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An RCMP officer gathers evidence at a home on Pacific Road Wednesday morning as police investigate a targeted shooting in Wildwood, which took place in the rental home just before midnight Tuesday. Three young children were in the home at the time of the shooting. Police said the incident is gang related. 250-392-2305 • 122 N. Broadway www.gustafsonsdodge.com DL#7549 *All prices net of all manufacturer’s rebates plus taxes, fees and $399 doc fee. All payments OAC, taxes and fees included. # 16077 - 96 months @ 3.99% total paid $41,398.24.
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Children present as gang war escalates Angie Mindus Staff Writer Gang violence has erupted in the Williams Lake area once again, this time in the nearby community of Wildwood where a home was
the scene of a targeted shooting overnight Tuesday. No one was injured in this latest attack, however, it’s what was inside the home at the time of the shooting that has police speaking out.
“Those involved need to realize that this house had three kids in it — ages one, two and nine. As police, we are just thankful that these children and no other innocent people were hurt,” said Williams Lake RCMP Staff Sgt.
Del Byron, noting the Ministry of Children and Family Development (MCFD) has been called in to review the matter. See WILDWOOD Page A3
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Tribune Weekend Advisor Friday, January 22, 2016
www.wltribune.com A3
LOCAL NEWS
Worker rescued Angie Mindus Staff Writer A United Concrete worker had to be rescued after becoming partially buried in a gravel hopper Thursday morning. Members of the RCMP, BC Ambulance and Williams Lake Fire Department responded to the call for help just after 9 a.m. at 245 Hodgson Rd. Firefighters gathered outside the location
with ropes and headed inside the building where the man was buried up to his waist in gravel. “We worked with staff to dig him out (as we) hoisted him up with a rope and a pulley system,” said Fire Chief Des Webster, noting the worker was able to walk out on his own after being freed. Webster said staff had been alerted to the emergency after hearing the worker yell for help. He estimated all
Angie Mindus photo
Members of the Williams Lake Fire Department gear up to rescue a man trapped in a gravel hopper at United Concrete Thursday morning.
told he was trapped for about 45 minutes and escaped unharmed. “He was lucky,” Webster said. United Concrete owner Paul Zacharias said he hasn’t put all the pieces together as to why the incident happened, however, he is thankful for the quick response of emergency crews and that the worker was unharmed. “I am grateful that nothing catastrophic happened,” he said.
Wildwood community scene of latest shooting Continued From Page A1 Not only is Byron wanting to send a message to the suspects that children are becoming the innocent victims in this escalating street gang conflict, he is also not pulling any punches about who is involved. “This shooting relates to the ongoing
gang conflict in our area, specifically between the Indian Outlaws and the 712s,” Byron said. “And we are very concerned that if this kind of high-risk behaviour continues innocent people are going to get seriously hurt or killed.” Police were called to the scene of this latest shooting at ap-
proximately 11:53 p.m. Tuesday after one person of many in the home heard sounds outside and opened the front door. Upon the door opening, two individuals who were standing in the driveway no more than 10 feet from the house, opened fire, shooting four or five times. The suspects then
fled in what is being described as an older model, dark SUV. A neighbour said Wednesday he heard the shots but assumed the sound was merely firecrackers. It wasn’t until the morning, when the police had the area cordoned off and yellow squares marked the shotgun casings left in the driveway, that he re-
alized what had happened. He said occasionally he would hear yelling from inside the rental home in question, but nothing too out of the ordinary until the shooting this week. Byron confirmed the incident in Wildwood is connected to the targeted shooting on the streets of Glendale Jan. 2 which left two
Byron said FOR the LOOKING Wildwood shooting
young men injured, one seriously. That crime, whose victims are connected to the Soda Creek First Nation, occurred on the one-year anniversary of the unsolved murder of Jesse (Delmer) Frank, a member of the Tl’etinqox-T’in (Anaham) First Nation, who was found on the ice below the Rudy Johnson Bridge.
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Friday, January 22, 2016 Tribune Weekend Advisor
LOCAL NEWS
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Monica Lamb-Yorski Staff Writer Mount Polley Mine hopes to resume fulltime operations in April or May of this year with plans to use the tailings storage facility that breached in August 2014, said Luke Moger, the mine’s project engineer. During the mine’s community meeting held in Williams Lake Wednesday that attracted about 20 people, Moger said the company’s permit application to return to full operations is being reviewed by the Ministries of Mines and Environment. By April it is expected the mine will have used up its processed ore limit of 4,000,000 tonnes, stipulated in its present temporary permit, he said. “Any other option for tailings storage would require additional disturbance in another area that would require recla-
Angie Mindus Staff Writer
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Williams Lake RCMP are reminding the public to be extra vigilant in securing their vehicles following a recent spike in thefts. “We are seeing nightly vehicle thefts, at-
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by the end of January. Meanwhile water sampling reports are being posted regularly on Imperial Metals’ website and continue to meet water quality guidelines, Vandenberg said.
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currently out of jail. Included in the recent thefts was a dark-coloured SUV stolen from the 4000 block of Mackenzie Avenue during the day Tuesday. That vehicle was recovered, abandoned, Wednesday in the Dog Creek Road area.
A vehicle matching that description was used in the targeted shooting of a residence in Wildwood late Tuesday night. Pole said they cannot confirm at this time whether it was the vehicle used during the recent shooting.
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Louise Emsley asks Golder Associates environmental chemist Jerry Vandenberg about longterm water management during the Mount Polley Mine community meeting held in Williams Lake Wednesday.
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Angie Mindus photo
Ulkatcho education advocate Gloria Elgin talks of the oppression she experienced at residential school during an enhancement agreement signing ceremony held Wednesday at the school board office. the district’s worksites by honouring and actively supporting the revitalization of the histories, cultures, governance and languages of First Nations. Before signing the agreement, Ulkatcho (Anahim Lake) Chief Betty Cahoose said the goals in it need
to be monitored and evaluated continually. “I will continue to advocate for our Carrier language being taught in school,” she said, noting it is also crucial the curriculum is up to par for all First Nations children. Ulkatcho’s education advocate Gloria
Elgin said seeing the children from Marie Sharpe elementary attending the ceremony was so important. As a residential school student she was classified as a special needs student and was never taught to read and write. “When the time came for me to heal
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Jan. 22, 2016
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SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 27 (CARIBOO-CHILCOTIN)
KINDERGARTEN REGISTRATION & SCHOOL OF CHOICE APPLICATIONS FOR THE 2016-17 SCHOOL YEAR KINDERGARTEN REGISTRATION – Begins January 18, 2016. Children must be five years of age by December 31, 2016. Children presently enrolled in Kindergarten do not need to re-register for Grade One. A birth certificate (or other proof of age) and presentation of the BC “Care Card” is required at registration. Students will normally register at the school in their attendance area. Parents not sure of their attendance area are requested to contact the nearest elementary school, the School District Office (250-398-3811), or our website at www. sd27.bc.ca for this information.
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250-392-4135 Answers for Jan. 22. , 2016
at the Williams Lake & District Credit Union
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Fill in the grid so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the numbers 1 through 9 only once. Each 3x3 box is outlined with a darker line. You already have a few numbers to get you started. Remember: you must not repeat the numbers 1 through 9 in the same line, column or 3x3 box. Credential Securities Inc. is a Member of the Canadian Investor Protection Fund. ®Credential is a registered mark owned by Credential Financial Inc.
*Mandatory information sessions will be held on January 12 and 14, 2016. SCHOOL OF CHOICE – Deadline is March 15, 2016. If you wish your child to attend a school that is not your catchment school, a “School of Choice” application MUST be completed. Applications are available from your local school, the School District office, or on the District website: www.sd27.bc.ca
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Nation communities. “To have the district call it a working document shows an openness for us all to voice our opinions,” Gentles said. Anaham Chief Joe Alphonse was absent from the ceremony and told the Tribune he won’t sign the agreement. “Between Anaham and Stone Reserve we have our own elementary schools and the school district chooses to run an elementary school so they are competing for our children,” Alphonse said. During the consultation for school closures Alphonse told the district to shut the Alexis Creek school down or convert it from Grade 8 to 12 so the Anaham community has an option to keep its children close to home rather than send them to secondary school in Williams Lake.
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Leaders signing a five-year enhancement agreement with School District 27 said it marks a willingness to work together while acknowledging there is still a long way to go to ensure the success of First Nations students in the CaribooChilcotin. “We’ve come a long way in the education we provide to our students,” said Supt. Mark Thiessen during a signing ceremony held at the school board office Wednesday afternoon. “But we have a long way to go to close the achievement gap between our non-First Nations and First Nations students.” The new agreement, which replaces the first one signed in 2006, aims to create a culturally sensitive, welcoming and supportive climate for First Nations at all
myself, I went to the court, and I was delivered and began to learn to read and write,” Elgin said, noting she also fights to make sure students don’t take courses they don’t need for graduation. “I lost my culture and do not know how to speak my own language but one day I will receive that.” District Principal, First Nations Education David DeRose, began his work on the agreement in 2013, after Joan Gentles retired from the district. “It’s about the community and school district working together to further Aboriginal education,” DeRose said of the new agreement. Gentles was on hand for the ceremony and said she has always appreciated the working relationship the school district has with First
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A6 www.wltribune.com
weekend
• Publisher Kathy McLean • Editor Angie Mindus
Help needed for gang violence As many know, Williams Lake is dealing with a gang problem. While some may shrug off the news because they feel it only involves a small group of individuals willingly participating in that type of dangerous lifestyle, the reality is it affects us all. The latest incident happened Tuesday night and saw shooters target a home with several people in it, including three small, innocent children. Seeing shotgun casings lying in the quiet, residential streets of Wildwood next to a school crossing sign is not something we should be willing to get used to. Hearing about victims being shot while on the streets of Glendale or thrown off the Rudy Johnson Bridge are not things we should accept as normal in a community the size of Williams Lake, but do we? One has to ask, how have we got to this point? For one, our justice system is not working. That much is obvious. We shouldn’t be playing a game of catch and release with dangerous prolific offenders, which is ex-
actly what is happening. Our police know these suspects and arrest them all the time only to watch them walk the streets again and again in no time at all. Currently, our community is experiencing another rash of vehicle thefts which is also likely related to the release of these types of offenders who make a career out of being a criminal at a young age. When are we going to say enough is enough? When the game turns deadly and innocent people die? Our community needs more resources to deal with this problem. Our local police need a dedicated team of officers in place to deal with these high-risk, dangerous offenders and our local social programs clearly need more supports in place to help identify these troubled children before they turn to a violent life of crime. The provincial and federal governments must step up to the plate on this one now before we bury another victim as a result of this escalating gang war. - Williams Lake Tribune
Friday, January 22, 2016 Tribune Weekend Advisor
advisor viewpoints
Published by Black Press Ltd. 188 N. 1st Avenue Williams Lake BC, V2G 1Y8
ANTI-RACISM COMMITTEE AT WORK
Gaeil Farrar photo
Spearheaded by the Canadian Mental Health Association lakecity branch, members of the city’s new anti-racism task force met Tuesday to work on planning their upcoming anti-racism campaign. Pictured in the back row from the left are Sarah Thompson, Marilyn Livingston, Eva Navrot, Kate Lines, Maggie Ranger, and Julie Bowser; front row from the left are CDC Area F Director Joan Sorley, Mary Thomas, Phyllis Webstad, and Margaret Anne Enders. So far the committee includes about 20 members and others are invited to join them.
Temple Grandin: one person can change the world If we need inspiration to take on a challenge, face adversity and make a difference, consider the role Temple Grandin has made to the lives of food animals, particularly cattle. Temple is now a household name amongst ranchers and livestock managers. She is also a passionate advocate of people with autism. She herself is autistic. She achieved her PhD in spite of being a different learner. She thinks in pictures not in words, as she says. Thinking outside the box has been her key to successfully changing the way livestock is handled in North America and probably the rest of the world. As a young woman she spent time at a relative’s ranch and learned to “see” what cattle saw
the
weekend
Ranch Musings
with David Zirnhelt
as they were being handled and moved through corral systems. She didn’t like what she saw so this became her passionate objective: to design a different way of handling animals in holding facilities. The essence of her corral sys-
tem is the utilization of the natural circling behavior of cattle and therefore allowing handlers to work the cattle’s flight zones despite being in the confined space of a handling facility. The flight zone is the point at which the animal can no longer tolerate the approach of a person or other animal and moves away. A decade ago Temple was credited with changes made in the major feed yards and slaughtering facilities to use her handling facility designs. The uptake by the major consumers of meat products such as McDonald’s and those who supply them reached 50 per cent of industry. I am sure it is higher now. There are no doubt people
who want to make improvements on her methods but the fact remains that the cattle industry is now more caring about the life of cattle when under their management. Animals are healthier; being stressed less because of her. She is aware of the fact that confined animal operations (as opposed to open or free range operations) result in often lower priced food. When I had the privilege to hear her speak someone asked her about implementing free-range production of eggs, to which she replied that America’s poor could never be fed with $4 a dozen eggs. The price of battery eggs was then about $1 at Walmart in the U.S. That was her compassion for people being expressed.
Now here, I am told, egg producers who got together recently to determine the price of eggs raised essentially organically is about $7 a dozen. Again, hard to feed the poor at those prices! I commend Temple Grandin to those of you interested in better facilities for livestock. We hope to bring her here sometime during the Thompson Rivers University’s first year of the Applied Sustainable Ranching program, starting next week, at the Williams Lake campus. David Zirnhelt is a member of the Cariboo Cattlemen’s Association and chair of the advisory committee for the Applied Sustainable Ranching program which is starting at Thompson Rivers University in Williams Lake this January.
advisor
A politically independent community newspaper published Fridays by: Black Press Group Ltd. 188 North 1st Ave., Williams Lake, B.C., Canada V2G 1Y8 • Phone (250) 392Kathy McLean Angie Mindus Gaeil Farrar Greg Sabatino 2331 Fax (250) 392-7253, emails editor@wltribune.com or Community Editor Sports Editor Publisher Editor classifieds@wltribune.com, view our web page at www. wltribune.com. The 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.org
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Friday, January 22, 2016 Tribune Weekend Advisor
weekend
• Publisher Kathy McLean • Editor Angie Mindus
www.wltribune.com A7
advisor viewpoints
Published by Black Press Ltd. 188 N. 1st Avenue Williams Lake BC, V2G 1Y8
Things that are going well in B.C. In the early days of this new year, readers have advised me to do several things. I’ll go with one that seems relatively painless, embracing the “sunny ways” of our new federal government and seeking optimism in these fragile times. For starters, we have a building boom going on in the southwest. Here in Victoria, cranes dot the skyline as new residential-commercial projects emerge from bedrock, and hardhats are mostly on construction workers, scratched and backwards, rather than shiny and forward on politicians. Shipyards are busy, with Royal Canadian Navy work and cruise ship refits to reduce their emissions, plus work on ferries, tugboats and barges. Most of the activity is private investment, much of it in a hot housing market. Surrey has just recorded its second-highest total for building permits in history, a value of $1.46 billion nearly matching the pre-recession peak of 2007. Thousands of provincial employees get a small raise in February, based on stronger than forecast economic growth in 2014. It works out to $300 a year for a medical technologist and $346 for a teacher. Health care costs are rising less dramatically. That should ease the crisis atmosphere at provincial and federal health ministers’ negotiations over the funding formula, taking place this week in Vancouver. Health Minister Terry Lake announced last week that the province is increasing funding for a prom-
B.C. Views
with Tom Fletcher
ising program in cancer research, using genetic analysis to improve targeting for drugs to treat the hundreds of different cancers diagnosed in B.C. patients each year. The B.C. Cancer Agency’s new director, Dr. Malcolm Moore, oncologist Dr. Janessa Laskin and Dr. Marco Marra, director of the agency’s Genome Science Centre, described a world-leading centre of research that is reaching out to specialists and their patients across the province and attracting international funding and talent for ground-breaking research. Outside the urban regions, where retail sales and real estate mainly drive the economy, sunny ways are harder to find. The mining and natural gas sectors are in the grip of a slump in commodity prices, with more temporary mine closures expected. The forest industry is being helped by the low Canadian dollar and a steady recovery in the U.S. economy, and tourism is ex-
pected to have another strong year as Americans take advantage of a discount on visits to B.C. Central 1 Credit Union broke down the regional employment numbers for B.C. in 2015, and found job growth in every region except the Cariboo. Province-wide employment grew 1.2 per cent last year, ahead of the national rate. That may not sound like much, but compared to Alberta’s oil-dependent economy, it’s pretty good. Construction of a new dam on the Peace River is expected to ramp up this year, bringing work-
ers home from Alberta, and the federal government is planning to fast-track its promised infrastructure spending to create work across the country. Energy and Mines Minister Bill Bennett was in Toronto last week to ring the opening bell at the stock exchange with B.C. mining industry representatives. Not much sun on mining stocks these days, but Bennett’s sales pitch to an investor luncheon included reference to two more mines under construction in northwest B.C., the province’s Pacific Rim trade advan-
tage, and revenue sharing with First Nations that is attracting attention of other provinces. The Conference Board of Canada has forecast that B.C.’s economy will “lead the country by a wide margin over the near term,” with unemployment declining in 2016. We’re at the mercy of global forces, but things could be a whole lot worse. Tom Fletcher is B.C. legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press. Email: tfletcher@blackpress. ca Twitter: @tomfletcherbc
ENHANCEMENT AGREEMENT SIGNED
Angie Mindus photo
Ulkatcho Chief Betty Cahoose (from left), Board of Trustees Chair Tanya Guenther, Alexandria Chief Bernie Mack, Canim Lake Chief Mike Archie, SD 27 secretary treasurer Kevin Futcher, Soda Creek Chief Donna Dixon, SD 27 superintendent Mark Thiessen, Williams Lake Indian Band councillor Heather MacKenzie, Toosey Chief Francis Laceese, Cariboo-Chilcotin MLA Donna Barnett, Cariboo Friendship Society executive director Rosanna McGregor and Canoe Creek/Dog Creek Chief Patrick Harry gather for a formal picture after signing an enhancement agreement with School District 27 meant to ensure the success of First Nations students in the district.
Seafood supreme highlights delicacies of fresh water and ocean I was going through my freezer and found a couple of trout fillets, much to my surprise, because I thought they had all been used a few months ago. There are so many ways to cook trout that makes this fish very tasty. Trout, like salmon, can be used in combination with other seafood. I was thinking about a soup, or a salad, or maybe add some prawns and scallops in a stirfried dish. I wasn’t quite sure what I would do, but I did know there would have to be garlic. I love garlic and could almost put it on my cereal in the morning. Before I found the fish in the freezer I found this recipe that
It wasn’t difficult to decide how I was going to cook the trout, prawns and scallops, once I pulled the recipe from my desk drawer. Ken’s Seafood Supreme
Contemplating Ken
with Ken Wilson
I had first made in about 2002 and, because it was hand written, suggested I picked up this dish from somebody and scribbled it down so there would be some recording of this if I wanted to try this seafood recipe.
• Three tbsp butter • Three tbsp olive oil • Four garlic cloves chopped • Eight tiger prawns. • One dozen small scallops • Two trout fillets from 16inch trout (you could use salmon, if you don’t have trout). • One half cup white wine • Seasoned sea salt and pepper to taste • Chives or onion tops for decoration In a medium hot frying pan put in butter, olive oil and two
cloves of garlic chopped. After heating the garlic for five minutes shut off the pan and let all the ingredients get happy together. One hour later turn the heat on under pan until medium and then add one-quarter cup of wine. Maintain on medium heat for about 10 minutes or until a nice syrupy sauce is left. Turn off heat under pan then add scallops and prawns. Leave for one hour. This gives time for the scallops and prawns to snuggle up to the fine tasting sauce of garlic and wine. After an hour turn on the heat to medium, take out prawns and scallops. Add the rest of the wine and garlic and let this cook on me-
dium for about five minutes. Put the fish in the pan, and when the fish is almost done return the prawns and scallops and cook all together for a few more minutes. Use seasoning sea salt to taste along with a little pepper. Serve prawns and scallops over fish, then pour the rest of sauce over the dish. The actual cooking does not take much time, but you do have to organize this dish somewhat because it does take some time to let the flavours meld together and get really happy. Have fun cooking! Bye for now and GOOOOOD COOKING. Ken Wilson is a freelance writer with the Tribune/Weekend Advisor.
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weekend
Friday, January 22, 2016 Tribune Weekend Advisor
advisor
COMMUNITY BUILDERS CWES HELPS OUT SALVATION ARMY Salvation Army Cpt. Ben Lippers accepts a cheque for $250 from Cariboo Woodlot Education Society member Graeme McIntosh.
for Williams Lake and Area NOTICES
OPERATION CHRISTMAS CHILD A SUCCESS Lynn Rankin, the Grade 6/7 kids church teacher, and Pastor Jeremy Vogt of Cariboo Bethel Church, with some of the donation boxes collected during this year’s Operation Christmas Child program. A total of 477 boxes were collected by Cariboo Bethel Church to be distributed to children living in poverty around the world, says church spokesperson Linda Fornwald. She estimated that another 100 boxes from the community went directly to the Greyhound Bus station in Williams Lake for transport to the international distribution centre.
MUSEUM RAFFLE WINNER COLLECTS PRIZE Museum of the Cariboo Chilcotin executive director and curator William Adams presents Marg Bublitz with her museum raffle winnings, giving her a two night’s stay at the Hills Health Ranch plus a $100 gift certificate for the ranch’s restaurant.
Would you wrap you Newborn in Newspaper? In some third world countries, this is an unfortunate reality! Church on 11th is asking our community of crafters to quilt, sew, knit or crochet baby items (0-2 years) such as receiving blankets, sleepers, diapers (flannelette) and clothing, during the next few months. Or, you can purchase new items for expectant and new moms and newborns. Items can be dropped off at the church to be stored. On Saturday April 2, from 2-4pm we will hold a Third World Baby Shower & Tea at the Church on 11th, 1100-11th Ave. We will display all the items made and purchased before they are shipped overseas. For more information, contact Marie at 778-412-9257 or the church office 250392-2843. Hough Memorial Cancer Society. Cancer affects all of us. Our mission is to collect funds to purchase equipment for our local hospital for early cancer detection. All monies remain in our community. For more information www.houghmemorial.org or contact Bob McIntosh at 250-305-1041. Our mailing address is PO Box 4311, Williams Lake, B.C. V2G 2V4. Your donation is tax deductible. The Williams Lake Wanderers partake in a variety of outdoor seasonal activities - currently snowshoeing, x-country skiing and hiking as weather permits. We meet at the Cariboo Memorial Complex at 10am each Tues., Wed. and Thurs. Come and spend the morning. For further information please call 250-392-6423 or 250-392-4705. Nature Kindergarten will be offered by SD#27 at Scout Island beginning in September 2016. Interested parents must attend a mandatory information session in early January. For details go to www.sd27.bc.ca/nature-kindergarten. Registration for Quintet Plus is now closed. We look forward to inviting new members in the fall.
COMMUNITY CALENDAR IS FOR NON-PROFIT EVENTS HAPPENING WITHIN 2 WEEKS Posting must be limited to TIME, DATE & PLACE (excluding dollar amounts)
Deadline is 5 pm Tuesday, postings run the following Friday Email to: gaylene@wltribune.com Attention Community Calendar NOTICES and MEETINGS that remain the same from week to week wil be printed once a month in our Weekend edition CLIP-AND-SAVE PAGE - the first Friday of each month.
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Tribune Weekend Advisor Friday, January 22, 2016
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LOCAL NEWS Photo submitted
Pioneer Log Homes Ltd.’s founder and owner Bryan Reid Sr. inside the company’s log car that set a Guinness World record in Arizona Wednesday.
HOROSCOPE
Log car sets world record Monica Lamb-Yorski Staff Writer Pioneer Log Homes Ltd. of Williams Lake has set a Guinness world record for the fastest motorized log car while raising funds for veteran groups.
The company’s founder and owner Bryan Reid Sr. set the record Wednesday, Jan. 20 at the Wild Horse Pass Motorsports Park in Phoenix, Arizona. “It was unreal — once in a lifetime, 90 km in 1/4 mile,” Reid
texted the Tribune Thursday. Reid’s efforts were also filmed for Timber Kings, the popular HGTV Canada show that features Pioneer Log Homes and is in its third season. The car’s body is made from one giant
cedar tree harvested near Bella Bella and powered by two Buffalo turbines made by one of Pioneer’s customers in Buffalo, New York. In a previous interview, Reid credited Gerald Overton Sr. of Williams Lake for
being in charge of the mechanical aspects of the log car while Pioneer has been in charge of all the wood work. The car weighs about 2,200 pounds. All proceeds from the sale of the car will go to veterans, Reid said.
Anahim Lake goes green Monica Lamb-Yorski Staff Writer The largest of five diesel generators at BC Hydro’s Anahim Lake Generating Station is being converted to use mostly liquefied natural gas (LNG) in hopes of reducing greenhouse gas emissions and fuel costs. The three-year pilot project, which will commence in the fall of 2016, has an option for a one-year extension and could become a more permanent solution, said Hamid Tamehi of NIA Engineering team lead with BC Hydro during a teleconference with the Cariboo Regional District board Friday. “We expect there will be significant reductions, and hope to run the plant on more than 60 per cent natural gas following the pilot.” Part of the project
will see an LNG partner build, own and operate an LNG storage facility on the property. The partner will also build, own and operate vaporizers used to heat LNG and convert it back into natural gas. Once the new infrastructure is in place, it is anticipated that one tanker truck carry around 40,000 litres of LNG will travel along Highway 20 from Williams Lake to the Anahim Lake Generating Plant every 10 days. When Williams Lake Mayor Walt Cobb asked why the community isn’t being connected to the hydro grid, Tamehi said converting the generating plant to using LNG is a “fraction” of the cost. More information about this and other BC Hydro projects underway is available online at bchydro.com.
ARIES – Mar 21/Apr 20 Aries, it’s a good time to be thinking about family. Consider delving more deeply into your genealogy. Research your roots, and you may be surprised at what you discover. TAURUS – Apr 21/May 21 All that hard work you have been putting in will finally start to pay off, Taurus. It’s quite possible you will receive some good news soon. Don’t forget to go out and celebrate. GEMINI – May 22/Jun 21 Gemini, major changes could be coming your way and they likely involve your home life. Get ready for a big move or some major renovations to your home.
CANCER – Jun 22/Jul 22 This week your thinking could be even sharper than ever. It’s a good time to make plans that affect your future, including those pertaining to education or employment. LEO – Jul 23/Aug 23 If you let your imagination take over, you just may find others are more receptive to this creative way of expressing yourself, Leo. Use every trick to your advantage. VIRGO – Aug 24/Sept 22 Virgo, a recent project of yours could bring about some deserved recognition. It doesn’t matter if it is at work or home, being honored can feel good.
2016 Williams Lake Stampede
Dinner Dance & Auction Saturday, February 13th at the Elks Hall Dance to “Clancy Wright & The Silverado Band” Doors Open 5:00 pm • Dinner 6:00 pm Auction 7:00 pm • Dance 8:00 pm - 12:30 am
Tickets $35.00 per person Available at Margetts Meats • Cariboo Saddlery Cariboo Spurs Apparel & Tack info@williamslakestampede.com RETIREMENT CONCEPTS
LIBRA – Sept 23/Oct 23 Libra, if you feel inspired to express yourself in creative ways this week, go for it. Others may appreciate your sense of humor and may commend you for making them feel better. SCORPIO – Oct 24/Nov 22 Scorpio, a new visitor or someone from your past may put you in touch with another who could make a difference in your life right now. Changes will spring up rapidly. SAGITTARIUS – Nov 23/ Dec 21 Your thoughts may shift to more positive horizons, and your resulting optimism will prove attractive to others. Spread good cheer to as many people as you can. CAPRICORN – Dec 22/Jan 20 Listen closely during all conversations, Capricorn. You can always jot down notes later if you really need to remember something in particular. Paying attention this week is crucial. AQUARIUS – Jan 21/Feb 18 Aquarius, the hectic pace you have been keeping may be catching up with you. It will be difficult to keep this up for much longer, so start to pare down your responsibilities. PISCES – Feb 19/Mar 20 You may receive a call, text or email today that turns your life in a new direction, Pisces. Just wait for all of those doors to open for you.
JANUARY 22 Alize Cornet, Athlete (26) JANUARY 23 Richard Dean Anderson, Actor (66)
JANUARY 24 Ed Helms, Actor (42) JANUARY 25 Alicia Keys, Singer (35) JANUARY 26 Wayne Gretzky, Athlete (55) JANUARY 27 Rosamund Pike, Actress (37) JANUARY 28 Sarah McLachlan, Singer (48) JANUARY 29 Marc Gasol, Athlete (31) JANUARY 30 Christian Bale, Actor (42)
2016 - 2016 - 2016 - 2016 - 2016 - 2016 - 2016
January Special
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LOCAL NEWS
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Christ Centered Family Focused
Sunday School Sunday Morning Sunday Afternoon Wednesday
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Carriers Required for Wednesday Edition! Papers need to be delivered by 5:00 pm 1114 - 11th Ave N. (1300-1585) 56 papers 1129 - Mackenzie Ave N. (1010-1605) 42 papers 1144 - Albert Pl (1113-1123), Balsam St (913-1015), Conrad Cres (102-116 & 1000-1012) & Mountview Dr (217-231) 37 papers 1147 - Dog Creek Road (708) 12 papers 1155 - Lakeview Cres (1123-1298) 23 papers 1161 - Broadway Ave N. (402), Centennial Dr (290-693) & Hubble Rd (900-1019) 52 papers 1178 - Hull Rd (605-635) & Roberts Dr (613-874) 33 papers 1194 - Cornwall Cres (200-220), 2nd Ave N. (585 & 630 & 800-980) 60 papers If interested in earning extra cash please call Sherri at 250-392-2331.
Firefighters rally for co-worker and friend Monica Lamb-Yorski Staff Writer Members of the Williams Lake Fire Department are rallying for Chris Walker, a fellow firefighter who has a rare form of cancer entangled in his spinal cord. “He is having his second surgery in Kamloops today and
Chris Walker
we are all waiting to hear the outcome,” said Fire Chief Des Webster Wednesday. Walker has been with the WLFD for six years, continuing a career he began as a volunteer firefighter in Saskatchewan. “He is an outgoing family guy, he’s got kids, he works at Gibraltar Mine,” Web-
ster said of Walker. “The family has a long road ahead of them.” Walker has been told by his surgeon he will not have use of his legs after the surgery so the firefighters have been fundraising and started a Gofundme account to help Walker, his wife Nancy and kids,
renovate their home to be wheelchair accessible. “We’re going to try and help out with that as much as we can,” Webster said. “We’ll try and raise money and we have some qualified carpenters out of the fire hall willing to volunteer their labour time.”
Former Yunesit’in Chief Ivor Myers battling cancer Monica Lamb-Yorski Staff Writer Former Yunesit’in Chief Ivor D. Myers is battling cancer. “His cancer is spreading, his stomach was removed and he is having problems keeping food down,” said Anaham Chief Joe Alphonse. “They’ve given him three to six months.” Myers was diagnosed last summer and hasn’t been able to work so bills and payments are causing stress which add to the weight he already car-
ries of not being well among other things. “He has a young family and unfortunately when you are elected chief there isn’t the big huge pension you’d get if you were a politician in any other area.” Friends and family have set up a GoFundMe account to help his three small children and his wife Stella who will benefit from any donations. “It’s a tough thing to see Ivor go through this, aside from everything else he was a really nice guy and
Photo submitted
Former Yunesit’in Chief Ivor Myers (right), pictured here with his daughter, Jessika Myers, is battling cancer. A GoFundMe account has been set up to help. wouldn’t hurt a fly,” Alphonse said.
The funds raised will also help with any trav-
Game banquet Feb. 6
It’s the 11th Annual
FAMILY FEST Celebrating Families, Supporting Lifelong Literacy and Learning
10am - 2 pm Sunday, January 31st, 2016 WHERE? The Gibraltar Room WHEN?
Cariboo Memorial Recreation Complex, 535 Proctor Street, Williams Lake
It’s FREE and fun for all the family. Please join us, everyone is welcome!
Sir-Read-A-Lot says ‘Bring your old books along to swap!’ and A free new book for every child!’
WHAT’S HAPPENING?
Puppet Shows! Music! Story Telling! Crafts! Interactive Learning and ‘Hands On’ Fun! Free Snacks and Door prizes! Featuring: **Remote Control Car Racing** **Book Walk** Family Fest is supported by:
The Hearth Restaurant
el expenses to appointments for medical care.
The Williams Lake Sportsmen’s Association is hosting the annual Wild Game Banquet Feb. 6 at the Elk’s Hall. The event will feature door prizes, auctions, bucket draws and even a chance to win a four-day horseback pack trip donated by Stu Maitland. Tickets are $35 for adults, $60 for couples and $25 for kids under 18. Doors are slated to open at 5 p.m. Organizers said tickets are selling fast and are available at Chilcotin Guns, Blue Mountain Gunsmithing and from WLSA directors. The club serves a variety of dishes at the banquet from salmon and grouse to bear, cougar and moose meats. Following dinner, the WLSA recognizes members during the awards ceremonies.
Tribune Weekend Advisor Friday, January 22, 2016
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A R T S
Entertainment Culture
Children’s activities celebrate Family Literacy Week Carla Bullinger Special to Tribune/Advisor Let’s Play Together! This is the theme for Family Literacy Week Jan. 24 to 31. How fun and how easy is that? Let’s Play Together raises awareness about the vital role of play in children’s lives and of the importance of engaging in play-based literacy activities as a family. Here are some family literacy events happening in Williams Lake next week. • Tuesday, Jan. 26, 11 a.m. to 12 p.m.: The Cariboo Regional District Library, Williams Lake hosts puppet play, craft and music activities. • Monday to Friday, Jan. 25-28: Strong Start Program participants will be exchanging letters through Canada Post with different Strong Start centres. The letters may include a photo, favourite recipe, or a song. Each Strong Start Centre will post the let-
Gaeil Farrar photo
The Williams Lake Library is a great place to spend time with children. On Tuesday, Jan. 26, as part of Family Literacy Week, parents and children are invited to the library between 11 a.m. and noon for fun activities including puppet play, craft and music activities. Above Gregg Strom spent a couple of hours recently visiting the library with his daughters Anika, 8, Maysa, 3, and Coralie, 1. Anika says they visit the library about once a month, and she has lots of her own books at home as well.
Texas Hold’Em for Kidcare Daycare The Women’s Contact Society is hosting a Texas Hold ‘Em Charity Poker Tournament called Hold ‘Em for Kidcare at the Laughing Loon next month. All proceeds will go to the Kidcare Daycare Program, says event organizer Ashley Hyde. There will be a guaranteed prize pool of $900 with the first prize being $500, Hyde says. The buy in is $60 per person with two
options to chip up, Hyde says. However, if a player is out of chips they are out the tournament as there are no “re-buys.” The tournament starts at the Laughing Loon at 7 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 6. People who would like to play in the tournament or have questions are asked to contact Hyde at 250-392-4118. Tickets are also available in advance at the Women’s Contact Society, 51A
Fourth Avenue South. Hyde reminds players to know their limit and play within it. The game is for adults 19 and older
Public Bowling Fall Hours OPEN PLAY
Monday - Closed Tuesday - 1 pm to 9 pm Wednesday - 1 pm to 9 pm Thursday - 1 pm to 6 pm Friday - 3 pm to 10 pm Cosmic Bowling Friday Nights - 6 pm to 10 pm Saturday - 1 pm to 5 pm • 7 pm to 9 pm Sunday 1 pm to 4 pm
under licence number 81173.
ters they receive. Strong Start Centres for pre-school children in the Williams Lake area are located at Cataline, Marie Sharpe, Mountview, 150 Mile, Horsefly and Big Lake elementary schools. • Sunday, Jan. 31, 10 to 2 p.m. Family Fest takes place in the Gibraltar Room. This very popular community event wraps up the Family Literacy Week celebrations. It’s free and it’s fun. There are lots of interactive booths, activities, and games. It’s a wonderful way to spend a few hours playing together with your kids. Literacy skills are important to all Brit-
ish Columbians – including children and families. Families that engage in play-based literacy activities from an early age see positive effects on both children and parents/caregivers. Research shows that children who get an early start are better prepared to enter school and do better academically and socially. Visit our local Early Years Centre website to find out what else is happening during Family Literacy Week www.wlchild.ca. Decoda Literacy Solutions also has a lot of family literacy resources, contests, and activity ideas at www. decoda.ca
Guaranteed Prize Pool $900 • 1st Prize $500
Women’s Contact Society Poker Tournament Saturday February 6, 2016 The Laughing Loon
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For more information please call Ashlee at 250-392-4118
Cariboo Bowling Lanes 250-392-5526
BC Gaming Event License #81173
204 1st Avenue N. www.cariboobowl.com
Know your limit, Play within it, 19+
Infoline: 250.392.4722
The 5th Wave 7:00 & 9:15pm Nightly Sat. & Sun. Matinees 2:00 & 4:00pm
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Friday, January 22, 2016 Tribune Weekend Advisor
LOCAL COMMUNITY
Travel and Dessert Night series continues St. Andrew’s United Church is hosting three more presentations in its popular Travel and Dessert Night series, says Barry Sale. On Friday, Feb. 5
Naomi Miller and Sara Goddard will describe their journey along the El Camino de Santiago road in Spain. On Wednesday, Feb. 24 Frances McCou-
brey will talk about her summer explorations in Mount Edziza Provincial Park near Dease Lake in Northwestern B.C. On March 23 Ross McCoubrey will do a
St. Peter’s Anglican Church Sunday Worship 10:00 am Wednesday Morning Prayer 9:00 am The Rev. Keith Dobyns and The Rev. Kristen Dobyns 549 Carson Drive, Williams Lake, B.C. V2G 1T4 Embracing All, 250-392-4246 wlchurch@telus.net Faith in Action http://www.facebook.com/StPetersWL
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
travelogue presentation on his canal boat travels in England. “Everyone is welcome to attend these interesting and enjoyable slide presentations,” Sale says.
Admission is by donation. Presentations take place downstairs in the church hall. Dessert is served at 6:30 p.m. and the shows begins promptly at 7 p.m.
“Please join us for an evening when you can get away from the winter blahs,” Sale says in his invitation. Tickets Tickets for the Stu-
dio Theatre’s production of Making God Laugh on stage Jan. 20 to 23 and Jan. 27 to 30 are at The Open Book, Aboutface Photography, and Kit and Kaboodle.
Find a Church... ...Sponsored by the Williams Lake Pastors Fellowship
A story worth hearing
Priests: Father Derrick Cameron Father Boniface Ogbenna Sunday Mass 9:30 and 7:00 pm Saturdays 5:00 pm anticipated for Sunday 450 Pigeon Ave. 250-398-6806 sacredheartwl.ca
Salvation Army
Williams Lake Corps
Family Worship Centre 267 Borland Street, Williams Lake 250-392-2423 Sunday Morning Worship 10:30 am Captains Ben & Isobel Lippers
St. John Lutheran Church 377 Hodgson Road, Williams Lake
250-392-4421 9:30 am - Sunday School 10:00 am - Bible Study 11:00 am - Worship Service 95.1 FM Listen Online www.voar.org
Brought to Williams Lake by the Seventh-day Adventist Church Full Info On Worship Services Only
www.caribooadventist.ca or Call 250-392-1905
CARIBOO BETHEL
Sunday Morning Service 10:00AM With Nursery, Kids Club & Coffee Time Wednesday Youth & Events 833 Western Ave 250-398-6731 www.cariboobethel.com
Evangelical Free Church Sunday Morning Service 10:00 a.m. Sunday School 10:30 a.m. AWANA Thursdays at 5:30 p.m. Pastor John Nicholson
1100-11th Ave. North, Williams Lake 250-392-2843 www.wlefc.org
I love a good story. Telling a good story is an art form, and there are some doozies in the books that were written about the life of Jesus. Luke was a doctor in ancient Palestine, a man of science who wanted to tell the story about Jesus. He searched out the facts with hours of testimony from eye witnesses to the life of Jesus. We are left with a masterpiece called the Gospel According To Luke. It is filled with vignettes that awaken our imagination and cause us to smile with wonder.
and much to mourn. Engrossed in conversation as they journeyed along, it took them a while to recognize that a stranger had come up alongside them. He wanted to know what they are talking about. They were amazed, believing they had met the only person in the region who knew nothing of Jesus. Urged on by the stranger, they began to tell the story about Jesus.
with wonder and their dull eyes were opened. They looked across the table and recognized Jesus their teacher and Savior! He was with them the whole time. In that moment he smiled (my addition) and vanished—no doubt off to show someone else that he really did conquer death. He was RISEN indeed!
As a good story should, this one inspires wonder and raises questions. It Although their new offers hope and invites companion seemed to a response. The hope know nothing about Jesus offered is this: even from Nazareth, he seemed though you may feel to know everything alone, you are not. Jesus, One such vignette is the Hebrew Scriptures your Savior, is close to told about two of Jesus’ said about the Messiah. you every day, like a students walking to a They were amazed at his graceful stranger waiting village called Emmaus knowledge and insight to talk. The response (Luke 24:13-34). The into the old prophecies. It intended in this story is day was Sunday, the first was their turn to urge him clear. He is walking close day of the week. This to keep talking. As they to you on your journey was the Sunday that neared their destination, right now, but he waits we now remember as they invited him to come to be invited into the ‘Easter’ or Resurrection in for supper. Their hearts conversation. He is not Day. But these two men were burning with the a bully. Revelation 3:20 (NLT) says “Look! I knew nothing about a story of the Messiah. stand at the door and resurrection. They were convinced that Jesus, They sat down at the knock. If you hear my their hero, was dead. The table to eat. The stranger voice and open the door, I freedom movement they lifted the dinner bread will come in, and we will hoped he would start was, and thanked God for it in share a meal together as presumably, also dead. Aramaic. He broke it. The friends.” Will you invite They had much to discuss disciples’ hearts burned him in?
The views expressed in this column are not necessarily the views of all the churches in the Pastor’s Fellowship.
WILLIAMS LAKE ALLIANCE CHURCH Sunday Worship 10:30 a.m. Nursery and Children’s Sunday School 261 - 3rd Ave. South • 250-392-4280 Pastor Chris Harder ...real people ...real needs ...real hope
www.williamslakealliance.com
625 Carson Drive 250-392-5324 Affiliated with PAOC
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Tribune Weekend Advisor Friday, January 22, 2016
www.wltribune.com A13
LOCAL COMMUNITY
Fractured Land screening Tuesday Krista Liebe Special to Tribune/Advisor
Photo submitted
Caleb Behn, the young lawyer and subject of the documentary Fractured Land that will be presented by the Williams Lake Film Club at the Gibraltar Room on Tuesday. Canadian Audience Award), Toronto’s Hot Docs Top Ten Audience Favourite, and playing to packed houses around select
cities in B.C., the film will screen in Ontario and the Yukon. Since it started its limited release on the B.C. circuit Fractured
Robbie Burns’ Night Saturday There are still a few tickets available for the annual Robbie Burns’ Night celebration taking place at the Royal Canadian Legion Branch 139 this Saturday night, says Vivian MacNiel. The evening includes a traditional Scottish roast beef dinner with the formal introduction of the haggis, that “great chief-tan o’ the puddin’ race,” escorted into the hall by the Williams Lake Pipe Band. Doug White will give the address to the hag-
gis while Ron Hume will deliver the Immortal Memory in honour of the famed Scottish poet Robbie Burns. Barry Sale will deliver the toast to the lassies and MacNeil will deliver the reply. The roast beef dinner with all the trimmings wraps up with “tipsy laird,” a traditional Scottish trifle, minus the alcohol. Entertainment will include performances by the Williams Lake Pipe Band; Highland dancing by Kirsten
Lees; Synergy singing a medley of Scottish songs; and Ken Emery on fiddle and Hal Giles on keyboards delivering a medley of spirited Scottish tunes. Dancing follows to the music of The Perfect Match. Doug White will close out the evening leading the crowd in the singing of Star of Robbie Burns and Auld Lang Syne. Tickets are $30 and available at the legion hall for the event coming up this Saturday, Jan. 23.
Brody Kohnke May 1992- January 2012
Today recalls the memory Of a loved one gone to rest, And those who think of him today Are those who loved him best. The flowers we lay upon his grave May wither and decay, But the love for him who lies beneath Will never fade away. You are always with us xoxo Mom, Dad, Brenden and Jess Sending our love to you from all our family and friends.
Land has become a rousing success. Just go on Facebook and look under Fractured Land, and you will be amazed. There are only two screenings planned for the interior of B.C., ours here in Williams Lake and the next day at the university in Prince George. We invite all our friends in Quesnel and 100 Mile to visit us and enjoy this event with us. The Gibraltar Room holds an audience of 400. Director Damien Gillis will introduce his film and be avail-
2016 YEAR OF THE RED MONKEY
First of all we wish to thank everyone out there who helped to make our First Cariboo Chilcotin Film Fest a huge success! And yes, we already started work on our Second Cariboo Chilcotin Film Fest for January 2017. Maybe you will have a film for us by then. Stay tuned. The Williams Lake Film Club will show its next special presentation, Fractured Land, on Tuesday, Jan. 26, at the Gibraltar Room. Doors open at 6:30 and the screening begins at 7 p.m. After an award-winning run at the Vancouver International Film Festival (Best BC Film, VIFF Impact
able for a question and answer session afterwards. Fractured Land features Caleb Behn, a young Dene oil and gas officer who found himself on the front lines of a huge shale gas boom. His father is an environmentalist. His mother works in the oil and gas industry. As a representative of his people Caleb found himself sifting through rooms full of boxes of referrals from industry telling him what they wanted to do on his people’s land. He held the record for most delayed applications, yet not one application was denied on the basis of his arguments. This is when he decided to go to law school. Realizing that law alone may not be enough, Caleb speaks at demonstrations where he becomes an unexpected star. We travel with him to New Zealand where he consults the Maori and to the Sacred Headwaters of the Tahltan people. He meets with Council of Canadians president Maude Barlow, with Grassland director Josh Fox, Naomi Klein, Thomas Mulcair, and many others.
We travel with him while he confronts the fractures within his community and himself as he struggles to reconcile traditional teachings with the law to protect the land. I am very excited to see this film. I am very excited to welcome Damien Gillis to the Williams Lake Film Club — and I am even more excited to welcome you to another special event. Gillis is a Vancouver-based documentary filmmaker with a focus on environmental and social justice issues, especially relating to water, energy, and saving Canada’s wild salmon. He is co-founder of the online publication The Common Sense Canadian. While refreshments are being served, you will have a chance to talk to Gillis. There will be a table set up by representatives of the Williams Lake chapter of The Council of Canadians before the screening. Let’s all enjoy this informative and exciting evening together! Admission is $10 regular, $8 for Film Club members, and $6 for seniors (65+) and students, both High School and TRU.
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Friday, January 22, 2016 Tribune Weekend Advisor
LOCAL COMMUNITY
Winter Carnival teepee events coming together
Gaeil Farrar photo
Tanya Hutchinson is co-ordinating the First Nation cultural presentations taking place in a teepee at the Williams Lake Winter Carnival coming up in Boitanio Park Jan. 30-31.
One of the special First Nations guests at the Winter Carnival this year will be Spirit Carver Dean Ross/Gilpin, a member of the Pioneer Log Homes’ team of Carver Kings. Ross/Gilpin says he will be carving small sculptures (carry home size) that will be auctioned on site for charity. First Nations people from around the region are also being invited to join the presentations that will be taking place in a teepee that will be set up in Boitanio Park during the Williams Lake Winter Carnival Saturday and Sunday, Jan. 30-31. Event organizer Tanya Hutchinson says that so far two storytellers have been confirmed along with the Nenqayni Drummers who will perform
on the Saturday at 2 p.m. for about 30 minutes. Members of the group will also share stories about how they became drummers.
Prizes for all entrants in chili cook-off Professional and amateur cooks who love chili are invited to enter their favourite recipes in the Williams Lake Winter Carnival’s second annual chili-cookoff. Event organizer Karen Frey says the plan is to have about eight entries in each of the two categories. The amateur cookoff will take place on Saturday, Jan. 30 starting at 12:30 p.m. and the professional cook-off will be on Sunday, Jan. 31 also starting at 12:30 p.m. The first prize in both categories will be a trophy created by Spirit Carver, Dean
Ross/Gilpin, a member of the Pioneer Log Homes’ team of Carver Kings from television fame. “They are beautiful and something people will be able to keep forever,” Frey says. She says every contestant will also receive an apron and a gift card. A panel of five people will be selected for each category to be the judges, Frey says. So far she says the judges confirmed for the Saturday are Chief Joe Alphonse, Chief Roger William, Mayor Walt Cobb, Willie Dye, Coun. Craig Smith, and MLA
Donna Barnett. Frey says the contest rules are fairly simple and everyone who enters will receive a prize. Entrants present their best chili just as they would serve it for their guests. They will also be given 30 seconds to describe their recipe for the judges. The entry fee is $25. Entry forms are available at CJ’s Southwestern Grill located at the corner of Third Avenue and Oliver Street. For more information Frey can be reached at 250-2621672 or 250-267-5983 or by e-mail at corasia14@gmail.com.
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This year, she says they hope to have a wood-fuelled fire in the centre of the teepee instead of the gas fired unit used last year that didn’t produce much
heat to keep people warm. She is also planning to have chairs set up in a wide circle around the teepee for people to sit on.
People who would like to give presentations in the teepee can contact Hutchinson at 250-267-5320 or by email tanyahutch75@ gmail.com.
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Tribune Weekend Advisor Friday, January 22, 2016
www.wltribune.com A15
SACRED HEART CATHOLIC SCHOOL Catholic Schools Week 2016
The most effective kind of education is that a child should play amongst lovely things. ~ Plato
Education is for improving the lives of others and for leaving your community and world better than you found it.
Dear Young People, do not bury your talents, the gifts that God has given you! Do not be afraid to dream of great things!
~ Marian Wright Edelman
~ Pope Francis
Let us always meet each other with a smile, for the smile is the beginning of love. ~ Mother Theresa
Imagination is more important that knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world. ~ Albert Einstein
Just play. Have fun. Enjoy the game. ~ Michael Jordan
WE ARE NOW ACCEPTING REGISTRATIONS FOR THE 2016-17 SCHOOL YEAR.
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A16 www.wltribune.com
Friday, January 22, 2016 Tribune Weekend Advisor
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✦ E R U T L U C I R G A E L B A N I A T S U S F O E R U T U F E ✦ TH
Douglas Lake Cattle Company expands into Cariboo-Chilcotin Monica Lamb-Yorski Staff Writer
For more information about the upcoming Applied Sustainable Ranching program contact TRU at 250-392-8000
Regular prices are in effect until Feb 5, 2016
Douglas Lake Cattle Company has expanded its holdings in the Cariboo Chilcotin with its recent purchase of the Riske Creek Cattle Company’s Cotton and Deer Park Ranches. “This was sort of the third edition up in the Williams Lake area,” said Joe Gardner, general manager of Douglas Lake Cattle Company. “The Douglas Lake Cattle Company also owns the Alkali Lake Ranch and a couple of years ago we purchased the James Cattle Company at Dog Creek.” Previous Riske Creek Cattle Company partial owner Grant Huffman is retiring and Steve Brewer, who has worked for Douglas Lake Cattle Company for 18 years, is the new manager, Gardner said. “Cotton and Deer Park are absolutely beautiful ranches that have been there forever,” Gardner said. “Cotton Ranch is one of the oldest in the province. They’ve both been well cared for.” When asked about the Douglas Lake Cattle Company’s re-
With the new own- “Chunky” Woodward. ership of Cotton and Bit by the ranchDeer Park, Gardner ing bug, he went on to said the public access study a master’s degree to the nearby Farwell in animal science at Canyon area will not UBC where Huffman be impacted, noting was one of his classthe company has no mates. intention of changing Through the 36 years anything at the ranch- Gardner has managed es. Douglas Lake its ownGardner grew up in ership has changed Vancouver where his hands. father was the Dean of “At the time I was Forestry at the Univer- hired by Chunky I sity of British Colum- thought I’d be there bia. for a long time with His own love of him and here I am a ranching began at the long time later with a age of 16 when he was different owner and Joe Gardner hired one summer to several since,” Gardner work at Douglas Lake said. lationship to Walmart, Cattle Company, by In their book, RanchGardner described it as then owner Charles land, Rick Blacklaws a “pretty long stretch.” Douglas Lake Cattle Company is owned by Stan Kroenke, who also owns ranches, sports teams and other investments in the U.S. Kroenke is married to Anne Walton a Walmart heiress, Gardner explained. MSRP $1239.95 “Her father was Bud Walton, partner All featured prices of Sam Walton, the with 16" bar original founders of Walmart. So if his wife counts I guess we’re related to Walmart. Kroenke has done developments with Visit us at Walmart and has been on the board, but the www.wlforestry.com ranching side of it is 250-392-6699 WL Forestry his personal thing.” Toll Free 1-888-353-6625
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A18 www.wltribune.com
Friday, January 22, 2016 Tribune Weekend Advisor
PHYSICAL SIDEof it
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Photo submitted
New message therapists at Cariboo Chiropractic and Medical Centre in Williams Lake Kayla Walters (centre) and Nathan Walters, enjoy some of the outdoor scenery Williams Lake has to offer with their eight-month-old daughter, Grace. The family recently moved from Vernon to begin practicing massage therapy in the lakecity.
New massage therapists offer healing touch Nathan Walters and Kayla Walters have witnessed the benefits of massage therapy first hand. The husbandand-wife duo, both massage therapists themselves at Cariboo Chiropractic and Medical Centre in Williams Lake, have the power of healing touch ingrained within their family dynamic. “All family members can benefit from massage,” Kayla said. “I was massaged monthly during my pregnancy and it’s a benefit I would highly recommend. Our daughter has received massages almost daily since she was born.” During their careers Nathan and Kayla have massaged many families. “We’ve even heard the words: ‘You’re great for our marriage,’” Kayla said. “If one of us is in pain we just
remind the other to book a massage in order to take care of ourselves. The overall well-being of the family improves when the quality of life is better. Being able to play with your children and enjoy your activities in a pain-free body is a wonderful feeling.” Nathan, who was born and raised in Williams Lake and Kayla, originally from Chilliwack, decided to make the move to Williams Lake from Vernon after their now eightmonth-old daughter, Grace, was born. Kayla has been a massage therapist for seven years, while Nathan is coming up on his sixth year of being a massage therapist in February. “Three major things [brought us here],” Nathan said. “Family, a great work opportunity and affordable living.”
They also said another reason they moved to Williams Lake was to take advantage of all the outdoor activities they can enjoy as a family. Kayla noted massages can assist children with sports and physical activities, particularly at a competitive level. “Parents have often sought us out to assist with the various aches and pains that are common with sports and development,” she said. “Massage can also be a lesson in relaxation and appropriate touch.” Seniors, likewise, can reap the benefits of massage. “Mobility is a big issue for seniors,” Kayla said. “With seniors taking away all their pain is not always something you can do, but mobility and being able to get around easier is
a huge benefit for them.” The couple said whether you’re pregnant, in a family unit or otherwise,
they are here to guide you. “As a local guy born and bred and as a newcomer [Kayla] we are excited to
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Williams Lake Tribune Friday, January 22, 2016
www.wltribune.com A19
the
weekend advisor
sports
CLIMBING ASSOCIATION STARTS PROGRAM ON HIGH NOTE Kent Bernadet photo
It was an exciting evening Tuesday for the Williams Lake Climbing Association as the first-ever session of its new bouldering program kicked off at the newly-renovated climbing wall at Lake City secondary. WLCA president Erika Driedger said around 25 people, some new to the sport and some with plenty of climbing experience, took part. The program runs every Tuesday and Thursday evening from 6 to 9 p.m. until late June.
SPORTS NOTEBOOK Saturday, Feb. 13 and Sunday, Feb. 14
Stampeders playoffs The Williams Lake Stampeders host the Quesnel Kangaroos for games two and three of round two of the Central Interior Hockey League playoffs. Williams Lake, who got a bye in round one after finishing first in the East Division, plays game one in Quesnel on Saturday, Feb. 6. Puck drops in Williams Lake go at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 13 and 1:30 p.m. Feb. 14.
Saturday, Feb. 13 CMHA and Association for Community Living Funspiel
Girls rugby provincials a no-go Greg Sabatino Staff Writer It’s a year’s worth of work and planning thrown out the window. That’s how Lake City Falcons girls rugby coach Morley Wilson described his disappointment after he was forced to cancel the 2016 Girls High School Rugby Provincial Championships, originally scheduled to be held in Williams Lake in May. Roughly 700 athletes from around the province were slated to compete in Tier 2, AA and AAA divisions at the tournament. Last summer, Wilson and other tournament or-
ganizers visited multiple hotels in the city to confirm room capacity for visiting athletes. Wilson said they were told it would not be a problem. Unbeknownst to Wilson, however, another large, national gathering — the 2016 Shriners Spring Ceremonial — falls on the same dates, May 2628, and expects to attract another 400 to 500 guests to the city. Recently, Wilson was told the rooms were no longer available. Due to the lack of capacity among city hotels for both events to take place, Wilson made the decision to call off the provincial
championships in Williams Lake. Kamloops will now be the preliminary destination for the provincial event. “I’m very disappointed,” Wilson said. “A lot of work went in from myself, and the kids and the parents had been planning on it. The kids, the parents and the rugby club were all helping. It’s 250 hotel rooms, times three, or four for the number of days, and that money’s not coming into the town, so it’s unfortunate.” The idea to billet players was floated around, however, to attain billet families for roughly 700 players wouldn’t be feasible, Wil-
son said. “Some businesses and people have approached me to help out and it’s greatly appreciated,” he said. It’s not all bad news, however, as the Falcons are a likely candidate to host the girls’ rugby provincials in 2017. “We’re really hoping for that, so fingers crossed for next year.” As for the team’s upcoming spring season Wilson said the team is booked for the Las Vegas Sevens in March, and will travel to the seven-a-side provincials in Cowichan in April to defend the team’s bronze medal from last year.
From there, in May, they’ll head to the 15-a-side provincials in Kamloops to defend their second bronze medal from last season. Three of the team’s key players — Emma Feldinger, Emma Pfleiderer and Laura Pfleiderer — also took part during this past weekend’s Canadian Women’s U18 regional camp, Jan. 16-17, in Burnaby after they were selected among the top players in the country in their age group. From additional camps in Toronto, Red Deer and Halifax, a team will be selected to play for Canada during a tour to England in April.
The Canadian Mental Health Association and Association for Community Living Williams Lake is hosting a Funspiel on Feb. 13, 2016 at the Williams Lake Curling Club. The event runs from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Each team collects pledges or pays a registration fee of $60. Prizes for the highest score and most money raised will be given out. Everyone is welcome. Beginners and seasoned curlers are welcome to take part in the fun event for a great cause. Contact Ashlee Hyde at 250-392-4118 for more information and registration.
Friday, Feb. 19 to Sunday, Feb. 21 Men’s and Ladies’ Joint Bonspiel
The Williams Lake Curling Club hosts its annual Men’s and Ladies’ Joint Bonspiel from Friday, Feb. 19 to Sunday, Feb. 21. The tournament is open to out-of-town teams. For more information call the WLCC at 250-3924636.
A20 www.wltribune.com
Friday, January 22, 2016 Tribune Weekend Advisor
LOCAL SPORTS
Greg Sabatino photo
Williams Lake Bantam Girls Timberwolves players Addie Cleave (from left), Sara Tr a m p l e a s u r e , Senna Trampleasure, Gabrielle Pierce and Pyper Alexander (behind Gabrielle) celebrate a goal during a game against Kamloops Sunday at the Cariboo Memorial Recreation Complex.
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Our office will be CLOSED Monday February 8, 2016. Reopening on Tues. Feb. 9, 2016 EARLY AD BOOKING DEADLINES FOR FEBRUARY10TH Display Ads, Classified Display & Word Classifieds are Friday February 5 by Noon
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Coach pleased with T-wolves’ play Greg Sabatino Staff Writer Despite coming up on the wrong end of two games versus Kamloops during the weekend, Williams Lake Bantam Girls Timberwolves coach Ben Pierce was pleased
with what he saw. The team fell 4-2 and 5-4 in the games, held Saturday and Sunday at the Cariboo Memorial Recreation Complex. “Our team played well, just couldn’t score goals when we had the opportunity,” Pierce
said. “The girls really played with passion and pride and the effort for both games was there. “I was very happy with the compete level from our team. I think we’ve really turned our compete level up.” In game one Bron-
wyn Pocock tallied twice for the T-wolves, while Sara Vermeulen, Pyper Alexander, Gabrielle Pierce and Senna Trampleasure lit the lamp in game two. “We ran into a pretty good goaltender who stopped a lot of shots,” Pierce said. “We out-
shot Kamloops by a wide margin each game. Our forecheck and composure with the puck was the best I’ve seen yet this year. “We outplayed Kamloops both games. Unfortunately it wasn’t reflected on the scoreboard.”
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Tribune Weekend Advisor Friday, January 22, 2016
www.wltribune.com A21
LOCAL SPORTS
Stamps to face ‘Roos in playoff series Finish first in CIHL East Division in regular season Greg Sabatino Staff Writer After finishing first in the Central Interior Hockey League East Division, the Williams Lake Stampeders will have a bye in the first round of the playoffs. They’ll take on the Quesnel Kangaroos in round two of the post season, who finished second in the division, in a best-of-five series. “They’ll be good games,” said Stampeders president Marko Zurak. “We’ll have to play our best and they’ll have to play their best to be able to come out on top. They’ve got a pretty good team.” The Stampeders finished the 16-game regular season with 12 wins and four losses. Quesnel, meanwhile, had eight wins, seven losses and one overtime loss. The Kangaroos defeated the Stampeders 5-4 at the Cariboo Memorial Recreation Complex during the last game of the regular season for Williams Lake on Friday. Game one of round two of the playoffs kicks
They’ll be good games. We’ll have to play our best and they’ll have to play their best to be able to come out on top. They’ve got a pretty good team.” - Marko Zurak, Williams Lake Stampeders President off on Saturday, Feb. 6 in Quesnel, before the series shifts to Williams Lake on Saturday, Feb. 13 and Sunday, Feb. 14 for games two and three. If necessary, game four goes in Quesnel, while game five returns to Williams Lake. Zurak said while the layoff before game one will be rough, it will give some of players some time to recuperate from injuries. “We had some injures. Matt Lees and Nathan [Zurak] were injured, but both are back,” he said. “One of our key defencemen was hurt but he’s back, too.” As an added incentive
to win the series, if Williams Lake beats Quesnel and if the Terrace River Kings knock off the Smithers Steelheads in their West Division playoff series, the Stampeders will be granted an automatic berth into the Coy Cup senior men’s provincial hockey championships follow-
ing the CIHL playoffs. Terrace is the host team, so will automatically be granted a berth. Two teams from the CIHL qualify for the Coy Cup, and the other two teams will be decided by the winners of games between the North Island Capitals and the Powell River
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Regals, and the Whitehorse Huskies and the Fort St. John Flyers. As for the Stamps’ playoff series with the Kangaroos, Zurak predicts a victory for his club. “It’ll be a good matchup,” he said. “Now, we just wait for everything to start.” Puck drop Saturday, Feb. 13 goes at 7:30 p.m., while Sunday’s Feb. 14 game starts at 1:30 p.m. Both games go at the CMRC.
FOR RENT OR LEASE For more information call 250-392-4777 or email manager@pioneerfamilyland.com
The War Amps does not receive government grants. Charitable Registration No.: 13196 9628 RR0001
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Office & Retail Space Meeting or Banquet Rooms 6-150 people
This Week’s Crossword CLUES ACROSS 1. Color properties 5. Arabian greeting 10. Frozen spike 12. Levels 14. Tear down social stiffness 16. Rapper Hammer’s initials 18. Midway between E and SE 19. Shooting marble 20. Edward __, British composer 22. Largest English dictionary (abbr.) 23. Cygnus’ brightest star 25. Goidelic language of Ireland 26. Midway between N and NE 27. Auditory organ 28. Last month (abbr.) 30. Indicated horsepower (abbr.) 31. Mediation council 33. Aussie crocodile hunter 35. Sylvan deity 37. Clears or tidies 38. In a way, emerges 40. Whimper 41. G. Gershwin’s brother 42. Begetter 44. Seated 45. Old world, new 48. Girls 50. “Song of triumph” 52. A covering for the head 53. Attack
55. Norwegian krone 56. Coach Parseghian 57. No good 58. Task that is simple 63. A way to move on 65. In a way, advanced 66. Loses weight 67. Shift sails CLUES DOWN 1. Go quickly 2. Fiddler crabs 3. Cervid 4. Gundog 5. Gushed forth 6. Caliph 7. Shoe cord 8. Give extreme unction to 9. Of I 10. “A Doll’s House” author 11. Documents certify-
ANSWER
The Key Tag Service – it’s free and it works. Nearly 13,000 sets of lost keys are returned every year.
The War Amps
If you are a Tribune Reader you could WIN A PIZZA
ing authority 13. Drunk 15. Principal ethnic group of China 17. Crinkled fabrics 18. Longest division of geological time 21. Pancake 23. Small pat 24. A garden plot 27. Strayed 29. Surgical instrument 32. No. French river 34. Modern 35. Now called Ho Chi Minh City 36. Set into a specific format 39. Exhaust 40. Individual 43. Moves rhythmically to music 44. D. Lamour “Road” picture costume 46. Having earlike appendages 47. Certified public accountant 49. Outermost part of a flower 51. Supplement with difficulty 54. Plains Indian tent (alt. sp.) 59. Electronic warfaresupport measures 60. Displaying a fairylike aspect 61. Taxi 62. They __ 64. Syrian pound
A22 www.wltribune.com
Friday, January 22, 2016 Tribune Weekend Advisor
STOVES - FURNACES - BOILERS - CHIMNEY - ACCESSORIES - WETT INSPECTIONS Quality Workmanship
Sales • Service • Installation
36 N. Broadway • www.burgessphe.com
Heating • Air Conditioning Sheet Metal Fabrication • Electrical
250-392-3301
Serving Williams Lake and area for over 35 years.
Residential • Commercial Industrial
Installation • Repairs All Makes & Models
• Kitchens • Countertops • Vanities • Closets • Desk/Office Cabinetry • Laundry Room Cabinets
24 Hour Emergency Service
www.allcraftkitchens.com info@allcraftkitchens.com
250-398-8999
250-392-4039 910A S. Mackenzie Ave. Fax: 250-392-4208
985 D North Mackenzie Ave. BCEC#38260
Be a part of this great
Concrete or Gravel... our team delivers!
Home Plan of the Week Give one of our advertising reps a call at 250-392-2331 to find out more details.
Lifetime Warranty on Carpet,
Vinyl & Hi Amy!
Laminate We Love Pets
Nob
ea s... ody B
CANADA’S LARGEST FLOORING CHAIN!
250-392-7106
98 N Second Avenue www.endoftheroll.com
• Concrete Blocks • Bedding Sand • Pea Gravel • 3/4 Clear Crush • Drainrock & More!
PLAN NUMBER 14-2-275 GARAGE WITH LIVING AREA The living area in this attractive twobedroom family home is located over a garage large enough to accommodate an extra room. The main entry, at one side of the house, is sheltered by a porch and leads into a foyer. To the left is a doorway to the double garage, and directly ahead is the stairway to the living area. Upstairs, the living room and kitchen form one large space, with the kitchen
Be a part of this great
Home Plan
of the Week Give one of our advertising reps a call at
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to find out more details.
Call Sue for details.
250-392-3443 Toll Free 1-888-311-5511
overlooking the back garden. The living room enjoys access to a small deck. The main bedroom is at the back of the house, while the second bedroom looks out to the front garden and has a 12-foot ceiling that slopes toward the sides, as well as a walk-in closet.The two bedrooms share a three-piece bath, with a stacked washer and dryer nearby. Exterior finishes include horizontal siding with wooden shakes, as well as brick accents
and decorative woodwork. Plans for design 142-275 are available for $555 (set of 5), $605(set of 8) and $645 for a super set of 10. B.C. residents add 7% Prov. Sales Tax. Also add $35.00 for Priority courier charges within B.C. or $65.00 outside of B.C. Please add 5% G.S.T. or 13% H.S.T. (where applicable) to both the plan price and postage charges. Our NEW 47TH Edition of the Home Plan Catalogue containing over 400 plans is available
250-392-3987 CERTIFIED JOURNEYMAN
E S T A B L I S H E D
for $15.50 (includes taxes, postage and handling). Make all cheque and money orders payable to “JENISH HOUSE DESIGN LTD” and mail to: JENISH HOUSE DESIGN LTD. c/o...(WLTribune) #203151 Commercial Drive Kelowna, BC V1X 7W2 OR SEE OUR WEB PAGE ORDER FORM ON: www. jenish.com AND E-MAIL YOUR ORDER TO: homeplans@jenish. com
❆ Rooftop Snow Removal
1 9 8 5
Windsor Plywood So Much More Than A Plywood Store! We specialize in unique or hard to source finishing items for your home’s interior and exterior
Locally Owned & Operated 910 E. Mackenzie Ave. S.
www.windsorplywood.com
250-398-7118 1-800-661-6887
The Willams LakeAdvisor Tribune Friday, January 22, 2016 Tribune Weekend Friday, January 22, 2016
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FIND EVERYTHING YOU NEED IN THE CLASSIFIEDS Mr. Lawrence Pendergast late of 150 Mile House, BC passed away on January 5, 2016 at V.G.H. in Vancouver, BC.
FRIDAY ISSUE 3:00 p.m. on the preceding Wednesday
FLYER BOOKING WEDNESDAY ISSUE 3:00 p.m. on the preceding Thursday FRIDAY ISSUE 3:00 p.m. on the preceding Monday
the
weekend
advisor
Call (250) 392-2331 188 North 1st Ave. Williams Lake
October 5, 1939 - January 18, 2016
Marilyn Irene Johnson was born in Clinton, Ontario to Fred and Irene Miller. After high school, Marilyn attended Goderich Business College. In 1962 she married Henk Halff of Holland and they had two children, Shelley and Natalie. After Henk drowned, Marilyn moved with her girls to Prince George, BC, where she had a son, Jamie.
upstairs Boitanio Mall
DISPLAY ADVERTISING WEDNESDAY ISSUE 3:00 p.m. on the preceding Monday
Marilyn Irene Johnson
Feb 13 - 27, 2016
FRIDAY ISSUE 3:00 p.m. the preceding Wednesday
LEGAL NOTICES
AGREEMENT
1940 - 2016
He is lovingly remembered by his wife of 60 years, Anita; two brothers and four sisters in Ontario and their families. At his request, cremation took place with no service to be held. Those wishing to honour Lawrence’s memory by way of donation may do so to the charity of their choosing.
Happy Thoughts
Keep your toddler safe in the car.
Participate in an event to help the 4 million Canadians living with arthritis.
End of Season
CLEARANCE SALE UP TO
50% OFF
250-392-1161 • 41 S. First Ave alexander41@telus.net
A
1.800.321.1433 www.jointsinmotion.ca
Obituaries
Obituaries
ALEXANDER
clothing • jewellery • gifts
Pigeon,
Phillip Joseph 1936-2016
Compassionate Care Funerals entrusted with all arrangements. 250-392-3336
“Grandma, we’re coming to visit!”
Inspire. Perspire.
It is with deep sorrow that we announce the passing of Phillip Joseph Pigeon of Williams Lake after a battle with cancer. He was predeceased by his father Rosaire Pigeon and his mother Mary (Grinder), and his brothers Albert and Doug. Phil leaves behind his wife Marilyn, his children Barry (Melissa), Brian (Sandra) and Kathy (Pat), his grandchildren, Nicole, Alex, Denis, Austin, Joe, Tannis, Darci, Olivia; and great grand children Cory and Carson; sisters Lorraine, Marj, Yvonne (Orin), Charlotte and brother Lawrence (Maggie); and many nieces and nephews. Phil was born in Kamloops, May 5, 1936. He spent his childhood on the family ranch at Meadow Lake, and after marrying Marilyn they moved to Williams Lake where Phil managed the Elks Club and played on the Stampeders hockey team. After many years working with the PGE/BC Rail, Marilyn and Phil moved down to Squamish and later Campbell River where they enjoyed saltwater fishing, curling, and he worked as a welder. In 1980, they decided to move back up to Meadow Lake where Phil built a log home and semi‐retired ranching once again. He loved his horses, cattle penning, and going on long rides. In 2009 they moved back to Williams Lake fully retiring and the last few years, they enjoyed camping and fishing, golfing, hunting, watching sports, playing poker, and spending time with the family. He had a wonderful sense of humor and always a twinkle in his eye right up until the end.
Learn how to install your child’s car seat correctly. Call 1-877-247-5551 or visit ChildSeatInfo.ca
In 1973 Marilyn married Kirk Johnson of the Kluane First Nation and they settled in Williams Lake and had a son, Shane. While raising her children, Marilyn enjoyed many good times with friends and helped a lot of people. Once her children were grown, Marilyn attained a bartending license and worked at the Alexandria Indian Band, Kat-Ali Store, and Anaham Elders Society. For 14 years Marilyn was the bookkeeper and secretary at the Tsilhqot’in National Government where she enjoyed babysitting the staff’s children. After “retiring” in 2004, Marilyn was hired as a Walmart greeter when the store opened in W.L. She always loved people and had the “gift of the gab,” so being a greeter was her dream job. Marilyn liked country music, crime documentaries, crossword puzzles, hairstyle magazines, cookbooks, and shopping for her grandchildren. She made friends everywhere she went and was treasured for her sense of humor, story-telling, honesty, intelligence, compassion, generosity, and style. She will be dearly missed by us all. Marilyn is survived by her daughter Natalie, son Jamie, daughter-in-law Rebecca Johnson, grandchildren Chantal, Jimmy, Kirk and Shelly, brother and sister-in-law Bob and Sharon Miller, and great-aunts Evelyn Harrison and June Bond. Marilyn is pre-deceased by her daughter Shelley, son Shane, and common-law husband Roger Wycotte. Special thanks to the wonderful doctors, nurses and staff at Cariboo Memorial Hospital for their care during Marilyn’s brief illness. In lieu of flowers, be nice and share a laugh in Marilyn’s honor, or donate to a charity of your choice. A celebration of Marilyn’s life will be held at the Longhouse in Williams Lake, BC on Monday, January 25, 2016 at 2:00 pm.
The eyes have it
At this time there will be no ceremony held, however, there will be a Celebration of Phil golf tournament later this spring. Details will be communicated to family and friends.
Drive to Save Lives
Obituaries
Fetch a Friend from the SPCA today! spca.bc.ca
LaPrairie’s Funeral Services entrusted with arrangements. 250-398-9100
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Friday, January 2016The Tribune Weekend Advisor Friday, January 22, 22, 2016 Willams Lake Tribune
Employment
Announcements
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Employment
Hotel, Restaurant, Food Services
Obituaries
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Education/Tutoring
Education/Tutoring
Experienced Full Time Cooks Wanted Wages dependent on experience. Medical & dental benefits. Apply in person with resume at 177 Yorston Street NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
Medical/Dental CDA or chair side for front desk management/data entry/reception/assisting. Abeldent and/or strong computer skills required. Tuesday- Friday work week. Email jocelyne@ shawcable.com; phone 250-398-8189 or drop resume at Vitality Dental Centre, 333A N. 2nd Ave., Williams Lake,V2G 2A1.
Pharmacy Assistant Part Time, Permanent The successful applicant will display the following attributes: - High level of energy - Self motivated - Very well organized - Superior customer service skills - Extremely trustworthy - Ability to work in a high energy environment - Available to work a variety of shifts including evenings and weekends - Pharmacy experience an asset
Resume and cover letter must be submitted in writing. Attn: Chad Francis, Shoppers Drug Mart #283, 12 South 2nd Ave., Williams Lake, BC. V2G 1H6
12 South 2nd Ave, Williams Lake 250-392-3333
Despite every technological advance, business cards remain an essential business tool.
Mendoza, Eduardo “Eddie� 1938-2016
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Eduardo “Eddie� Mendoza died peacefully at the Fraser Hope Lodge, on January 13th, 2016, in Hope, BC at the age of 77. Eddie is survived by Aurora and their 5 children: Ederlaine Peterson (Chad), Charles Mendoza (Carol), Grace Bergen (Terry), Heidi Rattay (Dean), Lisa Mendoza-Hulka (Peter), and 8 much-loved grandchildren. Eddie is preceded in death by his parents, and his older brother Narciso (coincidentally the day before on January 12th, 2016 in Seattle). Eddie was born on October 14, 1938 in Bocaue Bulacan, Philippines. He studied agriculture, and became an Agricultural Teacher. He came to Canada in 1966 and worked at the BC Teacher’s Federation. Aurora came to Canada in 1967 and went to teach at Atlin, Cassiar, and eventually the Alkali Lake Reserve outside of Williams Lake. Eddie moved out of Vancouver and up to Williams Lake to join her. They married in 1970, and all of their children were born and raised in Williams Lake. Eddie did not teach in Williams Lake, but instead purchased properties as rental investments. Eventually, he and Aurora bought and ran the Mt. View Store before selling it to Jack Leong (his best friend). Living in the Frost Creek area, Eddie enjoyed raising chickens, ducks, turkeys and other assorted animals on their acreage which also had fishing ponds. He had rental properties that kept him busy as well. He was always on the go, and very active, so it was difficult for him after he suffered a stroke in 2007, and was confined to a wheelchair. A private funeral was held on January 18th, 2016 in Williams Lake. In lieu of flowers, please send donations to the Heart and Stroke Foundation of BC. The family would also like to thank the caregivers and staff at the Fraser Hope Lodge for the professional and compassionate care they provided.
The eyes have it Fetch a Friend from the SPCA today! spca.bc.ca Career Opportunities
Career Opportunities
Employment Opportunities www.nenqayni.com
Casual On Call Operations Director Positions Available
Nenqayni Wellness Coaches - primary afternoon shiftCentre
- day shift ADaycare residential alcohol and drug treatment centre providing holistic healing to First Nation and Inuit families and Nenqayni is a residential alcohol and drugyouth, treatment centre communities in a healing safe and environment. providing holistic tosecure First Nations and Inuit youth and in a safe and secure environment.Director Please visit our a Isfamilies currently seeking an Operations with website forDegree further information. Business or an equivalent combination of education and experience. Relevant Master’s degree 4uali¿ed applicants are needed to ¿ll casual on call posi preferred. The successful candidate will be part of the tions for coaches and daycare assistant. senior management team, reporting to the Executive Coach positions: should have some training or experience Director and responsible for the non-clinical components with adult and youth addictions treatment. Afternoon shift is of the centre. Responsibilities will include: overseeing 3pm to 11pm. Occasional weekend work available as well. accounting functions including the annual budget; Daycare Assistant – ECE or ECE Assistant credential supervising maintenance requirements; and supervisrequired ing the personnel management functions. Experience :age scale 1 .1 per hour rising to 1 . with a Class working at a is senior management level is required. driverœs licence. Preferably, the successful candidate will be of aboriginal descent. is an equal opportunity Hours forNenqayni these positions will vary dependingemployer. on the need. Deadline is December 11, Preferably for thesubmissions successful candidates will be of2015. aboriginal descent. Reliable transportation to and from Nenqayni and Start date is June 15, 2016. Salary is negotiable, dependthree ing on references educationare andrequired. experience. Relocation assistance is available. Deadline for submissions is Friday -anuary 1 .
Please letter, resumeletter and and 3 references to: Pleasesend sendyour your cover resume a covering three refer Nenqayni Wellness Centre,Centre attn. Jim Chorney, PO Box ences to Nenqayni :ellness PO %ox :illiams 2529, LakeorBC 4P2, fax: 250-989-0307 /ake Williams %C 9 * P by V2G fax: 3 or email to or by email to jchorney@nenqayni.com jchorney@nenqayni.com
Here’s my Card!
250-392-2331
Cathy Hoy-Poole
Business Elite Commercial & Fleet Sales & Leasing 370 S. Mackenzie Avenue Williams Lake, B.C. V2G 1C7
Career Opportunities
Career Opportunities
250-392-7185 Fax 250-392-4703 1-855-GO-4-CHEV Cell 250-267-2715 www.cariboogm.ca cathyhoypoole@ cariboogm.ca
ULKATCHO FIRST NATION Employment Opportunity
Nagwuntl’oo School Director Nagwuntl’oo School is seeking a full-time Director position for the 2015/2016 school year. The Nagwuntl’oo School Director will assist the Nagwuntl’oo School Staff in the day to day operations. QUALIFICATIONS: • Excellent verbal and written communication skills • Minimum Bachelor Degree, preference for Education or Business Administration • Must maintain strict confidences pertaining to the operations of the Nagwuntl’oo School and other Band Administered operations • Creativity, enthusiasm and love for working with students, parents and community members • Experience and compassionate working with First Nations children • Excellent Communication, team-building skills and a team player • Ability to follow directions, work independently and follow Nagwuntloo school and Band policy • Good organizational skill s, willing to learn and selfmotivated • Be punctual and reliable • Have an excellent rapport with children, parents and community members • Must be able to work one on one with children, parents, and with other staff members • Must be a positive role model • Must have a current Criminal Record check • Must have a Valid Driver’s License • Computer literate: knowledge of working with Excel, Word, Powerpoint, Publisher • Ability to do submit proposals, grants, reports and letters. This is a permanent full time position that is subject to a 90 day probationary period. Hours: 8:00am to 4:30pm daily with a 1/2hr lunch Monday to Thursday, Fridays 8:00am to 12:00pm Wages: based on experience, qualifications and education. Please submit your cover letter, resume and updated criminal record check to: Liz Hennigar at the Ulkatcho Band Office (250)742-3260 by Tuesday. January 26, 2016 at 4:30pm Any questions pertaining to the position please call Education Director- Marietta Cahoose at the Ulkatcho Band Office at (250) 742-3234 ext. 209 or email mcahoose@ulkatcho.ca
! y u B Buy! Buy! SELL! S e ! ll! l l Se
DL#5683
C & Ski Small Engines Sales and Service of All Small Engine and Marine Equipment
• 2 and 4 stroke engine rebuilding • Buy and sell used equipment • Many parts - new and used available in stock • Dealer for Motovan, Kimpex, Trans Can Imports, Western Marine and many more • Warranty Contractor for Sears • Specials on in-stock ATV tires & helmets
Shop Hours: Tues to Sat 9am - 5:30 pm
Colin Stevens Over 26 years experience
250-296-3380
3616 Stanchfield Road - 15 mins up Horsefly Road candski@xplornet.ca
e West ErniDenturist DENTURE CENTRE
COMPLETE DENTURE SERVICES 250-398-9800 1138 Lakeview Crescent
Ernie West
across from Tim Hortons, next to Ramada/OV
Denturist
INCOME TAX RETURNS Monday to Friday 8 am to 6 pm Saturday 9 am to 4 pm
Walk-Ins Welcome Certified e-file agent OPEN Fast drop-off service YEAR ROUND Mobile tax service Free basic high school tax returns Audit assistance included Farm, rental, business & corporate returns
DEBBIE SELAND
Over 30 years experience
Phone 250-392-6502 • Email qtaxwl@shaw.ca 118E N. 1st Avenue, Williams Lake
Feb 27
Feb 29 - Mar 14
Workplace Level 1
Advanced Level 3
Melanie Funk
E.M.P. Instructor/Trainer/Evaluator Registered Training Agency for Worksafe BC
Workplace Level 1 Transportation Endorsement Pediatric Courses Automated External Defibrillator C.P.R. All Levels Advanced Level 3
Group Rates Available BOOK NOW
250-296-4161
www.cariboofirstaid.ca Email: cariboofirstaid@live.ca Located at the Pioneer Complex
Committed to training excellence!
Let me help your business grow! Give me a call
TRACY
250-392-2331
250-392-2331 188 N. 1st Ave.
Tracy Freeman Ad Sales
The Willams Lake Tribune Friday, January 22, 2016 Tribune Weekend Advisor Friday, January 22, 2016
www.wltribune.com www.wltribune.com A25 A25
Services
Services
Merchandise for Sale
Rentals
Rentals
Art/Music/Dancing
Recycling
$400 & Under
Misc for Rent
Homes for Rent
GWEN Ryder ARCT Interested in starting piano lessons in the new year? I have some spaces available. For info or to register call 250-392-1972 or email gwen.5@hotmail.com
RECYCLING
Craftsman Snowblower. 10hp - 28” cut, electric start & chains. $375. 778-412-6530
1 & 2 BEDROOM SUITES
3bdrm house, top floor only. view of lake. Quiet area. No dogs. R/R $700. +util. 250392-3037 Call after 5:00pm.
Education/Tutoring DISCOVER Trades@Thompson Rivers University in Williams Lake. Want to learn a trade but can’t decide which one? Our 12 week program will explore residential construction, electrical, and plumbing. Tuition: $600 Starts Feb 15, 2016 - May 6, 2016 Contact 250-392-8010 for more information or to register Experienced private tutor accepting students grades 1-9. All subjects, but especially math. Call Jo 250-398-6087.
Depot for batteries, rads, copper, aluminum, catalytic converters, alts. and starts. Will p/u, will pay cash! Phone 250-398-0672
Garage Sales
Purple bins are located at:
Share Shed •Surplus Herby’s Canadian Tire • Safeway
100 MILE. SENIOR’S GARDEN 55+, 2 bdrm., level entry, 5 appliances, back yard, metal shed $105,900. Picture at Craigslist or Kijiji (Cariboo). Ph: 604-807-6963 or e-mail: garlin2@telus.net
Poultry 1 1/4 year old laying hens. $4.50 each. (250)398-7647
LARGE FUND Borrowers Wanted Start saving hundreds of dollars today! We can easily approve you by phone. 1st, 2nd or 3rd mortgage money is available right now. Rates start at Prime. Equity counts. We don’t rely on credit, age or income. Call Anytime 1-800-639-2274 or 604-430-1498. Apply online www.capitaldirect.ca
Handypersons ONE CALL DOES IT ALL! Time to get that bathroom or bedroom reno done. Also specializing in kitchens. Gerry (250)398-8969
Home Improvements RENOVATION SPECIALIST ONE CALL DOES IT ALL Commercial and Residential Interior & Exterior. Specializing in kitchen & bathroom renos. Call Gerry @ 250-398-8969 for a quote today.
Merchandise for Sale
Auctions BC livestock Kamloops, bred cow and bred heifer sale Tuesday, Jan 26. Bar M Ranch herd dispersal and many other contributors. Phone BCL 250-573-3939 www.bclivestock.bc.ca
More than 1.5 million Canadian families are in need of affordable housing. Your contributions provides Habitat with the resources it needs to help families.
Donate Today!
3bdrm Corner lot home in downtown core. Remodeled kitchen with 5 near new appliances. New exterior wood siding. RV Parking and ground level entrance makes it ideal for disabled person. Lots of room for expansion. Area zoned R 2, could be home based business. $195,000. 250-392-0024 250-305-5242
Call a Tribune advertising consultant today!
250-392-2331
Massage by Keely
Storage
Swedish & Hot Stone Massage
250-267-7720
Chaparell
SELF STORAGE
6x8, 6x15, 10x10, 10x20
3bdrm mobile at 150 Mile. Close to shopping center and school. n/p (250)392-7617
250-392-3261
RV Storage
Keely Graham
Call for details
Certified Massage Practioner 1485 11th Ave Lane Williams Lake BC
www.chaparellselfstorage.ca
24 Hour Access
ADvantage
FOR ALL YOUR AUTO REPAIRS
SELF STORAGE
250-392-4777 or 250-305-5251
Serving the Cariboo since 1981
2 bdrm small home $500 utilities not incl. Please call 250-267-6671
Pioneer Complex, 351 Hodgson Rd
Government Inspections Shuttle Service
Misc. Wanted
Misc. Wanted
Homes for Rent 2 bdrm house. f/s, natural gas heat. 250-392-7617.
www.advantagestorageltd.com mike@pioneerfamilyland.com
STAN POGUE
Licensed Technician
1075 N. Mackenzie Ave.
Apt/Condo for Rent
(250) 395-6218 (direct line) • (250) 395-0584 (cell) (250) 395-6201 (fax)
1 & 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 2&3 bdrm apartments, South Lakeside area, n/p 250-3925074.
Misc. for Sale
Misc. for Sale
TARPS! TARPS! 10X8 weave (Medium Duty)
15% OFF
BLUE TARPS
WHITE TARPS 10X10 weave (Heavy Duty)
STARTING AT $3.99
STARTING AT $5.49
2bdrm in 4-Plex, like new! Details, Pictures and map at: www.LivingSpace4Rent.com Call Roy at 604-767-1600
FOR RENT
Big Lake Community Hall Lakeshore setting, fully equipped kitchen, reasonable rates Weddings, Private Parties, etc.
250-243-0024
PARTS AND LABOUR
STARTING AT $2.19
BLACK TARPS
Duplex / 4 Plex
Phone or text 250-267-5081 Email rvkamloops@yahoo.ca
TIMING BELT REPLACEMENT
2bdrm apt, 1144 N. MacKenzie Ave, n/s n/p $600/mo. plus utilities. (250)303-2233
Newly renovated, beautiful 3 bdrm 1 bath, right in town of Williams Lake $1000/mnth incl utilities. w/d d/w A/C R/R Avail. now. 1-250-395-3906
If you or someone you know is experiencing an unplanned pregnancy or suffering the pain of a past abortion, there is compassionate, non-judgemental confidential support available.
“BEST PRICES IN TOWN!”
2 bdrm apartment in clean, quiet, secure adult oriented building, no pets, references required. $705/mo. 250-3922602 or cell 250-305-5366
Lovely 3bdrm condo with 5 appliances. $950/month (250)267-5097
Phone 250-392-3522 • Fax 250-392-3548
Box 67, 100 Mile House B.C. V0K 2E0
Rentals
BOITANIO PLACE APARTMENTS
Tuesday to Friday 7:30 am to 5:00 pm Saturday 7:30 am to 4:00 pm
A.R.S. Enterprises Ltd
BEFORE YOU SELL: • ASPEN • BIRCH • COTTONWOOD • PINE • SPRUCE • FIR PULP LOGS Please call KATHERINE LEPPALA
Halls/Auditoriums
www.habitat.ca
Reserve your space!
645 Hodgson Rd. Room for Rent or Shared accommodation. Smokers welcome, small pets okay. $475/mon. 250398-5159
Mobile Homes & Pads
3 bdrm mobile homes fridge, stove, close to casino. no pets. (250)392-7617
Despite every technological advance, business cards remain an essential business tool.
For Sale By Owner
1bdrm suite in 4-plex, washer/dryer, references required, $600/mnth plus utilities. Phone (250)302-1203
Painting & Decorating Residential Painting Great rates, free quotes. Big or small jobs! Current WCB. Bonded. (250)267-7616
Coin Collector Looking to Buy Collections, Olympic Gold & Silver Coins, Loose, Sets, etc Chad: 1-778-281-0030 Local
Please donate your bottles to Amanda Enterprises Bottle Depot and simply say ‘these bottles are for the Williams Lake Hospice Society’. The great folks at Amanda Enterprises will put the proceeds on the Hospice account and you will be supporting a vital community organization! Thank you for your support from the bottom of our hearts!!
Excellent quality cow & horse hay, large round & large square bales. Phone early a.m. & evenings. Delivery available on large loads. (250)398-2805
GET 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
Misc. Wanted
Apt/Condos for Sale
Feed & Hay
Financial Services
www.spca.bc.ca
Recycling
Pets & Livestock
Shared Accommodation
CHECK OUT OUR WEBSITE www.williamslakeliving.com
Real Estate
Board, Staff & Volunteers of WLHS
Great downtown location! Walking distance for work or shopping, on site laundry, references required, immediate availability.
Please call 250-305-4972 or 250-302-9108
Please consider donating your soft goods to Big Brothers & Big Sisters Recycling Program
Thank you for your support
Volunteer your time, energy and skills today.
NATURALLY RAISED grass fed beef for sale. Call Windy Creek Farm 250-296-3256 or 250-267-8476 to order. www.grassfedbeefbc.ca
Leftovers from your Garage Sale?
For further information 250-398-8391
Fight Back.
Food Products
Here’s my Card!
ALL
Merv
Call Merv or Lani today to book your appointment! U BETCHA!
DL#30676
14X14 weave (Industrial Duty)
FOAM SHOP MATTRESS REPLACEMENTS SINGLE TO KING SIZE 2” TO 6” THICK - CUSTOM CUT OR CUSTOM ORDER MEMORY FOAM TOPPER PADS - 3LB DENSITY SINGLE TO KING SIZE - 2” & 3” THICK
TRAYNOR’S Tile & Stone
Advertising is an investment that can help a store’s turnover and net profit
YOU NEED IT - WE WILL CUT IT!
CAMPING FOAM, MEDICAL WEDGES & BOLSTERS, PILLOWS
“ A CUT ABOVE THE REST”
527 MACKENZIE AVE., WILLIAMS LAKE 250-392-5362 • OUT OF TOWN CALL 1-800-661-5188
Ceramic Tile Schluter Shower Kits Glass Blocks Fireplace Facings Cultured Stone
BRUCE TRAYNOR
SOFAS, CHAIRS, OTTOMANS, SNOWMOBILES SEATS, TRACTORS
www.surplusherbys.com
250-398-8279 550 North 11th Ave
Ph/Fax: 250-296-3698 Cell: 250-267-3374 Williams Lake, BC www.traynorslabradors.com/tilestone.htm
CUSHION REPLACEMENTS TORN OR TATTERED?
FIND US ON FACEBOOK
Lani
call me!
Brenda Webster
Advertising Consultant
250-392-2331 188 N. 1st Ave.
A26 A26 www.wltribune.com www.wltribune.com
Friday, January 2016The Tribune Weekend Advisor Friday, January 22,22, 2016 Willams Lake Tribune
Rentals
Transportation
Rentals
Rentals
Legal
Legal
Legal
Suites, Lower
Snowmobiles
Apt/Condo for Rent
Apt/Condo for Rent
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
1bdrm ground level bsmt suite $600 Utilities included. Close to schools & bus stop, No pets Avail. immed. (250)305-1213
Apartment & Townhouse Rentals
2bdrm bsmt suite, Pigeon Ave. yard, w/d, excellent condition. $735/mnth utilities incl. Phone. (250)267-1087 2 bdrm daylight basement suite on North Lakeside. Elect. heat, f/s & sat. tv incl. Contact Al 250-398-7766. 2bdrm plus storage room, n/p n/s large yard. Gas/electric heat. Child Dev. Centre/Nesika School area. $700/mnth plus utilities (250)398-8182
2013 Polaris Sno Pro 800ES, 163â€? Decal kit, skis, front bumper, jerry can, seat bag, tunnel bag, exhaust can and cover. 900 miles. Mint shape. $6500 ďŹ rm. 250-303-0450
1&2 BEDROOM SUITES FOR RENT
1 and 2 bedrooms suites, close to schools, on bus route, pet friendly, includes storage, assigned parking, clean, secure building, rent negotiable for long term tenancies, suit working professionals, references required, available to view anytime including evenings and weekends, immediate availability. Please call 250-305-4598 or 250-302-9108 CHECK OUT OUR WEBSITE www.williamslakeliving.com
Townhouses CLEARVIEW APARTMENTS
1 and 2 bedroom suites, very clean, quiet, secure building, has in suite storage, onsite laundry on each floor, close to schools and bus route, immediate availability.
Please call 250-392-2997 or 250-302-9108 CHECK OUT OUR WEBSITE www.williamslakeliving.com
3bdrm townhouse, 300 First Ave, available immed. N/S N/P $900/mon + util. Phone 250303-2233
Want to Rent WANTED TO RENT starting March 1, 2-3bdrm home or cabin for 3 sisters and brotherin-law in early 60’s. Excellent references available. Call Garth McIntyre @ Re/Max 250-398-0215 or email gmrt@wlake.com
Transportation
Cars - Domestic
Bachelor, 1, 2 and 3 bedroom suites, various locations in and around the Williams Lake area. Check out our website. MOVING? We have other rental availability in Kamloops, Quesnel, Prince George and Kitimat. To inquire by phone please call 250-305-0446 or 250-302-9108.
www.williamslakeliving.com Houses For Sale
BRAND NEW! 2 bdrm bsmt suite. Lake view in Westridge area, patio, W/D, non-smoking, $1100/month+utils. Available now. 250-302-2276
Suites, Upper
NOTICE OF DEVELOPMENT
www.williamslakeliving.com
Legal
Houses For Sale
REAL ESTATE
Tenders
FROM:
Resource/Agricultural (R/A) zone
TO:
Settlement Area 2 (RS 2) zone
PURPOSE :
To rezone in order to finalize a Crown Grant Offer on a 50+ year lease property.
THE PLANNING SERVICES DEPARTMENT CARIBOO REGIONAL DISTRICT SUITE D, 180 NORTH THIRD AVENUE WILLIAMS LAKE, BC V2G 2A4 TEL: (250) 392-3351 OR 1-800-665-1636 FAX: (250) 392-2812 www.cariboord.ca
SOLD SOLD SOLD SOLD SOLD SOLD SOLD SOLD $ SOLD 00 SOLD SOLD SOLD SOLD 7A; SOLD SOLD
CONCESSION
That Parcel or Tract of Land in the Vicinity of Wasko Creek, Cariboo District, Containing 0.429 Hectares, More or Less (Crown Grant Offer No. 5402316)
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:
99
The Williams Lake Stampede Association is accepting requests from community groups or interested individuals to lease the Infield Concession at the Stampede Grounds for 2016. The facility is a wellequipped commercial kitchen with a solid sales history. The kitchen operates for approximately 15 days during summer events. Interested parties can contact the Williams Lake Stampede Association at
SITE DESCRIPTION:
Cars - Domestic
• 2x a week for 4 weeks 2x a PoQWK LQ &oasW 0W 1ews 12 A*(176
188 North 1st Ave. 250-392-2331 Fax 250-392-7253 FOassLĂ€eGs#ZOtrLEXQe.FoP
info@williamslakestampede.com
attention Tim Rolph. Experience in operating similar facilities would be an asset.
Open Houses
10 ADS FOR ONLY
44
OPEN HOUSES SATURDAY, JAN. 23rd 2185 BLUFF VIEW DRIVE 11:00 am - 12:00 pm
1713 JUNIPER STREET 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm
plus tax
Your receive: 0 ,50 37 3 $
345 PATENAUDE DRIVE 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm
Legal Notices
95
$
Open Houses
2000 Chrysler Cirrus $1,100 – 187,435 kms In good running order. Comes with 2 sets of tires - 4 winter tires and 4 all season tires. Well maintained. 250-398-5681
2002 Chevy Cavalier 2 door. 4 cyl., 5 speed, clutch. Recent engine work. Sunroof. Good all season tires. Jet black with rear spoiler. Smart looking car. 1 owner. Immaculate interior. $2350. 250-303-0941
Cars - Domestic
VEHICLE FOR SALE SPECIAL CLASSIFIEDS
• 1x2 Bordered Ad LQ WKe FODVVLÀedV • :LWK or ZLWKoXW D SKoWo
Open Houses
Cars - Domestic
2 ads a week for 4 weeks 2 ads a month in the Coast Mountain News
0 ,50 02 2 $
Drop off a photo and info or email
3253 WOODCUTTER PLACE 2:30 pm - 3:00 3:30 pm 2:00
classifieds@wltribune.com 250-392-2331 | www.wltribune.com
Preview at tanyarankin.com (Side street street between between 4th 4th Ave Ave and and Pigeon Pigeon Ave) Ave) (Side
0 Tanya Rankin Ltd. • ,50 18 (150 Mile Mile House) House) (150 $2
250-392-0371
Customer Service Above & Beyond the Industry Standard Preview at tanyarankin.com
Tanya Rankin Ltd. • 250-392-0371
0 ,00 98 3 $
Find The Car Of Your Dreams
In the Classifieds
HOW TO REACH US... 250-392-2331 www.wltribune.com
• Reception 250-392-2331 advertising@wltribune.com
• Classifieds 250-392-2331 classifieds@wltribune.com
• Circulation 250-392-2331 circulation@wltribune.com
188 North 1st Ave., Williams Lake, B.C. V2G 1Y8
Mon. Fri. 8:30 - 5:00
Tribune Weekend Advisor Friday, January 22, 2016
www.wltribune.com A27
LOCAL SPORTS
Busy month shaping up for Cariboo Archers Greg Sabatino Staff Writer Arrows are flying in all the right directions for the Cariboo Archers. Last weekend, two Cariboo Archers – Al Campsall and Lee Jackman — braved sketchy road conditions to travel to Abbotsford for B.C.’s largest indoor 3D shoot. And despite not having
fellow teammates Fred Streleoff, Dan Mobbs, Jessie Mobbs and Ernie Schmid there, Campsall said they proved Cariboo Archers can still dominate. “Lee shone as never before,” he said. “His 150/150 round with nine out of 15 ‘Xs’ (perfect centre shots) was the top round of all archers. He led all archers with three
perfect (150/150 rounds) for the weekend.” Campsall, meanwhile, finished second with two perfect rounds and the same total of ‘Xs.’ Because both shooters had 150/150 scores, a onearrow shoot-off was put in place. There, Campsall barely edged Jackman, but said Jackman was the undisputed “man of the event.”
In the days following the shoot Campsall continued on with his good stroke of luck, discovering he was among the topthree finalists for Sport BC’s Master Athlete of the Year. A gala dinner, scheduled for Thursday, March 10 in Vancouver, will honour outstanding amateur athletes, coaches and officials, named as finalists. “It’s very exciting,”
said Campsall, who was also a finalist last year. “I have to admit I was quite surprised. You’re there with Olympic athletes, guys like Carey Price, and just to be able to mingle among that group is quite exciting.” This weekend, a number of Cariboo Archers will travel to Vanderhoof for a shoot, before Campsall and junior archer Ty
Thurow will pack up their bows and head south to Las Vegas Jan. 29 for the Vegas Shoot, the largest archery competition in the world. “Ty is a Canadian record holder and Canadian champion in indoor archery,” said Campsall, who coaches Ty. “He’s our star archer and I think he has a good chance to finish very well.
“He’s putting up scores in practice that are very impressive.” The event is expected to attract some 3,000 archers from around the world. “If he keeps it up, from his scores right now, he’ll definitely be in the top 10,” Campsall said. “It seems that he will be soon beating his coach’s scores, and is that not the ultimate goal of a coach/mentor?”
DRIVE AWAY WITHOUT PAYING * $
0 0 0 0
DOWN PAYMENT
$
$
FIRST TWO BI-WEEKLY PAYMENTS
$
SECURITY DEPOSIT
DUE ON DELIVERY
ON 2016 LEASE PURCHASES
2016 SIERRA 1500
2016 CANYON
2016 ACADIA
2016 TERRAIN
BI-WEEKLY LEASE OFFER
2016 TERRAIN SLE-1 AWD
$
182 0.9 @
FOR 48 MONTHS
%
$
LEASE RATE
0
DOWN PAYMENT
BASED ON A LEASE PURCHASE PRICE OF $31,010††
SLE-1 AWD MODEL SHOWN
2015 CLEAROUT! GREAT OFFERS ON REMAINING 2015s 2015 SIERRA 1500 DOUBLE CAB SLE 4X4
0
%
FOR UP TO
84
PURCHASE FINANCING
MONTHS ON SELECT 2015 MODELS^
0
84
10,380
UP TO
OR
$
IN TOTAL VALUE ON OTHER MODELS‡ (INCLUDES $1,000 LOYALTY CASH¥)
DOUBLE CAB SLE 4X4 4SA MODEL SHOWN
2015 SIERRA 2500HD DOUBLE CAB SLE 4X4
%
PURCHASE FINANCING
FOR UP TO
MONTHS ON SELECT 2015 MODELS^
12,000 UP TO
OR
$
IN TOTAL VALUE ON OTHER MODELS† (INCLUDES $1,000 LOYALTY CASH¥)
2500HD SLE 4X4 SHOWN
ENDS FEBRUARY 1ST
BCGMCDEALERS.CA
ON NOW AT YOUR BC GMC DEALERS. BCGMCDEALERS.CA 1-800-GM-DRIVE. GMC is a brand of General Motors of Canada. Offers apply to the lease of a 2016 Terrain SLE-1 AWD (3SA), and purchase or finance of a 2015 Sierra 1500 Double/Crew Cab and Sierra 2500HD. License, insurance, registration, administration fees, dealer fees, PPSA and taxes not included. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Limited time offers which may not be combined with other offers, and are subject to change without notice. Offers apply to qualified retail customers in BC GMC Dealer Marketing Association area only. Dealer order or trade may be required. †† Lease based on a purchase price of $31,010, including $670 Loyalty Cash (tax exclusive) and $500 lease cash for a new eligible 2016 Terrain SLE-1 AWD (3SA). Bi-weekly payment is $182 for 48 months at 0.9% APR, on approved credit to qualified retail customers by GM Financial. Annual kilometre limit of 20,000 km, $0.16 per excess kilometre. $0 down payment and a $0 security deposit is required. Payment may vary depending on down payment or trade. Total obligation is $18,912, plus applicable taxes. Option to purchase at lease end is $12,886. Price and total obligation exclude license, insurance, registration, taxes and optional equipment. Other lease options are available. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Limited-time offer, which may not be combined with other offers. See your dealer for conditions and details. General Motors of Canada Company reserves the right to amend or terminate this offer, in whole or in part, at any time without prior notice. * Offer valid to eligible retail lessees in Canada who have entered into a lease agreement with GM Financial and accept delivery between January, 5 and January 31, 2016 of a new or demonstrator 2016 model year GMC model excluding GMC Canyon 2SA. General Motors of Canada will pay one month’s lease payment or two biweekly lease payments as defined on the lease agreement (inclusive of taxes). After the first month, lessee will be required to make all remaining scheduled payments over the remaining term of the lease agreement. PPSA/RDPRM is not due. Consumer may be required to pay Dealer Fees. Insurance, licence, and applicable taxes not included. Additional conditions and limitations apply. GM reserves the right to modify or terminate this offer at any time without prior notice. See dealer for details. ^ Offer available to qualified retail customers in Canada for vehicles delivered between January 5 and February 1, 2016. 0% purchase financing offered on approved credit by TD Auto Finance Services, Scotiabank® or RBC Royal Bank for 84 months on select new or demonstrator 2015 GMC Sierra 1500 Double Cab 2WD 1SA / Crew Cab 2WD 1SA and Sierra HD’s 1SA 2WD with gas engine. Participating lenders are subject to change. Rates from other lenders will vary. Down payment, trade and/or security deposit may be required. Monthly payment and cost of borrowing will vary depending on amount borrowed and down payment/trade. Example: $45,000 at 0% APR, the monthly payment is $535.71 for 84 months. Cost of borrowing is $0, total obligation is $45,000. Offer is unconditionally interest-free. Freight, air tax ($100, if applicable) included. License, insurance, registration, PPSA/movable property registry fees, applicable taxes and dealer fees not included. Dealers may sell for less. Limited time offer which may not be combined with certain other offers. GM Canada may modify, extend or terminate offers in whole or in part at any time without notice. Conditions and limitations apply. See dealer for details. ®Registered trademark of The Bank of Nova Scotia. RBC and Royal Bank are registered trademarks of Royal Bank of Canada. † $12,000 is a combined total credit consisting of $1,000 Loyalty Cash (tax inclusive) and a $11,000 manufacturer to dealer cash credit (tax exclusive) for a 2015 Sierra HD gas models (excluding 1SA 4x2), which is available for cash purchases only and cannot be combined with special lease and finance rates. By selecting lease or finance offers, consumers are foregoing this $11,000 credit which will result in higher effective interest rates. Discounts vary by model. ‡ $10,380 is a combined total credit consisting of a $3,000 manufacturer-to-dealer delivery credit (tax exclusive) $5,195 Cash Credit (tax exclusive) available on 2015 GMC Sierra Double Cab 1SA 4WD models, $1,000 Owner Cash (tax inclusive), $750 manufacturer-to-dealer Elevation Package Discount Credit (tax exclusive) for 2015 Sierra 1SA Elevation Edition with 5.3L Engine and a $435 manufacturer-to-dealer cash credit (tax exclusive) on any 2015 GMC Sierra Elevation Double Cab AWD with a 5.3L engine, which is available for cash purchases only and cannot be combined with special lease and finance rates. By selecting lease or finance offers, consumers are foregoing this $5,630 credit, which will result in higher effective interest rates. Discounts vary by model. ¥ Offer applies to eligible current owners or lessees of any model year 1999 or newer car that has been registered and insured in Canada in the customer’s name for the previous consecutive six (6) months. Credit valid towards the retail purchase or lease of one eligible 2015 Sierra or 2016 model year GMC SUV, crossover and pickups models delivered in Canada between January 5 and February 1, 2016. Credit is a manufacturer to consumer incentive (tax inclusive) and credit value depends on model purchased: $750 credit available on eligible GMC vehicles (except Canyon 2SA, Sierra 1500 and HD); $1,000 credit available on all 2015 and 2016 GMC Sierra models. Offer is transferable to a family member living within the same household (proof of address required). As part of the transaction, dealer may request documentation and contact General Motors of Canada Company to verify eligibility. This offer may not be redeemed for cash and may not be combined with certain other consumer incentives. Certain limitations or conditions apply. Void where prohibited. See your GM Canada dealer for details. GM Canada reserves the right to amend or terminate offers for any reason in whole or in part at any time without prior notice.
Call Cariboo Chevrolet Buick GMC at 250-392-7185, or visit us at 370 MacKenzie Avenue South, Williams Lake. [License #5683]
A28 www.wltribune.com
Friday, January 22, 2016 Tribune Weekend Advisor
#2-25 South 4th Ave
1690 CHIMNEY LAKE RD
LOT 1 HAGGENS POINT RD
(across from Safeway)
606 HULL ROAD
QUESNEL LAKE
Just shy of 5 acres, this fantastic building lot has a million dollar view of amazing rolling hay fields. Property is partially fenced with a driveway.
Spectacular private lakeshore on Quesnel lake! The ultimate recreation property with a view that will take your breath away! 2.18 acres.
Private 1.64 acre lot with a 3 bedroom home and detached workshop. Large daylight basement with games room and rec room.
R2001167
R2015070
R2021224
$89,000
#2 - 530 YORSTON STREET
$94,000
310 JERSEY PLACE
$97,900
3140 HORSEFLY ROAD
Amazing 2 bedroom home, location in town. Quite nice neighborhood. Kitchen, dining room and living room on the main floor.
Fantastic 3 bedroom rancher in desirable Dairy Lane Estates! Fenced yard with private patio offers the perfect place to relax.
Great 3 bedroom family home located on private 1.52 acres. This fantastic location is just minutes from the 150 Mile Center.
R2021910
RN247557
R2008411
$124,000
1195 LAKEVIEW CRESCENT
$154,900
A 1160 DIXON ROAD
$174,900
2480 BAILEY ROAD
SUSAN COLGATE
250-267-1088 Owner/Realtor
W NE
Fantastic location, fully fenced front & back yards. Large covered deck with view of the lake and city. 3 bdrms up, large living room lots of updates.
Great location to set up a home-based business. Tastefully renovated to offer a top-quality main floor living area with work space below.
Fantastic 3 bedroom home, just minutes from town! Open concept kitchen, dining and living area. Single car garage, covered porch.
R2003227
R2015103
R2008930
ILD U B
$219,900
$234,900
Spectacular new construction with a panoramic view of the city of Williams Lake! This perfectly designed 3 bedroom home offers an open floor with a view from just about every part of the house. Be quick on this home so you can customize colour and finish.
#123 - 375 MANDARINO
R2024398
$284,900
1905 BOE PLACE
$239,900
Remarkable 3 bedroom home with an open floor plan with a cozy feel! Step out from your fantastic master bedroom onto your private deck to enjoy a view of Williams Lake, also enjoy your 4 piece ensuite and large closet space. Fully fenced, large backyard with great landscaping and patio area. This home is a must see! R2000953
$447,000 W NE
ING T S LI
1212 MIDNIGHT DRIVE
Location! This 4 bedroom home is located in a quiet subdivision just minutes from all levels of schools, bus routes and recreational trails. Beautifully updated house offers 3 bedrooms up with large open kitchen and family room, formal dining and living room with vaulted ceilings. R2024512
$324,900
3 bedroom log home, 10 acres, hardwood floors, fenced, large living room and rock fireplace.
1220 LUMREEK
www.interiorproperties.ca
$289,900