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36
$1.25 45930 Airport Road 604-795-9104 DLN 8692 7-12H M5 DRIVE A LONG WAY INTO THE FUTURE DRIVE A LONG WAY INTO THE FUTURE THE ALL-NEW THE ALL-NEW 2012 2012 CHEVROLET $ 36,545 from ................... $41,545 msrp Clean Energy Vehicle Credit ... - $5,000 ROLET C HEVROLET CHEVROLET Jennifer Feinberg The Progress It’s the first time a national conven- tion of Elks and Royal Purple has ever been held in Chilliwack — coinciding with the 100th anniversary of the Elks of Canada. “I feel very proud,” said Jerry Wernicke, national president of the Elks of Canada, who has carried the title of Grand Exalted Ruler for the past year. Anywhere from 500 to 600 Elks and Royal Purple members will be arriving in Chilliwack starting this weekend for the annual convention, July 24-26 at the Landing Sports Centre. The economic spinoffs could be con- siderable, Wernicke said. “It will bring recognition to Chilliwack and the Fraser Valley with a lot of extra people in town to support local businesses.” Members of Chilliwack Elks lodge #48 are getting help to mount the convention event with folks from B.C. Elks Region #3 in Delta, White Rock, Cloverdale, Langley and Aldergrove. Part of the excitement is that the event could generate up to $100,000 for the Elks and Royal Purple Fund for Children, he said. The fund helps youth in need of medical care, with up to $5,000 in grants. Chilliwack won out over Red Deer, Alberta, in a bid to hold the event here, and part of the reason is that the orga- nization started out in Vancouver back in September 1912, and it seemed a fit- ting tribute, he said. Visiting Elks will be golfing and visit- ing Minter Gardens before the official opening on Tuesday. Wernicke is a 30-year member of the Elks, and spent the past seven years on the Grand Executive. He spent 40 years as a sailor and just retired from his role as chief engineer with Seaspan Marine of North Vancouver. “I’ve always been obligated to serve,” he said. “I enjoy volunteering and help- ing children.” His year as national leader has seen him personally raise $11,470 for the Children’s Fund by selling a pin with a stylized tugboat on it to honour his marine career. “I hope to bring it up to $12,000 during the convention,” he said. “My motto has been, ‘Sailing into the future with integrity and pride’ and I hope to impress this upon the membership after my term is over.” [email protected] twitter.com/chwkjourno 19 3 27 News Pipeline Aging oil pipeline too risky, say critics Sports Swimming Sharing the synchro spotlight YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER • FOUNDED IN 1891 • WWW.THEPROGRESS.COM • THURSDAY, JULY 19, 2012 The Chilliwack Progress Thursday Jerry Wernicke, national president of the Elks of Canada, has personally raised $11,470 for the Children’s Fund by selling these pins. JENNA HAUCK/ PROGRESS Elks converge for centennial in Chilliwack Ty-Crop rezonings go through Jennifer Feinberg The Progress Zoning changes for the Ty-Crop expansion in Rosedale sailed through Tuesday night at Chilliwack city hall. It took about two hours to cycle through three separate public hearings and public commentary before a crowd of about 60 in council chambers. Neighbours complained about the lack of con- sultation by the long-time local company, as well as lack of trust, excessive noise, traffic concerns, and more. Some expressed fears the Ty-Crop expansion was already “changing the face” of Rosedale, that it had been “defaced” while another said it had “got- ten out of hand.” One said Rosedale was “not a town anymore but an industrial park.” Rezoning and official community plan changes for five properties owned by Ty-Crop Investments were given second, and third readings, and final approval in a unanimous vote of Chilliwack coun- cil. “It will move us into the modern world,” said Ty-Crop co-owner Gary Teichrob, describing the expansion and modernization plan. The changes will mean “progress and improve- ments” for their operations, making things “qui- eter and greener” with new offices, parking space, equipment storage and sewage treatment plant. The owner wanted to clear up any confusion. “This has nothing to do with the agricultural property south of the railway tracks,” Teichrob said. “This is all north of the railway.” Some critics were already worried about pro- posals coming forth to remove land from the Agricultural Land Reserve. But that was not on the agenda Tuesday night. “Modern manufacturing facilities are built like this,” Teichrob said, referring to operations that will be brought indoors. “We will ultimately be in one building on one side of the road,” he said. “Finally it allows Ty-Crop it keep its headquar- ters in Rosedale,” the company rep said. “We believe these changes will make Rosedale an even Continued: TY-CROP/ p3 Scene Theatre Chilliwack alive with the Sound of Music
Transcript
Page 1: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

$1.25 45930 Airport Road604-795-9104

DLN

869

2

7-12

H M

5

DRIVE A LONG WAY INTO THE FUTUREDRIVE A LONG WAY INTO THE FUTURETHE ALL-NEW THE ALL-NEW

2012 2012 CHEVROLET

$36,545

from ...................$41,545 msrpClean EnergyVehicle Credit ...- $5,000

ROLET CCHEVROLETCHEVROLET

Jennifer FeinbergThe Progress

It’s the first time a national conven-tion of Elks and Royal Purple has ever been held in Chilliwack — coinciding with the 100th anniversary of the Elks of Canada.

“I feel very proud,” said Jerry Wernicke, national president of the Elks of Canada, who has carried the title of Grand Exalted Ruler for the past year.

Anywhere from 500 to 600 Elks and Royal Purple members will be arriving in Chilliwack starting this weekend for the annual convention, July 24-26 at the Landing Sports Centre.

The economic spinoffs could be con-siderable, Wernicke said.

“It will bring recognition to Chilliwack and the Fraser Valley with

a lot of extra people in town to support local businesses.”

Members of Chilliwack Elks lodge #48 are getting help to mount the convention event with folks from B.C. Elks Region #3 in Delta, White Rock, Cloverdale, Langley and Aldergrove.

Part of the excitement is that the event could generate up to $100,000 for the Elks and Royal Purple Fund for Children, he said. The fund helps youth in need of medical care, with up to $5,000 in grants.

Chilliwack won out over Red Deer, Alberta, in a bid to hold the event here, and part of the reason is that the orga-nization started out in Vancouver back in September 1912, and it seemed a fit-ting tribute, he said.

Visiting Elks will be golfing and visit-ing Minter Gardens before the official opening on Tuesday.

Wernicke is a 30-year member of the Elks, and spent the past seven years on the Grand Executive. He spent 40 years as a sailor and just retired from his role as chief engineer with Seaspan Marine of North Vancouver.

“I’ve always been obligated to serve,” he said. “I enjoy volunteering and help-ing children.”

His year as national leader has seen him personally raise $11,470 for the Children’s Fund by selling a pin with a stylized tugboat on it to honour his marine career.

“I hope to bring it up to $12,000 during the convention,” he said. “My motto has been, ‘Sailing into the future with integrity and pride’ and I hope to impress this upon the membership after my term is over.”

[email protected]/chwkjourno

19 3 27News

PipelineAging oil pipeline too

risky, say critics

Sports

SwimmingSharing the synchro

spotlight

Y O U R C O M M U N I T Y N E W S PA P E R • F O U N D E D I N 1 8 9 1 • W W W. T H E P R O G R E S S . C O M • T H U R S D AY, J U LY 1 9 , 2 0 1 2

TheChilliwackProgress

Thursday

Jerry Wernicke, national president of the Elks of Canada, has personally raised $11,470 for the Children’s Fund by selling these pins. JENNA HAUCK/ PROGRESS

Elks converge for centennial in Chilliwack

Ty-Crop rezonings go throughJennifer FeinbergThe Progress

Zoning changes for the Ty-Crop expansion in Rosedale sailed through Tuesday night at Chilliwack city hall.

It took about two hours to cycle through three separate public hearings and public commentary before a crowd of about 60 in council chambers.

Neighbours complained about the lack of con-sultation by the long-time local company, as well as lack of trust, excessive noise, traffic concerns, and more.

Some expressed fears the Ty-Crop expansion was already “changing the face” of Rosedale, that it had been “defaced” while another said it had “got-ten out of hand.”

One said Rosedale was “not a town anymore but an industrial park.”

Rezoning and official community plan changes for five properties owned by Ty-Crop Investments were given second, and third readings, and final approval in a unanimous vote of Chilliwack coun-cil.

“It will move us into the modern world,” said Ty-Crop co-owner Gary Teichrob, describing the expansion and modernization plan.

The changes will mean “progress and improve-ments” for their operations, making things “qui-eter and greener” with new offices, parking space, equipment storage and sewage treatment plant.

The owner wanted to clear up any confusion.“This has nothing to do with the agricultural

property south of the railway tracks,” Teichrob said. “This is all north of the railway.”

Some critics were already worried about pro-posals coming forth to remove land from the Agricultural Land Reserve.

But that was not on the agenda Tuesday night.“Modern manufacturing facilities are built like

this,” Teichrob said, referring to operations that will be brought indoors.

“We will ultimately be in one building on one side of the road,” he said.

“Finally it allows Ty-Crop it keep its headquar-ters in Rosedale,” the company rep said. “We believe these changes will make Rosedale an even

Continued: TY-CROP/ p3

Scene

TheatreChilliwack alive with the Sound of Music

Page 2: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

Thursday, July 19, 2012 The Chilliwack Progress2 www.theprogress.com

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Page 3: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

The Chilliwack Progress Thursday, July 19, 2012 www.theprogress.com 3

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Jeff NagelBlack Press

Opponents of Kinder Morgan’s plan to twin its Trans Mountain pipeline through B.C. and load much more crude oil onto tankers say a scathing U.S. report on a 2010 spill there is a wake-up call on the risks the existing line poses.

NDP politicians and B.C. environmental groups have seized on U.S. regula-tors’ findings in the spill at an oil pipeline owned by Enbridge Inc. into Michigan’s Kalamazoo River as grounds to ter-minate the company’s pro-

posed Northern Gateway pipeline to Kitimat.

But Sheila Muxlow, a Chilliwack-based activist with the anti-twinnning Pipe Up Network, hopes Kalamazoo also galvanizes B.C. opposition to Kinder Morgan’s project.

“The same risks that are raised with the transport of tar sands along an Enbridge pipeline exist for the Kinder Morgan pipeline and are even escalated because they’re using a 60-year-old pipeline,” she said.

In Michigan, an aging pipeline burst and the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board blamed

Enbridge for a 17-hour delay in acting to contain the breach, which spilled 840,000 gallons of oil sands crude into the Kalamazoo River and triggered a $767-million cleanup.

B.C. Premier Christy Clark, accused of fence-sitting and failing to take a stand on Northern Gateway, called the Kalamazoo spill response “disgraceful” and pledged B.C. will inter-vene in National Energy Board hearings to raise its concerns with Enbridge’s $5.5-billion project there.

Federal NDP leader Thomas Mulcair and B.C. NDP leader Adrian Dix

both denounced Northern Gateway last week and called on Ottawa and the province to scrap it in light of the Kalamazoo report.

Muxlow said Kinder Morgan’s plans have in comparison run under the radar, but added she expects equally vocal oppo-sition to build.

“There are major risks for all of us living along the pipeline – not just environ-mentally but economically as well.”

Critics like Muxlow claim increased shipments of bitu-men from the oil sands are raising the risk of a pipe-line rupture because the

heavy crude is mixed with more corrosive diluent (a solvent) to help it flow.

Muxlow said she’s disap-pointed Dix and the provin-cial NDP have yet to take a stand against the Trans Mountain expansion.

“It is a little irrespon-sible,” she said. “This is a real issue. It’s happening right now – we’re all at risk. It would make sense for hopeful political parties to take a position.”

Muxlow wants Kinder Morgan to scrap the $4-bil-lion expansion pipeline and agree to limit the use of the existing pipe to light crude or refined petroleum.

She said the Pipe Up group represents con-cerned people from Hope to Langley, including farmers and other residents wor-ried about potential impacts – including reduced prop-erty values – due to the pipeline corridor.

Kinder Morgan spokes-person Lexa Hobenshield rejected suggestions the existing pipeline is unsafe.

“Age doesn’t necessar-ily relate to the condition of the pipeline,” she said, adding the company has a “robust” pipeline integrity process in place.

News

Aging oil pipeline is too risky, say critics

Robert FreemanThe Progress

Chilliwack-Hope MLA Gwen O’Mahony has been named the NDP’s skills training critic, an issue that she campaigned on dur-ing the April byelection.

NDP Leader Adrian Dix announced O’Mahony’s appointment Wednesday along with MLA Joe Trasolini who won the byelec-tion for the NDP in Port Moody-Coquitlam.

Most NDP MLAs will see no change in their roles, Dix said, but he wanted to make changes that will give O’Mahony and Trasolini “roles in making the case for change” in the next provincial election.

He said O’Mahony “campaigned on skills training in the Chilliwack-Hope byelection, and this issue will be a key element in our approach to the economy.”

He said Trasolini, given his business background, will have “a key role ... in our dialogue with the business community on growing investment in the province.”

The other announced changes are:Shane Simpson becomes labour critic; Raj

Chouhan takes on multiculturalism, immi-gration and human rights; Doug Donaldson becomes mining critic; Maurine Karagianis takes on the Liquor Distribution Branch; Spencer Chandra Herbert adds the BC Lottery Corporation to his duties as tourism critic; Mable Elmore takes on the ICBC and deputy critic for finance; Doug Routley adds deputy health critic to his duties as critic for citizens’ services; and Sue Hammell becomes critic for women’s issues, child care and early leaning.

Dix said the party is taking a “positive” approach to politics aimed at “re-engaging” the 1.7 million eligible voters who did not vote in the last election.

B.C. voters go to the polls next on May 14, 2013.

[email protected]/paperboy2

O’Mahony given NDP critic rolegreater place. We love it and will work with

our neighbours to accommodate that goal.”The fact that the zoning changes were

effectively being made retroactively to bring some existing ones into compliance, was a source of annoyance for some in council chambers that night.

OCP changes shifted the designation from residential to industrial, and were con-sidered “housekeeping” to “correctly reflect current uses on the properties,” according to a staff report.

One person requested a longer sidewalk from the school to the playground. Some were incensed about changes made on-site before they were officially approved coun-cil.

Several were dismayed by the demolition of heritage houses, including Yale Road resi-dent Roger Tweedle.

“The village east of McGrath is being assaulted by demolition,” said Tweedle.

Rosedale’s historic buildings are the basis of its character.

“We can’t afford to lose a single one of them,” he said, displaying a photo of the Mercer House, which has been on that spot since 1900.

Most area residents who spoke were unconvinced of the positive aspects.

One speaker said he didn’t see anything “good” for Rosedale to come of it.

“I didn’t purchase my home to live in a commercial/industrial zone. I moved to Rosedale because of the mountain views. It’s changing rapidly.”

One resident said his “quality of life” was “shot” after being awoken every day at 1:30 a.m. by truck traffic.

“So I have a lot of anger,” he said. A sewage treatment plant was not just

“proposed,” said McGrath resident Susan Payne, it was already put in place.

“I don’t feel any of the bylaws have been followed,” she added, saying Ty-Crop may have put the “cart before the horse,” in terms of creating additional parking space before the rezoning was approved.

Scott Mason, one of three Ty-Crop own-ers present at the meeting, said although the company could not have disclosed its plans earlier, until the expansion plans were “firm,” he said they are “always there to talk to neighbours.”

“Did we disclose all the way? No we didn’t, not until our plans were firm.”

He said Ty-Crop reps feel “badly” that some people feel they are “changing the culture” of Rosedale for the worse.

“Down the road I hope people will agree it’s a better community than it is today,” he said.

Coun. Jason Lum said “change is inevi-table,” after the vote, but voiced a desire for the owners and neighbours to continue to talk out any issues.

“I think this plan is supportable,” he said, adding that a move out of Chilliwack for

Ty-Crop, with the risk of losing 300 jobs, was not one he wanted council to take.

Mayor Sharon Gaetz said she agreed with her fellow council members that it wasn’t easy to pick up and move an established industrial operation.

“Frankly I’m glad you’re staying in Rosedale,” she said to Ty-Crop officials. “You’re part of the fabric in Rosedale.”

But she also had a few words of advice.“The people who came out had strong

things to say about the process,” Gaetz said. “You learned along the way.”

But from here on in, the “eyes” of Rosedale will be on Ty-Crop, and they will remain vigi-lant, “to ensure all the zoning bylaws and all the rules will be followed to the letter of the law,” she said.

[email protected]/CHWKjourno

TY-CROP from Front

“The village east of McGrath is being assaulted by demolition,” said Roger Tweedle of Rosedale, showing a photo of the Mercer house built in 1900. JENNIFER FEINBERG/ PROGRESS

Continued: PIPELINE/ p6

‘Eyes of Rosedale will be on Ty-Crop’

Page 4: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

Thursday, July 19, 2012 The Chilliwack Progress4 www.theprogress.com

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Page 5: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

The Chilliwack Progress Thursday, July 19, 2012 www.theprogress.com 5

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Robert FreemanThe Progress

A 26-year-old Chilliwack man was stabbed repeatedly early Saturday morning in the 46200-block of Yale Road in downtown Chilliwack.

A 27-year-old Agassiz man was also attacked in the down-town area outside the old Paramount movie theatre at about 2 a.m. that same day.

But police don’t believe the

two attacks are related.“It’s an avenue we’ll con-

sider, but it’s too early in the investigation to link them in any way,” RCMP Const. Tracy Wolbeck said Wednesday.

Police said the stabbing vic-tim and his friends were walk-ing along Yale Road at about 3:40 a.m. Saturday when they came upon three men.

“After a brief discussion, the three other men attacked the victim stabbing him several

times,” Wolbeck said.The victim is cooperating

with police, she said, but wit-nesses to the attack are still being sought by RCMP inves-tigators.

“This was a very serious incident and we are looking for any witnesses who may have seen something that night,” she said.

Police said the victim of the earlier attack suffered “signifi-cant” head injuries and could

not initially provide many details of the attack.

But investigators are hop-ing his memory improves as he recovers, or witnesses may come forward with more infor-mation.

Anyone with information about the two incidents is asked to call the Chilliwack RCMP at 604-792-4611 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS.

[email protected]/paperboy2

NewsTwo brutal attacks in downtown Chilliwack

Page 6: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

Thursday, July 19, 2012 The Chilliwack Progress6 www.theprogress.com

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More sensitive tools now exist to monitor pipeline safety, she said.

Nor are all portions of the pipe-line 60 years old.

A new tunnel beneath the

Fraser River was drilled in 2002 to improve the pipeline’s chances of withstanding an earthquake, Hobenshield said.

She said claims diluent increase the risk of corrosion are misinfor-mation.

“Pipelines transporting diluted bitumen are not at any greater risk of corrosion than pipelines carry-ing any other kind of petroleum product.”

Kinder Morgan has yet to iden-tify the exact route of its pipeline

expansion, which would increase Trans Mountain’s capacity from 300,000 barrels per day now to 750,000 by 2017.

That would bring about 300 oil tankers a year through Burrard Inlet to load at the Westridge Terminal in Burnaby.

Kinder Morgan has had past oil spills on land, including a pipeline

breach in 2007 in Burnaby and at a tank farm in Abbotsford earlier this year.

The existing pipeline route runs through the Lower Mainland on the south side of the Fraser River before crossing at Surrey and running through Coquitlam and Burnaby.

NewsGroup argues Kalamazoo lessons extend to Kinder MorganPIPELINE from p3

Page 7: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

Jennifer FeinbergThe Progress

A decision to can-cel question period at Cultus Lake Park Board meetings is not sitting well with locals.

Park Board commis-sioners voted 4:3 at a recent meeting against a motion to reconsid-er the suspension of public question period, according to residents at the meeting.

It’s evidence of a board divided on this matter, said resident Gary Lister.

Even Cultus Lake Community Association asked the board to reinstate question period.

“This is a sign that quite a few people are not happy with the board’s in-camera deci-sion,” said Lister.

The controversial decision to cancel the public question part of the meetings, was made by the board at an in-camera meet-ing on June 27, which means the public is not privy to the details of why, and commission-ers are not at liberty to discuss it, until it’s been “declassified,” accord-ing to Park Board CAO Ron Campbell.

Lister sees a num-ber of thorny issues arising from the move. Not the least of which is the board may be in breach of their bylaws for cancelling it.

What it also means is that “there is no recourse for the resi-dents of Cultus Lake to hold Chilliwack elected commissioners accountable for their behaviour.”

Increasingly Lakers

want answers.“Many members of

the public want ques-tion period and view it as way that their voice can be heard,” said Rick Williamson, a resident and retired accountant, who has been very critical of the park board’s past financial reporting pro-cedures.

He edits an e-mailed newsletter sent out to lake residents who want his take on a range of Cultus Park Board issues.

The board also decided to write a letter to residents or leaseholders explain-ing its rationale for the decision, but it has not been made public, and it’s not clear if it’s been released.

“Cancellation raises the obvious questions: What are they afraid of and what are they try-ing hide?” Williamson asked. “If the Board truly wants to be open and transparent with the public that they were elected to serve, they should immedi-ately re-instate ques-tion period.”

C o m m i s s i o n e r s who voted against the motion to reconsider the decision to cancel question period includ-ed Owen Skonberg, Charlotte Hall, Sacha Peter and Carlton Toews.

Williamson said he requested an explana-tion from the board for the move.

“I know other Lakers have done the same. I heard back from Commissioner (Carleton) Toews, who responded in part:

‘The CLPB made a decision that our com-munity needs to be respectful and consid-erate.

‘The vast major-ity of the community of Cultus Lake and Chilliwack support the CLPB and CL Staff. CLP has a gifted staff team and CAO. ‘It is

important that in writ-ten communication and public comments that respect and integ-rity is at the forefront.’

Lister said the can-cellation decision just makes things worse.

“If they have a prob-lem with how the pub-lic is responding to them then they need to deal with that issue. Shutting done ques-tion period is not the answer.”

[email protected]/CHWKjourno

The Chilliwack Progress Thursday, July 19, 2012 www.theprogress.com 77/

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Cultus Park Board shuts down question period‘Cancellation raises the obvious questions: What are they afraid of and what are they trying hide?’ says resident

Page 8: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

Thursday, July 19, 2012 The Chilliwack Progress8 www.theprogress.com

ofView

PointsProgressThe ChilliwackThe Chilliwack Progress is published by Black Press Group Ltd., every Tuesday, Thursday

and Friday at 45689 Spadina Ave., Chilliwack. The Progress is a member of the Canadian Circulation’s Audit Board, Canadian Community Newspaper Association, British Columbia and Yukon Community Newspaper Association and B.C. Press Council.

VICTORIA – By the time you read this I should be in Vanderhoof, the geographical centre of B.C., to visit relatives.

Born in the Okanagan, raised in the Peace country and working for 20 years in Metro Vancouver, I’ve driven from one end of the prov-ince to the other more times than I can count.

A similar trip last year began just as a huge mudslide was cleared near Chilliwack. Other drives have featured mid-summer hail piled 10 centimetres deep on the Coquihalla, a near miss between two moose in the Pine Pass, plus the usual blizzards and hundreds of traffic jams for construction, accidents and growing urban vol-ume delays.

This time I’ve got a new tool on board, the mobile version of DriveBC.ca on my BlackBerry. Launched two years, ago, the

mobile site has taken off with the surging popularity of smart-phones.

In the past year, DriveBC’s online traffic averaged 1.2 million visits a

month, about half to the five-year-old desktop site and half from mobile users. It’s by far the most popular B.C. government website.

I asked DriveBC technical leader Nainesh Agarwal for these stats, and he said even

he was surprised by the surge in mobile traffic in recent months. But trying out the mobile site, it’s easy to see the appeal.

With a few clicks, the phone displays incident reports and web camera images for my chosen

route. Webcams have been added steadily all over the province, and now watch 18 key locations on Vancouver Island, 93 in the Lower Mainland, 73 in the Southern Interior, 35 in the North and 13 at Canada-U.S. border crossings. At a glance, you can check any-thing from the traffic at the Lions Gate Bridge to the lineup for the Skidegate ferry on Haida Gwaii.

Most pictures update every two minutes, offering a real-time look at traffic, weather and road condi-tions. A recent addition is “replay the day,” which shows the last 24 hours of pictures in a few seconds.

Another new feature is an email alert that can be customized. You can subscribe to a particular region or highway and receive notices as soon as they are posted to the DriveBC network. And of course there is an @drivebc Twitter feed, where between 6:30 a.m. and

midnight, staff update conditions and respond to inquiries. (Major events are automatically tweeted overnight.)

Verified reports are fed from highways staff and contractors all over the province and co-ordinated through the provincial highways condition centre in the Lower Mainland. It’s become a primary source of information for radio and TV traffic and news reporters around B.C.

The mobile service now has an option for drivers to report new problems they encounter. After determining your smartphone’s location, the site displays the name and phone number of the local maintenance contractor who can take the report.

For those who haven’t joined the smartphone era, there is an old-fashioned option. Dialing 5-1-1 any-where in the province gives access

to a toll-free line that connects to recorded DriveBC messages.

Agarwal said use of that service has been declining as phones with web access become more popular. The 5-1-1 service also requires you to use the keypad to select your route from a numerical list, so driv-ers would have to pull over rather than breach the new restrictions on using handheld devices while driving.

The 5-1-1 system still gets surges of heavy use during major events like the recent flooding. The plan is to upgrade the system to allow voice recognition, so drivers can use headsets to get updates on the move.

Tom Fletcher is legislative reporter and columnist for Black Press and BCLocalnews.com.

[email protected]

Hitting the roads guided by DriveBCBC VIEWS

Monster apples create concern

Apples have a long-standing reputation as a healthy food. An apple a day keeps the doctor away, as Benjamin Franklin is said to have put it.

But the Frankenstein complex has an equally long, if not longer history. That’s the nickname given to the fear that man’s messing around with the building blocks of life will eventually create something that will destroy humanity.

Bring the two together and you’ve got a problem. It’s hard to blame the B.C. Fruit Growers for their concern that the introduction of a genetically modified apple could ruin the reputation of the Okanagan as a source of high-quality, healthy fruit.

And while Neal Carter, whose company has used gene modification to create a non-browning apple, certainly has his eye on the commercial return while extolling the benefits of his Arctic apples, there is one benefit that stands out.

And, coincidentally, it’s the same as what made the apple’s reputation. Most people don’t care about a little browning, but it is also indicative of a breakdown of the apple’s nutritional factors.

Take away the browning, and the vitamins and antioxidants stay.So, on one hand, we have growers wanting to preserve the

reputation of their product as a healthy food and on the other we have an apple that retains its nutritional value for longer. Anyone see some common ground here?

Consider too that growers have been practising genetic modification for centuries, albeit by the much slower selection and grafting methods.

Caution is a good thing, especially when it comes to monkeying with genes. Extensive testing, too, is a good thing.

But allowing caution to grow into an unreasoning fear is never a good thing. If turning off an enzyme can preserve the best aspects of an apple, it shouldn’t be thrown away on account of ancient fear.

~ Black Press

Tom

FLETCHER

2007 WINNER

www.theprogress.comPublished at 45860 Spadina Avenue, Chilliwack, B.C. V2P 6H9Main Phone: 604-702-5550Classifieds: 604-702-5555 • Circulation: 604-702-5558• Advertising Fax: 604-792-4936Advertising e-mail: [email protected] e-mail: [email protected]

Robert Freeman, 604-702-5571 / [email protected]

Jennifer Feinberg, 604-702-5573 / [email protected]

Katie Bartel, 604-702-5575 / [email protected]

ProgressThe Chilliwack

publisher

Liz

Lynch604.702.5560 • [email protected]

editor

Greg

Knill604.702.5570 • [email protected]

Eric J. Welsh, 604-702-5572 / [email protected] Hauck, photojournalist / 604-702-5576, [email protected]

EditorialStaff:

ContactUs: B.C. & YUKON COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER

ASSOCIATION

GOLDNEWSPAPER EXCELLENCE

B.C. & YUKCOMMUNNEWSPAP

ASSOCIAT

NEWSPAEXCELLE

KON NITY PER TION

APER ENCE

RAESIDE

Page 9: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

The Chilliwack Progress Thursday, July 19, 2012 www.theprogress.com 9

Come and enjoy the Fraser Valley’s most accessible waterslides, with no stairs for you to worry about!

Ride the Black Hole, tube the Rapids River Ride or enjoy our gigantic Hot Tub! All that, plus parking and HEATEDHEATED water on all the slides!

Just 10 minutes East of Chilliwackat Exit 135 in Bridal Falls.

1-888-883-88521-888-883-8852www.bridalfallswaterpark.com

OPENOPENDaily from 10am till 6pm

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Sales 604-792-8061rrs TM*see store for details. O.A.Cwww.wagnerappliances.ca

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Sale prices on Danby Air Conditioners

• No water buckets to empty• Non ozone depleting refrigerant *limited quantities, see store for details.

WriteReaders

ProgressThe Chilliwack

The Chilliwack Progress welcomes letters to the editor, but reserves the right to edit for brevity, clarity and legality.All letters must be signed and include the writer’s phone number (for verification purposes only)

Email: [email protected] • Online: www.theprogress.comMail to: Attention: Editor, 45860 Spadina Ave., Chilliwack B.C. V2P 6H9

Questionof the week:

Last week: Do you like the changes made to Chilliwack’s transit system?

Yes: 13% No: 86%

This week: Will the Ty-Crop expansion be good for Rosedale?

Register your opinion online at: www.theprogress.com

Online poll

Transit worse than beforeYou have got to be kidding me!

I did not think it was possible to take a dinosaur, archaic, dysfunc-tional transit system that may have worked 20 years ago, but has been a nightmare for long suffering bus users for at least the past 12-15 years and make it worse — but you did.

What were you people think-ing when you came up with this disastrous plan which now makes it harder than ever for people to get anywhere? The only thing I can think of is ridership will go down because, as always, the system does not work and then maybe those of us who have to rely on public transportation will just keep walking or stay home and then City Council can say we do not need any more buses because not enough people are using them.

Then, to put the icing on the cake, I read several articles in both our local papers just prior to the implementation of this fiasco complimenting our council for bringing big city transit improve-ments and patting themselves on the back for the wonderful job they have done. Gee, thanks!

Bravo to Owen Delane for his excellent letter ‘Bus service changes blasted’ in the Chilliwack Progress on July 10. He was bang on in his comments and I have just a few more to add.

First of all, please look at the new bus schedule. The No. 4 bus

states a bus connection at Tyson and “Wandson” — I do believe they mean Tyson and Watson as I live in this area, but to a new-comer or tourist they are going to have a heck of a time trying to find “Wandson.” Does anyone check these things before they go out?

Secondly, there are several fake bus stops all over Chilliwack and Sardis that buses have not stopped at since I moved here 12 and a half years ago. My daugh-ter and I learned this the hard way by waiting at many of them in truly horrific weather condi-tions only to be told by bus driv-ers that buses haven’t stopped there for years. I called the Chilliwack Transit System years ago to inquire why all these bus stops that were not really bus stops were not removed. I was informed it was up to the City of Chilliwack to do that and it simply had not been done. That’s not very nice for the people left stranded.

Next, I want to comment on the ludicrous statement I read in the local paper that 70 per cent of the people in Chilliwack live within five minutes of Vedder and Yale Roads. Perhaps, if they own a car, but for the vast major-ity of people I know it is a very long walk in the blazing heat or freezing cold or on snow and ice-covered sidewalks. Carrying loads of groceries or whatever

just adds to the fun. Many of us (I feel like the great unwashed) who have to rely on transit do not qualify for Taxi-Savers and can-not afford a cab every time we need to go out.

To say they have increased the hours on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights is, as Mr. Delane clearly pointed out in his letter, totally false as this has been the situation for years.

Finally, there is still no bus service on holidays — we bus people don’t need to do anything anyway.

I hope before I die this town will actually bring in an express bus or preferably light rail to Abbotsford, Langley, Surrey and Vancouver so we can get out of town, get our chores done and maybe even have some fun.

I have come to the conclusion I can get nowhere fast or easily so I may as well forget about it. I can only hope that kind friends and neighbours might help me out once in awhile but that means more cars on the road and being an annoyance, doesn’t it?

I cannot give City Council a pat on the back for this transit mess but my heart goes out to all my fellow bus riders who were hoping for vast improvements that would make our lives a little easier only to find sheer disap-pointment and anger at the lack of consideration afforded us.

Colleen FrankChilliwack

I’m so sad to say that the Paramount Theatre has little chance of survival.

It’s all to do with money - as usual, someone wants to pay as little as possible. The owner of the adjacent building has offered to tear down the theatre for the city. Why? The cost and engineering headache is significantly less to tear down both.

Consider the ease of smashing both rather than

having to be careful with the Paramount right next door. The owner who damages an adjacent prop-erty is liable for those damages. The accounting is elementary but the logistics of having to careful is much more advanced.

I really hope enough people realize what’s being thrown away and why.

Love to see the Paramount Theatre conserved, Wendy Power

Would love to see Paramount Theatre conserved

A company with great service that isn’t just after moneyMy mother Anne Unger, 92

years, was having trouble with the hearing aids supplied by company X. She didn’t get satisfaction to say the least after a year and a half. Money lost. The hearing aids cost is between $4,000 and $5,000.

I brought her to Connect Hearing on Mary Street in Chilliwack where she was treated with professional and personal respect with a friendly and caring

attitude by Linda Reavie.My mother passed away about

three months later. Six months after the purchase of the hear-ing aids I brought them back so that someone without funds could use them. I was told that had I brought them in within three months I would have received a refund.

Shortly after, I received a phone call that a full refund would be

issued even though I was well over the three-month limit. Wow!

First the great service that Linda Reavie had given, then a company that isn’t just after money.

I would recommend Connect Hearing and commend them for their actions. A company that has a sense of pride and deserves respect. A quality that is not com-mon today.

Bob Unger, Chilliwack

Page 10: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

Thursday, July 19, 2012 The Chilliwack Progress10 www.theprogress.com

PAPER TO INSERT DEALER TAG HERE

TMThe Hyundai nam

es, logos, product names, feature nam

es, images and slogans are tradem

arks owned by H

yundai Auto C

anada Corp. †Finance offers available O

.A.C

. from H

yundai Financial Services based on a new 2012 Elantra Touring G

L 5-Speed Manual/2013 Sonata G

L Autom

atic/2012 Tucson L 5-Speed Manual/2012 Santa Fe G

L 2.4 Premium

Pkg. with an annual finance rate of 0%

/0%/0%

/0% for 48/48/48/48

months. B

i-weekly paym

ent is $154/$222/$174/$241. No dow

n payment is required. C

ost of Borrow

ing is $0/$0/$0/$0. Finance offers include Delivery and D

estination of $1,495/$1,565/$1,760/$1,760. Registration, insurance, PPSA

, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. Delivery and destination charge includes freight, P.D

.E., dealer admin fees and a full tank of gas. Financing exam

ple: 2013 Sonata G

L Autom

atic for $22,995 at 0% per annum

equals $222 bi-weekly for 48 m

onths for a total obligation of $22,995. Cash price is $22,995. C

ost of Borrow

ing is $0. Example price includes D

elivery and Destination of $1,565. R

egistration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. D

elivery and destination charge includes freight, P.D.E., dealer adm

in fees and a full tank of gas. †

Prices for models show

n (after deducting price adjustment): 2012 Elantra Touring G

LS Manual/2013 Sonata Lim

ited/2012 Tucson Limited AW

D/2012 Santa Fe 3.5 Lim

ited AWD

is $18,644/$28,064/$30,109/$32,059. Delivery and D

estination charges of $1,495/$1,565/$1,760/$1,760 included. Registration, insurance, PPSA

, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. Delivery and

destination charge includes freight, P.D.E., dealer adm

in fees and a full tank of gas. Fuel consum

ption for 2012 Elantra Touring GL 5-Speed M

anual(HW

Y 6.4L/100KM; C

ity 8.9L/100KM)/2012 Sonata G

L Auto (H

WY 5.7L/100KM

; City 8.7L/100KM

)/2012 Tucson L 5-speed (HW

Y 7.4L/100KM; C

ity 10.1L/100KM)/2012 Santa Fe G

L 2.4 Auto (H

WY 7.2L/100KM

, City 10.4L/100KM

) are based on Energuide. Actual fuel efficiency

may vary based on driving conditions and the addition of certain vehicle accessories. Fuel econom

y figures are used for comparison purposes only. ‡Price adjustm

ents are calculated against the vehicle’s starting price. Price adjustments of $3,699/$2,569/$3,764/$4,464 available on 2012 Elantra Touring G

L 5-Speed Manual/2013 Sonata G

L Autom

atic/2012 Tucson L 5-speed Manual/2012 Santa Fe G

L 2.4 Premium

Pkg. Price adjustm

ents applied before taxes. Offer cannot be com

bined or used in conjunction with any other available offers. O

ffer is non-transferable and cannot be assigned. No vehicle trade-in required. †

‡Offers available for a lim

ited time, and subject to change or cancellation w

ithout notice. See dealer for complete details. D

ealer may sell for less. Inventory is lim

ited, dealer order may be required. ^

Based on N

atural R

esource Canada’s 2012 ecoEnergy aw

ard for most fuel efficient full-size car.

Governm

ent 5-Star Safety Ratings are part of the U

.S. National H

ighway Traffic Safety A

dministration’s (N

HTSA’s) N

ew C

ar Assessm

ent Program (w

ww

.SaferCar.gov). ††H

yundai’s Com

prehensive Limited W

arranty coverage covers most vehicle com

ponents against defects in workm

anship under normal use and m

aintenance conditions.

HyundaiCanada.com5-year/100,000 km Comprehensive Limited Warranty5-year/100,000 km Powertrain Warranty5-year/100,000 km Emission Warranty

ADVANTAGE

THE

HYUNDAI LOWERPRICES FINANCING

FOR UP TO 48 MONTHS

0%†

0 %†

FINANCING FOR 48 MONTHS

NOW

$15,995INCLUDES AIR CONDITIONING

WAS

$19,694

HIGHWAY 5.7L/100 KM

50 MPG

HIGHWAY 6.4L/100 KM

44 MPGINCLUDES: AIR CONDITIONING WITH GLOVE BOX COOLER ■ HEATED FRONT SEATS & MIRRORS ■ 6 AIRBAGS WITH FRONT ACTIVE HEAD RESTRAINTS ■ CRUISE CONTROL ■ REMOTE KEYLESS ENTRY ■ POWER WINDOWS, DOORS, LOCKS & MIRRORS

ELANTRA TOURING GL 5-SPEED MANUAL. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

INCLUDES: AIR CONDITIONING ■ HEATED FRONT SEATS & MIRRORS ■ 6 AIRBAGS WITH FRONT ACTIVE HEAD RESTRAINTS ■ CRUISE CONTROL ■ XM RADIO WITH BLUETOOTH® HANDS FREE PHONE SYSTEMSONATA GL AUTO. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

INCLUDES: AIR CONDITIONING ■ EZ LANE CHANGE ASSIST ■ DOWNHILL BRAKE CONTROL AND HILLSTART ASSIST ■ MOTOR DRIVEN POWER STEERING ■ REAR SPOILER ■ iPOD®/USB/MP3 AUXILIARY INPUT JACKSTUCSON L 5-SPEED MANUAL. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

THE MOST FUEL-EFFICIENT FULL-SIZED CAR – NATURAL RESOURCE CANADA’S 2012 ECOENERGY VEHICLE AWARD^

AWARDED THE HIGHEST GOVERNMENTCRASH SAFETY RATING

U.S. NATIONAL HIGHWAY TRAFFIC SAFETY ADMINISTRATION

SANTA FE PREMIUM PKG.2012

2012 ELANTRA TOURING GL

2013SONATA

2012 TUCSON

INCLUDES: AIR CONDITIONING ■ POWER SUNROOF ■ HEATED FRONT SEATS & MIRRORS ■ CRUISE CONTROL ■ XM RADIO WITH BLUETOOTH® HANDS FREE PHONE SYSTEM ■ 18" ALLOY WHEELSSANTA FE GL 2.4 PREMIUM PKG. DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

HIGHWAY 7.4L/100 KM

38 MPG

HIGHWAY 7.2L/100 KM

39 MPG

NOW

$22,995INCLUDES AUTO & AIR

WAS

$25,564

0 %†

FINANCING FOR 48 MONTHS

0 %†

FINANCING FOR 48 MONTHS

NOW

$17,995INCLUDES AIR CONDITIONING

WAS

$21,759

0 %†

FINANCING FOR 48 MONTHS

NOW

$24,995INCLUDES AUTO & AIR

WAS

$29,459

Limited model shown

Limited model shown

Limited model shown

GLS model shown

Mertin Hyundai

45753 Yale Roadnext to the overpass

604-702-1000DLN

3033

7

Get out of the rain or the heat and see every Hyundai model in our

HUGE 10-Car Showroom!

Page 11: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

The Chilliwack Progress Thursday, July 19, 2012 www.theprogress.com 11

IT’S HERE...IT’S HERE...

COME EXPERIENCE ONE TODAY!COME EXPERIENCE ONE TODAY!

2013 HYUNDAI

ELANTRA GT

Limited model shown

2012 HYUNDAI

SANTA FE

DRIVE ONE TODAY!DRIVE ONE TODAY!Limited model sshhhhhhhooooooooLIMITED

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$5,500$5,500

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H M

H19

0% FinancingAvailableup to 72 months

$$9999**

Bi Weekly

0% Financing

$$299299**

//month

2012 HYUNDAI

ACCENT40

CITY MPG

59HWY MPG

based onEnerguide Canada Website

39CITY MPG

56HWY MPG

based onEnerguide Canada Website

STARTING AT$13,299

STARTING AT $19,149

2012 Santa Fe based on GL FWD Automatic trim selling price of $23,759 plus levies and applicable taxes. 2.9% over 84 months with $4500 cash down. 2013 Accent based on 84 month term at 0.9% on approved credit with $0 down payment on a L 5 speed manual. 2013 Elantra GT is based on a GT GL manual not including delivery and destination of $1495.

HUGE SUMMER SAVINGS!!PLUS... 0% FINANCING

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THE

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Page 12: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

Thursday, July 19, 2012 The Chilliwack Progress12 www.theprogress.com

6-12H M7

DLN30337

45753 Yale Road 45753 Yale Road 604-702-1000DLN8692

45930 Airport Road 45930 Airport Road 604-795-9104DLN31024DLNDDLN3DLN3100LN310N 0DLNDLN33DDDLN3N331010DL 10DLNN33102242424244422444

8287 Young Road 8287 Young Road 604-792-8218

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Mertin Full ServiceOIL CHANGECOMPARISON Great Canadian Oil Change Mr. Lube

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* Price includes up to 5L of oil.

Page 13: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

The Chilliwack Progress Thursday, July 19, 2012 www.theprogress.com 13

Enter to win a family pass to the Chilliwack Fair. There are 3 age categories, 0-5 years, 6-9 years, 10-12 years. Deadline for entries is Sunday, Aug. 5, 2012. Winners will be notifi ed by phone. Entries become the property of the Chilliwack Fair and the Chilliwack Progress. Judges decision will be fi nal.

Mail or drop off entries to: The Chilliwack Progress, 45860 Spadina Ave., Chilliwack, BC V2P 6H9

Name: _____________________________________________________________________________Address: __________________________________________________________________________Phone:__________________________________________ Age: _____________________________

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CommunityOutdoor camp

The Great Blue Heron Nature Reserve is offer-ing a camp July 23-27 for ages 10-12. This camp, called Mission: Explore, challenges students to think outside the box, and look for in depth

answers to the beauty that surrounds us. It runs from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. and includes crafts and activities suited to the age.

More info or to reg-ister: 604-823-6603, [email protected], chilli-wackblueheron.com.

Bible schoolJoin the folks at Faith

Baptist Church for a week of Vacation Bible School July 30 to Aug. 3 at 9340 Windsor St. The theme is ‘Rev It Up’ and runs 6 to 8 p.m. each evening.

The bible school is open to children aged five to 12 (parents wel-come) and activities include: Bible stories, music, games, puppets, skits, crafts and snacks. www.faithbc.ca. 604-795-7700.

Page 14: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

Thursday, July 19, 2012 The Chilliwack Progress14 www.theprogress.com

4-45450 Luckakuck Way, Chilliwack 604-858-6911

7-12

H JL

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CHILLIWACK30309

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.com5-09F CF1

Katie BartelThe Progress

While some may think Rotary is just for old people, it’s not.

And nothing speaks to that more clearly than the new Interact Rotary Club starting up in Chilliwack.

The Interact Club, which is a partnership between Chilliwack Rotary and YMCA, is a service club geared for youth between the ages of 12 and 18 that promotes leadership and community involve-ment.

And unlike school-based leadership pro-grams, there is no limit on membership, no selection process, and no criteria beyond age.

“It’s open to anybody,” said Sharon Blaker, member of Chilliwack Rotary.

There are currently 11,000 such clubs world-wide with over 250,000 youth involved. Blaker believes it’s high time Chilliwack had such a club.

Every year the club will be responsible for one community project and one international project. It will be men-tored by Rotary and Rotaract members, but will have its own presi-dent, secretary-treasur-er, board, bank account and committees.

“They’re going to be self-governing and financially indepen-dent,” said Blaker. “They’re going to be the ones setting up the structure and making the decisions for their club. They’re going to learn how to lead and run an organization.”

Something she believes will not only benefit the youth

Wanted: youth to join Rotary

Continued: INTERACT/ p16

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7-12H PBS19

Prices in effect until July 31/12

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www.pioneerbuildingsupplies.comwww.pioneerbuildingsupplies.com604-795-7238 • 45754 Yale Rd W, Chilliwack

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Page 15: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

The Chilliwack Progress Thursday, July 19, 2012 www.theprogress.com 15

SALES EVENTSALES EVENT

Bad credithappens to

good people. We can help.

Free Test

Drives!!

Make No Payments

for 6 Months!!

2011 Nissan Cube SLTech pkg, Like new, save $$$. 5,202kms. stk#N12-040P

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WAS: $21,995 BI-WEEKLY: $138

2011 Dodge Caravan

Stow & go seating. 28,459kms. stk#N12-056P

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2010 Dodge Caravan

Stow & go seating. 57,628kms. stk#N12-049P

Sale $17,997Sale $17,997WAS: $19,995

2010 Kia Soul4U edition. Aff ordable. 59,353kms. stk#N12-050P

Sale $16,997Sale $16,997

WAS: $18,995 BI-WEEKLY: $121

Save on fuel this summer.57,938kms. stk#N12-084A

2010 Nissan Sentra

Auto power group. Great commuter. 53,785kms. stk#N12-061P

Sale $14,497Sale $14,497WAS: $14,995

2010 Nissan Altima 2.5S

Sale $15,990Sale $15,990WAS: $16,995

2009 Nissan Murano SL

AWD, back-up camera, leather, sunroof. 90,545kms. stk#N12-072P

Sale $23,497Sale $23,497WAS: $24,995

2009 Pontiac Vibe

Sunroof, auto, ready to go.64,001kms. stk#N25-3356A

Sale $14,490Sale $14,490WAS: $14,995

2008 BMW 3351

Sport pkg, BC car.66,357kms. stk#N12-034P

Sale $27,997Sale $27,997WAS: $29,995

2007 Honda Civic

Aff ordable reliability.120,570kms. stk#N12-077P

Sale $11,990Sale $11,990WAS: $12,995

2008 Nissan Versa

Great fuel economy, auto. 70,589kms. stk#N12-048P

Sale $10,990Sale $10,990WAS: $11,995

2008 Ford Escape

Sale $16,997Sale $16,997WAS: $17,995

2008 Ford Escape

4x4, low, low kms 68,259kms. stk#N25-4762A

Sale $16,997Sale $16,997WAS: $17,995

2007 Infi nity FX35

AWD, beautiful vehicle74,843kms. stk#N12-068P

Sale $25,497Sale $25,497WAS: $26,995

4x4, local trade-in. Sunroof. 73,351kms. stk#N12-062A

2007 Hummer H3

HX3 edition. 4x4, dual DVD headrests. 75,001kms. stk#N28-6616A

Sale $23,990Sale $23,990WAS: $24,995

2006 Lincoln LS

Fully equipped. Beautiful car. 87,000kms. stk#N23-7911A

Sale $14,997Sale $14,997WAS: $15,995

2006 Dodge Dakota

Local trade. Full load.91,766kms. stk#N29-0616B

Sale $12,497Sale $12,497WAS: $13,995

2006 Ford Escape

4x4, sunroof, great shape.112,228kms. stk#N29-7008A

Sale $12,990Sale $12,990WAS: $13,995

XUV hatch, versatile 4x4133,000kms. stk#N29-0575A

2005 Nissan Altima 3.5S

3.5L, auto, full power group. 145,358kms. stk#N29-2190B

Sale $7,997Sale $7,997WAS: $9,995

2004 GMC Envoy XUV

Sale $9,997Sale $9,997WAS: $11,995

2003 Ford F150 Crew Cab

King ranch edition. 183,765kms. stk#N29-9316B

Sale $10,997Sale $10,997WAS: $12,995

2001 Ford Taurus SEL

Full load, new trade-in.121,020kms. stk#N11-229C

Sale $5,997Sale $5,997WAS: $7,995

DLN31024• FINANCING AVAILABLE • TRADE-INS WELCOME • FINANCING AVAILABLE • TRADE-INS WELCOME • Go to www.mertinnissan.com to view more great used vehicles• Go to www.mertinnissan.com to view more great used vehicles

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Tony JanzenChad Erickson Paul Mertin Jeff Nery Chris Ditty JJ Sidhu

Disclaimer: All Sizzling Summer Sale prices do not include $399 documentation or HST. All B-Weekly Payments are with $0 Down and do include $399 documentation, but do not include HST, On Approved Credit and terms are based on the following: 2005 models are based on a 36 month term @ 8.97%; 2006-07 models are based on a 60 month term @ 7.57%; 2008-09 models are based on a 72 month term @ 6.97%, 2010-2011 models are based on a 84 month term @ 6.97%. Make No Payments for 6 Months is On Approved Credit.

BI-WEEKLY: $219

BI-WEEKLY: $142

BI-WEEKLY: $129 BI-WEEKLY: $138 BI-WEEKLY: $114

BI-WEEKLY: $221 BI-WEEKLY: $88 BI-WEEKLY: $138

BI-WEEKLY: $183

BI-WEEKLY: $138

BI-WEEKLY: $114

BI-WEEKLY: $232

BI-WEEKLY: $113 BI-WEEKLY: $143

BI-WEEKLY: $150BI-WEEKLY: $125

BI-WEEKLY: $121 BI-WEEKLY: $125

Page 16: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

Thursday, July 19, 2012 The Chilliwack Progress16 www.theprogress.com

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• 104-45833 Alexander Ave.604-792-4696

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R O B L I NT R A V E L & C R U I S E

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T_RT

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AFTER 42 YEARS ON MAIN STREET, OUR CHILLIWACK OFFICE HAS MOVED TO:

MIDTOWN PLAZA

104-45833 Alexander Ave.,Chilliwack, B.C. V2P 1L6(BESIDE SAFEWAY DOWNTOWN)

OUR PHONE NO. REMAINS THE SAME • 604.792.4696

Looking for us?

WE’VE MOVED!involved, but also the community.

“It’s going to make our youth more com-munity minded, they’re going to see the positive aspects of volunteer-ing, and they’re going to take ownership of their community,” said Blaker. “We’re building great citizens.”

And for the kids, “it’s going to open up doors for them,” said Blaker. “They can use this on their resume, and it will

connect them with other Rotary opportunities like our scholarships and youth exchange programs.”

An information ses-sion is being held on Sunday, July 22, at the YMCA on Hocking Avenue from 6:30-8:30 p.m. Any parent or youth interested is wel-comed.

For more informa-tion, contact Sharon Blaker at [email protected]

[email protected]/schoolscribe33

Community

INTERACT from p14

Youth will ‘take ownership of their community’

Page 17: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

The Chilliwack Progress Thursday, July 19, 2012 www.theprogress.com 17

#1 – 45690 Yale RoadCHILLIWACKCHILLIWACK X

YALE

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Page 18: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

Thursday, July 19, 2012 The Chilliwack Progress18 www.theprogress.com

PROTECT LIFE!!!

Phone us at 604-795-3091. CHILLIWACK

Abstinence may not be the easiest path to take;but it’s the one that will maintain yourself-respect and you will never regret it.

12-09F PL11e

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MALLFabricland

COTTONWOOD MALL

THE CORPORATION OF THE DISTRICT OF KENTINVITATION TO TENDER

STRUCTURAL RENOVATION OF FORMER FIRE HALL 2012-12

July 12, 2012

August 7, 2012

Friday, August 24, 2012

“STRUCTURAL RENOVATION OF FORMER FIRE HALL 2012-12”

Please Join Us BMO Bank of Montreal® will hold a public mee ng to discuss the reloca on of our Chilliwack Branch from its current loca on at 46115 Yale Road to its new and expanded premises at 8249 Eagle Landing Parkway.

All are welcome to attend.

Tuesday, July 24, 2012 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.Evergreen Hall9291 Corbould StreetChilliwack, BC

We hope you will join us to learn more about what this move will mean for our customers, and how we will assist and prepare individuals and business enterprises for a seamless transi on.

7/12H BMO19

As of July 1st, you can recycle more than 300 different household electrical products such as small appliances, power tools, exercise equipment and sewing machines at one of over 120 ElectroRecycle drop-off locations across B.C.

For a complete list of accepted products or to find a drop-off location near you, visit electrorecycle.ca or call the Recycling Council of BC’s hotline at 1-800-667-4321 or 604-732-9253 in the Lower Mainland.

100+ FREE Drop-Off Locations

Across B.C.www.electrorecycle.ca

Recycle Your Small Electrical Appliances, Power Tools & More

CHILLIWACK30309

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.com5-09F CF1

Community

Help support Strong Roots Ministry this Saturday during a fundraiser to raise money for its mission work being done in the Philippines.

The event includes a car wash, barbecue, bake sale and raffle on July 21 at the Free Reformed Church parking lot (45471 Yale Rd.) from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Joven and Anita Antolin of Strong Roots Ministry have spent the last three years in the Philippines work-ing with underprivi-leged adults and chil-dren.

Over the years, some of the projects they have completed include placing a clean drinking-water system in the village, install-ing an outhouse for the people, working with the children (getting them in school, tutor-ing them, teaching them English, making sure they have clothes and food), working with the adults (teach-ing them dif ferent trades, teaching them English, helping them get food), creating a feeding program in the schools, and setting up and operating a mobile library van through Rotary.

They have also started a program so that Canadians can sponsor children and families in need in the Philippines.

Strong Roots Ministry is always looking for donations of children’s picture books, children’s clothes, softball gloves, money, etc.

For more info, go to www.strong-roots.com.

Strong support this Saturday

Page 19: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

The Chilliwack Progress Thursday, July 19, 2012 www.theprogress.com 19

smileof the

week

Jodie, 23

FAVOURITE FOOD

Butter ChickenButter Chicken

FAVOURITEMOVIE

TedTed

FAVOURITE MUSIC

The Beat 94.5The Beat 94.5

LOVE ABOUT CHILLIWACK

The ViewsThe Views

OCCUPAT ION

Early Childhood EducatorEarly Childhood Educator

C H I L L I W A C K ’ S L A R G E S T L I Q U O R S T O R E !C H I L L I W A C K ’ S L A R G E S T L I Q U O R S T O R E !5 865 V E DDE R RD . 858-35055865 V E DDE R RD . 858-3505

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Scene ProgressThe Chilliwack

Jennifer

Feinberg604.702.5573 • [email protected]

Jennifer FeinbergThe Progress

The hills around Chilliwack are about to echo with The Sound of Music.

The classic Rodgers and Hammerstein musical is being pre-sented by Secondary Characters, July 18-29 at the UFV Chilliwack Theatre.

What’s so rich about The Sound of Music is that it’s based on a true story, says director Randy Newbury, who will also play the role of materialistic uncle Max.

“Of course it’s about the wonderful music, and many say it’s their favourite of all time,” he said.

Except there are some younger audi-ence members who’ve potentially never seen the Sound of Music.

It follows the Von Trapp family on the cusp of Nazi occupa-tion of Austria, all the way to their triumphant trek to freedom in Switzerland.

An information dis-play will be in the the-atre lobby to provide some historical context.

“That makes it an educational experience as well as entertain-ment.”

The well-loved songs stand up through the years: “Do-Re-Mi”, “My

Favourite Things” and “Edelweiss” will be per-formed by a huge cast of children and adults alike, from Chilliwack to Surrey, with a live orchestra.

The youngest player is only five years old.

“The kids are extremely talented. They’re giving it their

all. I’m so amazed at the level of talent com-ing out of this com-munity,” the director gushes.

Theatre has been a thriving artistic con-cern here for a long time, he said, and Chilliwack is “teem-ing” with theatrical and musical talent.

“When you get to work with so many eager new people want-ing to see shows done so well, it makes you want to do even better,” he said.

The way the story of the Sound of Music goes, when a “postu-lant,” which is someone awaiting entry to a

religious order, proves too high-spirited, she is sent to be the govern-ess of seven children, the beloved family of a widowed naval captain.

Maria’s rapport with the kids, along with her generous spirit, cap-tures the heart of the stern captain, and they marry.

Leading the cast is experienced Chilliwack duo of Caroline Davies as postulant Maria Rainer and Darren Guenther portraying Captain von Trapp. Joining them are Sarah Benjamins as the Mother Abbess, Randy Newbury as Max Detweiler, Steffi

Munshaw as Elsa Schraeder, and Ben Buckingham as Rolf Gruber.

The von Trapp children are played by Katie Allinger (Liesl) Connor Ferris (Friedrich) Darby and Jackson Howard (Louisa and Kurt) Sydney and Maya Dombowsky (Brigitta and Marta) and Eden Wedel (Gretl). Choreographer Shelley Wojcik and music direc-tor Nicola Davies, who leads a nine-piece live orchestra. Costumes are designed by Mari Spani and Chrystal Romano, props by Alyson Seale, and light-ing by Gabriel Kirkley.

The Sound of Music July 18-21, 25-28 at 7:30 p.m. July 22, 28, 29 at 2 p.m., with all perfor-mances at the UFV Chilliwack Theatre. Tickets $20 Adults, $15 Student/Senior. July 18 and 19 are Preview Nights: all tickets $12. July 25 is the Sing-A-Long; join the cast for all your favourites! All tickets are $15

Tickets at the Chilliwack Cultural Centre: in person 9:30-5:00, 604-791-SHOW (7469), online at www.chilliwackculturalcentre.ca.

Secondary players present Sound of Music

Seen here with the von Trapp children, Caroline Davies is Maria Rainer in Sound of Music. JENNA HAUCK/ PROGRESS

Some lucky person will be taking their dream horse home this weekend in Chilliwack

The Pacific Association of the Andalusian and Lusitano Horse (PAALH) will once again host the Canadian National Andalusian and Lusitano Show and Fiesta of the Royal

Horse at Chilliwack Heritage Park, July 19 to 21.

The Canadian National Show and Fiesta is a highlight event among own-ers of Iberian horses as well as with the horse-loving crowds.

One of the biggest attractions is the Saturday night ‘Fiesta of the Royal

Horse’ with many talented rider-and-horse combinations that’s always breathtaking.

Thanks to Silver Mist Farms, a purebred Andalusian will be auctioned off during the Fiesta to the highest bidder. Admission by donation. www.paalh.com

Join singer-songwriter Wyckham Porteus who makes his debut at Bozzini’s upstairs lounge, with co-headliner and long-time roots/blues favourite Darren Johnson on July 28.

“This will be a fantastic night,” said organizer Mano Asperakis. “It’s not to be missed.”

Tables from 8 p.m., show at 9:30. Tickets $20. 604-792-0744“This will be the only show of the summer with two hours

of music.”

Riders and horses in harmony at Andalusian show Two hours of music at Bozzini’s

Page 20: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

Thursday, July 19, 2012 The Chilliwack Progress20 www.theprogress.com

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Page 21: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

The Chilliwack Progress Thursday, July 19, 2012 www.theprogress.com 21

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ValleyDLN 8176

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www.valleytoyota.ca • www.valleytoyota.ca • www.valleytoyota.ca • www.valleytoyota.ca • www.valleytoyota.ca • www.valleytoyota.ca • www.valleytoyota.ca • www.valleytoyota.ca

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www.valleytoyota.ca • www.valleytoyota.ca • www.valleytoyota.ca • www.valleytoyota.ca • www.valleytoyota.ca • www.valleytoyota.ca • www.valleytoyota.ca • www.valleytoyota.ca

604.792.1167 • [email protected]

YOUR #1 PRE-OWNED VEHICLE STORE!YOUR #1 PRE-OWNED VEHICLE STORE!

I N V E N T O R Y R E D U C T I O N E V E N T !I N V E N T O R Y R E D U C T I O N E V E N T !

BOTTOM LINE PRICINGBOTTOM LINE PRICING WITH LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTSWITH LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS O.A.C.O.A.C.

TRADETRADEAPPRAISALSAPPRAISALSWELCOME!WELCOME!

LOW RATELOW RATEFINANCING!*FINANCING!*

2010 COROLLA 2009 YARIS 2009 COROLLA S

$13,980 $119 bi-weekly

$99 bi-weekly

$111 bi-weekly

$10,980 $12,9805.99%5.99%OVER 72 MONTH

TERM O.A.C.

$1500 DOWN$1500 DOWNOR EQUIVALENT

TRADE

5.99%5.99%OVER 60 MONTH

TERM O.A.C.

$1500 DOWN$1500 DOWNOR EQUIVALENT

TRADE

5.99%5.99%OVER 48 MONTH

TERM O.A.C.

$1500 DOWN$1500 DOWNOR EQUIVALENT

TRADE

ota ca • www valleytoyota ca • www va

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stk#12944Astk#12944A stk#13038stk#13038 stk#12957Astk#12957A

2010 RAV4 SPORT

$27,888$27,888V6, 4WD, Auto, A/C, Cruise, Power Options, Sunroof, Keyless, Local,

1 Owner, 44500km

RRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUCCCCCCCCCCCCEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!stk#13004Astk#13004A

2009 RAV4 LTD 4WD

$24,980$24,980V6, Auto, Dual A/C, Cruise, Power Options, Leather, Sunroof, Local,

Extended Warranty, 78600km

RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!stk#12887Astk#12887A

2008 RAV4 SPORT 4WD

$19,980$19,980V6, Auto, Power Options, Leather,

Sunroof, Cruise, Local, 99937 km

RREEEDDDDDDDDUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!stk#13228Astk#13228A

2008 HYUNDAI ELANTRA GL

$9,988$9,988Auto, A/C, Power Options, Cruise,

Heated Seats, Locally Owned, 106000km

RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!stk#13173Astk#13173A

2010 TUNDRA TRD D-CAB

$29,980$29,980V8, 4X4, Auto, Dual A/C, Tilt, Cruise, Power Options, Keyless, 65700km

RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!stk#13156Astk#13156A

2008 FORD EDGE LTD

$23,980$23,980V6, 4WD, Auto, Power Options,

Leather, Sunroof, Keyless, Clean, 86000km

RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!stk#12151Astk#12151A

2009 NISSAN CUBE

$12,980$12,980 4Cyl, 6 Speed, A/C, Cruise, Power Options,

Keyless, Local, 1 Owner, 33000km

RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!stk#13048Astk#13048A

2006 CHEVROLET IMPALA LTZ

$6,988$6,988Auto, Power Options, Sunroof,

Alloys, One Owner, 143000km

RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!stk#0286LSAstk#0286LSA

2010 VENZA

$29,980$29,980V6, AWD, Auto, Dual A/C, Cruise, Power Options, Sunroof, Alloys,

Keyless, 15800km

RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!stk#13222Astk#13222A

2008 HIGHLANDER LTD

$29,980$29,9804WD, V6, Auto, Dual A/C, Cruise, Power Options, Leather, Sunroof,

Keyless, Local, 132800km

RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!stk#13131Bstk#13131B

2010 TOYOTA TUNDRA 4WD

$25,980$25,980Auto, A/C, Power Options, Locally Owned, Regular Cab, Short Box,

46900km

RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!stk#13097Astk#13097A

2005 TOYOTA SIENNA CE

$9,980$9,9808 Passenger, V6, Auto, A/C, Tilt, Power Options, Keyless, Tinted,

188220km

RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!stk#13319Astk#13319A

2009 HYUNDAI ACCENT

$9,480$9,4804Cyl, Auto, Tilt, AM/FM/CD, Local,

1 Owner, Accident Free, 54250km

RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!stk#13130Astk#13130A

2007 HYUNDAI ENTOURAGE

$7,980$7,980V6, Auto, Tilt, Power Options,

Keyless, Local, 1 Owner,150400km

RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDUUUUUUUUUUUUUCCCCCCCCCCCEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!stk#12758Astk#12758A

2010 TOYOTA TUNDRA 4WD

$24,980$24,980Auto, A/C, Power Options, Locally Owned, Regular Cab, Long Box,

36700km

RRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDUUUUUUUUUUUUUCCCCCCCCCCCCCCEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD!!!!!!!!!!!!stk#12956Astk#12956A

2005 TOYOTA 4RUNNER

$22,980$22,980V8 Ltd, Auto, Fully Loaded, Locally

Owned, One Owner, Very Clean Vehicle, 111000km

RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!stk#B1357stk#B1357

*Low rate fi nancing available O.A.C.

7/12

H VH

19

Page 22: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

Thursday, July 19, 2012 The Chilliwack Progress22 www.theprogress.com

Community Partner:

GT Hiring Solu ons

Service Providers:

Community Futures South Fraser Buxton Consul ng MCC Paci c Community Resources Society Collège Éducacentre College Western Ins tute for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Amber Educa on Services Ltd.

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Chilliwack Community Services Wishes to express its’ sincere appreciation and gratitude to all

the new Work BC staff, CCS staff, CCS Management, CCS Board of Directors, Contractors, Sponsors and Suppliers that

contributed to the startup and opening of the new

WorkBC – Sardis Employment Services Centre.

Thank you!

With over 25 years experience we have become one of the largest Independent Service Organizat ions in Canada

Monarch Developments Dan & Stefan

Kingma

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Myriad Technologies

Jason Lum

Amar Nabod

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The Chilliwack Progress

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Sips and Sweets

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Myriad is proud to provide technical support and services to WorkBC

Congratulations and Welcome to the Community!

Congratulations and welcome to Chilliwack

ProgressThe Chilliwack

www.theprogress.com45860 Spadina Avenue

604-702-5550

a n d i t s s e r v i c e p r ov i d e r s

C O M M U N I T Y F U T U R E S S O U T H F R AS E R

B U X TO N C O N S U LT I N G

PAC I F I C C O M M U N I T Y R E S O U R C E S S O C I E T Y

C O L L EG E E D U C E NT R E C O L L EG E

W E ST E R N I N ST I T U T E f o r t h e D E A F a n d H A R D

O F H E A R I N G

A M B E R E D U C AT I O N S E RV I C E S LT D .

M C C

A L L T H E B E STF R O M

M O N A R C H D E V E LO P M E NTG o o d L u ck f o r t h e f u t u r e .

D a n & S t e f a n K i n g m a

C O N G R AT U L AT I O N Sf r o m

In Partnership with GT Hiring Solutions

Page 23: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

The Chilliwack Progress Thursday, July 19, 2012 www.theprogress.com 23

S e v e n D a y s

SATURDAY

Coming UpTHURSDAY

FRIDAY

MONDAY

WEDNESDAY

A selection of entertaining events for the week ahead: July 20 to 26

Seven Days is a free A&E listing, published every Thursday. For more information, phone 604-702-5576 or e-mail all information, including a contact phone number, to [email protected] Days is a free A&E listing, published every Thursday. For more information, phone 604-702-5576 or e-mail all information, including a contact phone number, to [email protected].

SUNDAYChilliwack is alive with the Sound of

Music from July 18 to 29 by Secondary Characters at the UFV Chilliwack Theatre. Tickets $20 for adults, $15 student/senior. Tickets available at the Cultural Centre. 604-791-SHOW (7469). www.chilliwackculturalcentre.ca.

The Royal Canadian Legion Branch 280 has disco music July 20 and 21, plus dinner. Tickets $8 a plate.

Art-iculations, a special summer exhi-bition of mixed media artwork created by the Artifacts Studio (45655 Storey Ave.), features photography, painting, glass, and metal artwork. Show runs Tuesdays to Saturdays (11 a.m. to 6 p.m.) until Aug 31. 604-819-7705.

Euchre at the Vedder Golden Branch 280 begins at 6:45 p.m. 604-858-3600.

The Art of the Portrait is a group show by the Chilliwack Visual Artists Association in the gallery at the Cultural Centre July 18 to Aug. 25. Opening reception is today from noon to 2 p.m.

Yuk Yuk’s on Tour with Lori Ferguson-Ford and Chris Gaskin is tonight at the Best Western. Doors open at 7 p.m. and show is at 8 p.m. Tickets (in advance only) are $15, or $35 for three-course dinner and show. Tickets available at the front desk of the hotel. 604-795-3828. www.rainbowcountryinn.com.

Monday nights is karaoke at the Anavets (305-46268 Yale Rd.) at 8:30 p.m. 604-792-6645 or 604-792-6370.

Music and More is every Wednesday until Aug. 29 at Salish Park. The series features weekly kids’ activities at 12:15 p.m. and evening concerts at 7 p.m.

The sixth annual Friends of the Library Photo Contest is open to all amateur photographers from Chilliwack and area (Hope, Agassiz, Yarrow, and even Abbotsford) and runs until Aug. 18. There is no entry fee, but here are the rules: Photos must have been taken in the Fraser Valley between August 2011 and August 2012. There are two categories: Seasonal/Places; and People/Animals. Film or digital photos may be used. All photos must be unmounted 5x7-inch prints. No more than two entries are allowed per photographer. There are four age categories: Under 11; 11-16; 17-Adult; and Library Staff/Friends of the Library. Entries will be col-lected at the Chilliwack Library up until Aug. 18. All entries will be judged, and the photographs will be displayed in the library. Photos will not be returned. 604-792-1941.

Scene&Heard

Coup d Etat Theatre presents Spring Awakening at the Cultural Centre July 27/28 (7:30 p.m.) and July 28/29 (2 p.m.). Tickets $15 for adults and $10 for seniors and students, and available at the centre box office, by phone at 604-391-SHOW (7469), or online at www.chilliwackculturalcentre.ca.

TUESDAY

Party in the Park is every Friday night starting at 5 p.m. at Central Community Park and the surrounding area. With dozens of street vendors, music and entertainment (7 p.m.) it’s huge. This week singer Laurell Barker (above) headlines at PITP. SUBMITTED PHOTO

Thunder Struck, an ACDC tribute band, performs at JD’s Lounge in the Best Western tonight. Doors at 7 p.m. and show at 8:30 p.m. Tickets $20 (in advance only), and available at the front desk of the hotel. 604-795-3828. www.rain-bowcountryinn.com

■ LAURELL AT PITP

Page 24: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

Thursday, July 19, 2012 The Chilliwack Progress24 www.theprogress.com

The Centre of Things Located in Downtown Chilliwack

The Little Shops Around the CornerThe Little Shops Around the Corner46020 Yale Road West Chilliwack, BC

perfect party platters

We offer a wide range of We offer a wide range of platters for any occasion.platters for any occasion.

Stop by ourStop by ourGuest Services CounterGuest Services Counter

or call to orderor call to order604.792.7520604.792.7520

We offer a wide range of platters for any occasion.

Stop by ourGuest Services Counter

or call to order604.792.7520

46020 Yale Road, ChilliwackLocated in Salish Plaza, 604.792.7520

WILLOW DENTAL CARE

GARRISON VILLAGE604-846-1150

SALISH PLAZA604-792-6999

HOME OF CONSCIOUS SEDATION, COSMETIC & FAMILY DENTISTRYWWW.WILLOWDENTALCARE.COM

#3-46030 Yale Road604.792.9434

• snacks • beverages • drink mixes for all occasions

TOBACCOOUTLET

Redi-Mix ‘n SnacksConvenience Store & Lottery Center

46040A Yale Rd • 604-792-1778

Nancy’s NailsNancy’s NailsProfessional Nail & Skin Care

• Walk-Ins Welcome •

Business Hours:Monday-Saturday: 9:00am-7:00pmSunday: 11:00am-5:00pm

Address:#21-46030 Yale Road

Chilliwack, BC V2P 7V2

tel: 604-393-6979

Nancy’s Nails

We sell A&G products.

Senior’s Day10% Off every

Wednesday.

100% Canadian owned & operated.

Family Hair Care - Open 7 Days a Week

604-792-1866 #23-46030 Yale Roadwww.sassycuts.ca

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Page 25: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

The Chilliwack Progress Thursday, July 19, 2012 www.theprogress.com 25

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The last Canadian pennyhas been minted andThe Chilliwack Progress and Envision Financial are encouraging you to bring in your loose pennies, penny jars

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FUTURE SHOP – Correction Notice

Please be advised that this product: Asus Laptop Featuring 2nd Generation Intel® Core™ i3-2350 Processor (X53E-FS31-CB/WebID: 10205835), advertised on the July 13 flyer, page 1, may not be available for purchase in select stores or online as the item has been discontinued and is limited in quantity. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers.The rather late, wet start to spring

this year and the recent hot, dry spell has taken its toll on many of

our annuals.Some varieties are starting to look

somewhat hard, instead of being soft and vegetative, and many annuals have stopped growing. Heat and water stress are the major causes of this hardness. Unfortunately, these stressed-out annu-als can leave your garden looking a little blah at this time of year, which may be awkward when we have so many friends and relatives visiting.

Late flowering summer annuals and perennials, however, can give your gar-den some needed colour. As I was walk-ing through our gardens the other day, I couldn’t help but notice how a few very special plants were doing more than their share to keep the colour going.

Yellow is always an important colour to give a lift to late summer gardens, and two excellent perennials immedi-ately come to mind. The longest and strongest flowering variety has got to be the lacy leafed Coreopsis verticulata ‘Zagreb’. Its cousin, the softer yellow C. ‘Moonbeam’, is also a non-stop flower-ing, more spreading variety. Both always look good without any care or attention and defy the concept of perennials need-ing a lot of work.

The single most powerful perennial geranium today is called ‘Rozanne’. It’s a beautiful blue colour with large flow-ers that just don’t quit. Blue is a harder colour to find in our gardens and it’s an invaluable colour to add to the mix in warm summer gardens.

My other favourite yel-low perennial is a rud-beckia called ‘Goldsturm’. This European introduc-tion is just out of this world! It’s hardy, relative-ly short (about 24 inches tall), and its large, single, yellow daisy-like flowers just keep on blooming right up until November. ‘Goldsturm’ is such an

improvement over the other varieties - they’re not even in the same league! Today there are shorter versions of ‘Goldsturm’, like ‘City Garden’ and ‘Viette’s Little Suzy‘. Rudbeckia ‘Early Bird Gold’ starts earlier and is now in full bloom. A very vigorous and tall growing variety, called R. ‘Herbstonne’ is also truly amazing. Stretching up to six feet in height, this late summer giant creates an amazing display of colour from July to October. We have one at the entrance to our home, and it is spectacular.

Not to be outdone, annual rudbeck-ias really steal the show at this time of year. The low, larger flowered ‘Becky’ and smaller flowered ‘Toto’ series per-form magnificently in our hot weather. For taller, more background plants, the ‘Hirta’ series, like the award winning ‘Prairie Sun’ and ‘Denver Daisy’, do the job nicely.

Helleniums truly provide some of the richest summer colours from bronze to burgundy, as well as terrific bicolours. There are many varieties, but H. ‘Sahin’ is a gold bronze bicolour that just never quits.

Shasta daisies are not the same old boring whites. There is a whole new range of cream, yellow, ruffled and feathered blooms in all sizes that add so much to our summer gardens.

Echinaceas are also now in full bloom, and all the new colours from vibrant orange and golden yellow to white and hot pink provide a lasting perennial display. They also attract butterflies and honeybees.

Phlox paniculata is an old standby for summer colour, but with all the newer, more disease resistant and more com-pact varieties, the selection is amazing. The pinks, whites, reds and lavenders really make a summer garden pop!

Some other excellent late summer blooming perennials not to be forgotten are the pink-lavender blooms of Joe-pye Weed (Eupatorium ‘Atropurpureum); the white, fragrant flowers of all the cimicifuga; and some of the new heliop-sis varieties that make wonderful back-drops for perennial borders.

Bee balm or monarda is truly amaz-ing with its wonderfully fluffy vibrant coloured blooms that attract honeybees and butterflies. New more compact vari-eties that bloom far longer are a great addition to our summer colour.

In spite of the weather we may expe-rience from year to year and how it impacts on our annuals, these peren-nials, and many more like them, are the workhorses of any garden and will add wonderful colour to a late summer garden.

Home&Garden

Perennials replace fading annuals

Brian

MINTER

Page 26: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

Thursday, July 19, 2012 The Chilliwack Progress26 www.theprogress.com

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Page 27: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

The 2012 BC Summer Games start tomorrow in Surrey, with athletic events going through the weekend.

Eric J. Welsh,The Progress

Eleven practises.That’s all they have to

get a rather complicat-ed synchronized swim-ming routine together. A blink of the eye, real-ly, when you’re trying to get eight girls to swim in unison.

Less than the blink of an eye when you’re Olivia Strickland — when all you’ve done up till now is solos and duets, and you’re just meeting your 2012 BC Summer Games team-mates for the very first time.

Eleven practises for the soon-to-be 12-year-old to get things right as she tackles the biggest challenge of her young athletic career.

No complaints though.

There’s nothing going on that she can’t handle.

June. 11 is the first practice, the first chance for the Chilliwack girl to get a read on her team-mates.

She likes what she sees.

They’re a fun group.Stephanie Hughes,

from Surrey, is the class cut-up.

There could be a funeral going on, and Hughes would be ready with a line that would have the room in stitch-es.

Rose MacKenzie, also from Surrey, is the

one keeping them all in line.

She’s a perfectionist who demands perfec-tion from her team-mates.

Sometimes, that leads to a five minute dissertation on how to properly execute a split. But that’s OK, because you want teammates who care.

If MacKenzie pushes Olivia and her team-mates to be just a little bit better, it might be the difference between medal or no medal.

Each of the girls has their own thing, their own quirk, that makes them unique.

Outside the pool, that’s great.

Inside the pool, they spend the next six weeks (two times per week) figuring out how to function as one. They do so to the music of Agent J, Bagger Vance and Oscar from Shark Tale.

Will Smith supplies the soundtrack as the girls work through their elements, starting with Switch before roll-ing into Men in Black, Getting Jiggy Wit It and the theme from Fresh Prince of Bel Air.

When it’s time to get into the pool, Olivia isn’t nervous.

Ever.Her mom, Christina,

watches her before her solo and duet routines and swears its true. Before getting into the pool, this kid is a mask of calm, completely blind to distractions. Olivia could give focus lessons to the Dalai Lama.

Ice water runs through her veins from start to finish. From two-and-a-half to four minutes (depending on the competition), all she hears is the music and her thoughts.

“One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight. Surface! Pull into pike. Swirly! Crane!

Swirly! Swirly! Swirly! Inverted tuck. Knee tuck. Boost!”

All of that, just to get through the first figure.

Normally, Olivia gets to wear goggles as she swims.

No such luck at the BC Summer Games, so she trains as she will compete.

With goggles she sees clearly.

Without, it’s all a blur.

A legible blur, mind you.

She can tell that Rose is over here and Maria Goncharova (Surrey) is over there.

But high definition TV it is not.

Olivia’s first priority is taking care of her-self.

In that frantic gaggle of flailing arms and legs, the only thing she has direct control over is how well she does — whether she executes her movements as she is supposed to do.

She almost always does.

At times Olivia will spend anywhere from 20 to 30 seconds under water, but she’s far too busy to worry about that small matter of breathing.

She’ll surface, grab as much air as she can, and head back down for the next figure.

Synchronized swim-ming is not for the aqua-phobic.

Olivia gets tired down there.

Going a half minute without oxygen will do that to a person.

But she doesn’t let up.

She can’t.In solo, Olivia’s fail-

ures and successes are her own, with no one else to credit or blame. At the BC Summer Games, Rose MacKenzie’s fate may rest on something Olivia does or doesn’t do.

Olivia’s fate depends on the performance of

Rose, Stephanie, Maria, Erin Nichols, Courtney Armstrong, Jessica Friesen and Lani-Marie Carbonel.

Together they swim.Divided they sink.At one of their final

practices, the team looks like they’re ready to swim.

They walk out onto the swim deck, flash-ing ear-to-ear smiles at an imaginary panel of judges.

They hop into the pool and they’re off, looking more cohesive than they’ve ever been.

They’re through one figure, then the next, and the next and the next.

The music stops.They swim to the side

and their coaches, Tina Naveri and assistant Tanya Magee, ask them to grade themselves on a 1-10 scale. Most of the girls give it a seven and the coaches agree.

Not perfect, with plenty of room for tin-

kering and tuning.But the girls, many

of them strangers just six weeks ago, finally feel like they’re ready. On July 21 at 1:50 p.m., they’ll do this in front of a few hundred people at the Surrey Sport and Leisure Centre.

The place will be buzzing, with several events running at the same time.

Olivia’s not likely to notice.

The pandemonium around her, the whistles and shouts and cheers, will all fade away.

Just her and the water.

Six weeks and 11 practises all leading up to four minutes.

And at the end?Relief.Happiness.And a medal would

be really nice.

● Chilliwack is sending several athletes, coach-es and officials to the BC Summer Games.

Ryan Higuichi, Tasha Willing and Dylan McCrindle are compet-ing in athletics (track and field).

Devyn Heggs, Colin Kellington, Parker Logan, Donovan Moorman and Tony Pharand are competing in baseball.

Finley Capstick and Rhys and Isabel Taylor are competing in canoe/kayak.

Mark Harrison is competing in boys vol-leyball.

Catherine Armitage and Barb Schmidt are officials in equestrian and Ray Flynn is an offi-cial in golf.

Steven Scurr and Connor McClellan will be competing in golf and Kaitie Smith will be involved in girls rugby.

Patrick Harkness is an official in boys soc-cer.

Get full participant lists online at http://www.bcgames .ne t/results/default.aspx

The Chilliwack Progress Thursday, July 19, 2012 www.theprogress.com 27

1/10F CL2245323 Hodgins Avenue, Chilliwack | 604-702-0062 | [email protected] | Register online at: www.prosperacentre.com

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28

&Recreation

Sports ProgressThe Chilliwack

Eric

Welsh604.702.5572 • [email protected]

With little time to breathe in synchronized swimming, Chilliwack’s Olivia Strickland, a 2012 BC Summer Games athlete, must take big breaths of air whenever she’s got the chance. ONSITE PHOTOGRAPHY

Strickland shares spotlight in synchro swimming

Page 28: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

Thursday, July 19, 2012 The Chilliwack Progress28 www.theprogress.com

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Sports

Chilliwack’s bantam AA baseball Cougars are 3-1 to start the sum-mer season.

The Cougars bounced the Vancouver Yankees and Newton Canadians last weekend.

In Saturday’s game against the Yankees, Chilliwack got home-runs from Tony Pharand, Josh Anderson and Devyn Heggs, and led 15-7 through seven innings.

Liam Campbell went four-for-four with two doubles.

Vancouver scored six in the bottom of the sev-enth to make the final close, but the Cougars held on.

On Sunday, Chilliwack led 12-0 after three innings and cruised to a 19-2 final.

Heggs and Anderson each hit grand-slams to lead the offensive onslaught.

Offensive explosion

Page 29: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

The Chilliwack Progress Thursday, July 19, 2012 www.theprogress.com 29

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†0% APR purchase fi nancing is available on select new 2012 Mazda vehicles. Using a fi nance price of $18,590 for 2012 Mazda3Sport GX (D5XS52AA00)/$17,590 for 2012 Mazda3 GX (D4XS52AA00)/$24,890 for 2013 CX-5 GX (NVXK63AA00)/$23,845 for 2012 Mazda5 GS (E6SD62AA00) at a rate of 0%/0%/3.99%/0% APR, the cost of borrowing for a 84 month term is $0/$0/$3,679/$0 bi-weeklypayment is $102/$97/$157/$131 total fi nance obligation is $18,590/$17,590/$28,569/$23,845. Finance price includes freight & PDI. Taxes are extra and required at the time of purchase. Other terms available and vary by model. **Lease offers available on approved credit on 2012 Mazda3 GX(D4XS52AA00)/ Mazda3 Sport GX (D5XS52AA00). At 0% lease APR the monthly payment is $149/$159per month for 48 months with $1,770/$1,480 down payment. PPSA and fi rst monthly payment due at lease inception. Total lease obligation equals $8,945/$9,135. 20,000 km lease allowance per year, if exceeded, additional 8¢ /km applies. 25,000 km leases available. Taxes extra and required at the time of purchase. Other lease terms available and vary by model. *The advertised price of$24,990/$16,590/$15,590/$13,995/$19,945 for 2013 CX-5 GX (NVXK63AA00)/ 2012 Mazda3Sport GX (D5XS52AA00)/Mazda3 GX (D4XS52AA00)/Mazda2 GX (B5XB52AA00)/Mazda5 GS (E6SD62AA00) includes freight & PDI, plus a cash discount of ($0/$2,000/$2,000/$1,500/$4,000). The selling price adjustment applies to the purchase and is deducted from the negotiated pre-tax price and cannotbe combined with subsidized purchase fi nancing or leasing rates. All prices include freight & PDI of $1,495/$1,695/$1,895for Mazda2/Mazda3/Mazda5, CX-5. PPSA, licence, insurance, taxes, down payment and other dealer charges are extra and may be required at the time of purchase. Dealer may sell/lease for less. Dealer trade may be necessary on certain vehicles. Lease andFinance on approved credit for qualifi ed customers only. Offers valid as of June 1, 2012 while supplies last. Prices and rates subject to change without notice. Visit mazda.ca or see your dealer for complete details. 5.7 L/100 km (50 MPG) Highway/7.8 L/100 km (36 MPG) City – Based on ENERGUIDE Fuel Consumption Rating for the 2013 Mazda CX-5 with 6-speed manual transmission.4.9 L/100km(58 MPG) Highway/7.1 L/100 km (40 MPG) City – Based on ENERGUIDE Fuel Consumption Rating for the 2012 Mazda3 GS-SKY sedan with 6-speed automatic transmission. These estimates are based on Government of Canada approved criteria and testing methods. Actual fuel consumption may vary. MPG is listed in Imperial gallons.++Based on Highway driving only. rBasedon 2012 fuel consumption ratings published by Natural Resources Canada. ‡‡To learn more about Ward’s 10 Best Engines, visit www.wardsauto.com. ÐBased on Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. ‡ALG, the industry benchmark for residual values and depreciation data, www.alg.com.

Finance from Lease from

bi-weekly for 84 months

All prices include freight & PDI. Taxes extra.

per month for 48 months

On fi nance price from $17,590 with $0 down. $1,940 down. $0 security deposit.

2012 MAZDA 3 GX

$97† $149**

at 0%APR at 0%

APR

Finance from Lease from

bi-weekly for 84 months

All prices include freight & PDI. Taxes extra.

per month for 48 months

On fi nance price from $18,590 with $0 down. $2,360 down. $0 security deposit.

2012 MAZDA 3 SPORT GX

$102† $159**

at 0%APR at 0%

APR

2012 MAZDA5 2012 MAZDA2 2012 MAZDA CX-5

Starting from

Price includes freight & PDI. Taxes extra.

ecoENERGY for Vehicles AwardsALG 2012 Residual Value Award for

Best Subcompact Car

$13,995*

WHAT DO YOU DRIVE? ZOOM-ZOOM

▼▼▼▼▼

ALSO AVAILABLE WITH 155 hp

148 lb-fttorque

Delivering up to1,000 km per tank of gas.††

Starting from $15,590* Starting from $16,590*

$131† at 0%

APR

Finance from

bi-weekly for 84 months

Finance from

eco G o e c es a ds

Finance from

Starting from

$19,945*

On fi nance price from $22,845 with $0 down. All prices include freight & PDI. Taxes extra.

$157† at 3.99%

APR

Finance from

bi-weekly for 84 months

Finance fromFinance from

Starting from

$24,990*

On fi nance price from $24,890 with $0 down. All prices include freight & PDI. Taxes extra.

WOLFE’S CHILLIWACK MAZDA

ON SELECT 2012 MODELS

PURCHASEFINANCING† FOR UP TO MTHS0% 84LEASE FINANCING†† FOR UP TO MTHS0% 480%THE

EVENT

YOUR CHOICE

Page 30: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

Chilliwack’s squirt B rep fastpitch team capped off a dream sea-son with a gutsy per-formance at provincials, bowing out in the quar-ter finals of last week-end’s tournament.

The Mayhem were Chilliwack’s first ever rep B team, competing in the 12-and-under divi-sion.

The team held fre-quent offseason prac-tises and, once the

season began, held their own against the ‘big-market’ teams in Vancouver, White Rock and Langley.

The team finished the regular season at 11-8, eighth in the standings. They beat Langley and Abbotsford to claim the District title, then beat the Langley Extreme on Canada Day week-end to claim the Lower Mainland Cup.

At provincials, the girls went 3-1 in the round-robin stage, advancing to the final eight.

Though the season ended with disappoint-ment, the Mayhem accomplished great things.

Members of the team were Bones Henrotte, Lindros Metcalfe, Tazer Rushton, Kalista Kirkness, Vendetta Sawatzky, Champ Thiessen, Hank Soltys, Joe Wiens, Dani B. Klassen, Deanna Tuchscherer, Stitch Morrison, Flash Wismer, Van H. Anderson, Crash Tizzard and Ken Galley.

Coaches were Jeff Galley, Admiral Henrotte, Brad Wiens and Clarke Wismer.

The team is making the jump to rep A next season.

Tryouts for the 2013 Mayhem squad will be held Sept. 15 at Townsend Park.

See chilliwackminor-fastpitch.com for more info.

Thursday, July 19, 2012 The Chilliwack Progress30 www.theprogress.com

July 20-22Mission Raceway Park

or call 604.826.6315 or toll free 1.877.826.6315missionraceway.com

FOR MORE DETAILS VISIT

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The City of Merritt is seeking proposals from interested parties to operate the City-owned Claybanks RV Park/Campground under a

lease agreement for a ten-year term, January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2022. Request For Proposal (RFP 2012-07) documents can be obtained

through the City’s website at www.merritt.ca or can be requested through the City of Merritt, 2185 Voght St., Merritt, BC.

Deadline for Proposals to be received by the City is 4:00 p.m. local time, August 6, 2012.

For further information please contact:Larry Plotnikoff

Leisure Services ManagerCity of Merritt

250-378-4224 (ext 206)[email protected]

The City of Merritt reserves the right to reject any and all proposals and to choose the proposal that is in the best interests of the City.

Request For Proposal

Making MayhemSports

Chilliwack’s mosquito baseball Cougars trav-elled to Pitt Meadows on July 7 for the Rup Dog Mini Mosquito tournament.

Thanks to great pitching and timely hit-ting, the team of nine-year-old boys and girls ran the table to take top spot.

Chilliwack knocked off previously unbeaten Kamloops in the finals. The Cougars also enjoyed success in the skills competition.

Landen Gourlie was tops in the pop-fly event.

Kennedy Hall, Kalen Reemeyer, Clay Kurtz and Mitchell Middlemiss blew away their competition in the running race.

Mosquito might

o

The Chilliwack Chiefs are done for the season, but assistant coach Paul Nicolls remains very busy. In his latest bi-weekly column, the Xceed Training owner/operator talks about the potential benefits of cross-training.

Cross-training refers to a regimen involv-ing several different forms of exercise. It’s a great way to condition different muscle groups, develop new skill sets and reduce the boredom that can creep in after months of doing the same types of exercise.

For an athlete to excel it is necessary for them to train specifically for their sport, but rather than continuing to improve, you may simply be maintaining a certain level of fitness. Including cross-training is an excellent way to maintain a high level of overall fitness.

You may opt to use both biking and swim-ming each week to improve overall aerobic capacity, build muscle strength and reduce the chance of injury from overuse. Cross-training can limit the stress that occurs on a specific muscle group because different activities use muscles in slightly different ways.

The types of cross training I encourage for the Chilliwack Chiefs players in the off-season includes road or mountain biking, jogging, hik-ing and swimming.

After nine consecutive months on the ice I want them to get outside and away from the rink.

They will cross-train from 30 to 90 minutes a day, three times a week, for the first three weeks.

Each week includes an increase in intensity or duration, or both.

For the next three weeks I advise the players to include bike and running sprints, as well as plyometrics, stair runs, slide board, inline skat-ing, and agility work.

At this point, we begin to decrease the cross-training component and add in more hock-ey-specific exercises and metabolic activities. Sprints range from short (100 metres or 30 seconds) to long (800m or two minutes). As well, the overall time spent exercising with their heart rate elevated must be accounted for.

I want them to get their heart rate up to a maximum of 180 beats per minute (bpm) on the sprints, and get it back to 125 bpm before the next sprint (this number varies based on fitness levels).

There is generally a 4:1 rest-to-work ratio. We want their HR to be above 125 for 30-40

minutes, three or four times per week. In the final three weeks we progress more

into hockey-specific exercises including sprints on the ice or grass, and the slide board. But we continue to do stairs, plyos, and the stationary bike.

At this point, the intensity level is very high. The overall time their HR is at its maximum is from 30 to 90 minutes. Depending on the day, the rest-to-work ratio is now 3:1 or 2:1.

We do these exercises so that the rest-to-work ratio is metabolically similar to hockey line changes (go hard for 30-45 seconds, then rest for 60-120 seconds).

Exercises at this point are done three to four times per week.

With cross training, you can do one or more forms of exercise each day.

You can change the order in which you do them.

You can adjust cross-training to your needs and interests; mix and match your sports and change your routine on a regular basis.

Exercise can strengthen the cardiovascular system, bones, muscles, joints, reduce body fat, and improve flexibility, balance and coordina-tion.

However, if you want to see ALL of these ben-efits, you’ll need to cross train.

You could start today.

Cross-training tacticsAfter nine months on the ice, I want them to get outside and away from the rink, writes Paul Nicolls

Page 31: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

The Chilliwack Progress Thursday, July 19, 2012 www.theprogress.com 31

where’s the catch? Find Jobs

Shell’s plans to drill thousands of gas wells in the Sacred Headwaters threaten three critical salmon rivers in B.C.

Ask Premier Clark to protect our multi-million dollar salmon

industry and hundreds of local jobs by banning coalbed methane in the Sacred Headwaters for good.

www.forestethics.org/sacred-headwaters

Salmon jobs are on the line.Salmon jobs are on the line.

Page 32: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

Chilliwack Chiefs assistant coach Paul

Nicolls is running power skating camps in mid-August. The cost is $100 for five one-hour sessions. The camps are for players in initia-tion, atom and peewee.

Phone 604-858-6031 for info.

Vancouver’s Philip Mak won the champi-onship tournament of the 2012 Fred Wellsby Junior Divot Tour.

The matter was decid-ed July 10 with Mak draining three birdies to run away with the title. Mak (13-15 year old division) shot a low-gross 71.

The next best score belonged to West Vancouver’s Andrew

Wong, who shot a low-gross 82. Chilliwack’s Mitchell Thiessen shot a low-gross 83 to place third.

The tournament was played in high winds at the Royalwood Golf and RV Resort.

Dates have already been set for next year’s tour, with the first of six rounds teeing off the first Tuesday of July at Kinkora.

Thursday, July 19, 2012 The Chilliwack Progress32 www.theprogress.com

YOUR LAWYERS FOR LIFEFor all of life’s important events

our first child

1973

Our new home

1990

Enjoying retirement

2012

CX-5 RAISES THE BAR

FIRS

T DR

IVE

CROSSOVER EMPHASIZESSPORTINESS OVER UTILITY, WITHSKYACTIV PROCESS PROVIDING THEPERFORMANCE BOOST

The story of the 2013 Mazda CX-5 began in 2005 when Mazda began mapping out its long-term strategy in a post-Ford world. This is how the car business works. What you see in showrooms today was conceived long ago. SkyActiv, the buzzword Mazda is using to describe the company’s comprehensive take on improv-ing fuel economy and reducing emissions in vehicles that remain fun to drive, is all about “wiping the slate clean,” says Mazda senior engineer Dave Coleman, the self-described Director of Technobabble. “No more parts-bin engineering,” he adds. By that he means this: The CX-5 and all that comes next from Mazda represent what you might call a holistic approach to vehicle development. Everything you will see from Mazda going forward, from the powertrains to the platforms, from the designs to engineering top to bottom – all if it is about “squeezing maximum effi ciency from existing technolo-gies.” Yeah, but why should you care? You’re not a technogeek. But if you’re like 300,000 other Cana-dians or so, you will be buying a compact SUV of some sort this year or next year or the year after, each and every year. Canadians love their compact SUVs; sales

here account for 17 per cent of the entire new-vehicle market and just in the last two years have doubled. So you are very likely to want something along the lines of a Honda CR-V, Hyundai Tucson, Ford Escape, Chevrolet Equinox, Kia Sportage, Toyota RAV4 and Nissan Rogue. If you are a Mazda owner, you will likely be moving up from a Mazda3, although Mazda wants you if you are a former Honda Civic or Ford Focus owner, too. If that’s you, the base version of the CX-5, the GX with front-wheel-drive, starts at $22,995. The volume model, the GS, lists for $27,895 and the top-of-the-line GT starts at $32,495. All are well equipped, but of course, as you pay more you get more. AWD, for instance, is a $2,000 option on GX and GS models, standard on the GT. Most importantly to Mazda, the CX-5 offers the “best highway fuel economy of any SUV sold in Canada – including hybrids:” 7.8 litres/100 km in the city, 5.7 highway for front-drive models with the six-speed manual transmission. Front-drivers with the six-speed automatic get 7.7 city/6.1 highway and with AWD and the automatic, 8.0 city/6.4 highway. Using regular gas

across the board. Mazda, then, is taking aim at the heart of the new-vehicle market in Canada with a crossover that is very capable, looks sharp and is fun-to-drive. All at an appealing price. If Mazda gets this right, the CX-5 will not be a niche player. You’re going to see them all over your neighbourhood. The CX-5 is, for the present, the future of Mazda. It’s Mazda going all in for the fi rst time with SkyActiv fuel-saving technolo-gies. For instance, there is a new global platform architecture here, and it is 8 per cent lighter and 30 per cent more rigid than the company’s previous small-car architecture. Most interesting, I think, is that this small-car architecture has yielded a fuel-effi cient crossover that not only isn’t a bore to drive, but is almost as big as the current Mazda CX-7. SkyActiv at work. Speaking of which, the heart of it, really, is Mazda’s new Skyactiv-G direct-injected, 2.0-litre, inline- four-cylinder gasoline engine. Director Tech-nobabble had a long and detailed presentation to explain why this engine is so good, so strong, and so effi cient and if you must know, the essence of it all is the 13:1 compression ratio using regular gas. Those who care about

compression ratios will know that’s a pretty good number for an everyday car. If you could not care less, suf-fi ce to say the 155 horsepower and 150 lb-ft of torque are all there and pretty quickly. This Mazda is no slug. And thanks to some fancy engine plumbing, the power comes on smoothly, with-out any knocking or hesitation. All very impressive. Then there’s the new automatic transmission. Delicious. Again, only a geek would care why the shifts are so good (the torque converter is basically on the job only during gear changes) but let me tell you, up-shifts are smooth and downshifts are rev-matched. They are seriously snappy, too. As is the overall handling of the CX-5. Meanwhile, the exterior design is an eye-grabber and the cabin is roomy, intelligently useful and airy. Outward visibility is excep-tional, rear-seat room is good for adults and the big cargo area expands thanks to near-fl at fold-ing rear seatback. As family haulers go, the CX-5 looks like a winner. No, that’s damning with faint praise. Mazda, in fact, has just thrown down the gauntlet in this segment. The competition should start tearing down CX-5s ASAP.

2 0 1 3 M A Z D A C X - 5

CHECK OUT THE NEW LINE OF CX-5’S AT WOLFE’S CHILLIWACK MAZDA 604.795.3700

PAID ADVERTISEMENT

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SportsVan’s Mak takes title

Search for stronger skating

Page 33: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

The Chilliwack Progress Thursday, July 19, 2012 www.theprogress.com 35

AdvertiseYOUR

LISTINGHERE!CALL TODAY

604-702-5552

AdvertiseYOUR

LISTING HERE!CALL TODAY

604-702-5552

AdvertiseYOUR

LISTING HERE!CALL TODAY

604-702-5552

ANGLICANANGLICAN

BAPTISTBAPTIST

SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTISTSEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST

UNITED CHURCHUNITED CHURCH

'Where all are welcome'Sunday Services: 9:30 am

Now offering Stephen Ministry 'one-to-one' Crisis Care

St. Thomas’St. Thomas’Anglican ChurchAnglican Church

SUNDAY SERVICESHoly Communion – 8 am

Holy Eucharist – 10:15 amwith Children Welcome

46048 Gore Ave, ChilliwackCorner of First & Young

604-792-8521www.stthomaschilliwack.com

FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH

9340 Windsor St. 604-795-7700 SUNDAY SCHEDULE:

Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.Morning Service - 11 a.m.Evening Service - 6 p.m.

Wednesday Service - 6:30 p.m.

REFORMEDREFORMED

ROMAN CATHOLICROMAN CATHOLIC

CATHOLIC PARISH OF ST. MARY’S

8909 Mary St. 604-792-2764Weekday Mass: 8 a.m.

Saturday: 9 a.m. & 5 p.m.Sunday: 8 a.m. , 9:30 a.m.,

11:30 a.m.Youth Lead Mass: 6:30 p.m.

PRESBYTERIANPRESBYTERIAN

COOKE'SPRESBYTERIAN

CHURCHWellington Ave (near Mary St.) 604-792-2154

Sunday Worship 11:00 amRev. Willem van de Wall

Sunday School during service.

www.cookespresbyterianchurch.webs.comwww.noahsarkpreschool.webs.com

CHILLIWACK UNITED CHURCH

Rev. Heather AndersonYale Road at Spadina

604-792-4634Morning Worship and

Sunday School at 10:30 am

MOUNT SHANNON UNITED CHURCH

46875 Yale Road East

Worship/Sunday School11:00 am

The friendly placeat Yale & Quarry!

CHILLIWACK SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH

46024 Riverside Dr., Chilliwack(1 Block off Young St. on Riverside Dr.)

Sabbath Services SaturdaySabbath School 9:15 a.m.Worship Service 11 a.m.

Vespers 7 p.m.Prayer Meeting Wednesdays 7 p.m.

604-795-572545831 Hocking Ave., Chilliwack

BAHÁ'Í FAITHBAHÁ'Í FAITH

ALLIANCEALLIANCE

Chilliwack Alliance Church

Celebration Service 10:30 am

Sunday School for all ages

8700 Young Rd. Chilliwack 604-792-0051

[email protected]

CHILLIWACKCHINESEALLIANCECHURCH

DIRECTORYChilliwack’sFFaith

www.sardisfellowship.com

9:15 • Worship Services9:30 • Sunday School11:00 • Worship Service

45187 Wells Road604-858-8433

SARDIS FELLOWSHIPBAPTIST CHURCH

“Armed with thePower of thy name nothing

can ever hurt me, and with Thy love in my heart all the world’s afflictions

can in no wise alarm me.”-Bahá’u’lláh

FOR MORE INFORMATION AND DIRECTIONS CALL 604-703-0230

AdvertiseYOUR

LISTINGHERE!CALL TODAY

604-702-5552

COMMUNITYCOMMUNITY

CHILLIWACKCHURCH OF

CHRISTSr. Citizens’ Building,

corner of Cook & VictoriaJohn Forman604-792-7806

Al McCutcheon604-824-670311:00 a.m.

WORSHIP SERVICES

MENNONITEMENNONITE

SARDISCOMMUNITY CHURCH

45625 South Sumas Rd.

Sunday Service: 10:35 a.m.Sunday School for all ages 9:30 a.m.

www.sardiscommunitychurch.com604-858-7191 [email protected]

EDEN MENNONITE CHURCH604-792-6013

Corner of Broadway & Chilliwack CentralPastor: Rob Brown

Classes - 9:30 am Worship Service – 10:50 am

Sunday School - 9:30 amAssociate Youth Pastor: Aaron Roorda

EVERYONE WELCOME!

SUNDAYS AT 9AM & 11AM46641 CHILLIWACK CENTRAL ROADCITYLIFECHURCH.CA604.792.0694

®

46420 Brooks Ave.Ph. 604-792-0311

www.salvationarmychilliwack.caattend our

Sunday Service: 10:00 am

CHILLIWACKCOMMUNITY CHURCH

“Come discover the Heart behind the Shield”

Where His Word brings new life and hymns soothe the soul.

New LifeChristian Church

Sunday Service10:00am

Vedder Elem School 45850 Promontory Rd. 778-823-4041 & leave message.

ALL ARE WELCOMEYOUR NEW LIFE BEGINS TODAY!

7-12T CH3

CHILLIWACK HERITAGEREFORMED CHURCH

YOU ARE INVITED TOJOIN OUR WORSHIP AT

45825 Wellington Ave, Chilliwack

Sunday Services9:00 am & 6:00 pm

Song worship following evening services.INFANT & TODDLER CARE PROVIDED

Pastor B. Elshout (604-794-3501)LIVE VIDEO STREAMING ON...

www.chilliwackhrc.comor

sermonaudio.com/chilliwackhrc

07/12H_SAS12

Stó:Lõ Aboriginal Skills & Employment TrainingBldg #8A – 7201 Vedder Road, Chilliwack, B.C.

Canada V2R 4G5Tel: (604) 858-3691 or toll-free 1-888-845-4455

Fax: (604) 858-3528E-mail: [email protected]

Sto:lo Aboriginal Skills & Employment Services (SASET)PROJECTS PROGRAM OFFICER

SASET requires the services of a qualifi ed Projects Program Offi cer to provide administrative program support to employment & training programs. Pursuant to section 41 of the BC Human Rights Code, preference may be given to applicants of Aboriginal Ancestry. Please self-identify on your cover letter or resume.The Projects Program Offi cer is responsible for all aspects of fi nancial monitoring, reporting, coordinating and managing program deliverables. Qualifi cations/Requirements• Thorough understanding of the Service Canada Aboriginal Skills &

Employment Training program, and reporting guidelines• Must have a Career Development Practitioner Certifi cate• Must be computer literate – MS Word, Excel, Access, Internet, E-mail,

ARMS and PowerPoint,• Experience in Labour Market Research Skills and delivering Career

Support Services• Financial, budget monitoring and reporting competencies• Experience in project coordination and reporting• Working understanding of the ASARET Program• Understanding of and adherence to the Canadian Standards and

Guidelines for Career development Practitioners Code of Ethics• Knowledge and understanding of First Nations employment barriers,

concerns and issues• Ability to work well individually or as part of a dynamic team of

professionals• Strong written and verbal communication skills• Excellent Networking skills• Confl ict resolution, time management, decision making skills and

demonstrate initiative and able to exercise good judgment• Willing to travel extensively, within the SASET catchment area for

work deliverablesSuccessful candidates will be required to provide the following if screened in for an interview:• Proof of education documentation• References: Three employment related references • Must possess and maintain a valid Class V BC Drivers’ License, Class

IV would be an asset.• Must successfully pass the required pre-employment RCMP Criminal

Records CheckSalary Range: Will be determined based on qualifi cations and experienceType of Position: Full-time, subject to 3-month probationary period and planned performance evaluationsApplications Deadline: Monday, July 23, 2012 at 4 pmCandidates will be screened according to the qualifi cations/requirements above. Please clearly indicate on your resume compliance with all indicated qualifi cations and requirements. Interested candidates can submit the resume to:Attention: Anna CelestaSto:lo Aboriginal Skills & Employment TrainingBuilding 8A – 7201 Vedder Road,Chilliwack, BC V2R 4G5Or via email: [email protected] regret that we will only respond to those applicants chosen for an interview. An eligibility list may be established from this posting. We thank all applicants for their interest.

FRED’SFRED’S

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Southgate Shopping Centre, #10-45905 Yale Rd. • 604-795-6066Southgate Shopping Centre, #10-45905 Yale Rd. • 604-795-6066BCAA MEMBERS SHOW YOUR CARDBCAA MEMBERS SHOW YOUR CARD

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GALVESTON, TEXAS to SINGAPORE - April 21, 201341 Night Cruise

This voyage starts in Galveston and goes across the Pacifi c Ocean through the Mediterranean passage of the Suez Canal to Dubai and ending in Singapore on June 1, 2013.

$2839 interior state room; $3519 ocean view; $4679 balcony.Prices are cruise only & include all taxes.

MEDITERRANEAN and HOLY LANDS - October 9, 201211 Night Cruise. Cruise round-trip from Rome.

$2339.44 Cdn. Price includes round-trip air from Vancouver with transfers and all taxes.

AGASSIZ BLUEBERRY FARM Ltdrequires pickers. Call Gill (604) 306-4182

$100-$400 CASH DAILYfor Landscaping Work!Competitive, Energetic,

Honesty a MUST!PropertyStarsJobs.Com

An Alberta Construction Company is hiring dozer, excavator and la-bour/rock truck operators. Prefer-ence will be given to operators that are experienced in oilfi eld road and lease construction. Lodging and meals provided. The work is in the vicinity of Edson, Alberta. Alco-hol & Drug testing required. Call Contour Construction at 780-723-5051.

CARETAKER/HANDYMAN re-quired for newer 3 building complex in Sardis. Full-time contract posi-tion. Please apply with resume by August 13, 2012 to:[email protected]

Experienced Framers req’d immedi-ately, full time, competitive wages. Fourth Dimensions Construction. Apply [email protected]

Holbrook Dyson Logging Ltd/ Newcastle Timber Have va-cancies in the following job: 1)Heavy Duty Mechanic 2)Driller/Blaster 3)Swamper 4)Hydraulic Log Loader Op-erator 5)Yarder Operator. Details can be seen at http://hdlogging.com/ Fax re-sume to 250-287-9259LANDSCAPE maintenance worker required, part/full time. Experience an asset. Must have own trans. Sequoia Landscaping Ltd. Email:[email protected]

NEED A RAISE??10 Customer Service positions available!

Up to $20.00/hr paid weekly

Must be outgoing and motivated!!!!

Call Erica 604 777 2195

Full/part-time SERVER need-ed at the Capital Restaurant. Apply with resume to 45766 Kipp Ave. Attn: Ken between 12pm & 2pm

LPN’s & RN’sBayshore Home Health cur-rently has day and night shift vacancies for Registered Nurses and Licensed Practi-cal Nurses in the Abbotsford / Chilliwack area. These positions are to provide one on one care for children with complex care needs. If you are an exp. RN or LPN and love working with children, we would like to hear from you. Pediatric exp. is an asset; however, we do offer client specifi c training, Trach / Vent courses and other on-going training supports.

Interested individuals are encouraged to fax their resume to: 604-739-7435 or email: pedsvancouver

@bayshore.ca

BLUEBERRY PICKERS wanted.East Chilliwack area, clean fi eld, good rates. (604)794-3383 Aft 6pm or (604)793-5674 days

BLUEBERRY PICKERS WANTED. July 6 - Sept 30, 2012. Ride available at 7am only. No ride back home until 5:30pm. Tel: 604-701-1138 or 1 (604)823-0044, leave message. Also U-Pick. 6845 Sumas Prairie Rd, Greendale/Chwk

CARPENTERS/HELPERS NEED-ED with experience and solid work ethics for fast paced work environ-ment. Call 604-220-2239 or email resume to [email protected]

COME to Comox Valley lead hand auto tech. Excellent benefi ts! [email protected]

HEAVY Duty Mechanic required with certifi ed inspection license; competitive wages; benefi t pack-age; full time; located in Rossland Trail area. Please send resume and or request for further detail to email: [email protected] or by fax 250-364-9956.

COMMERCIALROOF FOREMAN

$28.00 - $38.00 per hour based on experience. Commercial roof-ing co. hiring lead roofers with extensive exp. in commercial roofi ng, including: two - ply torch, single ply, sloped and metal. Offering Great Benefi ts Including: Company Vehicle, Paid Travel, Support Crews, Top Wages, Health/Dental,

Pension & Company Uniforms.Must have proven ability to install using RCABC roofi ng practices and follow WCB regulations.

Fax resume: 604-944-2916, Call Adam: 604-944-2977 or e-mail

aknipfel@designroofi ng.caVisit: www.designroofi ng.ca

PLUMBING & HEATING• Foreman • Journeyman

• Apprentices

Respected local Mechanical Contractor requires Plumbing & Heating Foreman, Journeyman & Apprentices for all aspects of Commercial Institutional Me-chanical work (New Construc-tion). Previous experience an asset. Team Environment. Long Term Opportunity.

Competitive Wages, & Excellent Benefi ts.

Fax: 604.576.4739 or E-mail: [email protected]

MASSAGE CONFIDENTIAL SIMPLY FOR YOUR HEALTH &

PLEASURE. *European *PrivateExcellent Service 604.230.4444

SENSATIONAL MassageNew Girls, New Look...604-746-6777

2459 McCallum Rd. Abby.

THE RIGHT TOUCH. Sensual mas-sage by Jill. Call (604)819-4333, Chilliwack.

NATURAL HEALTH Expert coun-seling, 30 years experience. I’llmake you, your family, your home and pets healthy! One hour ses-sions, call (604)845-0277

GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad cred-it? Bills? Unemployed? Need Mon-ey? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Accep-tance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877-987-1420.

www.pioneerwest.com

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

115 EDUCATION

130 HELP WANTED

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

130 HELP WANTED

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

134 HOTEL, RESTAURANT,FOOD SERVICES

139 MEDICAL/DENTAL

148 PICKERS

160 TRADES, TECHNICAL

161 TRAVEL/TOURISM

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION

160 TRADES, TECHNICAL

PERSONAL SERVICES

173 MIND BODY SPIRIT

182 FINANCIAL SERVICES

161 TRAVEL/TOURISM

CLASS ADS WORK!CALL 1-866-575-5777

WE’RE ON THE WEBw w w.bcclassified.com

Page 34: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

36 www.theprogress.com Thursday, July 19, 2012, The Chilliwack Progress

604-702-5552

ChilliwackBUSINESS PROFESSIONALS

Local Businesses Ready To Serve!

Sewer & Water Hookups, Drainage Repair, Hydro Seeding, Mountainside Landscaping, Rock/Retaining Walls

Ron, 604.823.6191or 604.819.0150

FULLY INSURED. OWNER/OPERATOR

WE DO IT ALL!WE DO IT ALL!General repair and General repair and

maintenance to maintenance to alternate fuels, major alternate fuels, major repairs and rebuilding.repairs and rebuilding.

604-793-9310604-793-931044344 Yale Rd., Chilliwack44344 Yale Rd., ChilliwackGOVERNMENT INSPECTION FACILITYGOVERNMENT INSPECTION FACILITY

Cree-AtiveHomeImprovements• All Home Improvements

& Additions• Fences, Decks, Bathrooms

& Basements• New Construction• Shop & Barns604-858-4513604-997-2007

Hank Van Dyk604-795-3163A1-44915 Yale Rd., Chilliwack

CALL TODAYFOR YOUR FREE

ESTIMATE!

SOLID SURFACE & LAMINATE

COUNTER TOPS LICENSED - BONDEDINSURED - WCB

email: [email protected]

• Licensed Electrical & Plumbing Repairs

• Drywall Repairs• Interior Painting• Cabinet Repairs• Cabinet

Replacement• Countertops• General

Construction• Flood Repairs• Moldings• Door/Window• Exterior Painting• Decks• Gutter Cleaning• Power Washing

24 HourService

CALL US TODAY FOR ACALL US TODAY FOR AFREE QUOTE 604-798-5082FREE QUOTE 604-798-5082

Mr. Fix it

• Home Repairs• Yard & House Cleanup

• Painting/Carpentry• Pressure Washing

• Junk Removal• Decking & • Gutters

LICENSED • IN BUSINESS OVER 10 YEARSContact Rick or Betty Today

604-792-3018

Almost EverythingHandyman Services

K-OnePainting

Commercial - ResidentialInterior & ExteriorWCB Coverage

For Free Estimate Call604.997.1674

[email protected]

24-HOUR SERVICE

604-824-8817 or cell: 604-316-4811

☛ Furnace Service & Repair☛ New Furnace Installations☛ Air Conditioning Install & Repair☛ Heat Pumps & Boilers☛ Hot water tanks & fireplaces☛ Duct Cleaning☛ All plumbing services

Plumbing& HeatingHK

Landscaping • Backfi ll Drainage • Trenching

Seed & Sod bed preparation

Call Tim at 604 316 6791

Vinyl FlooringCommercial &

ResidentialFREE ESTIMATES

604.819.6772

07/1

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NEE

D T

O C

IRCULATE A FLYER IN TH

E PAP

ER?

DELIVERED TO 30,150 HOMES EVERY TUESDAY & THURSDAY

It’s effective& affordable!

ASK ME HOW?Call Sharon

604-702-5552

07/1

2T_F

10

Creditors Calling?Need control back?

Call us for free information. Our friendly staff will review your

options for dealing with unpaid bills.

www.wihnan.ca604-795-4485

#9-45966 Yale Rd, ChilliwackWihnan Trustee Corp

Trustees in Bankruptcy

PERSONAL care aide, avail to as-sist clients retain dignity and inde-pendence in their homes. 604-846-6166

Professional Mobile Nursing Foot Care Service. Corns? Calluses? Painful feet? 10% Discount with fi rst service, call Silviu Cordos LPN, FCN, at 778-241-0880

CRIMINAL RECORD?Guaranteed Record Removal

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

assures EMPLOYMENT &TRAVEL FREEDOM.

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

RemoveYourRecord.com

Lena Rose Cleaning, weekly/bi weekly, 20 yr experience, excellent references. Lena, 604-702-9579

YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 Service Call Lic #89402 Same day guarn’td We love small jobs! 604-568-1899

Happy Place Garden & Home Services. Gardening, Pruning, Landscaping, Trimming and Handy Home Services. 604-615-4356

. Jims Mowing310-JIMS (5467)

GUTTER Cleaning Service, Repairs Free Est, 20 yrs exp, Rain or shine. 7 days/week. Simon 604-230-0627

HOME $ENSE - Reno’s / RepairsKitchens, bathrooms, basements, decks etc. Call for an estimate. 604-799-3743. [email protected]

SAWDUST Hemlock, Fir & Cedar

HOGFUELPlease call for pricing

604-465-5193 or 604-465-5197www.augustinesoilandmulch.com

#1 As in movers we trust. Reliable Honest Movers. Same day moves & deliveries. Starting, $45hr + gas. (604)997-0332 / (604)745-7918

1PRO MOVING & SHIPPING. Real Professionals, Reasonable. Rates. Different From the Rest. 604-721-4555.

RED WAGON MOVING & STOR-AGE You pack it up, we pick it up! Storage starting at $100.00 per month. 604-795-7363

SPARTAN Moving Ltd. Fast & Reliable. Insured

Competitive rates. Wknd Specials. Call Frank: (604) 435-8240

ROLL-ON PAINTING. Specializing in repaint. No job too small. Houses, offi ces, condos. John 604-825-1239Northstar Painting Ltd.- The Residential Specialists. BIG jobs, Small jobs - We do it all! Interior and Exterior Projects. Master Painters at Students Rates. WCB Safe, Reli- able, Effi cient & Quality Paint. 778.344.1069

ABOVE THE REST “Int. & Ext., Unbeatable Prices, Professional Crew. Free Est.

Written Guarantee. No Hassle, Quick Work, Insured, WCB.

Call (778)997-9582

A-TECH Services 604-996-8128Running this ad for 8yrs

PAINT SPECIAL3 rooms for $299,

2 coats any colour(Ceiling & Trim extra) Price incls

Cloverdale Premium quality paint.NO PAYMENT until Job is

completed. Ask us about ourLaminate Flooring, Carpet Cleaning & Maid Service!

www.paintspecial.com

LES THE FRIENDLY PLUMBER. Specializing in bathroom renova-tons, including ceramic wall and fl oor tile. In with the new, out with the old. Call 604-858-8842.

.

NORTH GATE PLUMBING

• New Installations• Renovations• Repairs• All Work GUARANTEED • Licensed with 30 yrs exp• Low Rates

Gord, 604-798-6370

Always!pressure washing, window cleaning, Gutter, lawn maintains, yard clean-up. Simon 604-230-0627

GL ROOFING. Cedar shakes, As-phalt shingles, fl at rfs. Cln Gutters$80. Liability Insur. 1-855-240-5362

PROFESSIONAL lifetime metalroof, aluminum patio cover, sun-room, windows, Andy 604-715-7525

PERSONAL SERVICES

182 FINANCIAL SERVICES

185 HOME CARE

188 LEGAL SERVICES

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

236 CLEANING SERVICES

260 ELECTRICAL

281 GARDENING

283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS

287 HOME IMPROVEMENTS

300 LANDSCAPING

320 MOVING & STORAGE

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

338 PLUMBING

338 PLUMBING

341 PRESSURE WASHING

353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS

CLASSIFIED ADS MEANMORE BUSINESS

PHONE 1-604-575-5777

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

Time to putdown some

roots?Check out the “Real Estate

Section” in Classifieds.

Class 625 - For Sale By OwnerClass 638 - Open Houses

Page 35: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

The Chilliwack Progress Thursday, July 19, 2012 www.theprogress.com 39

SELF-SERVEDISCOUNT AUTO PARTS

OVER A THOUSANDVEHICLES TO CHOOSE FROM

Engines-Gas.........$13995

Transmissions .......$4995

Starters ...................$1795

Alternators .............$1795

Radiators ................$2595

Windshields...........$2795

Hours: 8:30am - 5:00 pm7 days a week

www.pickapart.ca

WEEKLY SPECIALSJULY 21-27, 2012

7-12H PP19

792-122143645 IndustrialWay, Chilliwack

NowThat’sa Deal!

DreamCatcher Auto Loans“0” Down, Bankruptcy OK -

Cash Back ! 15 min Approvals1-800-910-6402

www.PreApproval.cc DL# 7557

1989 CAMARO RS, V6, auto, T-top, AirCrd, N/S lady driven, $1900. Phone (604)591-6918.

2003 Pontiac Grand Prix SE, wht, V6, 4dr, alum mags, 109,km, load-ed, leather, $5500. (604)858-2251

2006 CHRYSLER 300, 4 door, loaded, 77,000K, fresh AirCare, $11,900 obo. Call 604-780-8404

2007 CORVETTE, black, $38,900. obo, standard, fully loaded, electric doors. (604)580-8000

2009 Saturn Astra XE, 4 dr h/b. Automatic. Options. Silver. 18,000 kms. $8300/fi rm. 604-538-4883

2001 AUDI A4 QUAPPRO - 2.8L, V-6, auto, blk. on blk. local, 109k, fully loaded, sun roof, immaculate in /out $7995 Must See!604-312-7415

2001 Ford Focus, dark blue, 200,k, runs great, great commuter, auto, $2200 obo. (604)701-9086

2001 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA, 1.8T turbo, 4 dr sedan, std, all options, exc cond. $5300 obo 604-780-8404

2006 HYUNDAI SONATA GLS V6 1owner, no accid, loaded, $10,750 100K. Super clean! 778-574-7991

2006 Nissan 350Z, black, 45,000 miles, 6 speed, mint condition. $16,000. Dwayne 604-991-1900

2006 Nissan Sentra, moss green, auto, exc cond. Runs well. $5900. call (604)795-9903

2010 MAZDA 3 GT- FUN SUMMER SPORT CAR. Leather, sun roof, 4 dr. hatch, local, no accident, 5 spd. $16,495. Super sleek 604.312.7415

1989 HONDA Goldwing 6 cylinder, 1 owner touring motorcycle. Wine-berry red color. Complete with CB & AM/FM radio, inter-electronic radio, “His & Her’s” helmets, jackets, gloves, boots, chaps. Used for “tour-ing” purposes only. Always garaged when not in use. 604-852-9529

2009 SUZUKI GSXR 750, black, mint cond. 5,000K, with helmet, $8500obo.Must See! 778-891-4501

1984 GMC FRONTIER 21ft. Fully self contained, 147K.

Sleeps 6. $6,200. obo. 604-859-6705

1986 - 33’ Empress Motorhome, 60,000 Km. Excellent cond., $14,000 obo. Phone 604-765-0182.

1993 PINNACLE CLASS A 30.5 motor home, many extras $15,000 (604)820-8459 604-557-8459

1997 CITATION 5th wheel, 27.5’ with pop out. Good condition, $6000 604-860-5225/604-869-6159

1998 Immaculate SLUMBER QUEEN Adventure-8 ft camper, queen bed, sink, 3 burner stove, fl ush toilet, pull down table for 2nd bed. Furnace, 3-way fridge also comes with propane tank, rear steps, 12 v electrical cord. Ext. mir-rors. Fits half ton truck. $6300: Call Tom after 6pm Mission (604)826-4647

2003 Nash 24’ 5th whl, fully equip., no leaks or rot, slps 6, must see, $9200. (604)858-0904/366-2635

2007 5th WHEEL. Fleetwood Advantage, 36’, rear kitchen, 3 slides. $25,000. obo. 604-302-1277 or 1-604-259-8770.

2007 HARLEY SPORTSTER, facto-ry custom, 74 cube (1200) big bore by Denco Cycle, Bassani pipe, Windshield, sissy bar, leather bags. 27,000Km, one old guy owner, $7,450 obo. Phone (604)817-1945

2007 HOLIDAY RAMBLER, M/H A class, diesel, 5spd tran, push button shift, 2 slides, 14,300 km, 1 owner, $95,000. Call (604)869-2022

Autos • Trucks• Equipment Removal

FREE TOWING 7 days/wk.We pay Up To $500 CA$H

Rick Goodchild 604.551.9022TOP CA$H PAID TODAY For SCRAP VEHICLES! 2 hr. Service www.a1casper.com (604)209-2026

The Scrapper

AAA SCRAP CAR REMOVALMinimum $150 cash for full size vehicles, any cond. 604-518-3673

“ WANTED “ Unwanted Cars, Trucks and

Equipment. Will Pay Cash. Phone (604)792-7092

2006 Ford Expedition XLT, 110,000 kms, lady driven, all services, leath-er, automatic, seats 8, full load. No accidents, pearl cashmere color. $16,000. Dwayne 604-991-1900

1995 SAFARI 7 pass van, all whl drive, 199K, AirCared, 2nd owner, good cond, $2600. (604)430-3556

1996 FORD RANGER, ext. cab, 2 whl. drive, auto, ArCrd, 3LV6, cano-py, CD, $2500. obo 604-812-1278

2000 DURANGO 4X4, loaded, seats 7, AirCrd, exc. cond. $4500 obo. Call 604-780-8404

2003 CHEV SUBURBAN Z71, black, rebuilt trans. w/warranty, used eng. new B.J. & brakes. In-spected $8400obo 604-826-0519

2004 FORD WINDSTAR, 4 dr, fully loaded, AirCrd, looks new, asking $2500 obo. Phone 604-504-0932.

KEY TRACK AUTO SALES

CARS & VANS:2002 KIA RIO RX-V 4dr au-to, hatch back st#245 $24001995 HONDA ACCORD 4dr sdn, auto, fully loaded ST#247 $24952001 PONTIAC GRAND AM 4dr sdn auto ST#242 $25001998 HONDA ACCORD 4dr auto leather sdn ST#215 $29002000 DODGE NEON 4DR auto sunroof, runs good ST#147 $29952002 PONTIAC SUNFIRE 4dr auto st#195 $29952002 FORD WINDSTAR sport 7 pass auto Aircare ST#108 $34952002 CHEV CAVALIER 4dr auto sdn st#208 $3995 1999 HONDA ODYSSEY 7 Pgr van, auto, Aircare fully loaded ST#259 $45001997 NISSAN PATHFIND-ER 4dr auto 4X4 runs good ST#221 $49002003 CADILLAC CTS 4dr sdn auto fully loaded ST#237 $49002002 BUICK GRANDVIEW 7 pass auto ST#214 $59002006 DODGE MAGNUM 4dr wagon auto fully loaded ST#106 $6900

TRUCKS THIS WEEK:

1997 CHEV PU EXT CAB 5 spd short box ST#229 $39951997 CHEV P/U EXT CAB 3 door auto fully loaded ST#256 $3,9952005 FORD F250 XLT quad cab 4X4 auto diesel ST#125 $8,9002006 GMC CREW CAB 4X4 auto long box full loaded ST#198 $99002007 FORD F150 reg cab V6 auto long box ST#205 $10,9002005 GMC SLE CREW cab 4X4 auto diesel long box, loaded ST#218 $11,9002001 FORD F350 Dually 4X4 crew cab XLT 7.3L pwrstrk diesel ST#130 $11,9002008 FORD F150 REG CAB 4x4 auto long box ST#207 $11,9002007 FORD RANGER 4X4 auto super cab st#193 $12,9002006 CHEV LT CREW CAB auto Duramax diesel leather, loaded ST#217 $12,9002005 FORD F250 CREW cab Lariat leather diesel 4X4 auto ST#246 $13,9002005 CHEV 2500 HD LS crew cab Duramax diesel leather 4X4 auto ST#190 $16,9002006 FORD F350 CREW CAB Lariat leather 4X4 auto diesel ST#164 $17,9952005 FORD F350 King Ranch crew cab, diesel 4X4 autoshrt box st#251 $20,900

33166 S. Fraser Way, Abbotsford DL#31038

604-855-0666www.keytrackautosales.com

12’ fi breglass boat with trailer, $500 (no motor); 10’ Travel trailer, $500. (604)997-9104

7.5 Evinrude boat motor and 10’ in-fl atable Metzler, $450. (604)795-2299

In the matter of theWarehouseman’s Lien Act

and Parkers Mini-Storage Ltd.

Nicholas CollingDarryl Gaskell

Art KlimaJames Jean Garner

Deslippe, EricRon Orpin

Josh PotterAshley Zimmer

Vincent Oshoway

Take notice that the furnishings and personal effects located at 7981

Atchelitz Rd, Chilliwack, B.C. will, if not claimed by Aug 2,

2012, be disposed of accordingly.

Any questions regarding this matter should be

directed to:Parkers Mini Storage

(604)793-4800

I will no longer be respon-sible for any debt incurred in my name by anyone else other than by myself from this day forward.

July 17, 2012James Greaves

Michael John GirouxThis is your offi cial notice that at 9:30 am on August 8, 2012 at the Chilliwack Courthouse at 46085 Yale Road, Chilliwack, British Columbia, the director of Child, Family and Commu-nity Services will make an application for a Continuing Custody Order Pursuant to section 49 (5) of the Child, Family and Community Ser-vices Act in connection with your child, Sarah Emily Mi-chaud. You have the right to be present and to be rep-resented by legal counsel. Anyone knowing his present whereabouts, please contact Kurt Thies-sen, Social Worker, Ministry of Children and Family De-velopment, 8978 School Street, Chilliwack, BC, V2P 4L4. Telephone: (604)702-2311

Notice To Creditorsand Others

Daniel James McFarland, deceased

Creditors and others having claims against the Estate of the late DANIEL JAMES MCFARLAND, formerly of Unit 122 - 9855 Quarry Road, Chilliwack, British Co-lumbia, are hereby required to send full particulars of such claims to the under-signed Administratrix, c/o Sarah J. Dennis, Lawyer, 9259 Main Street, PO Box 390, Chilliwack BC, V2P 6K2, before August 9, 2012 after which date the Admin-istratrix will distribute the said Estate amongst the par-ties entitled thereto, having regard only to the claims of which she then has notice.

DAWN LENORE TOOPAdministratrix

BAKER NEWBY LLPLawyers

1956 GMC step side half ton, all original, numbers matching, frame off restoration. Minter Gardens winner! call Neil for full details $27,500. 604-703-4400

TRANSPORTATION

809 AUTO ACCESSORIES/PARTS

810 AUTO FINANCING

TRANSPORTATION

818 CARS - DOMESTIC

821 CARS - SPORTS & IMPORTS

830 MOTORCYCLES

838 RECREATIONAL/SALE

TRANSPORTATION

845 SCRAP CAR REMOVAL

847 SPORT UTILITY VEHICLES

851 TRUCKS & VANS

TRANSPORTATION

851 TRUCKS & VANS

MARINE

912 BOATS

CLEAN OUT YOUR CLOSETS!bcclassified.com 1-866-575-5777

BC BEST BUY - Place yourclassified ad in 3 BC REGIONS

66 NewspapersCall 1-866-575-5777

Congratulations...Congratulations...and keep up the good work!and keep up the good work!

Lucas had been helping his older brother, Dylan with his paper route but really

wanted his very own. Finally, a route came up and he was so happy!

He's been delivering for only a few months but loves his route and is committed to

getting it done every Tuesday and Thursday.Lucas likes to be very busy and is always

on the go. When he's not playing hockey or baseball, he loves to ride his bike or his skeateboard. He also likes to go camping,

exploring, fi shing and travelling.Way to go, Lucas!

Carrier Carrier Of The Week

LucasLucas

TO BE A PART OF OUR DELIVERY TEAM,PLEASE CALL 604-702-5558.

07-12H_CW19

TRANSPORTATION

806 ANTIQUES/CLASSICS

Page 36: Chilliwack Progress, July 19, 2012

Thursday, July 19, 2012 The Chilliwack Progress40 www.theprogress.com

9/10F_OC3

604-792-2754

07/1

2H_O

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SHOP FROM HOME: www.oconnorchrysler.com

45730 HOCKING AVENUE45730 HOCKING AVENUECORNER OF HOCKING & YALE ROAD, CHILLIWACK

LITTLE COUNTRY DEALER LITTLE COUNTRY DEALER WITH BIG CITY SAVINGSWITH BIG CITY SAVINGS

DLN 5952

Shane O’ConnorJohn O’Connor

Jay Grant,Jay Grant,Sales ManagerSales Manager

Dave Cherniwchan,Dave Cherniwchan,Business ManagerBusiness Manager

Richard Weeks,Richard Weeks,Business ManagerBusiness Manager

Deana WilkinsDeana Wilkins Arnie VanbeneenArnie Vanbeneen Chas ThomsonChas Thomson Bill ReidBill Reid Dustin PaulDustin Paul Barry RossBarry Ross Mike de RuyterMike de Ruyter Billy GrayBilly Gray

$38,790$38,790Leather, Stk#11258ALeather, Stk#11258A

2010 CHEV SILVERADO 2010 CHEV SILVERADO 2500 HD LT 4X42500 HD LT 4X4

$25,998$25,998Stk#U11072Stk#U11072

2011 DODGE RAM 1500 2011 DODGE RAM 1500 SLT QUAD CAB 4X4SLT QUAD CAB 4X4

$7,990$7,990Stk#11221AStk#11221A

2004 DODGE 1500 2004 DODGE 1500 QUAD CABQUAD CAB

$41,990$41,990Canopy, Stk#11292ACanopy, Stk#11292A

2010 GMC SIERRA HD LT 2010 GMC SIERRA HD LT 2500 DUROMAX DIESEL 4X42500 DUROMAX DIESEL 4X4

$30,998$30,998Stk#11044CStk#11044C

2010 DODGE RAM 2500 2010 DODGE RAM 2500 SLT CREW CAB 4X4SLT CREW CAB 4X4

$38,980$38,980Stk#11232AStk#11232A

2011 FORD F350 SD XLT 2011 FORD F350 SD XLT SUPERCREW DIESEL 4X4SUPERCREW DIESEL 4X4

$39,990$39,990Stk#U11175Stk#U11175

2011 RAM 3500 DIESEL 2011 RAM 3500 DIESEL 4X4 CREW CAB4X4 CREW CAB

$12,900$12,900Stk#11144AStk#11144A

2005 DODGE RAM 1500 2005 DODGE RAM 1500 SLT QUAD CAB 4X4SLT QUAD CAB 4X4

$16,994$16,994Stk#U10977Stk#U10977

2007 DODGE RAM 1500 2007 DODGE RAM 1500 QUAD CAB 4X4 SLTQUAD CAB 4X4 SLT

$15,994$15,994Stk#11084BStk#11084B

2009 DODGE 15002009 DODGE 1500SLT QUAB CADSLT QUAB CAD

$22,999$22,999Black on Black! Stk#U11241ABlack on Black! Stk#U11241A

2007 FORD F150 2007 FORD F150 HARLEY DAVIDSONHARLEY DAVIDSON

$41,999$41,999Canopy, Stk#10620ACanopy, Stk#10620A

2009 RAM 3500 2009 RAM 3500 LARAMIE DIESEL 4X4LARAMIE DIESEL 4X4

$23,990$23,990Only 21,000 KM, Canopy,Only 21,000 KM, Canopy,

Nice Truck!Stk#11122BNice Truck!Stk#11122B

2008 HONDA 2008 HONDA RIDGELINE LXRIDGELINE LX

Stk#11220Stk#11220

Stk#11289Stk#11289

+DOC. + TAX. NET OF REBATE+DOC. + TAX. NET OF REBATE

+DOC. + TAX. NET OF REBATE

2012 RAM 3500 DIESEL CREWCAB 4X4CREWCAB 4X4

2012 RAM 1500 2012 RAM 1500 CREWCAB 4X4CREWCAB 4X4

LET’S TALK TRUCKS!LET’S TALK TRUCKS!

TIC-TALKTIC-TALKTruck Talk

INSPECTEDPREMIUM PRE-OWNEDPREMIUM PRE-OWNED

NEW TRUCKS!NEW TRUCKS!

TRUCKS!TRUCKS!

$53,990$53,990

$27,900$27,900

WAS $64,385WAS $64,385

WAS $38,290WAS $38,290

OF . + +++DOC. + TAX. NET OF REEBBAATTTEEE

PAYMENT CALCULATORPAYMENT CALCULATOR

50% OFFEXTENDED WARRANTYWHEN YOU FINANCE AT O’CONNOR CHRYSLER

Payments are based on bi-weekly schedule.Payments are based on bi-weekly schedule.60 month term, 96 month amortization. O.A.C.60 month term, 96 month amortization. O.A.C.

$10,000$62$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$PAYMENT OFPAYMENT OF

$40,000$248$$$$$$$$$$2$$$$$$$$$$2PAYMENT OFPAYMENT OF

$20,000$124$$$$$$$$$$1$$$$$$$$$1PAYMENT OFPAYMENT OF

$50,000$310$3$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$33$$$$$$$$$3$3$$$$$$$$$3$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$3$$$$$333PAYMENT OFPAYMENT OF

$30,000$186$$$$$$$$1$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$1$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$1PAYMENT OFPAYMENT OF

YEAH IT’S YEAH IT’S GOT A HEMI!

GOT A HEMI!


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