trail daily times, june 12, 2012

20
Contact the Times: Phone: 250-368-8551 Fax: 250-368-8550 Newsroom: 250-364-1242 Cruszn Cruszn the the Columbia Columbia Page 2 Page 2 PROUDLY SERVING THE COMMUNITIES OF ROSSLAND, WARFIELD, TRAIL, MONTROSE, FRUITVALE & SALMO S I N C E 1 8 9 5 PROUDLY SERVING THE COMMUNITIES OF ROSSLAND, WARFIELD, TRAIL, MONTROSE, FRUITVALE & SALM S I N C E 1 8 9 5 TUESDAY JUNE 12, 2012 Vol. 117, Issue 114 $ 1 10 INCLUDING H.S.T. Generating jobs & economic benefits www.columbiapower.org BY TIMOTHY SCHAFER Times Staff The sun is shining a little brighter this week now that the details of the deal Local 480 of the United Steelworkers union signed Friday have sunk in. The membership gave its loudest ringing endorsement on a deal that they ever have, with 87.9 per cent of the membership (778 members) that voted saying ‘Yes’ to the tentative collect- ive agreement struck one week prior, with 104 against. With 885 members voting—80 per cent of the total membership— it was obvious the deal the negotiators had reached with the man- agement of Teck Trail Operations was one they wanted, said Armindo deMedeiros, Local 480 vice president. “It was one of the highest ratification votes we ever had. It’s the highest I’ve ever seen here,” he said. Teck Trail Operations and locals 480 and 9705 of the United Steelworkers put final signatures on the new collective agreement for Trail operations after one month of negotiations that began in earnest April 30. The agreement was ratified and commen- ces June 1, running through to May 31, 2017, replacing the three-year agreement that expired May 31. The agreement was a departure from past deals, said deMedeiros, being one year longer than the customary four the union typically signs, and included the biggest signing bonus the union has ever pulled in at $10,000. But the bonus and the longer contract duration was what the membership wanted, he said, after a priority sheet put out to its membership earlier in the year listed them as top priorities heading into negotiations. Considering what Teck unions on other proper- ties had signed for—including Sparwood, Fording River and Elkview—in their negotiations in the last few months, Local 480 was right in line with their demands. Traditionally the Trail union liked to negotiate with any extra money asked for being put into wages or the pension, but for this time around the See BONUS, Page 3 New contract gets strong support from union members “It was one of the highest ratification votes we ever had.” ARMINDO DEMEDEIROS GUY BERTRAND PHOTO Allan Tognotti, of School District 20’s maintenance department, sets up the chairs in the Cominco Arena for this weekend’s J.L. Crowe Secondary graduation ceremony. GRAD CHAIRMAN BY BREANNE MASSEY Times Staff Visualize being told that you have an incur- able disease, being handed a couple of pamphlets about it and leaving the doctor’s office in a daze. This experience might be one that you’ve had if you suffer from cancer, congestive heart failure, chronic lung conditions or renal failure. But a three-year pilot program is gearing up in Castlegar and Trail to bridge the gap between health care professionals and people who have recently diagnosed with life-limiting illnesses. “It’s kind of like being the grease for the wheel,” said Brenda Hooper, the Trail Castlegar Augmented Response (TCARE) Coordinator. “What we hope to do is create a model for a program that will work so that we have a num- ber of services out there. It’s about making those health care services—that are already there— See PARTICIPANTS, Page 3 BY TIMOTHY SCHAFER Times Staff It’s not just a lot of hot air about a new project for the city’s aquatic centre. Work has begun this week on the heating, ventilation and air con- ditioning (HVAC) sys- tem at the Trail Aquatic and Leisure Centre, but you likely won’t see it happening. Work is being sched- uled for the off-line hours of the centre— between 9 p.m. and 6 a.m.—with minimal work being done dur- ing the daytime hours. “A lot of it is the stuff that is the mechanics of the building that is in walls or behind the ceilings,” said Trisha Davison, City of Trail parks and recreation director. “There’s not going to be a lot of visually noticeable change when people walk in the door.” But people will notice the change once the work is done, she added. The goal of the $2.8-million project is to have a properly func- tioning HVAC system that includes proper dehumidification and improved energy effi- ciency while reducing operating costs, said Davison, as well as preserving the facility’s infrastructure. The de-humidifier that served the build- ing’s main pool area failed over 10 years ago and it was never properly repaired, said Davison. As a result over time, issues have arisen with the unit and the build- ing. See HVAC, Page 3 Multi-million dollar upgrade for aquatic centre TCARE bridges gap Program to help people suffering from chronic illness

Upload: black-press

Post on 28-Mar-2016

230 views

Category:

Documents


4 download

DESCRIPTION

June 12, 2012 edition of the Trail Daily Times

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Trail Daily Times, June 12, 2012

Contact the Times: Phone: 250-368-8551

Fax: 250-368-8550Newsroom:

250-364-1242

CrusznCrusznthe the

ColumbiaColumbiaPage 2Page 2

PROUDLY SERVING THE COMMUNITIES OF ROSSLAND, WARFIELD, TRAIL, MONTROSE, FRUITVALE & SALMO

S I N C E 1 8 9 5

PROUDLY SERVING THE COMMUNITIES OF ROSSLAND, WARFIELD, TRAIL, MONTROSE, FRUITVALE & SALM

S I N C E 1 8 9 5TUESDAYJUNE 12, 2012

Vol. 117, Issue 114

$110INCLUDING H.S.T.

Generating jobs & economic benefitswww.columbiapower.org

BY TIMOTHY SCHAFERTimes Staff

The sun is shining a little brighter this week now that the details of the deal Local 480 of the United Steelworkers union signed Friday have sunk in.

The membership gave its loudest ringing endorsement on a deal that they ever have, with 87.9 per cent of the membership (778 members) that voted saying ‘Yes’ to the tentative collect-ive agreement struck one week prior, with 104 against.

With 885 members voting—80 per cent of the total membership—it was obvious the deal the negotiators had reached with the man-agement of Teck Trail Operations was one they wanted, said Armindo deMedeiros, Local 480 vice president.

“It was one of the highest ratification votes we ever had. It’s the highest I’ve ever seen here,” he said.

Teck Trail Operations and locals 480 and 9705 of the United Steelworkers put final signatures on the new collective agreement for Trail operations after one month of negotiations that began in earnest April 30.

The agreement was ratified and commen-ces June 1, running through to May 31, 2017, replacing the three-year agreement that expired May 31.

The agreement was a departure from past deals, said deMedeiros, being one year longer than the customary four the union typically signs, and included the biggest signing bonus the union has ever pulled in at $10,000.

But the bonus and the longer contract duration was what the membership wanted, he said, after a priority sheet put out to its membership earlier in the year listed them as top priorities heading into negotiations.

Considering what Teck unions on other proper-ties had signed for—including Sparwood, Fording River and Elkview—in their negotiations in the last few months, Local 480 was right in line with their demands.

Traditionally the Trail union liked to negotiate with any extra money asked for being put into wages or the pension, but for this time around the

See BONUS, Page 3

New contract gets strong

support from union members

“It was one of the highest ratification

votes we ever had.”

ARMINDO DEMEDEIROS

GUY BERTRAND PHOTO

Allan Tognotti, of School District 20’s maintenance department, sets up the chairs in the Cominco Arena for this weekend’s J.L. Crowe Secondary graduation ceremony.

GRAD CHAIRMAN

BY BREANNE MASSEYTimes Staff

Visualize being told that you have an incur-able disease, being handed a couple of pamphlets about it and leaving the doctor’s office in a daze.

This experience might be one that you’ve had if you suffer from cancer, congestive heart failure, chronic lung conditions or renal failure. But a three-year pilot program is gearing up in Castlegar and Trail to bridge the gap between health care professionals and people who have recently diagnosed with life-limiting illnesses.

“It’s kind of like being the grease for the wheel,” said Brenda Hooper, the Trail Castlegar Augmented Response (TCARE) Coordinator.

“What we hope to do is create a model for a program that will work so that we have a num-ber of services out there. It’s about making those health care services—that are already there—

See PARTICIPANTS, Page 3

BY TIMOTHY SCHAFERTimes Staff

It’s not just a lot of hot air about a new project for the city’s aquatic centre.

Work has begun this week on the heating, ventilation and air con-ditioning (HVAC) sys-tem at the Trail Aquatic and Leisure Centre, but you likely won’t see it happening.

Work is being sched-uled for the off-line hours of the centre—between 9 p.m. and 6 a.m.—with minimal work being done dur-ing the daytime hours.

“A lot of it is the stuff that is the mechanics of the building that is in walls or behind the ceilings,” said Trisha Davison, City of Trail parks and recreation director.

“There’s not going to be a lot of visually

noticeable change when people walk in the door.”

But people will notice the change once the work is done, she added.

The goal of the $2.8-million project is to have a properly func-tioning HVAC system that includes proper dehumidification and improved energy effi-ciency while reducing operating costs, said Davison, as well as preserving the facility’s infrastructure.

The de-humidifier that served the build-ing’s main pool area failed over 10 years ago and it was never properly repaired, said Davison.

As a result over time, issues have arisen with the unit and the build-ing.

See HVAC, Page 3

Multi-million dollar upgrade

for aquatic centre

TCARE bridges gapProgram to help people suffering

from chronic illness

Page 2: Trail Daily Times, June 12, 2012

LOCALA2 www.trailtimes.ca Tuesday, June 12, 2012 Trail Daily Times

To place your ad in the

Phone 250 368-8551 ext 0 fax 250 368-8550

email: [email protected]

MAXIMUM EXPOSUREGUARANTEED PAGE 2 POSITION

BOLD COLOUR PRINTDeadline: 11am 1 day prior to publication.

Town & CountryRETIREMENT FOR

ALVIN CARON DROP IN TRAIL LEGION

2-4PM SAT. JUNE 16

When you’ve finished reading this paper, please recycle it!

WEATHER

Cloudy Periods

WEDNESDAY Cloudy w/ Showers

THURSDAY Variable Cloud

Cloudy with Showers

for You & Your Familyf

Tax Free Savings

AccountsAvailable now!

Financial ServicesSalsman

1577 Bay Avenue, Trail (250) 364-1515

Call or drop by for more information

The fourth annual Smoke n’ Steel Cruszn the Columbia brought car enthusiasts of all ages to Trail’s Gyro Park on Saturday. Clockwise from the top; One of the oldest cars in the show was this 1934 McLaughlin Buick Model 966, owned by Dick and Diana Mcleod; Muscle cars never go out of style; Drew Swan of Salmo stands in front of his Ferret Scout Car, an original military vehicle from the late 1940’s; Something old and something new, there was something for everyone; Ian Buskey of Montrose shows off his beautifully detailed Chevy Truck.

PHOTOS

BY

SIMON

OAKLEY

Cruszn the Columbia

Page 3: Trail Daily Times, June 12, 2012

LOCALTrail Daily Times Tuesday, June 12, 2012 www.trailtimes.ca A3

Congratulations Class of 2012!Gift certificates available

364-23771198 Cedar Avenue

FROM PAGE 1Excess moisture in the building, largely in the

pool atrium, has resulted in premature aging of the mechanical systems and the building envel-ope, Davison explained.

“At any point when you have that kind of humidity sitting in the pool atrium, you have a problem,” she said, noting that corrosion was occurring on metal, and mechanical systems were “taking a real beating.”

Which is where the HVAC upgrade and repair has now come into play. As well, repairs are being made to the building’s envelope system (primar-ily the building soffits), and upgrades to various electrical functions within the building.

These two systems form part of a proper func-tioning facility, she said. They will also improve the comfort of users throughout the facility around environment control.

Davison said the pool atrium humidity level should drop, the fitness centre will be on its own heating and cooling system, and the change rooms will have their own environment controls.

“There should be a drastic change for when people walk through the door,” she said.

The major budget items for the multi-million-dollar project include engineering consultation, major equipment components of the mechanical system, labour, and the building envelope repair work.

HVAC upgrade helps eliminate excess moisture

FROM PAGE 1signing bonus was pretty high on the priority list, deMedeiros said.

“Everybody seemed to want that money,” he said. “Right from the very beginning the member-ship was on us that they wanted the same (as the other unions). So our hands were pretty tied on that one. If we didn’t deliver … I don’t think the contract would have gone through without that signing bonus.”

The change in negotiation strategy was gener-ated by a younger workforce, he added. The evo-lution in the age of the workforce has also brought the air of a new era to the work environment at Teck, said deMedeiros, as well as between the company and the union.

“The membership is content and we are lean-ing towards a younger workforce right now so, for a lot of them, it’s their first big paying job and they are content with what they are doing,” he explained. “And a contract like this shows the commitment from the company, too.”

The contract covers 1,180 people in Local 480 on the production and maintenance side, and 170 people in Local 9705 for the office and technical workers.

The deal carried an 18 per cent increase over five years of the contract, a $12 boost to the pen-sion, and a $10,000 signing bonus.

Bonus was a top priority

MONTROSE

Dogs not deemed dangerous by SPCA

BY BREANNE MASSEYTimes Staff

Two Montrose dogs that were believed to be dangerous are not, according to an SPCA spokes-person.

Contrary to information relayed to the Village of Montrose concerning a dog attack, two Montrose dogs have not been declared as dangerous.

At the time of the regular council meeting June 4, members of the village council concluded that the incident was taken care of by the SPCA and revisited which bylaws applied to dogs in the vil-lage.

The SPCA, however, confirmed that both dogs were not declared as dangerous animals and con-tacted the owner to discuss complaints against the dogs.

“I just want to be sure nobody in the neighbor-hood is scared of my dogs,” said owner Jeremy Brown.

FROM PAGE 1work for somebody living with life-limiting chronic illnesses.”

The research project is designed to aid people suffering from chronic illnesses by providing supportive services for people with new tools.

“A lot of times the urban folks talk about rural communities and the gaps in rural care, but this kind of builds on the strengths that we already have,” said Hooper.

“There are some things that we’re missing—like specialists—but we also have a lot of strengths—we know each other and see each other.

“Most of the time you meet some-body then you see them in the gro-cery stores three times and things like that, there are some fairly good things that we do have.”

The researchers are aiming to open up a safe space to communicate with professionals about the burdens that you’re working through.

“We would be able to have those

kinds of conversations with us so it’s easy to ask questions with somebody who isn’t in a rush,” said Hooper. “I’ll have some time to spend with people and to be available.”

The pilot program is not accepting patients until 2013, but they are searching for participants and get-ting local organizations involved. Hooper will be presenting more information about the program in the regular Montrose council meet-ing on June 18 and Castlegar’s coun-cil meeting on July 16.

She has almost four decades of experience being a homecare nurse and a case manager, and she’s con-fident that her practical knowledge will benefit research participants to cope with chronic illnesses. The research program will also provide participants’ access to a nurse 24 hours a day.

For more information about the research project or to get involved, contact Hooper at 250-512-7721 or [email protected].

Participants wanted

GUY BERTRAND PHOTO

City of Trail electrician Shane Dixon attaches the new energy-efficient lights to the support that will illuminate the River Reconnect Mural on the Trail Memorial Centre

BY ARNE PETRYSHENRossland News

Rossland is no longer going to be subscribing to the development cost charge way of doing things, having abolished them in the last council meeting on May 28. The charges were a point of contention among new developments, because while they need to be paid - for the additional infrastructure - they also were a large upfront cost to developers, that would only really be recouped once the lots sold.

The Director of British Columbia Municipalities wrote back to Rossland with his blessing on press-ing a new path and so that’s what Rossland council decided to do. Mayor Greg Granstrom said that there is no need to hurry to replace them either, because of the slow economy, there is “no development knocking at the door.”

Coun. Kathy Wallace said that there is need for a change.

“We need a new system,” Wallace said.Coun. Jody Blomme noted that the signature

of the Director of Municipalities gave her some reassurance behind the decision.

“We can’t have two things covering us at once,” she said.

Coun. Kathy Moore was not as enthusiastic about the replacement, Connection Cost Charges (CCCs) and so voted against it.

“Basically when I looked into the CCCS and didn’t get the answers I wanted to keep DCCs in place,” she said. “That would’ve been the easiest thing to do.”

Coun. Jill Spearn noted that the City still has the ability to recoup the cost of the infrastructure, the major differences is that rather than at the moment of development, it happens at each sale.

Granstrom went further by saying that the City will have even more flexibility in negotiating before the development starts and could ask the developer to “build ten more trails,” as a part of the deal.

ROSSLAND

Council scraps DCC method

NEW LIGHTS

Page 4: Trail Daily Times, June 12, 2012

A4 www.trailtimes.ca Tuesday, June 12, 2012 Trail Daily Times

PROVINCIAL

PUBLIC NOTICEIn 2007 a 3,560 hecatare wildfire in the Pend d’Oreille valley occurred and caused evacuation orders and alerts to many local residents. As this year’s fire season approaches so does the risk of another wildfire, therefore it is requested that No Open Fires be in the Pend d’ Oreille area. Please respect this request and help to reduce the possibility of this area being closed to the public for the summer.

In May 2012 the WKATV Club removed over 1,000kg of wooden pallets from the Pend d’ Oreille area, business owners are advised to keep wood pallets in secure areas to help reduce and stop people from collecting them for open fires. Let’s all be part of the solution in protecting our forests.

This area has had security increased to watch for open fire and vandalism for the 2012 summer season and penalties/tickets will be issued to offenders.For further information on this request please email [email protected]

West Kootenay ATV Club

PC Clean Up Summer Special

Includes:• Virus Scan &

Removal• Hardware

Diagnostic Report• PC Case Dust Out• Registry Clean

& PC Tune Up

$3999Valu Office Supplies801 Farwell St, Trail250-368-9123

Bring this ad into Valu Office Supplies To Receive This Discount!

Comp Tia A+Certified Technicians!

Offer valid June 1-30

NO PARKING

CHRIS NICKLESS/100 MILE HOUSE FREE PRESS

The prop, a wing and several smaller pieces of this Cessna 172 were strewn across the Blue Sky park-ing lot when the plane crashed in 100 Mile House on Saturday. The pilot and a male and a female passenger were taken to hospital for treatment of minor injuries and released

THE CANADIAN PRESSVANCOUVER - Two unions repre-

senting post-secondary employees have launched a B.C. Supreme Court challenge of a government bill they call undemocratic.

The Federation of Post-Secondary Educators and the B.C. Government and Service Employees Union want parts of Bill 18 overturned, saying it bans union activists from serving on college, institute and university boards of governors.

BCGEU president Darryl Walker says forcing elected board mem-bers to be removed because of their union involvement is an affront to democracy and that the govern-

ment’s conflict-of-interest reasons for Bill 18 are unfounded.

Cindy Oliver, president of the Federation of Post-Secondary Educators, says the two groups met with Advanced Education Minister Naomi Yamamoto to point out the flaws in the legislation, but their input was ignored.

Oliver says they joined the legal fight because their members’ demo-cratic rights have been significantly impacted by the legislation.

She says there’s never been a problem involving faculty-elected positions on the boards of post-secondary institutions when those faculty have also been active in their local union.

THE CANADIAN PRESSVICTORIA - Premier

Christy Clark says she’s introducing a $5 mil-lion income supple-ment program to help vulnerable British Columbia families make ends meet and people with disabilities look for jobs.

She says welfare system changes coming later this year will help needy families with school-age children and allow people receiving disability assistance to earn up to $800 per month without losing their benefits.

Clark says the pro-

gram gives needy fam-ilies $100 for every child between five and 11 for school start-up costs and $175 for every child 12 and over.

She says the assist-ance also includes more tax exemptions for families currently on welfare.

Post-secondary unions mount fight against Bill 18

BY JENNIFER SMITHVernon Morning StarA strong odor is

emanating inside Vernon’s RCMP

office.The local detach-

ment busted a sub-stantial marijuana grow operation

Saturday evening, col-lecting 1,500 plants.

B.C. Hydro called the office to report they attended a ser-vice call in the 7800 block of Wilson Jackson Road (off Silver Star Road) and discovered the grow-op and power diver-sion.

“They were stealing 14,500 volts right off the pole,” said Gord Molendyk, RCMP spokesperson. “It was pretty advanced.”

The operation was located in the garage and shed, as well as a transformer.

Considering the amount of power diverted, Hydro

attended the scene with RCMP to ensure no one was injured or killed is dismantling the grow-op.

“There were a few tense moments at the property as the owners had a gener-ator on site that came on when the power was turned off,” said Molendyk. “The gen-erator then recharged the power lines.”

A 27-year-old male was arrested on scene and released on a promise to appear to charges of production of a controlled sub-stance, possession for the purpose of traf-ficking and theft of telecommunications.

B.C. Hydro helps cops bust grow-opVERNON

BY KRISTA SIEFKENCowichan News Leader PictorialThe ongoing saga of the

barges squatting in Chemainus harbour continues.

In January, one of five barges originally brought in by the developers of the Chemainus Quay and Marina Complex sunk to the bottom of the harbour.

But despite a removal order from Transport Canada in February, the barges have continued to bob in the bay — until now.

“On Wednesday, Transport Canada responded immediate-ly to the reports that (one of)

the barge(s) was in danger of sinking,” Transport Canada’s Jillian Glover explained on Friday afternoon.

“Arrangements were made to have the barge pumped out as soon as possible. We are currently monitoring the situation and assessing what action needs to be taken.”

Glover said a notice warn-ing boaters in the area of addi-tional debris as a result of the sinking of the barge was also issued.

“The Navigable Waters Protection Act allows Transport Canada to order an owner to adequately mark and/or

remove an anchored/sunk-en vessel that is obstructing navigation,” Glover said in an email to the News Leader Pictorial.

“Failure to respond means Transport Canada may mark or remove the obstruction and recover costs from the owner. Transport Canada consid-ers the barge owner respon-sible.”

But Glover also noted that while the province and Transport Canada have explored disposal options, she says traditional disposal options “are not feasible at this time.”

Another barge sinks in harbourCHEMANIUS

THE CANADIAN PRESSHAZELTON, B.C. - A six-month

blockade of the Gitxsan Treaty Society office in Hazelton, B.C., has ended peacefully.

The protest in the northwest B.C. village began when a heredi-tary chief signed an agreement with Enbridge to support the proposed Northern Gateway oil pipeline from Alberta to the B.C coast.

The dispute escalated amid com-plaints by blockade organizers that native negotiators were spending millions of dollars during the treaty process, but had made little head-way.

With RCMP officers standing

by, auditors from Aboriginal and Northern Development Canada entered the office and secured com-puters that will allow them to do an audit of Gitxsan finances.

Gitxsan chief treaty negotiator Bev Clifton Percival says the society agreed to the audit as an act of good-will to appease the protesters and clear them out of the office.

Percival says there was no true reason to occupy the office because there is no agreement with Enbridge and if the protesters had attended meetings about the treaty process they would understand where the money is being spent.

Blockade ends peacefully

Supplement added to welfare

Page 5: Trail Daily Times, June 12, 2012

Trail Daily Times Tuesday, June 12, 2012 www.trailtimes.ca A5

NATIONAL

328 Rossland Avenue, Trail, BC 250-364-1824

STAR GROCERY• Fine Italian Foods •

Fathers Day - Bocce Balls .......................................$8900set

Colavita Olive Oil Pure 3l ..$1795

Colavita Olive Oil ex virgin 1l .$995

Artichokes marinated.....4 for $500

Olives pitted & sliced .......4 for $500

Kalamata Olives superior 2kg $1595

Porcini Dry Mushrooms .........$249

Arrabbiata, Melanzane & Puttanesca Sauces ..............$395

Grapeseed Oil 1l .....................$695

CheeseGrana Padano .................$995lb

Provolone Auricchio ...... $1195lb

Crotonese .......................$995lb

Mozzarella whole ..............$2295

Fruilano mini .................. $995ea

MeatItalian Sausages

AAA Prime Rib Roast ........$699lb

AAA T-Bone Steaks ...........$795lb

Prime Sirloin Steaks ..........$599lb

Rib Steaks ..........................$795lb

Beef Burger 4, 6 & 8oz

CAB Striploin & Rib Eye Tenderloin

Wine & BeerKits & Supplies

ACHIEVE YOUR GOALS FOR 2012

Book your appointment today:HUNT NATUROPATHIC CLINIC INC.Dr. Jeffrey J. HuntB.P.H.E., N.D., F.C.A.H.NATUROPATHIC PHYSICIAN1618 2nd Ave., Trail (250) 368-6999www.huntnaturopathicclinic.com

Exceptional health & weight lossis within reach.

Safe, effective, physician directed.

For AppointmentsLisa. Kramer-Hunt

R. Ac., Dipl. NCCAOM, 1618 2nd Ave, Trail

250-368-3325 www.trailacupuncture.com

Enjoy your treatment for pain while reclining in the comforts of a lazy boy chair and enjoying your favourite book or TV show.

Start a pain free year now.

See results today with a revolutionary acupuncture treatment.

2012 Pain Resolution

THE CANADIAN PRESS/SEAN KILPATRICK

Ottawa school children rally for First Nations to have education equality as they hold banners and placards on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Monday, which was the fourth anniversary of the apology to former Indian residential school students.

EDUCATION EQUALITY

THE CANADIAN PRESSSUNDRE, Alta. -

Fishing guides and local residents fear a pipeline leak into the Red Deer River could do long-term dam-age to one of Alberta’s premier sport-fishing destinations and are demanding ongoing monitoring to track the spill’s effects.

“They’ve got to be here for as long as it takes to monitor what’s going on along that river, for sure,” guide Garry Pierce of Tailwater Drifters said Monday.

“I just hope they’re not going to come in for three weeks or a month and say ‘Oh yeah, we’re good. We’ve got it cleaned up, and

off we go.’ That’s just not going to be good enough.”

Kelsey Kure, who lives on about two kilo-metres of waterfront along the affected part of the river, agreed.

“There has to be a study done to deter-mine the effects of this. You can’t just go on pre-tending that nothing happened, that there are no impacts.”

On Thursday night, a section of pipe-line owned by Plains Midstream Canada running under the river near Sundre leaked up to 475,000 litres of oil.

The company has said high river levels flushed most of the oil downstream into Gleniffer Lake, a man-

made reservoir and popular recreational area.

As of late Sunday, more than 100 people were working on the cleanup. Booms had been placed on the lake, a skimmer was working on the river and deter-rents had been placed along the banks to pre-vent additional wildlife from being fouled.

Oil was not running in the pipeline at the time of the leak, com-pany officials said. But that doesn’t mean there won’t be consequences. Kure, a water resource technician for a for-estry company, said oil is pooling up along the river’s margins.

“(Oil) got mixed in with all the silt and sediment in the river. So wherever there’s sediment, there’s oil particles.”

He also points out the affected stretch of river is highly braided.

“You’re not talking about one channel. You’re talking six to seven to 10 channels.”

Phil French, head of the Red Deer River Naturalists, was at the spill site over the week-end. He said although water levels have begun to recede, it won’t be possible to estimate the damage until river flow is back to normal.

“There was oil every-where there,” he said.

Guides fear fishery damage after oil leak

THE CANADIAN PRESSEDMONTON - A

woman charged after more than 1,000 rab-bits were seized from an Edmonton home has been fined $8,500.

A judge also banned Shelley Zenner from owning pets, except a dog or cat that must be

spayed or neutered.The 35-year-old

woman is further banned from pet stores and must attend two years of counselling.

Zenner was one of three people charged after the rabbits were

found in the south side home in 2010.

Six hundred bun-nies were too ill to be saved and had to be destroyed. Zenner pleaded guilty to one count of causing ani-mals distress.

Woman banned from pet storesALBERTA

THE CANADIAN PRESSOTTAWA - The parliamentary

show of protest over the Conservative government’s controversial budget bill can go on, the Speaker of the House of Commons said Monday - a decision opposition critics hailed as the opening act of a great democratic drama.

The Tories, however, denounced the spectacle as a political farce.

Speaker Andrew Scheer agreed to allow for debate the majority of more than 800 proposed opposition chan-ges to Bill C-38, the government’s so-called omnibus bill, setting the stage for at least a few late nights this week for members of Parliament.

By grouping the motions togeth-er, however, Scheer did restrict the number of votes on the amendments to the bill, which weighs in at more than 400 pages and changes some 70 laws.

“There are few precedents to guide the Speaker in dealing with this type of situation,” Scheer told the House as he spelled out his ruling. “In my selection of motions, in their grouping and in the organization of the votes, and I have made every effort to respect both the wishes of the House and my responsibility to

organize the consideration of report stage motions in a fair and balanced manner.”

The opposition initially proposed more than 1,000 amendments to the bill, which makes major changes to environmental regulation, social programs and tax laws. A vote on every proposed change would have paralyzed the House for weeks.

Scheer’s ruling established that the motions would require no fewer than 67 votes and no more than 159 - a far less onerous workload than it could have been, at a rate of roughly four or five votes an hour, but enough to ensure MPs a few nights away from home.

“The Speaker was put into what I would consider an almost impossible situation,” said NDP House leader Nathan Cullen.

In exchange for dropping some of their amendments, the Liberals asked the government to pull items relating to fisheries, environmental assessment, EI and old age secur-ity and introduce them as separate bills.

Not surprisingly, those pleas fell on deaf ears. Voting on the amend-ments is expected to start later this week.

Speaker allows Bill C-38 amendments but will restrict voting

Page 6: Trail Daily Times, June 12, 2012

Published by Black PressMonday to Friday, except

statutory holidays

SECOND CLASS MAIL REGISTRATION #0011

1163 Cedar Avenue Trail, B.C. • V1R 4B8

OFFICEPh: 250-368-8551Fax: 250-368-8550

NEWSROOM 250-364-1242

SALES250-364-1416CIRCULATION250-364-1413

Barbara BlatchfordPUBLISHER, ext. 200

[email protected]

Guy Bertrand EDITOR, ext. 211

[email protected]

Tammy Crockett OFFICE MANAGER, ext. 205

[email protected]

Michelle Bedford CIRCULATION MANAGER, ext. 206

[email protected]

Timothy Schafer REPORTER, ext. 212

[email protected]

Breanne Massey REPORTER, ext. 208

[email protected]

Jim Bailey SPORTS EDITOR, ext. 210

[email protected]

Dave Dykstra SALES ASSOCIATE, ext. 203

[email protected]

Lonnie HartSALES ASSOCIATE, ext. 201

[email protected]

Jeanine MargoreethNATIONAL AND CLASSIFIED

ADVERTISING CLERK, ext. [email protected]

Kevin MacintyrePRODUCTION MANAGER, ext 209

[email protected]

Shannon TeslakPRODUCTION, ext 209

[email protected]

A6 www.trailtimes.ca Tuesday, June 12, 2012 Trail Daily Times

OPINION

Sometimes students deserves a zeroHow much should

a pilot get paid if she never flies a plane? How

about a doctor who never treats a patient? Or a car salesman who fails to sell a single car?

If you answered zero, you live in the real world. Employees don’t get paid for doing nothing. It’s com-mon sense.

However, many schools seem to have a different perspective. For example, many school administrators have introduced a grading for learning approach, part of which prohibits teachers from giving a mark of zero to students with incomplete assignments. Instead of a zero, teachers must assess students only on the work they actually submit.

In other words, students who don’t hand in many assignments can still pass their courses if they do well on the few assignments they do submit.

Lynden Dorval teach-es high school physics at Edmonton’s Ross Sheppard High School. With 35 years of experience, he recently refused to comply with the absurd grading policy that prohibited teachers from

assigning zeros for incom-plete work. He went on giving zeros despite several warnings from his princi-pal. Eventually, he was sus-pended and could very well lose his job.

From a legalistic per-spective, the school board has every right to suspend Dorval and even terminate his employment. According to Alberta’s School Act, school boards may suspend teachers who fail to follow a lawful directive from the board. While the assess-ment policy in question may be misguided, teachers are required to follow lawful dir-ectives from their employer. Schools could not function if teachers disregarded any policy they disagreed with.

That being said, most people recognize there is something intuitively wrong with an assessment policy that prohibits teachers from assigning zeros for work that has not been done The fact that many of Dorval’s colleagues and students are rallying behind him should also be a clear sign that something is seriously amiss. The superintendent and principal are defending a policy that may be lawful, but which most members of

the public consider illegit-imate and indefensible.

On June 1st, Edmonton superintendent Edgar Schmidt published an open letter to defend the indefensible. In that let-ter, he defends the current policy of not giving zeros and tries to present it as a superior way of holding stu-dents accountable.

“Our approach to missed assignments is to work with each student to find out the reason they did not turn in an assignment. Once a teacher finds out the reason, they work with the student to come up with a solution to address the situation. They agree to a plan to turn in future assignments and the teacher holds the stu-dent accountable,” explains

Schmidt.The explanation fails to

address the fact that some high school students simply choose not to do their work. Dorval didn’t automatic-ally assign zeros to students the moment an assignment didn’t come in.

Rather, he worked with students and reminded them regularly of the importance of submitting their work. When that fails, however, there needs to be a tangible consequence for those students who choose not to submit assignments. The new assessment policy naively ignores the realities of human nature.

Ross Sheppard High in Edmonton is by no means the first to experiment with this failed approach. In fact, Manitoba and Ontario had provincial assessment policies that prohibited or strongly discouraged teach-ers from deducting marks from late assignments or assigning a mark of zero for incomplete work. However, strong opposition from the public in both instances led both governments to retreat from this policy.

It never had to be this way. Many aspects of the so-called grading for learning

approach are positive and would likely have broad-based public support. For example, grading for learn-ing encourages teachers to drop the common practice of basing individual stu-dent assessment on group assignments. It also makes a clearer distinction between assignments given for the purpose of preliminary feed-back (formative assessment) and final marks (summa-tive assessment). These are sensible reforms but have been overshadowed by the no-zeros policy.

School administrators have a choice. They can focus on common sense assessment reforms that would have broad-based public support or they can stand behind a foolish no-zeros policy supported by a handful of education con-sultants.

Let’s hope common sense prevails for once in our edu-cation system. Teachers should be able to give zeros to students who choose not to submit their assign-ments.

Michael Zwaagstra is a research fellow with the Frontier Centre for Public Policy and a public high school teacher.

All rights reserved. Contents copyright by the Trail Daily Times. Any reproduction of material contained in this publication in whole or in part is forbidden without

the expressed written consent of the publisher. It is agreed that the Trail Daily Times will not be responsible for errors or omissions and is not liable for any amount exceeding the cost of the space used and then only such portion where the errors

actually appeared. We reserve the right to edit or reject any submission or advertise-

ment that is contrary to our publishing guidelines.

MICHAEL MICHAEL ZWAAGSTRA ZWAAGSTRA

Troy MediaTroy Media

Page 7: Trail Daily Times, June 12, 2012

Trail Daily Times Tuesday, June 12, 2012 www.trailtimes.ca A7

LETTERS & OPINIONLETTERS TO THE EDITOR

P E P P E R C O R NS T E A K H O U S E & B A R

BEST STEAKS Columbia River Hotel 250.368.33551001 Rossland Ave Trail BC

Best of the Best Chicken.Steaks.Seafood Reward Yourself

OPEN DAILY

ZCH BMO China Equity ........................ 11.02BMO Bank of Montreal ........................... 53.88BNS Bank of Nova Scotia ....................... 51.53BCE BCE Inc ............................................... 41.79CM CIBC...................................................... 70.33CU Canadian Utilities .............................. 65.92CFP Canfor .................................................. 11.29ENB Enbridge Inc ...................................... 38.38ECA EnCana Cp ........................................ 20.72FTT Finning Intl Inc ................................... 23.57FTS Fortis Inc .............................................. 33.60VNP 5N Plus Inc ...........................................2.40HSE Husky Energy Inc ............................. 23.54

MBT Manitoba Telephone .......................34.11NA National Bank of Canada ...............73.08NBD Norbord Inc .................................... 12.63OCX Onex Corp ..................................... 39.78RY Royal Bank of Canada .......................49.99ST Sherrit International ..............................5.03TEK.B Teck Resources Ltd. ...................31.25T Telus ............................................................ 59.02TD Toronto Dominion ............................ 77.66TRP TransCanada Cp ............................... 42.25VXX Ipath S&P 500 Vix ........................... 20.60

Norrep Inc. ................................................... 11.21 AGF Trad Balanced Fund ............................5.69

London Gold Spot ..................................1600.9Silver .............................................................28.585

Crude Oil (Sweet) ..................................... 81.95Canadian Dollar (US Funds) ................0.9696

Helping you turn your house into a home...4530

364-2537

Cloverdale PaintWindow CoveringsHardwoodCarpetLinoleumLaminateCeramic Tile

Your Home,Renovate e,e,,e,Your Life!Renovate

The two politi-cal solitudes Alex Atamanenko (MP BC Southern Interior) wrote about in his let-ter of June 4 (Two new solitudes - Part 1, Trail Times June 4) emerged in 2005 when, he, under the leadership of NDP’s Jack Layton, joined forces with Conservative leader Stephen Harper to vote down PM Paul Martin’s Liberal government.

Now, Atamanenko complains that Canada has changed under Stephen Harper. Well, the NDP and those who voted NDP are not blameless. What did Atamanenko expect; that the majority of Canadians would vote for a dyed in the wool socialist regime?

Hindsight is 20/20

but one could see it coming. The demise of the federal Liberal, and, yes, natural governing party, would lead to an American style extreme right versus extreme left.

The NDP’s new lead-er Thomas Mulcair is causing the great divide between East and West claiming, among other things, that Canada’s oil sands development has led to “Dutch” dis-ease (a reliance on oil revenue).

I think if Canada had to have a disease, it might better be “Dutch” than “Greek.”

In Greece, an over reliance on generous, unsustainable social programs has led that country to bankruptcy and bail out by other countries such as

Germany. The Greeks are now suffering hor-rible but needed auster-ity measures, a result of largesse run amok.

Quebec has a simi-lar problem to Greece. Its generous social programs are not sus-tainable despite being the largest recipient of equalization payments from the same oil sands province, Alberta.

Mulcair wants to keep his votes in Quebec so too bad for those NDP MPs from Western Canada. They now have to trot out the dog and pony show.

The political vehicle Mulcair uses is “environ-mental sustainability”. If Mulcair and the NDP were really interested in “environmental sus-tainability and polluter pays programs”, they

would apply the same measures and negative publicity to all resource industries, including those in Quebec and in Atamanenko’s riding.

Locally that resource industry, a private sec-tor company and larg-est single economic driver in the Kootenays, just negotiated with its unionized employees. The result is a substan-tial 18 per cent wage increase over 5 years, a 12 per cent increase in pension and a $10,000 signing bonus.

None of this settle-ment is due to the NDP, yet, local unions still go out to support Atamanenko, the same guy whose party wants to penalize the resource sector.

Rose CalderonTrail

Two solitudes started with NDP

Tax Freedom Day comes a little laterTHE FRASER INSTITUTE

Monday, June 11 is Tax Freedom Day, the day Canadians have finally earned enough money to pay all the taxes they owe to all levels of government for the year, according to the Fraser Institute’s annual calcula-tions

Tax Freedom Day arrives one day later than in 2011, when it fell on June 10.

“This underscores a worry-ing trend across the country of governments increasing taxes,” said Charles Lammam, Fraser Institute associate director of tax and budget policy.

Despite tax increases, the report notes that Tax Freedom Day would have come 12 days later this year if, instead of run-ning deficits, governments cov-ered their current spending with even greater tax increases.

“We need to remember that the budget deficits incurred by Ottawa and the provinces must one day be paid for by taxes and could mean a later Tax Freedom Day in the future.”

Tax Freedom Day is an easy-to-understand measure of the total tax burden imposed on Canadian families by federal, pro-vincial, and local governments. If Canadians were required to pay all taxes up front, they would have to give governments each and every dollar they earned prior to Tax Freedom Day.

To celebrate Tax Freedom Day and Canadians can also calculate their personal Tax Freedom Day using the Fraser Institute’s Personal Tax Freedom Day Calculator at www.fraserin-stitute.org

The federal government and several provinces increased taxes in 2012, which contributed to

the later Tax Freedom Day. For example, the federal government increased Employment Insurance (EI) premiums; Quebec increased its provincial sales tax, health tax, and gas and mining taxes; British Columbia raised its health tax; New Brunswick increased its financial corporation capital tax and property transfer tax; Manitoba raised tobacco taxes, gas taxes, and its financial cor-porate capital tax, in addition to expanding the list of items covered by its provincial sales tax; and Ontario introduced a new tax bracket for high-income earners and canceled a sched-uled decrease in the general cor-porate tax rate.

Tax Freedom Day also arrives later in 2012 because Canada’s economy is improv-ing. When the economy recovers from a recession and incomes increase, a family’s tax burden also tends to increase because of Canada’s progressive tax sys-tem, which imposes higher taxes as Canadians earn more money. Household consumption also rises, which results in an increase in the amount of sales and other consumption taxes families pay.

In 2012, the average Canadian family (with two or more indi-viduals) will earn $94,259 and pay a total of $41,627 in taxes, for a total tax bill amounting to 44.2 per cent of income.

Of the many taxes Canadian families pay, the largest increase in 2012 comes in the form of social security, pension, medi-cal, and hospital taxes—up $507 for the average Canadian family. Other notable increas-es: sales taxes ($297), income taxes ($283), and property taxes ($142).

“Many Canadians would be

surprised to find out just how much tax they pay to various lev-els of government. In addition to more obvious taxes like income tax, ‘hidden’ taxes such as alco-hol and gasoline taxes often go unnoticed,” Lammam said.

Tax Freedom Day varies from province to province, depend-ing on the taxation levels of pro-vincial and local governments. Alberta continues to enjoy the earliest Tax Freedom Day on May 22, followed by Prince Edward Island on June 2 and New Brunswick on June 6. Manitoba’s Tax Freedom Day falls on June 7 followed by British Columbia (June 8), Ontario (June 10), Saskatchewan and Nova Scotia (June 12), and Quebec on June 17. Newfoundland and Labrador has the latest Tax Freedom Day, June 21.

All but three provinces (Newfoundland and Labrador, BC, and Alberta) experience a later Tax Freedom Day in 2012 than in 2011. Quebec has the longest delay in Tax Freedom Day, with celebrations being postponed by four days this year.

Newfoundland and Labrador, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and British Columbia have signifi-cant natural resources, which provide the provinces with royalties; however, there is an ongoing debate over wheth-er natural resource royalties should be considered a tax. If royalties are excluded from the Tax Freedom Day calculations, then Tax Freedom Day arrives 24 days earlier in Newfoundland and Labrador, 11 days earlier in Saskatchewan, nine days earlier in Alberta, three days earlier in British Columbia, and two days earlier nationwide.

Page 8: Trail Daily Times, June 12, 2012

PEOPLEA8 www.trailtimes.ca Tuesday, June 12, 2012 Trail Daily Times

www.MyAlternatives.ca

Call April Cashman 250-368-6838Serving Rossland Warfield Trail Montrose & Fruitvale

Are you a senior who just needs a little help?We are now accepting new clients

Dementia / Alzheimer clients welcome

DALKE, LAWRENCE PETER — Born May 18th, 1946 in Prince Albert, Sask.,

passed suddenly Feb 29th, 2012 at home in Trail, B.C. from a sudden heart attack.

Our dad retired from Comin-co (a steel fabricator by trade). We’ve always heard he was a great tradesman. He spent the majority of his life living in Trail.

If you knew our dad, as many of you surely knew him very well, then you’d know he wasn’t the easiest person to get along with, so true. Our dad was very par-ticular about certain things as many of us are. If you knew that, did you also know that he was deeply sentimental about family and friends? (Like pulling teeth to get him to leave Trail even to visit family) That kind of sentimentality may not have been as obvious, as our dad had a diffi cult time showing that type of emotion and it was hard for him to deal with events such as the passing of his mom Lawretta (Taber) Dalke July 10th, 2005 and his dad John Dalke Oct 7th, 1991. He left behind 4 sis-ters (Rosalie, Agatha &Rebecca, and Judy) and his brother (Jack); 2 daughters (Sherry-Lee and Pam-ela); and three grandchildren (Chelcy Dawn, Robert Cameron, and Kenneth Archer) and countless other relatives. LOVE YOU DAD!!!!

Dad talked about so many of you and just couldn’t help but complain about all of you, also-present com-pany included. We tend to complain most about the ones we love and worry about most. So you know how special you were to him if your ears were ring-ing a lot. Yes, he could be a grumpy soul yet nothing made him happier then if you’d join him for a beer. That’s what we’re asking today. If you want to be there then come. We’re getting together July 7th, 2012 to celebrate him. Open house starts at 3pm at dad’s (2132 Daniel St.). Weather permitting we’re having a barbeque. Bring a chair, some meat, and an empty beer glass to have a beer on dad. We’re col-lecting memories of dad-good, bad, and/or funny. Please let us know you’re coming by June 20th 2012. Contact us at [email protected] and/ or 1 (250)563-1864 and/or call (250)364-2620 (leave message)

Thanks to Nina Hamilton (Coroner) and to Ev-erett at Grand forks Funeral Home. You were both so kind and patient and we, my sister and I, couldn’t have asked for a better experience considering the circumstances.

***GREEN, STANLEY BRYAN —December 5, 1497

- June 5, 2012On Tuesday, June 05,2012 Stanley Bryan, part-

ner, brother, uncle, son and friend passed away after battling cancer. He will be forever remembered by his faithful companion and life partner Nancy Alex-ander. He was predeceased by his parents Stanley and Margaret Green. He also leaves behind his sisters Dorothy, Helen (Dan), Eve (Wally), Joyce (Russ) and Heather (Roy) and brothers Doug (Joan), Jim (Linda) and Syd. Bryan will also be forever remembered by numerous nieces, nephews and extended family and dear friends.

No public service by request.The family would like to thank

all the staff at Trail regional hospital and friend for the extraordinary care, compassion and friendship during this diffi cult time.

OBITUARIES

THE CANADIAN PRESSOTTAWA - Rachel

Browne, founder of Winnipeg’s Contemporary Dancers who was con-sidered a pioneer of mod-ern dance and choreog-raphy in Canada, has died.

Browne died in her sleep on Saturday in Ottawa, the National Arts Centre said Monday. She was 77.

“Rachel Browne’s leg-acy is us,” Brent Lott, art-istic director of Winnipeg’s Contemporary Dancers, said in a statement.

“All of these dancers and

choreographers who have been blessed by knowing her, dancing for her, being mentored by her.

“We’re all around the world now.”

Browne was in Ottawa to catch performances at this week’s Canada Dance Festival, held in partner-ship with the NAC.

On Tuesday, students of Winnipeg’s School of Contemporary Dancers are set to perform and on Wednesday, Winnipeg’s Contemporary Dancers will appear in Brent Lott’s “97

Positions of the Heart.”Lott said his show will

go on as planned, noting: “She wouldn’t have want-ed it any other way.”

The NAC has lowered its flag in recognition of Browne’s death and plans to present a book of con-dolence in the lobby dur-ing the rest of the festival.

Born Ray Minkoff in Philadelphia, Browne studied ballet in New York City and joined the Royal Winnipeg Ballet in 1957.

In 1964, Browne founded Winnipeg’s

Contemporary Dancers, performing and choreo-graphing while also serv-ing as the company’s art-istic director for almost 20 years. She also founded the School of Contemporary Dancers.

Browne’s honours include the Order of Canada, the Jean A. Chalmers Award for Creativity in Dance, the Canada Council Jacqueline Lemieux Prize, and the Manitoba Arts Council Great-West Life Lifetime Achievement Award.

RACHEL BROWNE

Dance pioneer founded Winnipeg troupe

THE CANADIAN PRESS/FRED CHARTRAND

Conservative MP and surgeon, Kellie Leitch is shown in an operating room at the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario in Ottawa on June 1.

THE CANADIAN PRESSOTTAWA - “What do

I want to be when I grow up?”

Dr. Kellie Leitch repeats the cheeky question aloud, laughing easily as she buys time for a response.

For the rookie Conservative MP from Ontario, rising star in the government ranks and par-liamentary secretary to the minister of labour, it is no idle inquiry.

Her career paths seem limitless.

Leitch, 41, is being inter-viewed at the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario, where she moonlights as a volunteer pediatric ortho-pedic surgeon between parrying questions in the House of Commons, voting on bills, arguing policy on committees and travelling to her Simcoe-Grey riding for constituency work.

Her unpaid time at the superb children’s hospital, known as CHEO, allows Leitch to maintain her sur-geon’s credentials while she masters the art of electoral politics.

“I don’t know if I was con-fident that I’d always be able to keep a foot in both worlds, but I always was hopeful that I would,” Leitch says of her decision to seek office.

When she won the nomin-ation after the downfall and expulsion of Helena Guergis from the Conservative cau-cus, Leitch says people regularly raised the prob-lem of physician shortages and whether she could bet-ter serve the public in her trained profession.

There are about 800 prac-tising orthopedic surgeons in Canada, but only 34 list pediatrics as a full or part-time specialty, according to the Canadian Orthopedic Association.

Leitch says patching up kids and listening to their parents’ concerns - parents who come from all walks of life - “keeps me grounded. It’s part of who I am: being a surgeon and taking care of children.”

But Leitch said she’s also always been encouraged, within the medical commun-ity, to be more than just a pediatric surgeon.

“It’s not a common thing, obviously, for a surgeon to do this. But they’ve been very encouraging and wel-coming and wanted me to maintain my credentials and my capability as a surgeon.”

Hers is a dizzying sched-ule.

In order to maintain her credentials, Leitch visits the hospital two or three mor-nings a week for rounds before reporting to her day job at 9 a.m. Since January, she’s been on call every sixth week, doing rounds in the early morning before head-ing to Parliament Hill and then returning around din-ner - “the witching hour,” she calls it - for the evening call shift.

“It’s entirely unique,” Dr. Baxter Willis, chief of sur-gery at CHEO and himself a pediatric orthopedic sur-geon, says of the arrange-ment.

“Kids get injured; we need someone to be available nights and weekends. So we

worked out an arrangement with Kellie whereby she could be available on certain evenings (and weekends) to take call.”

As Willis puts it, he now has “five and a half, five and three quarters” pediatric sur-geons on staff - and he’s not joking about Leitch’s sprite-like frame.

“It allows her to maintain her skills and provides us with an extremely competent pediatric orthopedic surgeon and helps us with our call schedule - so a big win-win

all around,” says Willis.Leitch’s work schedule

and resume calls to mind a famous anecdote, recounted by Pierre Berton, involving another of Canada’s most accomplished authors.

“‘So you’re a writer,’ an examining physician remarked jovially to the late, great novelist Margaret Laurence. ‘When I retire, I intend to become a writer myself.’ To which Margaret replied, cheerfully, ‘Yes, and when I retire, I intend to become a brain surgeon.”’

DR. KELLIE LEITCH

Rookie MP moonlights as pediatric surgeon

Page 9: Trail Daily Times, June 12, 2012

DAYTIME

WEDNESDAY & MOVIES

TV LISTINGSTrail Daily Times Tuesday, June 12, 2012 www.trailtimes.ca A9

WEDNESDAY EVENING JUNE 13, 20126:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

# KREM KREM 2 News at 6 Inside Ed. Access H. Dogs in the City Criminal Minds CSI: Crime Scene News Letterman $ KXLY News News Ent Insider Middle Suburg. Mod Fam (:31) Duets “Party Songs” (N) News Nightline % KSPS PBS NewsHour (N) Nature Å NOVA Å (DVS) Secrets of the Dead Designing Healthy Charlie Rose (N) & KHQ 2012 Stanley Cup Final: Kings at Devils News Millionaire Jeopardy! Wheel Dateline NBC Å News Jay Leno _ BCTV (5:59) News Hour (N) Ent ET Dogs in the City (N) The Offi ce Duets “Party Songs” (N) Å News Hour Final (N) ( KAYU Big Bang Two Men Big Bang Two Men So You Think You Can Dance Å News 30 Rock Sunny (:36) TMZ + CTV CTV News (N) Å etalk Big Bang So You Think You Can Dance (N) Å The Listener (N) CTV News CTV News , KNOW Parks Gardens Frontiers of The Spice Trail (N) Swan Lake Tchaikovsky’s classic tale. Å Frontiers of ` CBUT 2012 Stanley Cup Final Los Angeles Kings at New Jersey Devils. (N) News Gags National Stroumboulopoulos . CITV ET Duets “Party Songs” (N) Å Dogs in the City (N) The Offi ce Ent Prime News (N) Å Ent ET / FOOD World’s World’s Eat St. Eat St. Gotta Eat Gotta Eat World’s World’s Eat St. Eat St. Diners Diners 0 A&E Storage Storage Storage Storage Barter Barter Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage 1 CMT Reba Reba Faith Hope Gags Pick Reba Reba Faith Hope Funny Home Videos 2 CNN Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Erin Burnett OutFront Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Erin Burnett OutFront 6 YTV iCarly Mr. Young Boys Indie Weird Splatalot Funny Home Videos Mr. Young Boys Splatalot Weird 7 TREE Caillou Big Friend Max, Rby Toopy Cat in the Max, Rby Backyard Dora... Beat Band Chugging Rolie Thomas 8 TLC Gypsy Wedding Strictly Irish Dancing Gypsy Wedding Strictly Irish Dancing Gypsy Wedding Gypsy Wedding 9 EA2 ReG (:25) Movie: ›› “The Kid” Å Movie: ››› “Marvin’s Room” (:40) Movie: ›››› “American Graffi ti” Sugar : TROP Wipeout Canada Weird or What? ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show 3rd Rock 3rd Rock Debt/Part ET ; TOON Jim Johnny T Total Vampire Mudpit 6TEEN Futurama Fam. Guy American Chicken Fam. Guy Dating < OUT Ghost Hunters (N) Storage Storage Storage Storage Ghost Hunters Å Storage Storage MonsterQuest Å = AMC “Two Weeks Notice” (:15) Movie: ››‡ “Two Weeks Notice” (2002) Movie: ››‡ “Overboard” (1987) Goldie Hawn. Å > HIST Pawnathon Canada Swamp People (N) Weird or What? Battles BC Å Patton 360 Å Ancient Discoveries ? COM Gags Corn. Gas Just for Laughs Å Simpsons Gags Corn. Gas Big Bang South Pk Todd Daily Colbert @ SPACE Hollywood Treasure Fact or Faked Star Trek: Voyager Star Trek: Next Star Trek Å Hollywood Treasure A FAM ANT Farm Wizards Shake It Good Austin Random Shake It Wingin’ It Zoey 101 So Raven Ned’s Princess B WPCH MLB Baseball Seinfeld Seinfeld Fam. Guy Fam. Guy The Offi ce The Offi ce Browns Payne “Out-of-Towners” C TCM (5:00) Movie: “West Side Story” (:45) Movie: “Black Legion” Å (:15) Movie: “And the Pursuit of Happiness” “It’s a Big Country” D SPIKE (:14) Auction Hunters Auction Auction Auction Auction Auction Auction Auction Auction Entourage Entourage E SPEED 101 Cars 101 Cars Barrett-Jackson Supercars Supercars 101 Cars 101 Cars Barrett-Jackson Unique Whips F DISC Deadliest Catch American Chopper Daily Planet American Chopper River Monsters Å Deadliest Catch G SLICE Property Property Housewives Property Property Property Property Housewives Kitchen Nightmares H BRAVO Dallas Å (:10) Dallas (N) Å (:05) Flashpoint The Mentalist Å Criminal Minds Å Dallas Å I SHOW King Å (DVS) Movie: ››› “Taken in Broad Daylight” King Å (DVS) NCIS “False Witness” NCIS Å J WNT Love It or List It Property Deal With Cupcake Cupcake Backyard Property Interior Therapy Property Brothers K NET MLB Baseball MLB Baseball: Angels at Dodgers Sportsnet Connected Central Blue Jays L TSN CFL Football CFL Preseason Football Saskatchewan Roughriders at BC Lions. (N) SportsCentre (N) SportsCentre Å M SCORE Score Fighting Series Final G-Night G-Night Final G-Night Final G-Night Final G-Night Final N CBCNWS National Asteroids National National Asteroids National P CTVNWS Direct (N) CTV News National CTV News National CTV News National CTV News National CTV News National ø MORE Pop Up Pop Up Jimmy Fallon Saturday Night Live Buffy, Vampire Slayer Gilmore Girls Å One Tree Hill Å

WEEKDAY DAYTIME JUNE 13 - 19, 201210:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30

# KREM Price Is Right The Young News Bold The Talk Make a Deal Dr. Phil Dr. Oz Show News CBS $ KXLY The View Paid Varied The Chew The Revolution Gen. Hospital Rachael Ray Nate Varied News ABC % KSPS Sesame Street Sid SitBe Charlie Rose Var. Programs Barney Word Word Elec Fetch! Wild News Busi & KHQ (7:00) Today The Doctors Var. Programs Days of Lives Var. Programs Ellen Show Judge Judge News News _ BCTV World Vision Big Debt News Days of Lives The Talk The Doctors The Young News News ( KAYU Chris Mother Family Family Perry Mason Law Order: CI Funny Videos Earl Offi ce Anderson Simp Ray + CTV The View Marilyn Denis CTV News Dr. Oz Show Anderson Dr. Phil Ellen Show CTV News , KNOW Num Mr. Save- Rolie Pingu Peep Doggy Zo Frank. Bear Rob Bears Ceorge Arthur Jack Martha ` CBUT Poko Doodle Animal Art CBC News Dragons’ Den Steven-Chris Reci Ste Mercer Wheel News News . CITV Big Debt News Days of Lives The Talk The Doctors The Young News News News Hour / FOOD Chopped Varied Programs Diners Diners Varied Programs Diners Diners 0 A&E Minds Varied Minds Varied 1st 48 Varied 1st 48 Varied Programs Stor Stor Stor Stor 1 CMT Var. Programs CMT Music Varied Programs Gags Gags Funny Videos 2 CNN CNN Newsroom Newsroom The Situation Room John King, USA E. B. OutFront Cooper 360 6 YTV Erky Varied Ceorge Res Rated Almost Kid Super Side Squir Almost Side Spong Kung Par Spong 7 TREE Caillou Cat in Ange Dino Varied Yo Wiggle Chug Dino Bubble Octo Varied Back Toopy Cat in Rolie 8 TLC Baby Baby Baby Multi Not Varied Programs Say Say Tiara Varied Programs 9 EA2 (9:35) Movie Varied Programs (:35) Movie Varied Movie ReG : TROP Debt Debt Varied Programs Law & Order Varied Programs 3rd 3rd Golden Golden ; TOON Quest Way Nights Quest Gadget Jim Way Way Spiez Spies! Jerry Looney Jim Spiez Spies! Johnny < OUT MonsterQuest Destination UFO Hunters Var. Programs Stor Stor Python Hunters Stor Stor Stor Stor = AMC (8:00) Movie Movie Varied Programs CSI: Miami Varied Programs Movie > HIST Varied Programs MASH MASH Varied Programs ? COM Gags Gas Sein Sein Theory N’Rad. Laughs Varied Gags SCTV Conan Varied Sein Sein N’Rad. Theory @ SPACE Stargate SG-1 Stargate Atlant. Sanctuary Star Trek: Next Star Trek: Voy. Inner Ripley Stargate SG-1 Stargate Atlant. A FAM Mickey Manny Phi Deck Wiz Han Sonny Zoey Raven Ned’s Wiz Deck Phi Phi Win Good B WPCH Million. Million. Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Amer. Earl King King Offi ce Offi ce Theory Theory Brown Payne C TCM Movie Varied Programs Movie Var. Programs Movie Varied Programs Movie Movie D SPIKE CSI Varied Programs E SPEED Varied Programs Pinks Varied On Varied Chop Gearz NASCAR Hub Pass Pass Var. Programs F DISC Varied Programs MythBusters Cash How/ Daily Planet Var. Programs G SLICE Prop Prop Varied Programs Nightmares Brides SOS Debt Debt Var. Programs H BRAVO Criminal Minds Flashpoint Da Vinci’s Inqu. Femme Nikita The Mentalist Criminal Minds Flashpoint The Mentalist I SHOW (9:00) Movie Var. Programs Movie Movie Sea Patrol Lost Girl J WNT (9:00) Movie Love It-List It Prop Love Var. Programs Movie Var. Programs Love My Will Friend K NET Sportsnet Con. Varied Programs MLB Baseball L TSN UEFA Varied EURO UEFA Euro Championship EURO Record Pardon SportsCentre Varied Programs M SCORE Score Score Score Score Score Score Varied Programs Score Score Varied Programs N CBCNWS CBC News Now CBC News Now Power & Politics Lang & O’Leary Connect-Kelley P CTVNWS Express National Affairs Power Play Direct National Affairs Power Varied ø MORE MMTop20.ca Sat. Night Live Gilmore Girls Buffy, Slayer MMTop20.ca Var. Programs

invites you to nominate your carrier as a Carrier Superstar

You might not ever see your carrier, but you know they do a fantastic job delivering the paper to you

and know we want to help thank them even more.

Nominate your carrier of the month and if selected they

will winMovie passes to

Pizza from

Drop your form off at Trail Daily Times, 1163 Cedar Ave, Trail or call 364-1413

or e-mail [email protected]

I would like to nominate

___________________________________________

___________________________________________

___________________________________________

Carrier’s Name

Your Name

Your Address

2905 Hwy Drive, Trail • 250.364.295529290505 HHwy DDD iirive TTr iaill • 252500 36Celebrating 11 years in business

Open for Breakfast and Lunch Lunch Soup & Salad Bar

Wed & Thurs 11am-2pm

Treat Dad on Father’s Day

Prime Rib Burger

11am-2pm

Lil T’s Café

Lil T’s Café

23875

at Birchbank

Celebrating 90 years

To register call 250-693-2255

HOSTED BY BIRCHBANK GOLF

BCGA SPONSORED JUNIOR GOLF CAMP

Saturday June 23, 2012

9:00am – 4:00pm includes lunchAll Junior Aged Players Welcome

$15Golf Clubs available at no charge

Going on holidays?Let us know & we’ll hold your subscription until you are back!

Call Michelle:250.368.8551 ex.206

Page 10: Trail Daily Times, June 12, 2012

THURSDAY & MOVIES

FRIDAY & MOVIES

TV LISTINGSA10 www.trailtimes.ca Tuesday, June 12, 2012 Trail Daily Times

FRIDAY EVENING JUNE 15, 20126:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

# KREM KREM 2 News at 6 Inside Ed. Access H. Undercover Boss CSI: NY Å Blue Bloods Å News Letterman $ KXLY News News Ent Insider Countdown to Megastunts -- Highwire Over Niagara Falls Sports Nightline % KSPS PBS NewsHour (N) Wash. Need Still Å Great Performances Å Douc Charlie Rose (N) & KHQ News Millionaire Jeopardy! Wheel Whitney Commun Dateline NBC Å News Jay Leno _ BCTV (5:59) News Hour (N) Ent ET The Glee Project Bones (PA) Å Lost Girl “Vexed” News Hour Final (N) ( KAYU Big Bang Two Men Big Bang Two Men House “Runaways” Bones (PA) Å News 30 Rock Sunny (:36) TMZ + CTV CTV News (N) Å etalk Big Bang Countdown to Megastunts -- Highwire Over Niagara Falls CTV News CTV News , KNOW Parks Rivers Marine Machines Doc Martin Å Poirot Å Poirot Å Marine Machines ` CBUT News Coronation Street (N) Jeopardy! InSecurity Mosque Michael Comedy National Stroumboulopoulos . CITV ET Ent The Glee Project (N) Lost Girl “Vexed” Bones Å Prime News (N) Å Ent ET / FOOD Gotta Eat Gotta Eat Diners Diners Diners Diners Gotta Eat Gotta Eat Diners Diners Diners Diners 0 A&E Storage Storage Barter Barter Shipping Shipping Storage Storage Storage Storage Barter Barter 1 CMT Extreme Makeover: Home Edition Å ER Vets Pet Hero Funny Home Videos Extreme Makeover: Home Edition Å 2 CNN Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Voters-Vets Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Voters-Vets 6 YTV iCarly One Victorious Big Time iCarly “iParty With Victorious” Mr. Young Mr. Young Boys The Next Star Å 7 TREE Caillou LittlePony Max, Rby Toopy Cat in the Max, Rby Yo Gabba Yo Gabba Beat Band Chugging Rolie Thomas 8 TLC Say Yes Say Yes Randy to the Rescue Say Yes Say Yes Randy to the Rescue Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes 9 EA2 Mystic (:25) “American Boyfriends” Å Movie: ›› “Darkness Falls” Movie: “Disturbing Behavior” Movie: “Heathers” : TROP Canadian Pickers Canadian Pickers Law & Order Å Law & Order Å Law & Order Å Debt/Part ET ; TOON Johnny T Ninjago Trans Avengers Avengers Star Wars Futurama Fam. Guy Venture Squidbill. Aqua Awesome < OUT Conspiracy Storage Storage Storage Storage Conspiracy Storage Storage MonsterQuest Å = AMC “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” Movie: ››‡ “Caddyshack” (1980) Å Breaking Bad Å (:34) Breaking Bad Break > HIST Ancients Ancients Trashopolis Å Ancient Aliens Å Ancients Ancients ? COM Gags Corn. Gas Laughs Laughs Simpsons Gags Corn. Gas Big Bang Tosh.0 Scare C...tales C...tales @ SPACE Movie: “Jersey Shore Shark Attack” (2012) Star Trek: Voyager Star Trek: Next Star Trek Å “Jersey Shore” A FAM Good ANT Farm Austin ANT Farm Movie: “Let It Shine” (2012) Gravity (:08) Movie: “Camp Rock” (2008) Princess B WPCH MLB Baseball: Orioles at Braves Seinfeld Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Seinfeld The Offi ce Browns Payne “Dead-Campus” C TCM Gojira (:45) Movie: ›› “Rodan” (1957) (:15) Movie: ›› “Mothra” (1962) Movie: ››‡ “The H-Man” Hausu D SPIKE Jesse James-Man Jesse Ways Die (:15) Movie: › “Exit Wounds” (2001) Steven Seagal. Jesse James-Man Jesse E SPEED NASCAR Racing Road to Le Mans (N) Countdown The Grid Perform. Trackside At... Road to Le Mans F DISC Finding Bigfoot (N) Dangerous Flights Daily Planet (N) Finding Bigfoot Å How/ How/ Dangerous Flights G SLICE Housewives Housewives/OC Debt/Part Debt/Part Housewives Housewives/OC Kitchen Nightmares H BRAVO The Listener (N) “Mystery of Mazo” Movie: ›‡ “Banshee” (2006, Action) Å The Listener “Iris” The Listener Å I SHOW Haven Å (DVS) The Last Templar (Part 2 of 2) Å (DVS) Lost Girl Å Movie: ›› “Hitman” (2007, Action) Å J WNT Love It or List It Property Deal With The Big C The Big C Movie: ››› “(500) Days of Summer” (2009) Premiere. The Big C K NET MLB Baseball Sportsnet Connected AIBA UFC The Ultimate Fighter Sportsnet Connected Blue Jays UFC L TSN U.S. Open Golf SportsCentre (N) 2012 UEFA European Championship SportsCentre (N) SportsCentre Å M SCORE WWE SmackDown! Aftermath Score Fighting Series G-Night WWE SmackDown! Å G-Night Final N CBCNWS National Doc Zone Anxiety. National National Doc Zone Anxiety. National P CTVNWS Direct (N) CTV News National CTV News National CTV News National CTV News National CTV News National ø MORE “40-Year-Old Vir” Jimmy Fallon Saturday Night Live Buffy, Vampire Slayer Gilmore Girls Å One Tree Hill Å

THURSDAY EVENING JUNE 14, 20126:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

# KREM KREM 2 News at 6 Inside Ed. Access H. Big Bang Broke Girl Person of Interest The Mentalist Å News Letterman $ KXLY 2012 NBA Finals TBA at Oklahoma City Thunder. (N) J. Kimmel Ent Insider Primetime: What News Nightline % KSPS PBS NewsHour (N) Gubernatorial Debate New Tricks Å MI-5 Å Independent Lens (N) Å Sky Island & KHQ News Millionaire Jeopardy! Wheel The Offi ce Parks Saving Hope (N) Rock Center News Jay Leno _ BCTV (5:59) News Hour (N) Ent ET Movie: ››› “The Incredible Hulk” (2008, Action) Å The Offi ce News Hour Final (N) ( KAYU Big Bang Two Men Big Bang Two Men Take Me Out Å (8:58) The Choice (N) News 30 Rock Sunny (:36) TMZ + CTV CTV News (N) Å etalk Big Bang Take Me Out (N) (PA) Saving Hope (N) The Mentalist Å CTV News CTV News , KNOW Parks Undersea The Blue Planet (N) Planet Earth (N) Å “Standing in the Shadows of Motown” Å Architects of Change ` CBUT News Coronation Street (N) Jeopardy! The Nature of Things Doc Zone Anxiety. National Stroumboulopoulos . CITV ET Ent Movie: ››› “The Incredible Hulk” (2008) Premiere. The Offi ce Prime News (N) Å Ent ET / FOOD Iron Chef America Food Network Star “Guy Live” Eat St. Iron Chef America Food Network Star “Guy Live” Diners 0 A&E The First 48 (N) Å Cajun Cajun Cajun Cajun (:01) The First 48 (:01) The First 48 Cajun Cajun 1 CMT Reba Reba Hope Hope Naked: Carrie Reba Reba Hope Hope Funny Home Videos 2 CNN Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Erin Burnett OutFront Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Erin Burnett OutFront 6 YTV iCarly Zoink’d! Boys Indie Weird Splatalot Funny Home Videos Zoink’d! Boys Splatalot Weird 7 TREE Caillou Mike Max, Rby Toopy Cat in the Max, Rby Backyard Dora... Beat Band Chugging Rolie Thomas 8 TLC On the Fly On the Fly Tattoo Tattoo On the Fly On the Fly Tattoo Tattoo Undercover Boss On the Fly On the Fly 9 EA2 ReG (:20) Movie: “The Captains” Å Movie: ››‡ “Wimbledon” (:40) Movie: “The Parole Offi cer” “North by Northwest” : TROP Instant Instant Eat St. Eat St. Friends Friends Friends Friends 3rd Rock 3rd Rock Debt/Part ET ; TOON Detention Detention Drama Vampire Mudpit 6TEEN Futurama Fam. Guy American Chicken Fam. Guy Dating < OUT Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage MonsterQuest Å = AMC (5:00) Movie: ›››‡ “How the West Was Won” Å Movie: ››› “Enter the Dragon” (1973) Bruce Lee. Breaking Bad Å > HIST Museum Secrets Real Deal Real Deal The Real Å Patton 360 Å Trashopolis Å Ancient Discoveries ? COM Gags Corn. Gas Just for Laughs Å Simpsons Gags Corn. Gas Big Bang Comedy Comedy Daily Colbert @ SPACE Being Human Being Human Star Trek: Voyager Star Trek: Next Star Trek Å Being Human A FAM ANT Farm Wizards Shake It Good Good Wingin’ It Really Me Wingin’ It Zoey 101 So Raven Ned’s Princess B WPCH Browns Payne Seinfeld Seinfeld Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Movie: ››‡ “The Ring” (2002, Horror) ›› “The Ring Two” C TCM Young-Cry (:45) Movie: ››› “A Summer Place” (1959) Å (:15) Movie: “Love in a Goldfi sh Bowl” (1961) “Bye Bye Birdie” D SPIKE iMPACT Wrestling (N) UFC Unleashed MMA Ways Die Ways Die Ways Die GTTV Entourage MMA Entourage E SPEED Wrecked Wrecked Parts Parts Car Warriors Wrecked Wrecked Parts Parts Unique Whips F DISC Alien Encountr MythBusters Å Life on a Wire Alien Encountr Alien Encountr MythBusters Å G SLICE Make Me Over, Under Make Me Over, Under Supernanny Make Me Over, Under Make Me Over, Under Kitchen Nightmares H BRAVO The Borgias Flashpoint Flashpoint The Mentalist Å Criminal Minds Å The Borgias I SHOW Continuum (N) Å Movie: “Descent” (2005) Luke Perry. Å Continuum Å Fairly Legal Å “Funny People” Å J WNT Love It or List It Property Candice Undercover Boss Undercover Undercover Boss Love It or List It K NET MLB Baseball: White Sox at Cardinals The Ultimate Fighter Å Sportsnet Connected Central UFC L TSN (5:30) 2012 NBA Finals TBA at Oklahoma City Thunder. (Live) Å SportsCentre (N) SportsCentre (N) SportsCentre Å M SCORE PokerStars Big Game Final G-Night G-Night Final G-Night Final G-Night Final G-Night Final N CBCNWS National Raccoon Nation (N) National National Raccoon Nation National P CTVNWS Direct (N) CTV News National CTV News National CTV News National CTV News National CTV News National ø MORE Billy Pop Up Jimmy Fallon Saturday Night Live Buffy, Vampire Slayer Gilmore Girls Å One Tree Hill Å

Fax Number: 250-368-8550

Circulation & Newspaper DeliveryMichelle Bedford ................................ 206 [email protected]

Classified: Trail Times & AdvertiserJeanine Margoreeth ............................ 204 [email protected]

Display AdvertisingDave Dykstra ...........................................203 [email protected] Hart ...................................... 201 [email protected]

AdministrationTammy Crockett ................................ 205 [email protected]

PublisherBarb Blatchford .................................. 200 [email protected]

Editorial & NewsroomGuy Bertrand ...................................... 211 [email protected] Bailey ............................................ 210 [email protected] Schafer ................................. 212 [email protected] Massey .................................. 208 [email protected]

ProductionKevin Macintyre .................................. 209 [email protected] Teslak ................................... 209 [email protected]

Dial250-368-8551

& the following extensions

To reach us at the

(250) 368-3911

1268 Pine Avenue Trail, BC V1R 4E4

(250) 368-3911

Luca Hair Studio is please to welcome Krystal Smith and Junior Stylist Alannah Amantea

Krystal Smith Alannah Amantea

Alannah is offering 25% off for the month of JuneWe invite past, present and future clients

to call for an appointment today

Please remember to recycle your past issues of the Trail Daily Times!

Page 11: Trail Daily Times, June 12, 2012

SATURDAY & MOVIES

SUNDAY & MOVIES

Trail Daily Times Tuesday, June 12, 2012 www.trailtimes.ca A11

TV LISTINGS

SATURDAY EVENING JUNE 16, 20126:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

# KREM News Paid Prog. Grey’s Anatomy Rules Gentle Hawaii Five-0 Å 48 Hours Mystery News Closer $ KXLY News Insider Entertainment ’Night Movie: ››› “Cars” (2006) Voices of Owen Wilson. Premiere. Å “Die Hard-Veng.” % KSPS Lawrence Welk Keep Up As Time... Movie: ›››‡ “Bringing Up Baby” (1938) Live From Artists Den Austin City Limits & KHQ U.S. Open Golf KHQ Wheel NUMB3RS Å Criminal Minds Å The Firm (N) Å News SNL _ BCTV (5:59) News Hour (N) 16x9 Å Movie: “Maternal Obsession” (2010) The Firm Å News SNL ( KAYU MLB Baseball Grt Pillow Raymond Big Bang Two Men Big Bang Two Men News Wanted The Finder Å + CTV CTV News (N) Å Movie: ›› “Turn the Beat Around” (2010) CSI: NY Å Comedy Comedy CTV News CTV News , KNOW Hope for Wildlife Lake of 1000 Caiman Heartbeat Å Rebus “The Falls” Suggs’ Italian Job (10:50) Ancient Clues ` CBUT National Market Short Film Faceoff (N) fi fth estate Movie: ››› “Adoration” (2008) Å News Be-Erica . CITV 16x9 Å Maternal Obsession Å The Firm Å News (:35) Saturday Night Live Å / FOOD Around the World Iron Chef America Eat St. Eat St. Diners Diners Sweet Genius Å Iron Chef America 0 A&E Storage Storage Dog Dog (:01) Flipped Off Storage Storage Storage Storage Dog Dog 1 CMT Extreme Makeover Gags Gags Gags Gags Movie: › “Daddy Day Camp” (2007) “Daddy Day Camp” 2 CNN Piers Morgan Tonight CNN Newsroom (N) Global Lessons: The Piers Morgan Tonight CNN Newsroom (N) Global Lessons: The 6 YTV Super Evil Super Evil Super Evil Super Evil Movie: ››‡ “Tron” (1982) Jeff Bridges. Zoink’d! Weird Splatalot Splatalot 7 TREE Max Ruby Big Friend Franklin Toopy Waybuloo Rolie Po Yo Gabba Yo Gabba Sesame Street Rolie Thomas 8 TLC Undercover Boss On the Fly On the Fly Undercover Boss Undercover Boss On the Fly On the Fly Undercover Boss 9 EA2 (5:50) Movie: ››‡ “Notting Hill” (1999) Movie: ›› “Lovely, Still” (2008) (:35) Movie: “Annie Hall” (1977) (:10) “Cabaret” (1972) : TROP Weird or What? Movie: ›››‡ “Gremlins” (1984) Zach Galligan. Å 3rd Rock Weird or What? Cake Walk ; TOON Johnny T Johnny T “Scooby Doo! Legend of the Phantosaur” Crash Crash Movie: ››‡ “Starsky & Hutch” (2004) < OUT Saw Dogs Dark Side Python Hunters Å Mantracker Å Dudesons Dudesons Dudesons The Dudesons Å = AMC (5:00) Movie: ››› “Brubaker” (1980) Å Movie: ›››› “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” (1975) Å Breaking Bad Å > HIST Movie: ›››‡ “The Thin Red Line” (1998, War) Sean Penn, Adrien Brody. Å Pawn Pawn “The Thin Red Line” ? COM LOL :-) LOL :-) Comedy Now! Simpsons Simpsons George Carlin Corn. Gas Corn. Gas Kids/Hall Comedy @ SPACE Movie: ››‡ “The Wolfman” (2010) Å (:10) Movie: ›› “Hide and Seek” (2005) (:15) Movie: ››‡ “Dark Water” (2005) A FAM Good Really Me Wizards Deck Sonny Random Movie: ››› “Get a Clue” Å Movie: ›› “The Cheetah Girls” B WPCH (5:00) Movie: “Die Hard 2” (1990) Movie: ››› “Die Hard With a Vengeance” (1995) Movie: ›› “Transporter 3” (2008, Action) C TCM “The Way We Were” (:15) Movie: ›››› “Kramer vs. Kramer” (:15) Movie: ››› “The Marrying Kind” “Divorce Amer.” D SPIKE Movie: ›‡ “Wild Hogs” (2007) Tim Allen. Surviving Disaster Surviving Disaster Surviving (:42) Movie: ›› “The Grudge” E SPEED (4:30) 24 Hours of Le Mans (N) (Live) 24 Hours of Le Mans The 80th running of the 24 Hours of Le Mans. F DISC Deadliest Catch Moonshiners Å River Monsters Å Deadliest Catch Hell Roads Å Moonshiners Å G SLICE Make Me Over, Under Housewives Housewives Bethenny Å Make Me Over, Under Make Me Over, Under H BRAVO Dallas Å Movie: ››› “The Ghost Writer” (2010) Premiere. Å (:45) Movie: ›› “The Astronaut’s Wife” (1999) Å I SHOW Movie: ›› “Lava Storm” (2008) Premiere. Movie: ›› “Goblin” (2010) Camille Sullivan. Movie: ››› “Star Trek” (2009) Chris Pine. J WNT “Northern Lights” Movie: › “Love, Wedding, Marriage” (2011) Movie: ››‡ “The Proposal” (2009) Sandra Bullock. Love, K NET MLB Baseball Sportsnet Connected Mazda Motorsports Intentional Talk Å Sportsnet Connected Poker: European L TSN U.S. Open Golf SportsCentre (N) 2012 UEFA European Championship SportsCentre (N) SportsCentre Å M SCORE Horse Racing Final Final Final G-Night G-Night Final G-Night Final G-Night Final N CBCNWS National One/One Transgender Kids National Issue National One/One Transgender Kids National Issue P CTVNWS CTV News Weekend CTV News CTV News CTV News CTV News CTV News National CTV News National CTV News National ø MORE MuchMore Countdown Å The Top 50 Firsts Movie: ›››‡ “Get Shorty” (1995) Å Movie: “Get Shorty”

SUNDAY EVENING JUNE 17, 20126:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

# KREM KREM 2 News at 6 60 Minutes Å Blue Bloods Å The Good Wife Å The Mentalist Å News The Unit $ KXLY 2012 NBA Finals J. Kimmel News Explorer WWAMI Primetime: What News Van Impe % KSPS Doc Martin Å Finding Your Roots Masterpiece Mystery! Mustang MI-5 Å The War of the World & KHQ ’12 U.S. Open Golf Champ. KHQ NUMB3RS Å Criminal Minds Å TBA Betty News Paid Prog. _ BCTV (5:59) News Hour (N) Daughter Cleveland Simpsons Burgers Fam. Guy American The Good Wife Å News Block ( KAYU Bones Å American Cleveland Simpsons Burgers Fam. Guy American News TMZ (N) Å Sunny + CTV CTV News (N) Å The Listener Law & Order: SVU Saving Hope (N) CSI: Crime Scene CTV News CTV News , KNOW Ancient Clues Å Edge of the World Monarch of the Glen Garrow’s Law Å Cracker Å “Standing-Mtwn” ` CBUT “Harry Potter” Heartland Movie: ›‡ “Wild Hogs” (2007) Tim Allen. National News fi fth est. . CITV The Good Wife Å Howie Do Cleveland American Burgers Fam. Guy American News Block Paid Prog. Paid Prog. / FOOD Food Network Star “Guy Live” Gotta Eat Eat St. Eat St. Food Network Star “Guy Live” Diners Restaurant: Im. 0 A&E The Glades (N) Å Longmire (N) Å (:01) Longmire Å (:01) Criminal Minds (:01) The Glades (:01) Longmire Å 1 CMT Extreme Makeover Hammer Employee Pick Pick Extreme Makeover Funny Home Videos Extreme Makeover 2 CNN Piers Morgan Tonight CNN Newsroom (N) CNN Presents Å Piers Morgan Tonight CNN Newsroom CNN Presents Å 6 YTV Movie: ››‡ “Liar Liar” (1997) Jim Carrey. Mr. Young Mr. Young Boys Zoink’d! The Next Star Å In Real Life Å 7 TREE Max, Rby Big Friend Franklin Toopy Waybuloo Rolie Po Backyard Dora... Sesame Street Rolie Thomas 8 TLC Sister Sister Gypsy Wedding Sister Sister Gypsy Wedding Gypsy Wedding Gypsy Wedding 9 EA2 Movie: ››› “Dad” (1989) Jack Lemmon. Movie: ››‡ “Mr. Mom” (1983) (:35) Movie: ›››› “Kramer vs. Kramer” Around : TROP Housewives Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Housewives Eat St. Eat St. ; TOON Skatoony Skatoony Mudpit Vampire R.L. Stine R.L. Stine Crash Crash Chicken Archer Crash Futurama < OUT Python Hunters Å Python Hunters Å Mantracker Å Dudesons Dudesons The Dudesons Å Dudesons = AMC The Killing (N) Å The Killing Å Breaking Bad “Pilot” (:04) The Killing Å (:04) Movie: ››‡ “Mission: Impossible” > HIST Explosion 1812 Impact of the War of 1812. Swamp People Å Pawn Pawn Movie: ›››‡ “Flags of Our Fathers” ? COM 22 Min 22 Min Comedy Now! Betty Betty 2012 (:45) Twenty Twelve Corn. Gas Kids/Hall Comedy @ SPACE Movie: ›‡ “Halloween” (2007) Malcolm McDowell. (:35) Movie: ›‡ “Halloween II” (2009) Å (:45) Movie: “Child’s Play” (1988) A FAM Good Wingin’ It Wizards Deck Sonny Random Movie: ››› “Cow Belles” Å Movie: “Double Teamed” (2002) B WPCH “Terminator Sal” Movie: ›››‡ “A.I.: Artifi cial Intelligence” (2001) Jude Law Movie: ››› “The Fifth Element” (1997) C TCM (5:00) Movie: ››› “Rio Bravo” Movie: ›››› “Fort Apache” (1948) (:45) Movie: ›› “The Circle” ›› “The Damned” D SPIKE “Day-Tomorrow” Movie: ››‡ “The Day After Tomorrow” (2004) Dennis Quaid. Spike Guys Choice 2012 E SPEED Wind Tunnel Garage Car Crazy Continental Tire Sports Car Challenge ARCA RE/MAX Series Racing Michigan. F DISC MythBusters Å MythBusters (N) MythBusters Å MythBusters Å MythBusters Å MythBusters Å G SLICE Brides Brides Four Weddings Property Property Princess Princess Four Weddings Cake Walk H BRAVO Flashpoint The Borgias (:15) Movie: ››› “The Professional” (1994) Å (:45) “Rabbit-Proof Fence” (2002) I SHOW Bomb Girls Movie: “Jodi Picoult’s Salem Falls” (2011) Continuum (N) Å Warehouse 13 Å Continuum Å J WNT Proposal Deal With Undercover Backyard Property Movie: ››› “Friends With Money” (2006) Undercover K NET Universal Boxing From Newark, N.J. Å UFC Wired Å The Ultimate Fighter Sportsnet Connected UFC Wired Å L TSN 2012 NBA Finals SportsCentre Å 30 for 30 Å SportsCentre (N) SportsCentre Å M SCORE Bellator Fighting PokerStars Big Game Final G-Night G-Night Final G-Night Final G-Night Final N CBCNWS National The Human Journey The Human Journey National The Human Journey The Human Journey P CTVNWS CTV News Weekend CTV News CTV News CTV News CTV News CTV News National CTV News National CTV News National ø MORE Jewels Billy The Top 50 Firsts Metal Evolution Å Best Ink Å Jewels Billy The Top 50 Firsts

Karen SiemensNotary Public

1331 Bay Avenue, Trail, BC

4562

Page 12: Trail Daily Times, June 12, 2012

MONDAY & MOVIES

TUESDAY & MOVIES

TV LISTINGS

MONDAY EVENING JUNE 18, 20126:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

# KREM KREM 2 News at 6 Inside Ed. Access H. How I Met Broke Girl Two Men Mike Big Bang Two Men News Letterman $ KXLY News News Ent Insider The Bachelorette (N) Å The Glass House News Nightline % KSPS PBS NewsHour (N) Wait... Steves Antiques Roadshow Antiques Roadshow Monarchy: Fam Charlie Rose (N) & KHQ News Millionaire Jeopardy! Wheel America’s Got Talent American Ninja Warrior “Finals Region 5” (N) News Jay Leno _ BCTV (5:59) News Hour (N) Ent ET Psych Å (DVS) House Å Hawaii Five-0 Å News Hour Final (N) ( KAYU Big Bang Two Men Big Bang Two Men Hell’s Kitchen (N) MasterChef (N) Å News 30 Rock Sunny (:36) TMZ + CTV CTV News (N) Å etalk (N) Big Bang Mike Two Men MasterChef (N) Å The Glass House CTV News CTV News , KNOW Parks Dogs Blue Realm Art of the Heist Å Kinngait: Riding Light Architects of Change For King and Empire ` CBUT News Coronation Street (N) Jeopardy! Mr. D Ron Republic of Doyle National Stroumboulopoulos . CITV ET Ent Hawaii Five-0 Å Psych (N) House Å Prime News (N) Å Ent ET / FOOD Top Chef Masters Around the World World’s World’s Top Chef Masters Around the World Iron Chef America 0 A&E Jewels Jewels Monster Monster Monster Monster Jewels Jewels Jewels Jewels Monster Monster 1 CMT Reba Reba Hope Hope Gags Pick Reba Reba Hope Hope Funny Home Videos 2 CNN Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Erin Burnett OutFront Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Erin Burnett OutFront 6 YTV iCarly Mr. Young Boys Indie Weird Splatalot Funny Home Videos Mr. Young Boys Splatalot Weird 7 TREE Caillou Big Friend Max, Rby Toopy Cat in the Max, Rby Backyard Dora... Beat Band Chugging Rolie Po Thomas 8 TLC Cake Cake Extreme Extreme Cake Cake Cake Cake Extreme Extreme Extreme Extreme 9 EA2 ReG William Shatner, World Movie: “When Harry Met Sally...” (:40) Movie: ›› “Only You” (1994) Å Modern : TROP Canada Sings Housewives Married Married Married Married 3rd Rock 3rd Rock Debt/Part ET ; TOON Jim Johnny T Total Vampire Mudpit 6TEEN Futurama Fam. Guy American Chicken Fam. Guy Dating < OUT Mantracker Å Storage Storage Storage Storage Mantracker Å Storage Storage MonsterQuest Å = AMC Red Dawn Movie: ››› “WarGames” (1983) Matthew Broderick. The Killing Å Movie: ›› “The Chronicles of Riddick” > HIST (5:00) Explosion 1812 Weird or What? Ancient Aliens Å Famous Last Words Dive Detectives Å Ancient Discoveries ? COM Gags Corn. Gas Just for Laughs Å Simpsons Gags Corn. Gas Big Bang Just for Laughs (N) Daily Colbert @ SPACE Alphas Å (DVS) Eureka (N) Star Trek: Voyager Star Trek: Next Star Trek Å Alphas Å (DVS) A FAM ANT Farm Wizards Shake It Good ANT Farm Wizards Warthogs! Wingin’ It Zoey 101 So Raven Ned’s Princess B WPCH Browns Payne Seinfeld Seinfeld Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Movie: ››‡ “We Are Marshall” (2006) Matthew Fox Lakeview C TCM (5:00) “Fat City” Å Movie: “The Four Days of Naples” (1962) (:15) Movie: ›››› “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” Last Pict. D SPIKE Stings Stings Wildest Police Videos Wildest Police Videos Tenants Tenants Stings (:40) Entourage Å Entourage E SPEED Hot Rod Hot Rod Garage Garage Gearz Gearz Hot Rod Hot Rod Garage Garage Unique Whips F DISC The Devils Ride River Monsters (N) Daily Planet Å MythBusters Å River Monsters The Devils Ride G SLICE Four Weddings Bethenny (N) Å Princess Princess Four Weddings Bethenny Å Kitchen Nightmares H BRAVO Suits “She Knows” White Collar Å Flashpoint The Mentalist Å Criminal Minds Å Suits “She Knows” I SHOW XIII Å Blackstone Å Movie: ›› “Beyond Sherwood Forest” Movie: “Seattle Superstorm” (2012) Å J WNT Love It or List It Property My House My House My House Love It or List It Love It or List It Undercover K NET MLB Baseball: Blue Jays at Brewers Sportsnet Connected The Ultimate Fighter Sportsnet Connected Blue Jays UFC L TSN Euro Champ. SportsCentre (N) (Live) Å Record ESPN Films Å SportsCentre (N) SportsCentre Å M SCORE (:15) WWE Monday Night RAW (N) Å Final Blue WWE Monday Night RAW Å G-Night Final N CBCNWS National Scientology Ex-Files National National Scientology Ex-Files National P CTVNWS Direct (N) CTV News National CTV News National CTV News National CTV News National CTV News National ø MORE Pop Up Pop Up Jimmy Fallon Saturday Night Live Buffy, Vampire Slayer Gilmore Girls Å One Tree Hill Å

TUESDAY EVENING JUNE 19, 20126:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

# KREM KREM 2 News at 6 Inside Ed. Access H. NCIS Å (DVS) NCIS: Los Angeles 48 Hours Mystery News Letterman $ KXLY 2012 NBA Finals Oklahoma City Thunder at TBA. (N) J. Kimmel Ent Insider Primetime: What News Nightline % KSPS PBS NewsHour (N) Queen Victoria’s Empire (Part 1 of 2) Å Frontline Moyers & Company Charlie Rose (N) & KHQ News Millionaire Jeopardy! Wheel America’s Got Talent America’s Got Talent Love in the Wild (N) News Jay Leno _ BCTV (5:59) News Hour (N) Ent ET NCIS Å (DVS) NCIS: Los Angeles Canada Sings News Hour Final (N) ( KAYU Big Bang Two Men Big Bang Two Men Hell’s Kitchen (N) MasterChef (N) Å News 30 Rock Sunny (:36) TMZ + CTV CTV News (N) Å etalk Big Bang Cleveland Big Bang MasterChef (N) Å Love in the Wild (N) CTV News CTV News , KNOW Parks Wild Heart Hope for Wildlife Lost Kingdoms Movie: “Dreams With Sharp Teeth” (2007) Hope for Wildlife ` CBUT News Coronation Street (N) Jeopardy! Mercer 22 Min Camelot National Stroumboulopoulos . CITV ET Ent Canada Sings NCIS Å (DVS) NCIS: Los Angeles Prime News (N) Å Ent ET / FOOD Sweet Genius Å Chopped Å Eat St. Eat St. Sweet Genius Å Chopped Å Chopped Å 0 A&E Barter Barter Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Barter Barter Storage Storage 1 CMT Reba Reba Hope Hope Gags Pick Reba Reba Hope Hope Funny Home Videos 2 CNN Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Erin Burnett OutFront Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Erin Burnett OutFront 6 YTV iCarly Mr. Young Boys Indie Weird Splatalot Funny Home Videos Mr. Young Boys Splatalot Weird 7 TREE Caillou Mike Max, Rby Toopy Cat in the Max, Rby Backyard Dora... Beat Band Chugging Rolie Thomas 8 TLC What Not to Wear (N) What Not to Wear What Not to Wear What Not to Wear What Not to Wear Cake Cake 9 EA2 ReG (:20) Movie: “Spymate” (2003) Movie: ››› “Junior” (1994, Comedy) Å (9:50) Movie: “Bird on a Wire” Strangers : TROP Bubble Wrap Kids Four Weddings Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier 3rd Rock 3rd Rock Debt/Part ET ; TOON Jim Johnny T Total Vampire Mudpit 6TEEN Futurama Fam. Guy American Chicken Fam. Guy Dating < OUT Top Shot Å Storage Storage Storage Storage Top Shot Å Storage Storage MonsterQuest Å = AMC (5:00) Movie: ›››‡ “The Fugitive” Å Movie: ››‡ “U-571” (2000) Matthew McConaughey. Breaking Bad “I.F.T.” Break > HIST Pawn Pawn American Pickers Canadian Pickers Brad Meltzer’s Dec. Battles BC Å Ancient Discoveries ? COM Gags Corn. Gas Just for Laughs Å Simpsons Gags Corn. Gas Big Bang Tosh.0 (N) Total Daily Colbert @ SPACE Movie: ›› “Infected” (2008) Gil Bellows. Star Trek: Voyager Star Trek: Next Star Trek “Charlie X” Movie: “Infected” A FAM ANT Farm Wizards Shake It Good Jessie ANT Farm Deck Wingin’ It Zoey 101 So Raven Ned’s Princess B WPCH Browns Payne Seinfeld Seinfeld Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Movie: ››› “G.I. Jane” (1997, Drama) Demi Moore. Double J C TCM (5:00) Movie: ›››› “Spartacus” (1960) Kirk Douglas. Movie: ›› “The Brave One” (1956, Drama) Movie: ››‡ “The Boss” D SPIKE Ways Die Ways Die Tenants Tenants Repo Repo Repo Repo Tenants Tenants Tenants Entourage E SPEED Parts Parts My Ride My Ride Dumbest Dumbest Parts Parts My Ride My Ride Unique Whips F DISC Dangerous Flights (N) Deadliest Catch (N) Daily Planet Dangerous Flights Deadliest Catch How/ How/ G SLICE Movie: ›‡ “John Tucker Must Die” (2006) Movie: ›‡ “John Tucker Must Die” (2006) Debt/Part Debt/Part Kitchen Nightmares H BRAVO Movie: “Demons From Her Past” (2007) Å Flashpoint The Mentalist Å Criminal Minds Å “Demons From” I SHOW Bomb Girls Movie: “Devil’s Diary” (2007) Alexz Johnson. The Firm NCIS “Recruited” Bomb Girls J WNT Love It or List It Property Love-List Property Brothers (N) Undercover Boss Chef Roblé & Co. (N) Love It or List It K NET MLB Baseball: Blue Jays at Brewers Sportsnet Connected UFC Countdown Sportsnet Connected Blue Jays UFC L TSN (5:30) 2012 NBA Finals Oklahoma City Thunder at TBA. Game 4. SportsCentre (N) SportsCentre (N) SportsCentre Å M SCORE World Poker Tour Final G-Night G-Night Final G-Night Final G-Night Final G-Night Final N CBCNWS National Conquistadors National National Conquistadors National P CTVNWS Direct (N) CTV News National CTV News National CTV News National CTV News National CTV News National ø MORE Pop Up Pop Up Jimmy Fallon Saturday Night Live Buffy, Vampire Slayer Gilmore Girls Å One Tree Hill Å

A12 www.trailtimes.ca Tuesday, June 12, 2012 Trail Daily TimesSOLUTION

SOLUTION

Sunsafe Tip:Drink plenty of water

(at least 8 glasses a day) to avoid dehydration and

heat-related illnesses.

Page 13: Trail Daily Times, June 12, 2012

Come get someCAR LOVE

1995 Columbia Ave, Trail, BC250-364-1208 www.integratire.com

19

See us for ATV Tires SPORTS

Trail Daily Times Tuesday, June 12, 2012 www.trailtimes.ca A13

at Birchbank

Celebrating 90 years

www.birchbankgolf.com 250-693-2255

SPECIAL SPRINGTIME RATESUntil June 19, 2012

18 holes - $45 • 9 holes - $25Any day, any time.

Call to book your tee-time.

BY GUY BERTRANDTimes Staff

Perhaps the baseball Gods smiled on the struggling Trail Jays after all.

The squad was scheduled to kick off its North Idaho American Legion baseball schedule on Friday at Butler Park against the perennial power-house Lewis-Clark Twins.

But the skies opened up and the saturated field forced the teams to postpone the doubleheader.

For the Jays, who have struggled to a 1-11 record this year, the delay in facing one of the league’s top teams might be a blessing in disguise as the squad looks to find its groove for the season.

And with the match up likely to be rescheduled for July, the Jays should be in mid-season form by then to gauge themselves against the league’s best.

“I think it’ll probably benefit us,” admitted manager Nick Combo.

In fact, Friday’s clouds might have another silver lining.

The postponement also gives the Jays a few extra days to prepare for an even bigger challenge when they host the Prairie Cardinals on Wednesday at Butler Park.

While the Cardinals don’t have the same potent lineup as the Twins, it will be Prairie whom the Jays will be fighting with throughout the sea-son.

With Lewiston hosting the state championships this year, two more teams will emerge from the district

playdowns to advance to the Idaho state tournament.

Barring a collapse from the Coeur d’Alene Lumbermen, the door is open to a third team – Trail, Prairie or Cranbrook – to grab the other berth.

As always, success in the district is based a lot on the seedings heading into that weekend. And while the districts aren’t until July, there is no time like the present for the Jays to gain the upper hand on Prairie.

“Every series is a must-win for us,” said Combo. “These games will cer-tainly help determine where we sit.”

But the Cardinals will be coming into Trail with a swagger of their own after sweeping a doubleheader from the Twins on Sunday in Post Falls by scores of 6-1 and 4-3.

Nathan Collier led the way for the Cards with two-run doubles in each game while the pitching staff held the Twins lineup to just seven hits over a combined 14 innings.

Combo said the Jays would likely start ace Dallas Calvin in the opening game on Wednesday and was still weighing options on who to hand the ball to in Game 2.

On the bright side, the clear-ing skies on Monday meant the field should be in perfect shape for Wednesday’s twinbill.

Game times Wednesday are 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. at Butler Park.

The Jays will host another American Legion foe on Sunday when the Cranbrook Bandits come to Trail for a doubleheader.

BASEBALL

Rain makes Jays’ opener against Cards

an early must-win

SELKIRK COLLEGE

CASTLEGAR – The Selkirk Saints Athletics and Recreation program is preparing for another excellent week of golf instruction and activities for youth aged 7-17 yrs old.

“We are very happy for the opportunity to keep this camp going after seven strong years,” comments Kim Verigin, camp coordinator and Athletic Director of Selkirk College. “

The camp focuses on the long and short aspects of the game, specialty shots and mental preparation. Club making, history and rules and eti-quette of the sport are also covered.

“The main goal is to expose young golfers of all ages and ability levels to exceptional instruction and facilities that will help and encourage them to enjoy the game and get to the next level if they so desire,” adds Verigin.

Locations over the week include the Castlegar Golf Club, Little Bear Golf Course and Castlegar Campus.

Locals may opt for the Day Camp package that runs from 9-4pm and out-of-towners can choose the Residence Camp option which includes lodging, 24-hour supervision and evening activities. All attendees can count on more than 24 hours of on- and off-course training, 36 holes of golf, computerized swing and video analyses, meals, snacks and free golf balls and a free golf shirt. The final registration deadline is June 15.

For more information about the Selkirk College Saints Golf Camp or the athletics and recreation program, visit www.selkirk.ca/athletics or call 250-365-1304. The registration desk phone number is 250-365-1208.

Golf camp coming soonCASTLEGAR – The

success of any hock-ey team begins on the back end and the Selkirk College Saints think they’ve added another piece to that foundation.

On Friday, the team announced a commit-ment from defenceman Mark for the 2012-13 B.C. Intercollegiate Hockey League (BCIHL) season.

The Alberta-born Strachan joins the Saints following three sea-sons split between the Kootenay International Junior Hockey League’s Fernie Ghostriders and Kimberley Dynamiters.

He enjoyed an offensive breakout as a 20-year old in

Kimberley, scoring 15 goals and picking up 46 points in 50 regu-lar season games and adding 10 points in 13 playoff contests as the Dynamiters advanced to the Eddie Mountain Division finals.

His 56 total points on the season were the third most by a KIJHL defenceman. The 21-year old wore the ‘C’ for the Dynamiters and was named the club’s Most Valuable Player following the season.

“Mark was a true captain who worked extremely hard every practice and was a leader every game dur-ing the regular season and playoffs,” says Dynamiters head coach

and former NHLer Roman Vopat. “He was a guy that we, as coaches, would love to have on our team every season.”

He also spent two years in Fernie, where he contributed 49 points in 88 games and played a key role in the Ghostriders’ sil-ver medal performance at the 2011 Cyclone Taylor Cup.

Strachan describes himself as a playmaker who is comfortable playing at forward as well as on the blueline.

Strachan is the third defenceman to commit to the Saints for the 2012/13 season, joining Brett Kipling (Melville, Saskatchewan Junior

Hockey League) and Dylan Smith

(Richmond, Pacific International Junior Hockey League).

Selkirk also returns second-year blueliners Justin Sotkowy and Sandro Moser, who combined for 43 points in 48 games last sea-son and finished third and fourth respectively in scoring by BCIHL defencemen.

“Mark is a smart, skilled, puck-moving defenceman coming off an outstanding season on and off the ice in Kimberley,” says Saints head coach Jeff Dubois. “His strengths fit in per-fectly with the style of game that we will play this season.”

Hockey Saints bolster blueline

POOL OPENS

GUY BERTRAND PHOTO

The sun came out just in time for the Warfield pool to welcome swimmers from Webster Elementary and officially kick off the season. The pool will be open from 2:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Monday to Friday until June 28. After that it will be open on weekdays from 10 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. The pool is open every Saturday and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.

Page 14: Trail Daily Times, June 12, 2012

SPORTS

SCOREBOARDStanley Cup

Final series results:2011-12 - Los Angeles Kings def. New Jersey Devils 4-22010-11 - Boston Bruins def. Vancouver Canucks, 4-32009-10 - Chicago Blackhawks def. Philadelphia Flyers, 4-22008-09 - Pittsburgh Penguins def. Detroit Red Wings, 4-32007-08 - Detroit Red Wings def. Pittsburgh Penguins, 4-22006-07 - Anaheim Ducks def. Ottawa Senators, 4-12005-06 - Carolina Hurricanes def. Edmonton Oilers, 4-32004-05 - Regular season and playoffs cancelled (lockout).2003-04 - Tampa Bay Lightning def. Calgary Flames, 4-32002-03 - New Jersey Devils def. Anaheim Mighty Ducks, 4-32001-02 - Detroit Red Wings def. Carolina Hurricanes, 4-12000-01 - Colorado Avalanche def. New Jersey Devils, 4-31999-00 - New Jersey Devils def. Dallas Stars, 4-21998-99 - Dallas Stars def. Buffalo Sabres, 4-21997-98 - Detroit Red Wings def. Washington Capitals, 4-01996-97 - Detroit Red Wings def. Philadelphia Flyers, 4-01995-96 - Colorado Avalanche def. Florida Panthers, 4-0

1994-95 - x-New Jersey Devils def. Detroit Red Wings, 4-01993-94 - New York Rangers def. Vancouver Canucks, 4-31992-93 - Montreal Canadiens def. Los Angeles Kings, 4-11991-92 - Pittsburgh Penguins def. Chicago Blackhawks, 4-01990-91 - Pittsburgh Penguins def. Minnesota North Stars, 4-21989-90 - Edmonton Oilers def. Boston Bruins, 4-11988-89 - Calgary Flames def. Montreal Canadiens, 4-21987-88 - Edmonton Oilers def. Boston Bruins, 4-11986-87 - Edmonton Oilers def. Philadelphia Flyers, 4-31985-86 - Montreal Canadiens def. Calgary Flames, 4-1

NEW YORK - Only 17 teams have won the Stanley Cup since 1967-68, the season in which the league expanded from the “Original Six” clubs (with total titles won, team and first year of play in parentheses; all titles won as current incarnation):10 - a-Montreal Canadiens (1917-18)5 - b-Edmonton Oilers (1979-80)4 - a-Detroit Red Wings (1932-33)4 - New York Islanders (1972-73)3 - a-Boston Bruins (1924-25)3 - c-New Jersey Devils (1982-83)

3 - Pittsburgh Penguins (1967-68)2 - d-Colorado Avalanche (1995-96)2 - Philadelphia Flyers (1967-68)1 - Anaheim Ducks (1993-94)1 - e-Calgary Flames (1980-81)1 - f-Carolina Hurricanes (1997-98)1 - a-Chicago Blackshawks (1926-27)1 - g-Dallas Stars (1993-94)1 - Los Angeles Kings (1967-68)1 - a-New York Rangers (1926-27)1 - Tampa Bay Lightning (1992-93)a-member of “Original Six”; b-entered league in 1979 fol-lowing demise of the World Hockey Association; c-originally Kansas City Scouts (1974-75 through 75-76) and Colorado Rockies (76-77 through 81-82) before moving to New Jersey for the 82-83 season; d-originally Quebec Nordiques (from WHA, 1979; moved to Denver for 1995-96 season); e-originally Atlanta Flames (1972 expansion; moved to Calgary for 80-81); f-originally Hartford Whalers (from WHA, 1979; moved to Carolina for 1997-98 season; g-originally Minnesota North Stars (1967; relocated to Dallas, 1993-94).

A14 www.trailtimes.ca Tuesday, June 12, 2012 Trail Daily Times

1995 Columbia Ave, Trail, BC

250-364-1208

This new tire was developed for light trucks, vans and SUVs and is ideal for both on and off road. use. It has a special block tread that combines shoulder lugs and multisipes for more traction and quiet running on all types of terrains. The tire’s low profile offers excellent traction and low rolling resistance.

Locally owned and operated by

Woody’s Auto Ltd.

CAR LOVE

Dynapro AT RF10T RF10

Call of membership to vote on proposed RTMHA/BVMHA

Merger Concept.

*RTMHA will be accepting new members at this meeting.*

McIntyre room 7pm

MEETING OF SPECIAL RESOLUTION

June 27th 2012

SUBMITTED PHOTOS

Seventeen teams from Trail, Nelson, Cranbrook and Colville took part in the annual East-West Bocce Tournament in Trail on June 3. Winners of the ‘A” event was the team of Guido Babuin and Mario Favaro (pictured on the left accepting trophy from tournament director Joe Bertuzzi). Second in the “A” event went to Trail’s J. Maleetta and J. Szabo while third went to the Nelson team of D.Cerone and C. Chirico. G. Bertuzzi and H. Barth of Trail won the “B” event with the Trail duo of T. Veltri and B. DeRosa taking second and S. Peloso and T. Cappelletto finishing third.

EASTWEST BOCCE TOURNAMENT

FRENCH OPEN

Nadal wins rain-delayed finalTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PARIS - Rain or shine, clay or mud, Sunday or Monday, Rafael Nadal rules Roland Garros.

The man they call “Rafa” won his record sev-enth French Open title on Monday, returning a day after getting rained out to put the finishing touches on a 6-4, 6-3, 2-6, 7-5 victory over Novak Djokovic, and deny Djokovic in his own quest for history - the “Novak Slam.”

The match ended on a Djokovic double-fault, a fittingly awkward ending to a match that had plenty of stops and starts, including a brief delay during the fourth set Monday while - what else? - a rain shower passed over the stadium.

They waited it out and Nadal finished where he has for seven of the past eight years: Down on the ground, celebrating a title at a place that feels like home. He broke the record he shared with Bjorn Borg and improved to 52-1 at the French Open.

After serving his fourth double fault of the match, Djokovic dropped his head and slumped his shoulders, an emotional two-day adventure complete, and not with the result he wanted.

He was trying to become the first man in 43 years to win four straight major titles. He came up short and joined Roger Federer, who twice came up one match short of four in a row - his quest also halted by Nadal at Roland Garros in 2006 and 2007. Nadal won his 11th overall Grand Slam title, tying him with Borg and Rod Laver on the all-time list.

THE CANADIAN PRESSLOS ANGELES - It was worth the

wait.After 45 long years, including

two near-misses in the last week, the Los Angeles Kings have finally been crowned Stanley Cup cham-pions. The party kicked off before the first period even ended Monday as Los Angeles romped to a 6-1 series-clinching victory over the stunned New Jersey Devils.

The game turned on a penalty that should immediately erase Marty McSorley’s 1993 illegal stick call as the most memorable in Kings history. Devils forward Steve Bernier was given a five-minute major for board-ing just over 10 minutes into the game after bloodying Rob Scuderi with a hard hit from behind, and Los Angeles made him pay.

First captain Dustin Brown got a puck behind Martin Brodeur. Then Jeff Carter followed. By the time Trevor Lewis made it 3-0 at 15:01, the Staples Center crowd knew the Kings had all the goals they needed.

After all, Jonathan Quick didn’t allow more than that in any game during a dominant 16-4 run through this post-season. The Kings goaltend-er was awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP for his domin-ant performance in the Kings’ goal.

Quick didn’t face a lot of shots in Game 6. His toughest task was stay-ing composed as the score went up.

“As much as you keep pushing it out of your mind it’ll creep back in,” he said.

“Especially you get that four-goal lead and it’s hard for it not to creep into your head a little bit. But you keep reminding yourself how dan-gerous of a team they are, and the

second you become relaxed and get your mind off what you’re supposed to be doing that’s when they’ll take advantage of you.”

The Devils were the first team since 1945 to even force a Game 6 in the Stanley Cup final after trailing 3-0 in the series, and the clincher highlighted why the task of com-ing all the way back is so daunting. There’s no room for bad bounces or bad luck.

New Jersey was it where it want-ed to be after weathering an early storm and killing off a minor pen-alty. And then Bernier crashed into Scuderi. The most difficult part of that penalty for the Devils was the fact it came just seconds after Jarrett Stoll had hit Stephen Gionta from behind without a call.

Series over.The Devils were shaken and their

hopes of forcing a Game 7 were soon shattered. It’s extremely rare to see a team score three times on a major penalty, especially against a New Jersey penalty kill that was the NHL’s best in the regular season at 89.6 per cent. They couldn’t maintain that level in the playoffs.

“You know what, tonight is about L.A. and letting them celebrate,” Devils coach Peter DeBoer said when asked about the Bernier penalty. “If you want to ask me about that in about a week, I’ll give you my honest opinion on it.”

All that was left was for Brown to take centre stage.

When the captain finally accepted the Stanley Cup from commissioner Gary Bettman and hoisted it in the air, it provided a fitting scene - he was one of the young players the Kings decided to build around when they were mired in a stretch of eight straight years out of the playoffs from 2002 to 2009.

NHL

Kings get crownLos Angeles hammers

Devils to claim Stanley Cup

Page 15: Trail Daily Times, June 12, 2012

LEISURE

Dear Annie: I know that anorexia is not uncommon in teenage girls, but I never thought I would see the signs in my best friend. “Emmy” always complains about the way she looks and is constantly focused on her weight. She makes sure everyone else eats, but I rarely see her put a bite in her mouth. She denies that she has a problem, but all her clothes are baggy, and you can see her bones sticking out.

Everyone, even peo-ple who just met her, ask me if she is anorexic. Emmy is six inches taller than I am and weighs less -- and my doctor says I am underweight. Last month alone, she dropped 20 pounds.

How can I help her? I want to talk to her mom, but I don’t know how to bring it up. -- Not that Skinny

Dear Not: Emmy is lucky to have you as a friend. Too many teen-agers with eating disor-ders are left alone until the problem becomes

life threatening. It’s also possible that something else is going on with Emmy, but the soon-er this is addressed, the sooner she can be helped.

First talk to Emmy and urge her to discuss this with her parents. If nothing changes, you can speak to her mom, saying, “I’m wor-ried about Emmy. She doesn’t seem to be eat-ing normally, and she’s lost a lot of weight.” You also can alert your own parents, and when school resumes, talk to the school nurse or counselor and urge Emmy to do so, as well. And please contact the National Association of Anorexia and Associated

Disorders (anad.org) for more information.

Dear Annie: My boyfriend of five years recently had a heart attack and died imme-diately. I am so dis-traught. He was my life and my best friend. He lived in a different town, and I didn’t want to uproot my children, so we never moved in together. This was a source of a great many arguments.

The problem is, I cheated on him with a friend of ours. He never knew. I cheated because I was lonely and felt that he really didn’t want me. But I loved him with all of my heart. The affair always made me feel guilty, but since he died, the guilt has become over-whelming.

I know I messed up. I never wanted to hurt him. I keep think-ing that he now knows everything, and I can’t take it. Do you think that in the afterlife you find out things like this? -- Lost My Love

Dear Lost: If you believe in an afterlife where loved ones watch over us, then you surely believe it is a place of forgiveness. Please con-sider grief counseling. It will help you come to terms with your loss and get past your guilt so you can move for-ward. Your doctor or local hospice organiza-tion can refer you.

Dear Annie: This is for “Illinois Neighbor,” who complained that a nosy neighbor keeps reporting her husband to the police because he parks his trailer so that one tire often rests on the dirt. This violates a city ordinance. She said they can’t afford to enlarge the driveway.

I’m not sure how much a truckload of gravel costs in Illinois, but in my area, I bought a small load (half a yard) for $15. They should put a two-foot-wide strip of gravel beside the driveway, so the vehicle wheels rest on it. That gravel would then be considered part

of the driveway. It’s not a job that requires an impossibly strong man, either. I’m a female in my 70s, and I did it. -- Old NW Rocker

Dear Rocker: Our thanks to all the read-ers who recommended adding gravel or rocks

to the area adjacent to the driveway so that the wheel doesn’t rest on the dirt. If this solves the legal problem, it should also solve the neighbor problem.

Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy

Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers col-umn. Please email your questions to annies-m a i l b o x @ c o m c a s t .net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. To find out

TODAY’S CROSSWORD

SOLUTION FOR YESTERDAY’S SUDOKU

Sudoku is a number-plac-ing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each col-umn and each 3x3 box contains the same num-ber only once. The diffi-culty level of the Conceptis Sudoku increases from Monday to Friday.

TODAY’S PUZZLES

ANNIE’S MAILBOX

Marcy Sugar & Kathy Mitchell

Trail Daily Times Tuesday, June 12, 2012 www.trailtimes.ca A15

Urge friend to discuss anorexia with parents

Page 16: Trail Daily Times, June 12, 2012

LEISURE

For Wednesday, June 13, 2012 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) This is a wonderful day to make long-range plans for the future. Talk to daily contacts, siblings and relatives, because their input, especially if they are older, might help you. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) You feel practical about your money and possessions today. If shopping, you will want to buy long-lasting, practical items because you need to feel financially secure. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Today you feel highly disci-plined, which is why you will accomplish a lot. Definitely choose work that requires dis-cipline and self-control while you have the perseverance and concentration necessary to succeed. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Any kind of research will go extremely well for you today.

You want to dive in and meticulously check details or search for answers. (Great!) LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Someone older might have excellent advice for you today. In particular, you might be concerned about how to make your future dreams a reality. (There’s always a way.) VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Discussions with author-ity figures will go well today because they perceive you as sensible, reliable and hard-working. And your financial projections seem to be solid. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Make long-range travel plans today. Similarly, future plans related to publishing, the media, medicine and the law will be well-planned with attention to detail. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) A favor or advice from someone older, wiser or richer might come your way today.

Listen to whatever is offered, because you can learn from others right now. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) This is a good day to exam-ine your closest friendships and partnerships. Look at your habits and style, and how they fit (or not) with others. You can learn some-thing! CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Make a plan to get bet-

ter organized at work today. You’ll find that whatever you do, your efforts will bring you long-lasting results. You can’t lose. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) This is a good day to make future plans for vacations, the education of young people or anything having to do with professional sports. You have the patience and attention to detail necessary to do this.

PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) Discussions with older fam-ily members can help you today. What you need is prac-tical, hands-on advice that makes a difference in the here and now. YOU BORN TODAY Many of you are psychic and are interested in esoteric knowl-edge. You’re intellectually and physically adventurous, and you love to explore new places and ideas. You believe

that anything is possible. Naturally, your heroes are those who attempt the impos-sible and succeed, which is why personally you often are a risk-taker. Your year ahead will be highly social and ben-eficial for all relationships. Birthdate of: W.B. Yeats, Bullitt/Nobel laureate; Tim Allen, actor; Ally Sheedy, actress. (c) 2012 King Features Syndicate, Inc.

TUNDRA

MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM

DILBERT

ANIMAL CRACKERS

HAGARBROOMHILDA

SALLY FORTHBLONDIE

YOUR HOROSCOPEBy Francis Drake

A16 www.trailtimes.ca Tuesday, June 12, 2012 Trail Daily Times

Page 17: Trail Daily Times, June 12, 2012

Trail Daily Times Tuesday, June 12, 2012 www.trailtimes.ca A17

Jackson Jacob ChernoffDec. 5, 1936 - Oct. 29, 2006

Beverly Louise ChernoffMay 25, 1933 - June 12, 2008

In Memory of

Our parents, grandparents.Remembering you is easy. Going on without you is hard.

Forever in our hearts.Brenda, Jason, Tannis & families

Call Today! 250-364-1413 ext 206

FruitvaleRoute 359 10 papers Columbia Gardens Rd, Forsythia DrRoute 370 18 papers 2nd St, Hillcrest Ave, Mountain StRoute 375 8 papers Green Rd & Lodden RdRoute 381 11 papers Coughlin RdRoute 382 13 papers Debruin Rd & Staats RdWarfieldRoute 195 17 papersBlake Court, Shelley St, Whitman WayBlueberryRoute 308 6 papers 100 St to 104 StMontroseRoute 341 24 papers 8th Ave, 9th Ave,10th Ave CastlegarRoute 311 6 papers 9th Ave & Southridge DrRoute 312 15 papers 10th & 9th AveRoute 314 12 papers 4th, 5th, & 6th AveRoute 321 10 papers Columbia & Hunter’s PlaceSalmoRoute 451 10 papers 8th St, 9th St

RosslandRoute 406 15 papers Cooke Ave & Kootenay AveRoute 414 18 papers Thompson Ave, Victoria AveRoute 416 10 papers 3rd Ave, 6th Ave, Elmore St, Paul SRoute 420 17 papers 1st, 3rd Kootenay Ave, Leroi AveRoute 421 9 papers Davis & Spokane StRoute 424 9 papers Ironcolt Ave, Mcleod Ave, Plewman WayRoute 434 7 papers 2nd Ave, 3rd Ave, Turner AveGenelleRoute 303 16 papers 12th Ave, Grandview PlMontroseRoute 345 9 papers 5th St, 8th, 9th AveRoute 348 21 papers 12th Ave, Christie RdWest TrailRoute 131 14 papers Bay Ave, Riverside AveRoute 132 14 papers Daniel St, Wilmes LaneRoute 140 11 papers Daniel St, Topping St

PAPER CARRIERS For all areas. Excellent exercise, fun for ALL ages.

WANTED

Arya Isabel

City of Trail - Job Pos ngPURCHASING/MECHANICAL

SUPERINTENDENTThe City of Trail is recrui ng for the permanent posi on of Purchasing/Mechanical Superintendent.

Detailed informa on about this employment opportunity is available on the City’s website at www.trail.ca/employment.php or by request to Sandy Lucchini at (250) 364-0809.

Applica ons will be received un l Friday, June 22, 2012.

The City of Trail thanks all applicants for their interest and will only reply to those selected for an interview.

IS SEEKING TO FILL THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS:

MEAT DEPARTMENT MANAGERPRODUCE DEPARTMENT

MANAGERFRONT END SUPERVISOR

GROCERY CLERKPRODUCE CLERK

Please submit resumes in person or email to:Liberty ‘AG’ Foods

1950 Main Street, Fruitvale, BCEmail: [email protected]

Only Those Candidates Short-Listed Will Be Contacted. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE.

In Memoriam

Births

Help Wanted

Announcements

BirthsWELCOME Maximillien Eric Crispin to the world! Born June 6, 2012 to proud parents Zachary Crispin and Monica Underwood. Thrilled grand-parents are Janice Under-wood, Eric Underwood and Martine Robb, and Lyle and Julie Crispin. Great Grand-mothers are Alice Wilson and Beth Lloyd.

In Memoriam

In Loving Memory of

Philip Sydney BoumaFeb 25th 1954 - June 12th, 2006

Forever in our hearts

Hilda,Lawrence & Margaret,

Greg & Janice,Derrick & Holly,Charlene & Dave

and families

Births

Announcements

Information

The Trail Daily Times is a member of the British Columbia Press Council. The Press Council serves as a forum for unsatis ed reader complaints against

member newspapers.

Complaints must be led within a 45 day time limit.

For information please go to the Press Council website at

www.bcpresscouncil.org or telephone (toll free)

1-888-687-2213.

PersonalsALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS

250-368-5651

CURIOUS ABOUT Men? Talk Discreetly with men like you! Try FREE! Call 1-888-559-1255.

FOR INFORMATION,education, accommodation

and supportfor battered womenand their children

call WINS Transition House 250-364-1543

MEET SINGLES right now! No paid operators, just real peo-ple like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and con-nect live. Try it free. Call now 1-888-744-3699.

Travel

TimeshareCANCEL YOUR Timeshare. NO Risk Program, STOP Mortgage & Maintenance Pay-ments Today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. FREE Con-sultation. Call Us NOW. We Can Help! 1-888-356-5248.

Employment

Business Opportunities

BUSINESS FOR SALE

Be your own boss publishing your own local entertainment / humour magazine. Javajokepublications is offering an exclusive protected license in your area. We will teach you our lucrative proven system, step by step by step to create the wealth that you want. Perfect for anyone FT / PT, from semi-retired to large scale enterprise. Call today to get your no obligation info packet.

Toll FREE 1-855-406-1253

FREE VENDING Machines. Appointing prime references now. Earn up to $100,000 + per year. Exclusive protected territories. For full details call now. 1-866-668-6629 Website www.tcvend.com

Career Opportunities

AIRLINES ARE Hiring- Train for high paying Aviation Main-tenance Career. FAA ap-proved program. Financial aid if qualifi ed- Housing available. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance (877)818-0783.

Drivers/Courier/Trucking

DRIVERS WANTED: Terrifi c career opportunity out-standing growth potential to learn how to locate rail defects. No Experience Needed!! Extensive paid travel, meal allowance, 4 wks. vacation & benefi ts pkg.Skills Needed - Ability to travel 3 months at a time Valid License with air brake endorsement. High School Diploma or GED.

Apply at www.sperryrail.comunder careers, keyword Driver DO NOT FILL IN CITY or STATE

Help Wanted Help Wanted

Employment

Education/Trade Schools

MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION Rated #2 for at-home jobs. Start training today. High graduate employment rates. Low monthly payments. Be a success! Enroll now. 1-800-466-1535 www.canscribe.com [email protected]

Help Wanted

Line Cook and Bartender/Server

Apply at in person with resume to

Benedict’s Steakhouse 3 Scho eld Highway, Trail

250-368-3360

Baker’s PackagerExperience in the

restaurant/food industry an asset. Early a.m. shifts.Drop off your resume

at the Trail Ferraro Foods

attention: David Ferraro

Colander Restaurant is now taking applications for

Line CookCareer training available

Bring resume to 1475 Cedar Ave

Employment

Help WantedAn Alberta Construction Com-pany is hiring dozer, excavator and labour/rock truck opera-tors. Preference will be given to operators that are experi-enced in oilfi eld road and lease construction. Lodging and meals provided. The work is in the vicinity of Edson, Al-berta. Alcohol & Drug testing required. Call Contour Con-struction at 780-723-5051.

EXPERIENCED PARTS Per-son required for progressive auto/industrial supplier. Hired applicant will receive top wag-es, full benefi ts and RRSP bo-nuses plus moving allowanc-es. Our 26,000 sq.ft. store is located 2.5 hours N.E. of Ed-monton, Alberta. See our community at:LacLaBicheRegion.com Send resume to: Sapphire Auto, Box 306, Lac La Biche, AB, T0A 2C0. Email:[email protected].

Summer Student to work at The Salvation Army Commu-nity Services and Thrift Store, 30hrs. per week, start immedi-ately. Applications available @ 730 Rossland Ave. or 1460 Cedar Ave.

Employment

Help Wanted**WANTED**

NEWSPAPER CARRIERSTRAIL DAILY TIMESExcellent ExerciseFun for All Ages

Call Today -Start Earning Money

TomorrowCirculation Department250-364-1413 Ext. 206For more Information

Services

Health ProductsOPEN HOUSE- Herbal Magic Join for only $9.95 per week. Come in today, or call Herbal Magic at 1-800-854-5176.

Financial Services

DEBT CONSOLIDATION PROGRAM

Helping CANADIANS repay debts, reduce or eliminate

interest regardless of your credit! Qualify Now To Be Debt

Free 1-877-220-3328Licensed,

Government Approved,BBB Accredited.

Help Wanted

PHONE:250.368.8551 OR: 1.800.665.2382

FAX: 250.368.8550

EMAIL CLASSIFIEDS TO: nationals@

trailtimes.ca

DEADLINES 11am 1 day prior to publication.

RATES Lost & Found and Free Give Away ads are no charge. Classified rates vary. Ask us about rates. Combos and packages available - over 90 newspapers in BC.

AGREEMENT It is agreed by any Display or Classified Advertiser requesting space that the liability of the paper in the event of failure to publish an advertisement shall be limited to the amount paid by the advertiser for that portion of the advertising space occupied by the incorrect item only, and that there shall be no liability in any event beyond the amount paid for such advertisement. The publisher shall not be liable for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement.

bcclassified.com cannot be responsible for errors after the first day of publication of any advertisement. Notice of errors on the first day should immediately be called to the attention of the Classified Department to be corrected for the following edition.

bcclassified.com reserves the right to revise, edit, classify or reject any advertisement and to retain any answers directed to the bcclassified.com Box Reply Service and to repay the customer the sum paid for the advertisement and box rental.

DISCRIMINATORY LEGISLATION Advertisers are reminded that Provincial legislation forbids the publication of any advertisement which discriminates against any person because of race, religion, sex, color, nationality, ancestry or place of origin, or age, unless the condition is justified by a bona i de requirement for the work involved.

COPYRIGHT Copyright and/or properties subsist in all advertisements and in all other material appearing in this edition of bcclassified.com. Permission to reproduce wholly or in part and in any form what-soever, particularly by a photographic or of set process in a publication must be obtained in writing from the publisher. Any unauthorized reproduction will be subject to recourse in law.

ON THE WEB:

250.368.8551

fax 250.368.8550 email [email protected]

Your classifieds. Your community

Want to know what’son TV next week?

Check out TV listings for cable or satellite at www.trailtimes.ca.

Click on entertainment, then on TV listings. Find out what’s on TV for the next two weeks!

Page 18: Trail Daily Times, June 12, 2012

A18 www.trailtimes.ca Tuesday, June 12, 2012 Trail Daily Times

Wayne DeWitt ext 25Mario Berno ext 27

Dawn Rosin ext 24Tom Gawryletz ext 26

Denise Marchi ext 21Keith DeWitt ext 30

Thea Stayanovich ext 28Joy DeMelo ext 29

1148 Bay Ave, Trail250-368-5000

www.allprorealty.caAll Pro Realty Ltd.

www.facebook.com/allprorealtyltdtrailbc

Shavers BenchBrand new custom designed 3 bed, 3 bath home. Net HST included!$269,900

FruitvaleThis great home sits on a nice private corner lot. All the work’s been done with new roof, windows and siding.$207,000

MontroseThree bedroom family home. There’s room for all your toys with a single garage and 2 carports.

$199,000

NEW LISTING FruitvaleWow! What a house! This beautiful house is 4000 sq ft with 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms and an in-law suite.$449,000

Emerald RidgeThis 3,000 sq.ft. custom built home is located on 1/2 acre with amazing views!

EXECUTIVE

$589,500

TrailAbsolutely beautiful 2400 sq. ft. home with the most incredible river views!!

$389,000

ONE-OF-A-

KINDTrailThis 5 bed, 2 bath home has new wiring, plumbing, roof, insulation, A/C and is solid as a rock.$119,000

JUST LISTED TrailBig updates, small price. Move in ready. Detached garage Additional parking available.

$149,900

War eldPerfect for the entertainer. Huge dining room, huge covered wrap around deck. Everything has been done!$239,900

East TrailNo stairs, no problem! Close to Gyro Park, rancher w/ off-street parking. Nice yard. Awesome for the retiree.$118,000

GREAT

INVESTMENT TrailDo you want a house that is spotless and well cared for? This is the one. In this price range, you need to see it!$144,900

TrailFor this price, why rent?

$49,000

NEW LISTING

WanetaA stunning executive quality home in a quiet setting with a beautiful back yard. This 3 bedroom home is only 6 years old and is a “must see.”

$429,500

BEAUTIFUL

YARD

WanetaBetter than new! This1/2 duplex offers over 2,700 sq.ft. of quality nishing. Super HW oors on main. 3 bath, main oor laundry. Call to check this one out!

$319,900

LIKE NEW

FruitvaleBeautiful 9.86 acre parcel on Col. Gdns. Rd. 3+bdrms, 2 bath home w/ large shop & stunning views across the valley. Beaver Creek meanders along the back of the property.

$299,000

CREEKSIDE

PLUS VIEWS!

Ross SpurA fantastic rural setting for this large family home on 2 1/2 acres - excellent condition throughout. Call on this one today!

$389,500

NEW LISTING

FruitvaleA fantastic custom made home on a large, landscaped lot. The attention to detail and quality make this home one of the nest. Call on this one today!

$499,900

QUALITY

PLUSRivervaleThis 4 bdrm, 2 bath home sits on a 1/4 acre site. Super property w/ swimming pool, gorgeous gardens, hot tub. Check this one out! $295,000

AnnableA good, solid home built in 1962 on a corner lot - large deck, great parking and good usable oor plan. You owe yourself a look. Call today!$184,900

GOOD BUY FruitvaleBeautiful 4 bdrm family home with private backyard. Modern, open kitchen, 2 car carport, large deck & much more.$279,900

GREAT

CONDITION

FruitvaleNicely updated 4 bedroom mobile with addition. Newer

ooring, freshly painted. Located in Fruitvale mobile home park. 1000 sq. ft of living area. Why pay rent when you can own this?$29,900

Beaver FallsThis 2 bedroom mobile home is located in quiet park. Freshly painted, newer

ooring, covered deck. Perfect for rst time buyers or seniors.$39,500

GenelleThis double wide modular has a spacious open oor plan, newer kitchen, newer bath, newer ooring & wood stove. Located in Whispering Pines park, just steps from the Columbia River$65,000

BELLA VISTA TOWNHOMES

Well maintained 2 & 3 bedrooms

townhouse for rent located in

Shaver’s BenchNo pets and no smoking

Reasonable pricesPhone 364-1822

or 364-0931.

FRANCESCO ESTATES& ERMALINDA APARTMENTS

Beautiful, Clean and Well Maintained 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom Apartments for

Rent Located by the Columbia River in Glenmerry

Adult and Seniors oriented, No Pets and No Smoking

Reasonable Rents, Come and have a lookPhone 250-368-6761

or 250-364-1922Come on down to Trail and don't worry about the snow.

Services

Financial ServicesDROWNING IN Debt? Helping Canadians 25 years. Lower payments by 30%, or cut debts 70% thru settlements. Avoid bankruptcy! Free con-sultation. Toll-Free 1-877-556-3500 www.mydebtsolution.com

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

www.pioneerwest.com

Apt/Condo for Rent

Services

Financial ServicesIF YOU own a home or real estate, Alpine Credits can lend you money: It’s that simple. Your credit/age/income is not an issue. 1-800-587-2161.

M O N E Y P R OV I D E R . C O M $500 Loan and +. No Credit Refused. Fast, Easy, 100% Secure. 1-877-776-1660.

Apt/Condo for Rent

Services

Legal ServicesCRIMINAL RECORD? Don’t let it block employment, travel, education, professional, certifi -cation, adoption property ren-tal opportunities. For peace of mind & a free consultation call 1-800-347-2540.

Merchandise for Sale

AuctionsUNRESERVED AUCTIONS- June 16 & 17, Redwater, Al-berta. Collector vehicles and tractors, 1300 die cast toy tractors, wagons, buggies, show harness; old gas upright gas pumps; original case ea-gle; antiques. Thursday, June 21 - Harry Shapka, Vilna, Al-berta. Phone 780-636-2165. JD 8650, 4440, 4240; Concord air drill; 1977 & 87 Kenworths; Cat 966C loader; Komatsu D85; lowboy; 8820 & 860 combines; haying equipment. Saturday, June 23 - John Baranec, Innisfree, Alberta. Phone 780-592-2308. Steiger ST250, 9030 Bi-Directional; 4640 & 4320; MF 8450; Claas 98; 1980 Ford tandem; Kello 24’ disc; JD 820 & 830; plus full line-up. View full lists on-line: prodaniukauctions.com.

Merchandise for Sale

Garage SalesW.TRAIL 2246 Daniel St. June 16 - 9am

Misc. for SaleSTEEL BUILDING - Blowout sale! 20x26 $5,199. 25x28 $5,799. 30x42 $8,390. 32x56 $11,700. 40x50 $14,480. 47x 76 $20,325. One end wall in-cluded. Pioneer Steel 1-800-668-5422 www.pioneersteel.ca

Misc. WantedCOIN Collector looking to buy Collections, Accumulations, Olympic Gold & Silver Coins. Bulk Silver coins, bills etc. CallChad 250-863-3082 (Local)

Real Estate

Business for SaleLIVE THE Dream. Harbours End Marine, 27 year history on beautiful Salt Spring Island, BC “the best place on earth!” Owner retiring, well-estab-lished business only $129,000 email: [email protected]

Houses For SaleEAST TRAIL clean, 2bd, up-dated, 1100sq.ft. garage, $109,000 250-512-1887 eve.

Rentals

Apt/Condo for RentRossland. 2 bdrm, clean, quiet, F/S, W/D, N/S, N/P. 250.362.9473.SUNNINGDALE, large 2bdrm. 1bth. Cable, heat & a/c includ-ed. Free use of washer & dry-er. No smoking, No pets. Avail. Jul.1st. 250-368-3055TRAIL, 1&2-BDRM, 250-368-1822TRAIL, DT, Updated, bright, large 3Bd. Apt. $1,000./mo. +utilities. Available Sept.1st. Call Cary 250-505-6282TRAIL, spacious 2bdrm. apartment. Adult building, per-fect for seniors/ professionals. Cozy, clean, quiet, com-fortable. Must See. 250-368-1312WARFIELD, 2BD. condo. $650./mo. plus utilities. F/S, coin-op laundry. 250-362-5970W.TRAIL, 2Bdrm. in 4-plex., garage. $550./mo. 604-250-5714

Commercial/Industrial

TRAIL, 1200sq.ft. Many up-grades/ options. Across from Trail Times. Call Cary 250-505-6282. Available Sept.1st.

Houses For Sale

Rentals

Duplex / 4 PlexRossland, Close to downtown 1bd on main, plus large loft, WD, F/S, wood fl oors, no pets $650/mo. 362-5303, 364-8282

Modular HomesJUNE SPECIAL

Brand New 16’ Wide ModularHomes. From $69,000.00

[email protected]

Homes for RentE.TRAIL clean, bright, 2bd, ref. req. July 1, $750 250.368.3354

Transportation

Auto Financing

YOU’RE APPROVEDCall Dennis, Shawn or Paul

for Pre-Approval

www.amford.com or www.autocanada.com

Transportation

Auto Financing

Need A Vehicle! Guaranteed Auto Loan. Apply Now, 1.877.680.1231 www.UapplyUdrive.ca

DreamCatcher Auto Loans“0” Down, Bankruptcy OK -

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

www.PreApproval.cc DL# 7557

GUARANTEEDAuto Loans orWe Will Pay You $1000

All Makes, All Models.New & Used Inventory.

1-888-229-0744 or apply at: www.greatcanadianautocredit.com

Must be employed w/ $1800/mo. income w/ drivers license. DL #30526

Cars - Domestic1965 MUSTANG F/B, restora-tion nearly complete, needs fi nishing. $20,000. Phone Car-men after 7pm. 250-368-5567

Motorcycles2007 BMW K1200GT 27,000KM Mint condition, many extras 250.368.8975

Recreational/Sale1999 Palomino Filly 21’ tent trailer, sleeps 8, new king & queen foamies, 3 way fridge, propane stove, $4500. Text or call 250-368-7286

Boats BOATING SEASON IS

HERE FINALLY!WANNA HAVE SOME FUN

WITH YOUR FAMILY & FRIENDS THIS SUMMER!!Your Cabin on the Lake

The Kootenay Queen

• 1976 30ft cabin cruiser with a 185 merc

• Full galley (fridge, stove, sink, furnace, toilet)

• Fold down table for a queen sized bed

• Fold up bunk beds• VHF radio• Hull is sound, galley is

dated.• Low draft• 200 hrs on new engine• A great boat that needs

some TLC.$12,000.00 invested, will

take offers starting at $9000

Call 250-362-7681 or email [email protected]

for more information

Classifi edsGet Results!

Find it all here.

250-368-8551 ext. 0

all

CLASSIFIEDS

Page 19: Trail Daily Times, June 12, 2012

Trail Daily Times Tuesday, June 12, 2012 www.trailtimes.ca A19

1st Trail Real Estatewww.coldwellbankertrail.com

1252 Bay Avenue, TRAIL (250) 368-5222

OPEN HOUSE

Fri, June 15 4 - 6pm 1771 First Street

Fruitvale $274,900

MLS# K212535

Beaver Falls $209,900Fred Behrens 250-368-1268

MLS# K210392

Trail $229,900Patty Leclerc-Zanet 250-231-4490

MLS# K211181

Fruitvale $335,000Rob Burrus 250-231-4420

MLS# K205510

Warfield $227,000Fred Behrens 250-368-1268

MLS# K204952

Trail $239,900Patty Leclerc-Zanet 250-231-4490

MLS# K210399

Fruitvale $429,000Rob Burrus 250-231-4420

MLS# K213040

Annable $169,900Fred Behrens 250-368-1268

MLS# K211761

Warfield $229,900Fred Behrens 250-368-1268

MLS# K212535

Warfield $259,900Patty Leclerc-Zanet 250-231-4490

MLS# K210284

Fruitvale $274,500Rhonda van Tent 250-231-7575

MLS# K205398

Trail $155,000Fred Behrens 250-368-1268

MLS# K207019

New Price

Warfield $59,900Gerry McCasky 250-231-0900

MLS# K211022

New Price

Trail $105,000Gerry McCasky 250-231-0900

MLS# K204267

Super 3

Bdrm Home

Trail $206,000Gerry McCasky 250-231-0900

MLS# K205930

2 Homes

1 Lot

Trail $360,000Gerry McCasky 250-231-0900

MLS# K210233

5Bdrm

2 Bath

Trail $214,000Gerry McCasky 250-231-0900

MLS# K206097

Excellent

Revenue

Trail $133,000Gerry McCasky 250-231-0900

MLS# K200362

New Price

Trail $555,000Patty Leclerc-Zanet 250-231-4490

MLS# K206977

New Price

Christina Lake $1,500,000Rob Burrus 250-231-4420

MLS# K213216

620ft of

Beach

Sat, June 16 12 - 2pm 135 9th Ave

Montrose $495,000

MLS# K212535

10 Acres

20 Acres

Houses For Sale Houses For Sale Houses For Sale Houses For Sale Houses For Sale Houses For Sale Houses For Sale

How to make your old car disappear: List it in the classifieds!Call us today! 250.368.8551 ex.204

CLASSIFIEDS

Having a

GARAGE SALE?

The Trail Daily Times provides the most comprehensive GARAGE SALE PACKAGE

available, at the BEST PRICE!Package Includes:

$1299Only

250.368.8551

FruitvaleRoute 359 10 papers Columbia Gardens Rd, Forsythia DrRoute 370 18 papers 2nd St, Hillcrest Ave, Mountain StRoute 375 8 papers Green Rd & Lodden RdRoute 381 11 papers Coughlin RdRoute 382 13 papers Debruin Rd & Staats Rd

CastlegarRoute 311 6 papers 9th Ave & Southridge DrRoute 312 15 papers 10th & 9th AveRoute 314 12 papers 4th, 5th, & 6th AveRoute 321 10 papers Columbia & Hunter’s Place

MontroseRoute 345 9 papers 5th St, 8th, 9th AveRoute 348 21 papers 12th Ave, Christie Rd

RosslandRoute 406 15 papers Cooke Ave & Kootenay AveRoute 414 18 papers Thompson Ave, Victoria AveRoute 416 10 papers 3rd Ave, 6th Ave, Elmore St, Paul SRoute 420 17 papers 1st, 3rd Kootenay Ave, Leroi AveRoute 421 9 papers Davis & Spokane StRoute 424 9 papers Ironcolt Ave, Mcleod Ave, Plewman WayRoute 434 7 papers 2nd Ave, 3rd Ave, Turner Ave

West TrailRoute 131 14 papers Bay Ave, Riverside AveRoute 132 14 papers Daniel St, Wilmes LaneRoute 140 11 papers Daniel St, Topping St

BlueberryRoute 308 6 papers 100 St to 104 St

SalmoRoute 451 10 papers 8th St, 9th St

GenelleRoute 303 16 papers 12th Ave, Grandview Pl

WarfieldRoute 195 17 papersBlake Court, Shelley St, Whit-man Way

MontroseRoute 341 24 papers 8th Ave, 9th Ave,10th Ave

Call Today! 250-364-1413 ext 206

PAPER CARRIERS

For all areas. Excellent exercise, fun for ALL ages.

Page 20: Trail Daily Times, June 12, 2012

A20 www.trailtimes.ca Tuesday, June 12, 2012 Trail Daily Times

For additional information

and photos on all of our listings,

please visit

www.kootenayhomes.com

KOOTENAY HOMES INC. a

Tonnie Stewart ext 33Cell: [email protected]

Deanne Lockhart ext 41Cell: [email protected]

Mark Wilson ext 30Cell: [email protected]

Mary Amantea ext 26Cell: [email protected]

Mary Martin ext 28Cell: [email protected]

Richard Daoust ext 24Cell: [email protected] www.kootenayhomes.com

Ron Allibone ext 45Cell: [email protected]

Terry Alton ext 48Cell: [email protected]

Christine Albo ext 39Cell: [email protected]

Art Forrest ext [email protected]

Darlene Abenante ext 23Cell: [email protected]

WE CAN SELL YOUR HOME.

NOBODY HAS THE RESOURCES WE DO!

#204-1800 Kirkup Avenue, Rossland

$129,000Bright, sunny 2 bdrm condo located on

the 2nd floor with fantastic southern views! This condo comes fully furnished ready to move in with quick possession

available. This building has had extensive renovations including new siding, decks,

windows and patio doors.Call Christine (250) 512-7653

730 Binns Street, Trail $149,900

There’s character everywhere! Updated electrical, hardwood floors, large living/

dining rooms, huge country kitchen, private yard, plenty of parking... the list

goes on. This one is a must see! Call Art (250) 368-8818

1665 Maida Road, Christina Lake $109,000

Bring offers! Beautiful level corner lot with all services in a great neighborhood - Christina

Lake the jewel of the southern interior - offers year round recreation - this is your chance to

build your dream retreat ! Call Mark (250) 231-5591

NEW LISTING

1280 Birch Avenue, Trail $189,000

Large 4bdrm family home with wood burning fireplace, large kitchen, updated

plumbing and electrical, and low maintenance yard! If you are looking for an affordable family home, this may be

it! Call now Call Mary M (250) 231-0264

NEW LISTING

36 Moller Road, Fruitvale $369,000

Elegant family home loaded with mechanical upgrades and gorgeous

features on .38 acres. Call Tonnie (250)-365-9665

385 – 8th Avenue, Montrose$324,000

This custom-built home is located on one of the most beautiful lots in the area. The

yard offers almost 360 degree view of Montrose and incredible privacy. Home offers vaulted ceilings, 2-3 bdrms, huge windows, and 2 fireplaces. Huge work-

shop, double carport, 2 private patios and 1 sundeck. This one has it all.

Call Mary M (250) 231-0264

NEW PRICE

1672 Stang Road, Fruitvale $399,000

4 bdrm home on 2.6 acres with open floor plan, hardwood floors, formal dining room, and a sunroom! A pool, sauna and firebox makes for great outdoor entertaining! All this plus 1500 sq. ft. of shop and garage!

Call Terry 250-231-1101

NEW LISTING

3955 Red Mountain Road, Rossland $330,000

Dropped from $439,900! View 1.4 acres with subdivision potential. This home has

great views from every window, large open living and dining rooms, 2 bdrms on main and 1 down. You will love the huge deck in summer and the cozy wood stove

in winter.Call Mary M (250) 231-0264

Call Mary A (250) 521-0525

SOLDOPEN HOUSE

Saturday June 16 11am-1pmOPEN HOUSESaturday June 16 12-2pm

2322 – 2nd Avenue, Rossland $289,900

SOLD

2111 – 4th Avenue, Rossland $219,000

SOLD

2260 Ralph Road, Fruitval $214,500

This home offers 4 bdrms, spacious rec room, 200 amp service, security system, cozy wood fireplace, underground sprinklers,

a/c, and 20X24 (shop/garage). All this on a 0.97 acre lot!.

NEW LISTING

460 Forrest Drive, Warfield. $359,000

Fantastic 3+ bdrm family home on a large .45 acre lot. Modern design & decor, open floor concept and vaulted ceilings. Gas fireplace, oak kitchen, private deck and yard and so

much more. Call now!

NEW LISTING

Call Darlene (250) 231-0527 or Ron (250) 368-1162 Call Deanne (250) 231-0153

Wed, June 13th 3:30-5:30pm901 Scott Street, Warfield

$219,000

NEW PRICEOPEN HOUSES

Thurs June 14th 3:30-530pm1739 First Street, Fruitvale

$269,000

LOCAL

The bid-d i n g : E a s t o p e n s

a twelve-point hand that some may just pass. It is not even a good bid in terms of lead direction because the suit is king empty. The only benefit is that partner may be able to compete with spade support. South, with four-teen points and a good six-card suit, overcalls at the two-level. West and North have no bids and pass. East doubles to keep the auction open and West passes, converting the takeout double to penalty.

The contract: Two Hearts by South, doubled

The opening lead: The five

of spadesA singleton in

partner’s suit is the best lead and is a good reason the double was con-verted to penalty.

The play:Declarer wins the ace of spades and draws three rounds of trump. West wins the third trump with the queen and

plays a small club. East wins the ace and gives partner a ruff. West exits his last trump. Now declarer has to play diamonds himself and will lose three dia-monds, one club, and two hearts for down one.

The result: Two Hearts doubled down one for -100.

Notes: - One hundred points are

probably not what East and West

were hoping for, but still should be a good board where nothing is sitting right.

-South makes a reasonable two-level overcall. However, the cards are not sitting favourably.

-Had East passed, South would probably end up playing two hearts undoubled for -50.

Overcall at the Two Level

WARREN WATSON

Play Bridge

WHAT YOU SEE ...

LANA RODLIE PHOTO

A species of crab spider was spotted crawling in the shrubs by the Family Statue in downtown Trail. If you have a photo you would like to share with our readers email it [email protected]