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V O I C E O F W H I T E R O C K A N D S O U T H S U R R E Y
w w w . p e a c e a r c h n e w s . c o m
Embracing Sea Fest:White Rock’s annual celebration of summer fun – Sea Festival – will be back on the waterfront Aug. 1-2 with renewed enthusiasm, new events and a return visit by the Legendary Powder Blues.
see page 11
FridayJuly 24, 2015 (Vol. 40 No. 59)
Real-estate agent died protecting his family from intruder
Loved ones say goodbye to a hero
Police characterization that victim was ‘suicidal’ is part of investigation
Witnesses ‘critical’ to shooting-death review
Kicker kicker
Water finesheadhead
Body.
Tracy HolmesStaff Reporter
As the mother of a young man killed by police last Saturday waited to see her son’s body, those investigating the circumstances surrounding the fatal shooting in South Surrey issued another appeal for help piecing together how Hudson Brooks came to be where he was when he died.
“We are trying to identify any other witnesses who may be able to assist us in understanding how this lad came to
be on 152nd early Saturday morning,” Kellie Kilpatrick, spokesperson for the Independent Investigations Office, said by email Thursday.
“Civilian witnesses are critical for us to speak with so that we can understand what led this young man to be in that situation.”
Brooks, 20, died around 2:30 a.m. July 18, after police responded to reports of a “suicidal” man screaming outside of the South Surrey RCMP office, in the 1800-block of 152 Street.
According to police, a struggle ensued and Brooks was shot. An officer was also shot in the altercation, however, investigators have since revealed that only police-issued firearms were found at the scene. The officer’s wound was not life-threatening.
The suggestion that Brooks was sui-cidal has been a point of contention amongst the young man’s friends and family, who have vehemently disputed the notion.
Kilpatrick told Peace Arch News inves-
tigators have not confirmed the detail.“Right now we know that the call for
service (as per the RCMP) was for a distressed man who the caller reported as suicidal – we are not confirming that to be true or not true – as these are early days in the investigation,” she said.
A statement from the IIO earlier this week noted “the actions of the police officer(s) when they received the call for service and when they came into contact with the deceased” is a key focus.
Tracy HolmesStaff Reporter
Colin Hill will be remembered as a hero – someone of strong char-acter who always put his family and friends first, and who paid the ultimate price for doing just that.
The popular real-estate agent was killed July 12 during an attempted break-in at his Cloverdale home, when he was shot while confront-
ing an intruder.Hill’s wife,
Becky Zhou, has said the fatal wound occurred when her hus-band led the would-be rob-ber outside to give his family time to hide, and those who spoke at his funeral
Wednesday at Victory Memorial Funeral Centre say that was just the kind of man he was.
“He would drop everything for his kids,” Barb Hiebert said of her cousin. “To put himself in harm’s way… for him, it was instinct.
“He left our world protecting his own family.”
Longtime friends remembered Hill, 42, as “like a brother.” He was also extremely competitive, a “tremendously gifted athlete and a true leader.” Evan Seal photo
Becky Zhou (centre) leaves Victory Memorial Funeral Centre following the funeral service for her husband, Colin Hill, Wednesday afternoon. see page 4
see page 4
Colin Hillshooting victim
Hudson Brooksshot by police
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www.peacearchnews.com 3 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015 www.peacearchnews.com 3 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015
newsMayor Hepner ‘understands it takes time to get people from one end of the country or to transfer’
First six of 100 officers arrive in Surrey
June 19 altercation
Road-ragewitnessessought
White Rock RCMP issued an appeal last week for witnesses to a violent altercation that took place a month earlier and ended with one man going to hospital.
According to police, officers were called to the area of Habgood Street and Buena Vista Avenue around 2:30 p.m. June 19, after a passerby reported “an altercation of two males who were engaged in a physical fight.”
“As a result of the fight, injuries were sustained by the males,” a notice posted online July 17 notes.
Cpl. Michelle Thiessen said Tuesday that police believe the altercation was the result of “road rage.” It involved a man in his 20s and a man in his 30s; the latter went to hospital for his injuries.
Vehicles associated with the incident were a white Dodge Charger and a white Subaru.
Thiessen said no arrests have been made, but police would like to speak with any witnesses.
“We just want to get the full picture of what occurred,” she said.
Anyone who witnessed the altercation is asked to contact police at 778-593-3600, referencing file #2015-2830.
Sprinkler complaints
Fineson deckKevin DiakiwBlack Press
Surrey has been flooded with calls of complaint about people violating watering restrictions.
On Monday, Metro Vancouver moved to stage 3 water-use restric-tions, prohibiting all home water sprinkling. The sprinkling ban also covers commercial lawns and all parks, cemeteries and boulevards.
Surrey’s manager of bylaw enforcement, Jas Rehal, said Wednesday that officers have issued 900 warnings since June 1 – more than 17 per day.
During that time, the City of Sur-rey handed out four fines of $250 to violators.
Now that the region has moved to stage 3 restrictions, Surrey bylaw officers are moving toward hand-ing out more tickets, instead of just warnings, as officials feel residents should now be fully aware of the restrictions.
Rehal is asking that people who call bylaw enforcement do so if they see watering violations, not just the sight of a green lawn.
Residents can still water shrubs, trees, vegetables and flower gar-dens using hand-held hoses, but only if they have a spring-loaded shutoff nozzle. Watering cans and drip irrigation systems are still allowed, but there’s no watering of gardens or planters using sprin-klers or soaker hoses.
Hosing off vehicles and surfaces and all forms of pressure washing are also banned, except for health and safety purposes, as well as com-mercial pressure washing to prepare a surface for painting or sealing.
Stage 3 restrictions are expected to remain in place until Sept. 30.
Metro Vancouver has only once before gone to region-wide stage 3 restrictions – during severe drought conditions in 2003.
In neighbouring White Rock, utility Epcor still has its users on its regular seasonal stage 1 restric-tions, allowing lawn sprinkling three days a week 4-9 a.m., speci-fied by address.
Kevin DiakiwBlack Press
More than a month after the federal gov-ernment said Surrey had 20 new police officers, the city has received only six new Mounties.
Conservative Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness Steven Blaney was at the Delta Public Safety Building Tuesday for a forum with local mayors.
At a media scrum afterward, Blaney said Surrey had 33 new officers in April, and six more since.
However, the 33 were owed this city from last year, he acknowledged when asked by Black Press, and he confirmed that Surrey has only six of the 100 it’s asked for this year.
He would not say how many of the 100 will be delivered before the federal election in October.
“I can’t commit to this number,” Blaney said. “The number is evolving every day, there are more coming in the coming weeks. We will keep you updated.”
More than five weeks ago, Blaney told the House of Commons that Surrey had 20 new officers deployed.
“Today, I am pleased to announce that the deployment of the first 20 members com-mitted to Surrey is underway and that boots are already on the ground,” Blaney said in a news release on June 11.
However, Black Press learned at the time that there had been no new Mounties added
to the city’s police force.For weeks, the federal NDP had
been hammering Blaney in the House, requesting the timeline was for 100 officers requested by the City of Surrey.
Blaney now says the number of new officers is six.
Surrey Mayor Linda Hepner said this week she’s unconcerned about the pace of arrival.
“I understand that it takes time to get people from one end of the country or to transfer,” Hepner told Black Press.
She added she will be greatly concerned if she doesn’t receive half of the 100 she asked
for by the end of the year.“Then I would be advocating very
strongly,” she said. “But right now, I’m letting the process unfold.”
The push for more police officers in Surrey came in part from politi-cal promises prior to the 2014 civic election. It has since been fueled by a series of shootings playing out in the streets of Surrey and Delta since March.
Blaney said the new recruits will be coming as they graduate from Depot
in Regina.He said Surrey will be getting a significant
proportion of grads as the city has been identified as a priority.
Boaz Joseph photos
Puppy loveAbove, Tara, a three-month-old Nova Scotia duck tolling retriever owned by Lake Cowichan’s Wendy Lee, sits on a lap at the Sporting Dogs Spectacular dog show at Hazelmere RV Park in South Surrey last Saturday. The event was organized by the Canadian Kennel Club. At left, Kristy Emery relaxes with her dog Juno, 2, – a Vizsla, a Hungarian hunting breed.
Steven Blaneypublic safety
Matter of prideThe ‘pride’ flag will be raised
at White Rock city hall Monday, after council unanimously voted last week to recognize the upcom-ing gay-pride festivities.
The request to take part in Pride Week celebrations – an annual event held July 27-Aug. 4 in Van-couver celebrating LGBT equality – was submitted to council last month by the White Rock Business Improvement Association.
In addition to flying the rain-bow-coloured flag at city hall, the BIA requested the city hold a flag-raising ceremony to recognize the occasion, which will take place at 11 a.m. July 27.
Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News4 www.peacearchnews.com Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News4 www.peacearchnews.com
news
“Even in death he has taught me about life,” Chris Robinson told a standing-room-only crowd in South Surrey. “His final lesson is to show the people you love that you would do anything for them. And that’s exactly what he did.”
Hill led a “much too short, very fulfilling life,” said Robinson, who knew Hill for 33 years; for the past nine, they lived across the street from each other.
Police have said that Hill’s death was not related to the spate of shootings that have occurred in Surrey since early March, which have been linked to a drug-turf war. The man charged in connec-tion with his death, 22-year-old Khouri Lamar Green, is due back in court on Sept. 14.
Outside the funeral home Wednesday afternoon, Surrey Mayor Linda Hepner – who was invited by Hill’s family and who arrived with Surrey RCMP Chief Supt. Bill Fordy – described Hill’s death as “a real tragedy” that points to a need to “take a look at the whole system.”
But the problem is not just in Surrey, she said.
“We’ve seen senseless acts of
violence all over the country.”Hepner said she plans to advo-
cate for the people of Surrey, but that “this is all about Colin today.”
Hiebert told attendees that a common theme regarding her cousin was evident at a private gathering last Sunday where “a few laughs and a few tears” were shared: he was a good son and brother, and family meant every-thing to him.
The sentiment was echoed by childhood friend Lowell Jordan, who shared a comment Hill
made to him about three weeks ago.
“One of the last words he told me was to spend more time with family,” Jordan said.
Pastor Doug Fortune noted there are many things not known or understood regarding Hill’s death, but reminded Hill’s friends, family and colleagues that they have choices when it comes to how they think about it.
He encouraged them to be inspired by Hill’s life; to “get bet-ter, love more, build relation-ships.”
Friends urged to spend family time from page 1
Tracy Holmes photoMedia surround Surrey Mayor Linda Hepner prior to funeral service.
Evan Seal photoColin Hill’s casket is carried to a waiting hearse, following his funeral in South Surrey Wednesday.
Kilpatrick could not confirm if video from the scene was obtained, but did say IIO inves-tigations often involve the review of multiple video evidence.
Brooks’ mother, Jennifer, told CTV News this week that she has many questions about her son’s death.
“I just want to know why they shot my son,” she said Tuesday at the scene, where a tribute of flowers has grown to include
cards, balloons and candles.She also wants to know why she
wasn’t notified of his death until nearly 12 hours after.
Regarding seeing her son’s body, the South Surrey resident said she was told it’s “not presentable.”
Coroner Barb McLintock con-firmed Thursday that Brooks’ body had been “locked down” since the incident. The step, she said, is legally required “between the scene and the autopsy”, in cases where a homicide charge is
a possibility.However, noting the autopsy
was being done that day, McLintock said she expected the body would be released to Brooks’ family today (Friday) “at the latest.”
Anyone with information on Hudson Brooks’ actions in the hours leading up to his death is asked to call the IIO witness line at 1-855-446-8477 or Kilpatrick’s office, at 778-988-1041. The line is monitored 24 hours a day.
‘Why did they shoot my son?’ from page 1
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www.peacearchnews.com 5 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015 www.peacearchnews.com 5 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015
news
The wig caught their eye.Police patrolling an area of White
Rock that has a major construc-tion project pending arrested a wanted man, after noticing some-one on the site wearing a wig.
Const. Deryk Roberts said offi-cers noticed a suspicious individ-ual around 2:30 p.m. last Friday, around abandoned buildings in the 1500-block of Vidal Street.
They quickly determined the man was wanted on outstanding
warrants for breaching previously imposed court conditions.
He “has worn disguises in the past to avoid detection and hap-pened to be wearing one that day,” Roberts noted.
He was arrested without inci-dent.
Jamey Ziegler appeared in Sur-rey Provincial Court on Monday, and is due back in court July 28.
The site of the arrest – 1501 Vidal St. – is destined for a 12-sto-
rey project that was given the green light by city council in November 2013.
Roberts said police have been doing focused patrols to keep on top of squatters and property crime. The latter was described last year by the city’s top cop, Staff Sgt. Lesli Roseberry, as White Rock’s “nemesis,” and she told Peace Arch News Monday it remains an area police are focusing on.
– Tracy Holmes
Tracy HolmesStaff Reporter
Residents concerned with a development proposed for a Grandview Heights neighbour-hood are crossing their fingers that Surrey council will “do the right thing” Monday when the project comes forward for third reading.
“What we’re asking is, go by your policy… preserve what’s across the street from us,” said Gary Cameron.
Tara Developments has applied to build 16 semi-detached duplexes and one single-family home on just over two acres in the 16600-block of 26 Avenue.
The application received first and second reading July 13 – and was scheduled for a public hearing July 27 – despite a report recommend-ing council refer the project back to staff and the applicant “for fur-ther dialogue with area residents to address outstanding issues.”
The report notes “significant opposition” on the part of resi-dents, who favour development that is more consistent with what already exists in the area: single-family homes. They also oppose the requested elimination of a “transition landscape buffer requirement.”
Victoria Blinkhorn, who chairs the Grandview Heights Steward-ship Association, said association members and other area resi-dents want to see a standard that was set for two nearby projects on 26 Avenue – which propose 30-metre-wide lots – continue. It would ensure appropriate, sensi-tive transitions that protect the neighbourhood from encroach-ing urbanization, she said.
However, Blinkhorn said the developer has had no appetite to consider residents’ concerns.
Reached Wednesday, Tara Devel-opments owner Jasbir Takhar deferred comment to his agent and architect, neither of which could
be reached by Peace Arch News press deadline Thursday.
However, the City of Surrey’s manager of area planning and development for South Surrey, Nicholas Lai, confirmed the two sides are at an impasse.
Noting the project complies with the Neighbourhood Concept Plan policies, Lai said Tuesday that “there is obviously a major difference in terms of what the applicant wants to see and what the residents want to see.”
“One of the things that staff like to achieve before we present an application to council is that there is an agreement and the issues have been addressed. In this particular case, there wasn’t any agreement…. From the resi-dents’ perspective, they think they have not been heard.”
The applicants are aware of resi-dents’ concerns, Lai said.
Cameron described the pro-posed development as “incom-patible” with the neighbourhood, noting that the area across the street is being considered for Rural Designation zoning – which, if approved, would essentially pro-tect the area from higher-density development. That zoning change is also on Monday’s agenda.
Neighbours urge city to ‘do the right thing’
Duplex project opposed
Tracy Holmes photoGrandview residents Gary Cameron and Victoria Blinkhorn.
Man’s disguise fails to fool police
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Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News6 www.peacearchnews.com Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News6 www.peacearchnews.com
LancePeverleyEditor
Dwayne Weidendorf Publisher
SteveScott Advertisingmanager
James ChmelykCreative Services manager
MarilouPasionCirculation manager
The Peace Arch News is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspapers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent within 45 days to B.C. Press Council, PO Box 1356, Ladysmith, B.C. V9G 1A9. For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go to www.bcpresscouncil.org
200 - 2411 160 Street., Surrey, B.C. V3Z 0C8Phone: 604-531-1711Circulation: 604-542-7430Classified: 604-575-5555 Fax: 604-531-7977Web: www.peacearchnews.com
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foundation
It’s so easy to become inattentive in summer.Blazing sun and hot temperatures seem
guaranteed to put the more vigilant parts of our brains on hold.
Whether we’re just befuddled trying to beat the heat – or eager to get out and be part of the many fun activities that warm weather offers, particularly in our seaside community – distraction is at an all-time high this time of year.
Unfortunately, as recent crime statistics show, there are those who are more than ready to take full advantage of any lapse of attention on our part.
Quoted in a story in today’s edition, White Rock RCMP Const. Deryk Roberts warns that property crime usually takes an upturn in summer.
Is there any wonder at it? The natural impetus is to leave home windows
open to catch any breeze, and as we stroll in and out, we are likely to be less attentive to locking doors, or even closing them – an open invitation to an uninvited visitor who won’t hesitate in taking an inventory of our personal belongings, and making off with the most portable of them.
While loading vehicles, we’ll often leave costly cameras and sports equipment sitting outside, a crime of opportunity just waiting to happen.
But it’s not just theft of valuables we have to worry about – offenders are also after mail and anything else they can leverage for subsequent, often very costly, identity theft.
And once we get in those vehicles – and get out again at our destination – are we really sure that we locked all of the doors and closed all of the windows? Did we lock valuables out of sight in the trunk – or did we leave them in plain view?
Insp. Peter Jadis, officer in charge of the Integrated Municipal Provincial Auto Crime Team, notes that car thefts leapt 29 per cent across B.C. last year.
He warns that it’s not just carelessly displayed items or the vehicles themselves that criminals are after – a garage door-opener and an address from insurance documents could be the key to a much higher payoff for a criminal, but one that poses a greater potential risk to ourselves and our families.
Our vigilance must also extend to our families – children, caught up in the excitement of the moment, are not likely to pay close attention to closing or locking doors after them.
But, in reality, in this day and age, any one of us could be responsible for a lapse that could mar our summer – and end up having to pay a hefty price in property loss and insurance hassles.
editorial
Don’t fall victim to summertime carelessness
Published by Black Press Ltd. at 200-2411 160 Street, Surrey, B.C.
opinionPeace Arch News
I walked past Bakerview Park the other morning, as a pair of middle-aged scofflaws politely pedalled past me.
They were guilty of two crimes against humanity: the first, riding their bicycles on the sidewalk; the second, and perhaps only slightly more likely to be ticketed, riding without helmets.
Imagine.And all I could think of was
how I, too, wish I was brave enough to flout the laws I have little use for.
Instead, I abide.I cycle along the edge of the
roadway with the flow of traffic – regardless if there is any – wearing my bike helmet, without exception. On late-evening strolls, I don’t enter Surrey parks after dark. When driving, I stick to the regulations as posted and, as of last month, I stay out of the left lane (except to pass) on B.C.’s highways, even when steadfastly driving not one klick less than the posted speed limit.
All of these issues are neatly legislated by our power brokers, when I would think a little common sense would suffice.
Don’t get me wrong. I support helmet laws on motorcycles and seatbelt laws
in cars, if only to prevent the painful repercussions for our first responders. And I’m convinced our new distracted-driving laws will eventually save lives, if they’re ever enforced with abandon.
But part of me wishes we had fewer edicts, as each and every new commandment fills me with a cynical sense of unease.
On the other hand – and on the other side of the world – I remember some time ago driving on a small island in the Mediterranean, where the stop signs apparently mean to slow down unless crash is imminent. My lesson was swift, after a couple of drivers following closely behind made gentle use of my bumper.
Further inland, a few years later in Rome, I was given an accelerated tour of the city by a Catholic nun. (Long story.) Traffic signs, lights, even pedestrian crossings meant little to her, as we flew through on our way to her convent – rules of the road be… er… darned.
Here, in the not-so-wild west, we demand compliance, offering so many regulations that we actually hear strangers reminding each other of the laws of the land.
Don’t believe me? Try walking a small, well-behaved, leashed dog on White Rock’s waterfront promenade. I’m predicting the advice will be plentiful. If you’re a smoker (and, really, you shouldn’t be, but not because of any set rules), I’m guessing you’ve had the odd comment cast your way, despite any efforts to puff away downwind.
Late last month, a group of soccer players not far from Bear Creek Park found out the hard way exactly what it means to ignore the City of Surrey’s draconian bylaws. They had the audacity to play their game in a city park without first applying for a permit.
Such cheek.Their reward was being confronted by a
zealous city bylaw official and being sent home after a patronizing lecture from an RCMP officer. (After a video of their encounter was posted online, though, the city clarified its position, blaming a miscommunication and maintaining permits for city parks are needed only for “organized” fun.)
Miscommunication? Sounds like those in charge were more concerned with enforcing society’s rules rather than stopping to consider the reason the rules were adopted in the first place.
But I guess that’s the choice we all make, whether to follow the rules verbatim or to make our own judgments and risk a ticket and possible confrontation when an overly pedantic official disagrees.
As for me, I plan to follow the letter of the law. Otherwise, I’m sure to hear from you. Right?
Lance Peverley is the editor of Peace Arch News.
Playing by the rulesin the land of plenty
?questionof theweek
Will 100 more RCMP officers earmarked for Surrey this year make the city safer?Vote online at www.peacearchnews.com
Has the weakness of the Canadian dollar deterred you from shopping or
vacationing across the border?
yes 69% no 31%102 responding
Last week we asked...
Lance Peverley
on the record
www.peacearchnews.com 7 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015 www.peacearchnews.com 7 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015
““
quote of note
lettersPeace Arch NewsPeace Arch News
MaximizingefficiencyEditor:Re: Time to revisit city merger, July 10 letters.
The letter to the editor from Ron Kistritz has struck a chord with me since digesting his very well-written observations.
I moved from Surrey to White Rock three years ago because downsizing became a necessity.
Now I live in a smaller home on a lot that is a fraction of the size of my former residence, yet my taxes are well over twice as high as in Surrey.
In comparing the two city services, to say that White Rock has been disappointing is putting it mildly. Also, the street I live on looks more like a broken down back alley, which always surprises my visitors to see this is what White Rock looks like.
I realize that, once upon a time, Surrey appeared to be run by a bunch of cowboys, which White Rock chose not to be a part of.
However, over the years Surrey has grown and developed into a sophisticated and efficient operation while White Rock has stood still and actually fallen behind the times.
Of course, it is not possible for a tiny city like White Rock to be as efficient as its big neighbour. This equates to trying to compare a corner mom-and-pop store to, perhaps, Costco.
The newspaper carries horror stories of White Rock increasing its density with highrises in order to broaden its tax base. If we were to join Surrey, then White Rock would be able to remain as is with its quaint character intact.
I would like to challenge the mayor and council to pursue this topic, since it would be in the best interests of the residents – although in the long run it could result in them being out of a job.Lucille Lewis, White Rock
Further to Ron Kistriz’s letter of July 10, I heartily agree that amalgamation with Surrey is long overdue.
When I lived in Coquitlam, there were three of everything in the Tri-Cities: three councils, city halls, fire departments, libraries, leisure departments and so on. But only two different police forces and one school board. All of this for a combined population of about 200,000, which is about half of Surrey’s present population.
We had and still have three mayors and 20 councillors, with a total wage bill over a million dollars.
Surrey manages quite nicely with one mayor and eight on council.
Then I moved to White Rock – for the geography not the politics. The situation here is not as bad as the Tri-Cities, perhaps, but it still borders on the absurd that 20,000 people need a political establishment all of their own.
Reunification with Surrey is necessary and desirable.Asher W. Bell, White Rock
They have our money to burnEditor:
We were having lunch at Montana’s at Morgan Crossing last Sunday.
When we arrived, the staff were all out trying to douse a fire on the boulevard. It was started by someone throwing a cigarette out of a car window.
This was the third fire they have put out in the past two weeks.
The fire department had to be called because the fire gets buried in the mulch and tends to smoulder.
This is an expensive proposition
for the fire department.When will smokers learn that
lighted cigarettes cause fires?James Meyers, Surrey
We’re in for a bumpy yearEditor:
Since January, 24 Avenue between 152 and 148 streets must be the nightmare street of this year.
The ‘waterline project’ was a messy disaster from the start and still is, looking like a discarded and unkempt afterthought of a project.
It is a sight – broken up, patched up, the newly planted vegetation in
the centre dying or dead and the concrete centres a sorry sight.
Days and weeks have gone by without a soul working there, then it’s three days with plenty of people standing around, holding up “slow” signs, holding up traffic while lots of machinery is doing godknowswhat, as it never gets ‘done’.
Driving on 24 Avenue is an extremely bumpy experience, and who knows what the future will hold for what used to be a pleasant, not-too-busy street.
Truly, the way this ridiculously slow project has been going, one cannot but wonder how long it would take in this day and age to build the whole city, roads and all in Surrey.
About 3,000 years, I presume!Madelon Keij, Surrey
write:200 - 2411 160 Street,
Surrey, B.C. V3Z 0C8
editorial@peacearchnews.com
(please include fullcontact information, including address)
fax:604.531.7977
email:
604.531.1711
questions?
It is amazing how much water you can
collect in one day, and how quickly it
can become part of your routine.Areta Evans
Submissions will be edited for clarity, brevity, legality
and taste.
File photoThis summer’s lack of rain – resulting in stage 3 water restriction in Surrey, stage 1 in White Rock – draws opinions.
Editor:Don’t tell someone on Marine Drive in Surrey
between 128 Street and 133A Street that they can’t water their lawn at their multi-million-dollar home around 10 a.m.
They got the bucks, so they can do what they want.Bylaws… lol!
Art Van-Lane, Surrey
As an apartment dweller in White Rock, I am struck by the lush green lawns surrounding condos in this area.
Houses and apartment buildings sport dried-out grass in the lawns, yet condos, by and large, are verdant, untouched by the Level 4 drought that grips this ‘temperate rain forest’.
Are they in denial? Protecting an investment? What?This selective waste of water by strata councils must
stop immediately. Christopher Jennings, White Rock
I read with interest about the need to conserve water and the implementation of water restrictions for the Greater Vancouver area. This includes the City of Surrey.
I suggest most people would find the need to conserve water a matter of responsible civic duty and responsible environmental practice with a view towards the future.
Clearly there is no endless supply of fresh water.Many Surrey councillors advocate responsibility in
one form or another on their page on the city website.However, when I think about responsible water
conservation, I am puzzled as to why the city approves the building of multiple condos and townhouses.
A person need only to travel short distances in and around South Surrey to observe the overwhelming construction of numerous condos and townhouses. I would not be surprised to learn the number of new units in the last five years is well into the thousands.
Some of the complexes now sit on land where there used to be one or two houses but now there are multi-
unit structures. Many large-lot properties in South Surrey currently have sold signs and property development signs, indicating more condo and townhouse units are to come.
I don’t think you need to be an expert in water consumption to figure out that the addition of thousands of toilets, dishwashers, washers and people showering use more water than the previous one- or two-family house that used to occupy the land.
I would like to see Mayor Linda Hepner go on public record and state unequivocally that prior to allowing the addition of thousands of new condos and townhouses, a water study was conducted by the city that supports the addition of thousands of new units.
Further, can the mayor please assure us that we will in fact never run out of water due to the local widespread and mass construction of condos and townhouses?
I request these statements from our mayor because it appears the conservation of water when approving the building of condos and townhouses was an afterthought, an oversight or no thought at all. I hope I am wrong.K. Jones, Surrey
If the Greater Vancouver area is to survive a severe water shortage, everyone should start using recycled water on their shrubs and trees.
Each household could purchase two buckets and one white basin to fit in their kitchen sink. The cost at the dollar store is about $6. Put one bucket in the bathroom, to transport your bath water outside.
If you use a shower, some water can be collected by placing the bucket in the shower with you. Place the other pail in the kitchen, and put the white basin in the kitchen sink. If you rinse your vegetables under running water, or your dishes before putting them in the dish washer, let the water run into the basin and then pour the water into the bucket.
It is amazing how much water you can collect in one day, and how quickly it can become part of your routine.Areta Evans, Surrey
Words of advice over water use
Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News8 www.peacearchnews.com Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News8 www.peacearchnews.com
news
Shots-fired reportHeavily armed police responded to
one of the Miramar Village towers (15152 Russell Ave.) Wednesday afternoon, following a report of possible shots fired.
Officers arrived to find a glass panel on a tenth-floor balcony blown out, however, quickly ruled out gunfire.
“There’s no bullet holes… no evidence to suggest anything violent,” Staff Sgt. Keith Bramhill said at the scene.
The incident was reported around 4:30 p.m. Wednesday (July 22).
Bramhill said police believe the shattering was temperature-related,
and noted police were told there have been similar issues in the building.
Traffic ticketsDrivers ignoring traffic signs in
White Rock’s Five Corners area were the subject of focused enforcement by police last week.
Following complaints concerning pedestrian safety, uniformed and plain-clothes officers spent time near
Beachview Avenue and Johnston Road last Wednesday.
They issued more than eight violation tickets within an hour, a news release notes.
– Tracy Holmes
newsnotes
editorial@peacearchnews.com
Tracy Holmes photoRCMP attend to the scene of a shots-fired call in White Rock Wednesday.
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Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News10 www.peacearchnews.com Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News10 www.peacearchnews.com
B.C. residents take water for granted, but as we have discovered in this long, hot
summer, it is far more important that we realize.
Imposition by Metro Vancouver of stage 3 water restrictions is a reminder of that.
The restrictions, which ban any sprinkling, car washing at home and swimming-pool refills, are the most severe to be imposed in the past 12 years.
And back in 2003, when they were last imposed, they didn’t come until much later in the summer.
That, of course, was the summer that saw massive wildfires in the B.C. interior, notably at Barriere and Kelowna.
While people living in the Lower Mainland tend to think that the interior is always hotter and drier, this year we have experienced conditions that aren’t all that different.
Rainfall that usually comes in May, June and July has been minimal – less than 10 per cent of normal.
A light snowpack has meant less water in rivers and reservoirs.
With no end to dry weather in sight, the restrictions are needed.
With that being acknowledged, the municipalities that deliver
Metro Vancouver water could do a better job of setting a good example. Many parks have been
drenched with water on a regular basis this summer. I’ve been to several where there is mud in places because of the drenching they receive.
The stage 3 restrictions theoretically prohibit municipalities from watering parks, but they always seem to find a way around those rules. Some limited sprinkling of sports fields and school play areas is still
allowed. In some cases, where there is newly planted turf, it is understandable. However, that isn’t the case at most parks and it’s likely many will stay green all summer.
If citizens bother to complain, they are given a litany of excuses. And while homeowners can be fined for disobeying the rules, municipalities seem to be exempt from any punishment.
There is no need to water lawns or parks. Grass is quite able to withstand dry conditions – as we have seen many times in September, when the green grass returns after a few rainy days.
Plants do require water, but hand-watering is sufficient if done frequently enough. Of
course, that’s harder to do on large properties. That’s where planting wisely comes in. Drought-resistant plants make the most sense.
As for car washing, commercial car washes are still operating and those desperate to wash their vehicles can go there.
Surrey and Delta have a lot of farms, and people will see fields being watered in the coming days and weeks. This, of course, is to allow crops to grow. Most farms have their own water systems, and most watering is done through water licences. They are not drawing down the Metro reservoirs, although some farms may find wells going dry.
Some common sense about water usage can go a long way.
B.C. is a long way from having California-style drought, but this year is a good reminder that we need to use water wisely.
We take it for granted because so much of it falls in the form of rain each year. Nonetheless, it is a precious resource that is absolutely essential to every form of life.
Using it wisely, as individuals, businesses and governments, should be something that we do automatically, no matter what time of year it is.
Frank Bucholtz – former editor of the Langley Times – writes Fridays for Peace Arch News.
frank.bucholtz@gmail.com
Restrictions or not, it’s important we learn to conserve
Let’s waste not, water notFrank Bucholtz
...andfrankly
opinion
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www.peacearchnews.com 11 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015 www.peacearchnews.com 11 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015
perspectives…on the Semiahmoo Peninsula
Alex BrowneStaff Reporter
Following a successful revival last year, a local legend is back.
White Rock’s Sea Festival returns to the waterfront Aug. 1-2 – with a combination of entertainment, activities and events that promises something to appeal to just about everyone.
That includes a beefed-up Sunday Torchlight Parade, for which parade director Maurene Beales has gathered an extra 20 entries this year, for a total of 75 expected participants.
According to Dave Braun, president of festival organizers, the White Rock Events Society, a key to boosting this cornerstone event has been the presence on the parade circuit of the White Rock float championed by Deanna Pedersen and LaVerne Hogg.
“When you go to other people’s festivals, they tend to come to yours,” Braun said. “For the first time in 20 years, the White Rock float has been on the road participating in multiple festivals, including the Hyack Festival, the Marysville Parade and the Steveston Salmon Fest – and this weekend it’s the Seattle Torchlight Parade, on July 25.”
Beales has put together an “amazing lineup” for the White Rock parade, Braun said, “featuring the Blues Brothers Too, who will be performing on the main stage, pre-parade on Marine Drive and then again in the parade.”
Another cornerstone event, the Semiahmoo Park children’s area – known recently as Pirates in the Park – is being organized for the 13th year by Heather Crawford, also known as Korki The Clown.
Braun said maintaining ties with such longtime festival participants is not accidental.
“It’s a huge benefit to the festival to have people involved who are from the community and committed to the community,” he said.
Debut events this year also meet that test, he added, among them a Lantern Walk from the iconic white rock to the end of the pier, organized by new Sea Festival partner, the Chinese Village Club.
“Last year we started some discussion with the group and this year they really wanted to be involved in organization of the event. They’ll be giving out lanterns at the end of the main-stage performance Saturday night, so that people watching can walk out on the pier. It should be a great visual – just after dusk and just before the fireworks, which are scheduled for 10 to 10:15 p.m.”
Braun acknowledged that one noted feature of past sea festivals – a sand sculpture created by world-renowned artist Craig Mutch – will not be present.
He said that the society “as a volunteer, non-profit group” had hoped to involve Mutch this year in a “partnership” in which he would bring in sponsors – rather than directly sponsoring the sculpture.
“Unfortunately we weren’t able to reach an agreement with Craig for this year,” Braun said.
“I wouldn’t rule out him being involved in future – he’s a great artist and his work is a benefit to the festival.”
The ever-popular Waiters’ Race – once again MC’d by Surrey-White Rock MLA Gordon Hogg – will be back, as will the fireworks demonstration concluding the Sunday night parade, and other returning events include the White Rock Skim Boarding Jam and the Kids’ Sandcastle Challenge.
Other beach-oriented activities include the fourth annual Sundog Semiahmoo Standup Classic hosted by adventure sports store owner Scott Robertson – featuring an appearance by the world’s number-one paddle boarder Danny Ching – as well as Rotary Sand Golf and the Coastal FC Sand
Soccer Skills Challenge. For the more sedentary, Fresh Air Cinema,
co-sponsored by Semiahmoo First Nation, will present a screening of Big Hero 6 at Semiahmoo Park at 8:30 p.m. Friday night (July 31) as a kick-off Sea Festival event.
Live entertainment Saturday and Sunday – also a must for the festival – is co-ordinated for a sixth year by well-known guitarist/bandleader Jim Black.
“Jim was born here, grew up here and still teaches here,” noted Braun, who added that he’s “overjoyed” at the entertainment lineup.
Performances will be day-long on the main stage, located on West Beach next to the white rock (8 a.m to 9 p.m. Saturday; 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday.)
A highlight is the return of Tom Lavin and the Legendary Powder Blues as Saturday night’s headliners, starting at 8 p.m.
“It’s not too many festivals that will have the same headliner two years running,” said Black. “But they like it here in White Rock – and White Rock likes them.”
Said Braun: “We were so happy with their performance last year – about 1,000 people came out to hear them – that we asked Tom if they’d like to do it again. We got a quick response back and we’re excited to have them.”
The rest of the main stage lineup also features “lots of great community stuff,” Black added.
It begins Saturday with a new event, at 8 a.m., a yoga demonstration led by Lauren Roegle, followed by Sandlanee Gid and the Urban Haida Singers at 11 a.m.
“She’s actually someone I went to school with, who’s part of the Haida Gwaii,” Black said.
At noon, it’s the close harmonies of
Annual event returns to White Rock’s waterfront Aug. 1-2
Sea Fest offers ‘something for everyone’
File photoWhite Rock Youth Ambassadors wave to the crowd during last year’s Torchlight Parade.
see page 12
File photoEntertainer Fanny Starchild performs at last year’s Sea Festival.
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the popular Pacific Showtime Men’s Chorus, followed at 1 p.m. by well-known singer/songwriter/pianist/musical director Kerry O’Donovan.
Also on the schedule Saturday is the Peninsula Arts Foundation Showcase featuring the Palomars (2 p.m.); Air Stranger (3 p.m.); Chinese Village Club Dance (4 p.m.); Black himself, in a combo with Matt Skepasts, Andrew Skepasts and Brandon Lin (5 p.m.); Michelle
Schultz (6 p.m.); and blues-meister Jason Buie (7 p.m.).
On Sunday, entertainment kicks off with a Zumba demonstration (10 a.m.), and Owen Owen (noon), followed by a group of youth performers who were participants in a Sea Festival-sponsored workshop at Camp Alexandra led by Black and Brian Sumner.
Panic Picnic then takes the stage (2 p.m.); followed by Scott
Christie (3 p.m.); The Phonosonics (4 p.m.); former Oh Wells front person Sarah Jickling and Her Good Bad Luck (5 p.m.); Black’s funk band the Star Captains (6 p.m.); and rollicking tribute band the Blues Brothers Too (7 p.m.).
Meanwhile, on East Beach, the Spirit Stage (at Semiahmoo Park) will feature emerging youth and alternative music talents from 4 -8 p.m. both Saturday and Sunday.
Saturday’s lineup features performers Kristen and Jenny, Ruby Gawthrop, MG Graveyard, Richard Tichelman, Panic Panic, Ava Carich and Emily Harder. On Sunday, performers are Jada McKenzie-Moore, Antoinette Libelt, Tom Vanderkam and his re-invented band, now known as Hawking, Sydney Thorne and Chasing Strangers.
For more, visit www.whiterockseafestival.com
lifestyles
Weekend full of live entertainment from page 11
File photoStand-up paddleboarders venture into Semiahmoo Bay during a race at last year’s Sea Festival. This year’s event runs Aug. 1-2.
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www.peacearchnews.com 13 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015 www.peacearchnews.com 13 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015
businessReal-life gaming
A new room-escape facility has opened in Surrey, offering themed rooms that give participants a “real-life gaming experience.”
Proponents behind E-Exit – located at 106-15345 Hwy. 10 – describe it as “the ultimate playground,” where two to 10 players work together to gather clues, solve riddles and unlock secret paths in order to escape a room within 45 minutes.
Themed rooms include an antique museum, a military base, “Cabin 13”, and a psychiatric unit.
Other E-Exits are located in Richmond, Vancouver and
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Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News14 www.peacearchnews.com Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News14 www.peacearchnews.com
White Rock’s Daisuke Serizawa was among nearly 300 participants to take part in this month’s scavenger hunt in support of the BC Lung Association.
Serizawa, along with teammate Sonia Shao, competed in RUSH: Race & Urban Scavenger Hunt on July 11. Checkpoints for the competition were scattered throughout Metro Vancouver and each were designed to push
participants “to their physical and mental limits.”
The challenges undertaken by Serizawa, Shao and the rest of the field included a roller-derby event, bubble balls and one involving jelly beans.
Since its inception, the RUSH event has raised $75,000 to support lung health, as well as research, advocacy and education about lung disease.
A real RUSH of support
lifestyles
Contributed photoDaisuke Serizawa takes part in a scavenger hunt for the lung association.
www.whiterockcity.ca
Instructors RequiredPre-school Ballet Contract Instructor Pre-school ballet teacher who is great with children required. You will implement an 8-10 week beginner ballet course each season with an emphasis on fun and participation. You will ensure that the necessary equipment and supplies are available and that the class is conducted in a safe manner. Please indicate if you are available for the timees below:
Thursdays 9:00 a.m.-12 noon
Saturdays 9:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m.
Competitive pay based on experience. Opportunity to instruct additional classes.
Please send a resume to jstech@whiterockcity.ca
Skating Instructor Contract Instructor September to February
This position instructs and evaluates individuals learning to skate; from basic to more advanced skills. The ability to be creative and fun while working with people and excellent customer service, communication, organizational and program planning skills are needed. Applicants should be energetic and enjoy working in an exciting workplace.
Please indicate which of the following shifts you would be available for:
Fridays 10:00-10:30 a.m., 3:00-4:30 p.m.
Saturdays 10:00 a.m.-12 noon
Competitive pay.
Please send a resume to jstech@whiterockcity.ca
next weekMonday, July 27
9:00 a.m. Special Council Meeting (14737 Marine Drive)
5:45 p.m. Governance and Legislation Committee Meeting
7:00 p.m. Regular Council Meeting
Please note the next regular Council Meeting will be held September 14, 2015.
Notice of Work: Hazardous Tree RemovalHealthy trees are important! They provide clean air and shade in the summer. Unfortunately, dead or defective trees can pose a threat to public safety. When this happens, your wellbeing is our top priority.
The City of White Rock is conducting hazard abatement work on trees in Centennial Park around the Mann Park running track. The City will remove two large big leaf maple trees due to extensive rot and decay. A number of other trees, mostly Alder, will be turned into wildlife stems and the coarse wood debris left on site in order to eliminate the risk associated with the presence of rot and decay. A number of other trees will have a crown cleaning to remove the dead, diseased, and poorly attached limbs while maintaining appropriate arboriculture standards and practices.
To fi nd out more about the pruning and maintenance of City trees, please contact the Operations Department, at operations@whiterockcity.ca or 604.541.2181.
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www.peacearchnews.com 15 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015
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Speaking Up Fundraising forAutism Speaks Canada
August 2 – 15
This summer, Choices is helping to raise funds for Autism Speaks Canada.
You can donate at any Choices Markets location by purchasing an Autism Speaks
puzzle piece for $1 during our fundraising campaign, which will take place between
August 2nd and August 15th. Be sure to stop by for our fundraising barbecue
(ask instore for details). See walknowforautismspeaks.ca
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Rodear Grass FedForage FinishedLean Ground Beef
Ocean Wise Fresh Sockeye Salmon Fillets
OrganicTop SirloinSteaks
450g
Harvest All Beef Wieners
6.9919.99lb/44.07kg
7.982.98lb/6.57kg
BC Organic Table Carrots from Similkameen River Organic2.27kg bag
California Organic Red
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BC Organic WhiteNugget Potatoesfrom Fraserland
1.98lb/4.37kg
3.98lb/8.77kg
BC Organic Nectarinesfrom Nature’s
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Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News16 www.peacearchnews.com Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News16 www.peacearchnews.com
FridayWhite Rock Community
Centre hosts bridge every Friday at 1 p.m. Call 604-536-3463 for more info.
Seniors Legal Advice July 24, 1-3 p.m. at Come
Share Society, 15008 26 Ave. Free. Pre-book. info-referral@comeshare.ca or 604-531-9400, ext. 204.
Saturday Food Preservation
Workshops, at South Sur-
rey Rec Centre (14601 20 Ave.), 10 a.m.-1 p.m., pre-sented by Surrey/White Rock Food Action Coali-tion. July 25, food fermen-tation; Aug. 15, pickling; Aug. 29, canning fruits; Sept. 12, canning sauces.
Registration required. sil-via.diblasio@gmail.com
Trunk Sale at Mount Olive Church, 2350 148 St., July 25, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Free to attend, $15 per park-ing space to sell items. mountolive@telus.net for
more info. Black Tails & Boots
Gala benefitting Semiah-moo Animal League Inc., Sept. 12, 5-10 p.m. featur-ing gourmet dinner, live music and dancing. info@sali.ca or www.sali.ca/
news/eventsRCMSAR5 fundraiser
Sept. 12, 6-10 p.m. at Sawbuck’s Pub, 1626 152 St., food, beverages and prizes. SPMRS@telus.net
SundayWhite Rock Farmers’
Market every Sunday, through Oct. 11, new hours: 10 a.m.-2 p.m., 15154 Russell Ave. www.whiterockfarmersmarket.ca
Toastmasters by the Sea meets Sundays 1:30-3 p.m. at White Rock Library.
MondayPacific Showtime
Men’s Chorus meets every Monday, 7:30 p.m. at St. Mark’s Church, 12953 20 Ave. All ages welcome. Contact: 604-536-5292 or leighand@shaw.ca or website www.pacificshowtime.com
White Rock Laugh-ter yoga at White Rock Library, 15342 Buena Vista Ave., 7-8 p.m. To continue on the last Tuesday of each month, except July and August. 604-536-9049.
Free meditation class every second and fourth Monday, 5:30-6:30 p.m., Semiahmoo Library meet-ing room, 1815 152 St. Info: 604-710-0507.
White Rock History Club meets July 27, 7 p.m. at White Rock Library (15342 Buena Vista Ave.). Herb Spencer and David Cotton to speak. By dona-tion.
TuesdayMental Health Meet
& Greet at Peace Arch Hospital, 5th floor, out-side mental-health unit. 6:30-8 p.m. every Tuesday. Information for families of people with a mental ill-ness. Info 604-541-6844.
WednesdayHeritage Walking
Tours at White Rock Museum and Archives, 14970 Marine Dr., every Wednesday at 11 a.m. No
appointment necessary. 604-541-2221.
Neigh-bourhood Fun Nights at Alexandra Neighbour-hood House,
2916 McBride Ave. Wednesdays 5-7 p.m. till Aug. 19. By donation. Includes dinner and chil-drens’ activities. 604-535-0015 ext. 236, community-programs@alexhouse.net
Seniors ballroom dancing featuring live orchestra, every Wednes-day, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. at Kent Street Activity Cen-tre, 1475 Kent St. Every-one over 50 welcome. $6.
lifestyles
datebook
datebook@peacearchnews.com
SweetCorn on the CobGrown in BC
Fresh Wild Sockeye SalmonWhole, Head Off10.98/kg
HeinzPicnic Packs3 x 375 ml
We reserve the right to limit quantities. Limited quantity specials require a $10 min. family purchase excluding limited quantity specials & tobacco products. Some items are subject to GST and plus deposit/eco fees where applicable.
HOURS: Monday - Friday: 8am - 6:30pm • Saturday: 8am - 6pm • Sunday & Holidays: 9am - 6pm
Hillcrest Mall - 1405 Johnston Road, White Rock Prices Effective: Sunday, July 26th - Saturday, August 1st, 2015
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arry a large selection of
BRITISH ITEMS
WESTERN CANADIAN OWNED & OPERATED.
Limit 2
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SeedlessGreen Grapes
Grown in California
Ocean SprayCocktails
Selected Varieties1.89 L
Diana’sBBQ SauceSelected Varieties
500 ml
98¢ea
6.13/kg
278lb
HeinzMustard
Selected Varieties550 ml
248ea
288ea
SunRypeBeveragesSelected Varieties
1.36 L
New York Strip Loin Steaks
Bone-In
19.80/kg
898lb
Lamb Double Loin
ChopsAustralian
26.41/kg
1198lb
$52for
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498ea
UNBEATABLE SAVINGS
$42for
$36for
Boneless ChickenBreasts
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12.08/kg
548lb
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RomaineLettuceGrown in BC
Fresh
Fresh
6.57/kg
298lb
SweetCherries
Grown in BCWeather Permitting
New Crop
Plus Deposit, Recycling Fee where Applic.
Plus Deposit, Recycling Fee where Applic.
498lb
Beef Prime RibSteaks
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www.peacearchnews.com 17 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015 www.peacearchnews.com 17 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015
arts & entertainment…on the Semiahmoo Peninsula
Bob Jadis’ paintings on display at library
A man of many talentsAlex BrowneArts Reporter
In a sign about Bob Jadis’s work, Semiahmoo Library’s Renee Zolinski Ward describes the Peninsula artist as a “renaissance man.”
“I’ve been called a lot of things over the years, but that is a first,” quipped the tall, cowboy-hat-sporting, wryly humourous painter.
In truth, it’s a good description for the quietly modest Jadis, who, in addition to painting the rich-hued, landscape-inspired abstracts on show at the South Surrey library for the rest of this month, is also an author whose works include Songs of a Saddle Tramp, a collection of poetry evoking the Old West.
He’s also the creator of two fanciful pseudo-‘old-time’ machines that can be found in a display case at the library – the Speculator and the Name-O-Meter (both bearing the date 1926 – significant for him as the year in which his lovingly-restored Model T Touring Car rolled off the assembly line).
The Wolfville, N.S.-born Jadis is also, in no particular order of importance, a cartoonist; a musician whose multiple instruments include trombone and Celtic fiddle; a soap-stone carver; a ventriloquist for charitable events under the name ‘Buckaroo Bob’; a keen horseman, a community volunteer of some 60 years – and a practising Buddhist (his registered name, Guang Xie, means ‘man with big heart’).
For 25 years, he was a member of the RCMP in Ottawa specializing in intelligence work – rising to the rank of senior advisor and director of security operations for the Privy Council Office and the Office of the Prime Minister.
But the arts have always had a fascination for him – all the way from when he was a young boy attending Acadia University, and, later, at the Nova Scotia School of Art, to his directorship of the St. Petersburg Art
see page 18
Song and danceThe Surrey Fusion Festival – a free, two-day multicultural event – was staged last weekend at Holland Park, drawing hundreds of visitors, who took in entertainment on multiple stages, and pavilions representing more than 50 countries. Clockwise, from top: the Polonez Polish Canadian Dance Society performs; members of the Cedar Hills Caledonian Pipe Band play while walking through festival grounds; Mike Sanshyn plays the violin; Vassilina Kazarina sings.
Boaz Joseph photos
Bob Jadisartist
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Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News18 www.peacearchnews.com Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News18 www.peacearchnews.com
Institute in Florida where he wintered two years during the 1990s.
It was there that he selected acrylic as his medium for his more serious ventures into painting – of which many representative examples can be found at the library.
Most distinctive are the abstract landscapes – inspired by both the geology and the sunset purples and oranges of the Grand Canyon area of Utah, Colorado and Arizona, where he and his wife, Trude Erickson, spend each winter near the town of Surprise.
Jadis’s eye for form and composition, evident in both his painting and cartooning, is manifest in the architectural pillars and beautiful rounded stones of his landscapes and also in their relationship to the ‘frame’.
“I have a tendency to paint outside the borders,” he acknowledged. “It gives the paintings a 3-D quality.”
The works are rooted in real landscapes he has observed in the region, he said.
“I don’t take any pictures. When I drive through an area I like, I stop and stare at it for a long time. It’s all in my mind. I don’t want to take a picture, because it would be
detrimental to the process. I want to paint my own interpretation.”
In a place called Carefree, Ariz., for example, one can encounter the same gently rounded rock formations that Jadis features in his paintings.
“Everything flows, one thing into another,” he said. “I’ve incorporated that.”
Similarly, what he calls ‘wingtips’ at the top of many paintings are inspired by the actual effect of wind erosion on rock formations.
Jadis is not inclined to impose a specific meaning on a painting, he said – he’d prefer that to be supplied by the viewer.
“It means whatever you want to see in the painting,” he said.
There is one notable exception – a painting he considers a key piece in the collection which takes pride of place above the fireplace on the south wall of the museum.
Titled Inukshuk, it’s a tribute to Victoria-
raised basketball player Steve Nash.As he explains, the stone structure
representative of the north is also a reference to its being chosen as symbol for the 2010 Olympics, for which Nash was a torchbearer.
The structure is contrasted with a natural rock formation from Arizona, painted in the orange and purple official colours of one of Nash’s teams, the Phoenix Suns.
The show is not all geology-inspired. Jadis has also included such still lifes as Mushrooms, Orchids and Cranberry Rhapsody – which demonstrates his desire to close any open loops in each composition.
They’re also an example of his somewhat cavalier, quirky sense of humour.
“In Cranberry Rhapsody, it’s been pointed out to me that cranberries don’t grow like grapes,” he said.
“But that’s the beauty of the piece – the liberties I can take as an artist.”
Jadis prefers to leave painting interpretations to the viewer from page 17
arts & entertainment
Contributed photoA Bob Jadis painting that will be on display.
SummerS O U N D S O F
From guitars to sitars, classical melodies to blues beats, you’ll hear it all during
Surrey’s Sounds of Summer.
SUMMER MUSIC SERIES IN SURREYPlease bring blankets or folding chairs to enjoy the performances.
6:30 pm – 8:00 pm
June 29 The Glades Garden Park* 561 172 St
July 6 The Grove (Pianos on the Street Kick-Off) 13730 72 Ave
July 13 Hawthorne Park Gardens 10513 144 St
July 20 The Plaza at City Hall 13450 104 Ave
July 27 Darts Hill Garden Park* 170 St at 16 Ave
Aug 10 Fleetwood Park Gardens 15802 80 Ave
Aug 17 Bear Creek Park Gardens 13750 88 Ave
Aug 24 The Plaza at City Hall 13450 104 Ave
Aug 31 Holland Park Gardens 13428 Old Yale Rd
Full performance schedule available online. For more information, please call 604-501-5050.
* Garden gates will open at 5:00 pm for extended visiting hours. Pets are not permitted in these locations.
FREE
www.surrey.ca/gardens
15316
7051770
July 13 Hawthorne Park Gardens
July 20 The Plaza at City Hall
July 27 Darts Hill Garden Park*
August 10 Fleetwood Park Gardens
August 17 Bear Creek Park Gardens
August 24 The Plaza at City Hall
August 31 Holland Park Gardens
10513 144 St
13450 104 Ave
170 St at 16 Ave
15802 80 Ave
13750 88 Ave
13450 104 Ave
13428 Old Yale Rd
www.surrey.ca
TRISKELLION - Celtic
5 ON A STRING - BLUEGRASS
FLUTERRIFIC - Baroque to Broadway Flute Ensemble
12 STRINGS - Popular Strings Trio
CAVIAR & LACE - Jazz
MOHAMED ASSANI - Sitar and Tabla
GOLDEN EARS - Jazz Band
For more information, please call 604-501-5050.* Garden gates will open at 5:00 pm for extended visiting hours. Pets are not permitted in these locations.
www.surrey.ca/trees the future livces here.
Rotary Club of White RockCharity Book Sale
Aug. 7, 8, 9 & 10 • 9:00 am to 5:00 pm
South Surrey Arena2199 148th Street
For more information call604.560.4770 or 604.536.1965
www.peacearchnews.com 19 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015 www.peacearchnews.com 19 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015
Alex BrowneArts Reporter
Shoppers serenaded by the Square Pegs Jazzy Band at Save-On-Foods at Semiahmoo Centre July 18 couldn’t help but get the message.
The two-hour concert was a mellow musical reminder that the White Rock Traditional Jazz Society will host Metro Vancouver’s most prestigious retro jazz event – the 2015 Jazz Band Ball – at the Pacific Inn and Resort Centre Sept. 26-27.
The Square Pegs – Peg Thomson (piano), Dave Ayton (vibraphone), Rob Arseneau (trumpet), Jim Armstrong (trombone and vocals), Casey Tolhurst (bass) and Bob Aitken (drums) – is
one of numerous bands revisiting the popular sounds of the Jazz Age at the two-day event.
So is WRTJS’ house band – Red Beans and Rice (featuring Rice Honeywell Sr., cornet; Gerry Green, reeds; Ray Batten, trombone; Don Ogilvie, guitar; Thomson, piano; Tolhurst, bass; and Scott Robertson, drums).
But the event will also summon a fine sampling of traditional jazz experts from the Northwest, as far south as Seattle, and as far east as New York.
“We’re very excited with our lineup,” notes Ayton, who also doubles as WRTJS publicist.
“(Noted reedman) Evan Arntzen, currently living in New York,
will be flying in to play with Simon Stribling’s New Orleans Ale Stars and his own group, The Brothers Arntzen. He is bringing with him (vocalist) Tamar Korn, who is developing an international reputation.”
Three other notable U.S. musicians, Ray Skjelbred, Clint Baker and Jeff Hamilton, will sit in with Stribling (who will host the 7:30 p.m. Friday night kick-off party for the event, $10 at the door) and will also be featured during the course of the weekend, Ayton said.
“Ray is a superb pianist currently living in Seattle. He is described as a ‘national treasure’ who revisits the ‘stride’ style of the 1930s – his Yeti Chasers
Jazz Band will also be featured,” said Ayton.
“Clint Baker, a multi-instrumentalist from California, is a regular member of (featured group) Grand Dominion Jazz Band, as is Jeff Hamilton, also from California. They will be sharing trombone duties in the Ale Stars, as well as playing trumpet and drums with Grand Dominion.
Also featured is Seattle’s Uptown Lowdown Jazz Band and youth group, the Curbside Jazz Band, from Chilliwack.
“Both venues at the Pacific Inn have dance floors and a combination of theatre and cabaret-style seating,” Ayton said.
Ayton said the cost of
a two-day badge to the event is $70 – or $62.50 if purchased before Aug. 1. One-day badges
(Saturday $40, Sunday $30) will go on sale on Sept. 1 if seating is still available.
For more. visit www.whiterocktradjazz.com or call 604-560-9215 or 604-531-8857.
Event set for September at Pacific Inn
Jazz festival to host top international players
Boaz Joseph photoDavid Ayton (centre, on vibraphone) plays with the Square Pegs Jazzy Band during a presentation by the White Rock Traditional Jazz Society outside the Save-On Foods at Semiahmoo Shopping Centre.
arts & entertainment
Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara Society7050 120 Street, Surrey, British Columbia V3W 3M8
Tel: (604) 598-1300 Fax: (604) 594-1669July 1, 2015
Notice of Annual and Special General MeetingDear Members:
TAKE NOTICE that the Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara Society (the “Society”) will be holding its Annual General Meeting (“AGM”) and a Special General Meeting (“SGM”) on Sunday, August 16, 2015 at 2:00 pm at the Society premises located at 7050 120th Street, Surrey, British Columbia. The AGM and SGM will take place in the Darbar Hall of the Society. If the Darbar Hall becomes full, additional meeting space will be provided in the Langar Hall and the Gallery. The AGM will begin at 2:OOpm. The SGM will take place promptly following the adjournment of the AGM.
The financial statements of the Society, for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2014, which are to be approved by the members of the Society at the AGM, are available for perusal at the Society’s office which is located at the above-noted address. At the SGM, members of the Society will be asked to consider and vote on the resolutions attached to this Notice.
The first resolution is to amend the Society’s Constitution. These changes have been requested by the Charities Directorate of the Canada Revenue Agency.
The second resolution pertains to the quorum requirement for the Society’s general meetings. This change is to allow greater certainty for Society members for when general meetings will actually be taking place.
Only members of the Society are eligible to attend the AGM and SGM and vote on the resolutions. Members are only able to attend the meeting in person. Voting by proxy is not permitted. Members are asked to bring their Society membership card, and appropriate identification.
Rajinder Singh Dhaliwal, President ~ Guru Nanak Sikh Gurdwara Society 7050 120 Street, Surrey, British Columbia V3W 3M8 Tel: 604-598-1300 Fax: (604) 594-1669
SPECIAL RESOLUTION IAmendments to the Constitution
RESOLVED AS A SPECIAL RESOLUTION that the Society’s Constitution be amended by deleting the entirety of Article 2 and replacing it with the following:
2.a. To advance religion by teaching the religious tenets, doctrines and observances of the Sikh
religion as contained in the scriptures of Sri Guru Granth Sahib and in the writings of the ten gurus (Sri Guru Nanek Dev Ji to Sri Guru Gobind Singh Ji) and in accordance with the “The Skih Rehat Maryada (the Sikh Way of Life)” as established by Sri Akal Takhat Sahib, Amritsar and as published by Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee, Amritsar, Punjab, India.
b. To advance religion by establishing and maintaining a Gurdwara Sahib, at 7050 120 Street, Surrey, British Columbia with services conducted in accordance with the religious tenents, doctrines and observances of the Sikh religion as aforesaid.
c. To support and maintain missions and missionaries in order to further the Sikh religion.d. To advance religion and education by establishing and maintaining a school of instruction on
the subject of the history, philosophy, religious observances and language of the Sikhs.e. To advance religion and education by establishing and operating a library and museum
regarding the Sikh religion and Sikh values and the history of the Sikh community in British Columbia and Canada.
f. T o advance religion by providing Langar (meals) in the Langar hall of the Gurdwara Sahib on a daily basis to one and all regardless of their religious, social or economic background.
g. To advance education by providing publicly available scholarships and bursaries to secondary school students for post-secondary education.
h. To advance religion by conducting religious festivals in Surrey, Delta, or White Rock for the Sikh community of British Columbia.
i. To advance religion and relieve poverty by providing rental accommodation for priests and by providing below market residential accommodation for the support of low income individuals and family.
SPECIAL RESOLUTION IIAmendments to the Bylaws
Paragraph 60 of the Society’s Bylaws currently reads:60. No business shall be transacted at any general or annual general meeting unless a quorum is present at the time when the meeting proceeds to such business. Except as otherwise provided herein, ten percent of the members in good standing at that time personally present at such meeting, shall constitute a quorum.
RESOLVED AS A SPECIAL RESOLUTION that the Society’s Bylaws be amended by deleting the entirety of Paragraph 60 and replacing it with the following:
60. (I) No business, other than the election of a chair and the adjournment or termination of the
meeting, shall be conducted at a general meeting at a time when a quorum is not present.(ii) lf, at any time, during a general meeting there ceases to be a quorum present, business then in
progress shall be suspended until there is a quorum present or until the meeting is adjourned or terminated. For the purposes of a general meeting, 10 members being in attendance shall constitute a quorum.
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Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News20 www.peacearchnews.com Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News20 www.peacearchnews.com
arts & entertainment
Alex BrowneArts Reporter
The sound of the blues will be wailing beside the sea this Sunday.
The White Rock Blues Society’s sixth annual Blues Challenge at Semiahmoo Park is billed as a ‘battle of blues bands’ – but it’s not necessarily as competitive, or as combative, as that may sound.
The main idea, according to the society’s Rod Dranfield, is to share the joys of the earthy, roots music style with as many people as possible in a day-long, family-friendly, summer showcase.
Along the way, judges will also help select a local band, and a solo or duo act, as White Rock’s rep-resentatives for the International Blues Challenge in Memphis in
January. The venue – contributed by Semi-
ahmoo First Nation – couldn’t be better, Dranfield said. “It’s a beauti-ful park right by the sea,” he added. “It’s also across railroad tracks and right next to a graveyard (the site is home to a historic SFN burial site) – you don’t get much more blues than that!”
Genuine Southern-style bar-becue cooked up by food ven-dor Memphis Mike ought to add the perfect complement to a day of wailing blues, he added – although guests are also welcome to bring their own lunches, snacks and non-alcoholic beverages.
Thirteen acts will vie to represent White Rock at this year’s Interna-tional Blues Challenge in Mem-
phis, Tenn. Topping off the event will be a full performance by Chi-cago blues legend, Jimmy D. Lane.
Competitors seeking the soci-ety’s sponsorship to attend the Memphis IBC include Harpdog Brown, the Jim Black Band, Arsen Shomakov, the Hell’s Gate Blues Band, McKinley Wolf, Gary Pres-ton and Jimmy Zee.
Looking for the nod in the solo/duo category are Jesse Roper, Lonnie Glass, The Blues Baron, Nash Mcinnes and Murray Porter.
Tickets are $20 at the gate, and children 12 and under, accompa-nied by an adult, can get in free.
Tickets are available at tickets.surrey.ca, www.whiterockblues.com, Tapestry Music, Surfside Music, or by calling 604-542-6515.
Blues battle set for Sunday
All Saints Community Church 14615 16th Ave. White Rock • 604-209-5570
www.allsaintswhiterock.com
“True Wisdom” (A study in the book of Proverbs)
This Sunday 10.30 am
Everyone welcome!
Pastor Peter Klenner
MorningWorship & Kids’ Church at 10:00 am
1480 George St.,White Rock B.C.
604-536-9322www.saint-johns.ca
Pastor WillemALL WELCOME!
July 26, 20159:00 am
Afrikaanse Diens10:30 am
Worship ServiceJohn 6: 1-21
Anglican Church of the Holy Trinity15115 Roper Avenue at Foster Street
Phone: 604-531-0884 www.holytrinitywhiterock.org
The Reverend Neil Gray, Rector
The Anglican Church welcomes you!
Sunday Services8:00 a.m. Eucharist
10:00 a.m. Sung Eucharist
Thursdays - 10:30 a.m. Eucharist
2350 - 148 St., Surrey, B.C.604-536-8527
www.mountolivelutheran.ca
Worship and Sunday School
10:15 amPastor Peter Hanson
All are Welcome!
on the on the Semiahmoo Semiahmoo Peninsula Peninsula
Sunday Worship Services10:30am
Pastor Norm Miller604-576-1394
Traditional & Christ CenteredALL ARE WELCOME
White Rock Lutheran Church
Meeting at St. John’s Worship Centre1480 George St., White Rock, B.C.
SEMIAHMOO 2141 Cranley Drive
604-576-6504
We sing the TraditionalHymns and use the King
James version in all services.
Sunday Services11 am & 6 pm
Independent, Fundamental Non-charismatic
BAPTIST CHURCH
Peninsula UNITED CHURCHESWorship ServicesJuly 26- Aug.16 July 26 & Aug 2
9:30 am Gathering at
Sunnyside UnitedAug. 9 & 16
10:30 am Gathering at
First United WRAug. 23
Regular Worship Services Resume
For further information for all these churches
Please call 604-531-5739Please call 604-531-5739
MASS SCHEDULE
OR GO TO WWW.STAROFTHESEA.CA
Good Shepherd Church 2250 - 150 St., S. Surrey• Mon, Wed - Sat: 8:00 am• Tuesday: 6:30 pm• Saturday: 5:00 pm• Sunday: 9:00 am, 11:00 am & 7:00 pmStar of the Sea Church 1153 Fir St., White Rock• Tues - Sat: 9:00 am• Saturday: 4:00 pm• Sunday: 10:30 amHoly Cross Church 12268 Beecher Ave., Crescent Beach• Sunday: 8:30 am
ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCHESROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCHES ON THEON THE PENINSULAPENINSULA
Parish Religious Education Program– Classes from Gr. 1 - Gr. 7 available Thursday evenings
Please call 604-531-5739
“A warm welcome to everyone”
Star of the Sea Catholic School(K - Gr. 7) 15024 - 24th Avenue, South Surrey
“The Star’s 3Rs” Reverence, Respect, Responsibility”Please call 604-531-6316 or go to: www.starofthesea.ca
WHITE ROCK SEVENTH-day ADVENTIST CHURCH
14615 16th Ave Surrey BC 604-531-6142www.whiterockadvenntist.ca
Saturday Sabbath Services: 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Fellowship Dinner Following
Jeremiah 29:11 - 13 “For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, says the Lord, thoughts of peace and not evil, to give you a future and a hope. Then you will call upon Me and go and pray to Me and I will listen to you. And you will seek Me and fi nd Me, when you search for Me
with all your heart.” NKJV
Note: July 25th and Aug. 1st - No Sabbath Services due to
Hope Camp meeting
“The purpose of the one true God, exalted be his glory,
in revealing Himself unto men is to lay bare those gems
that lie hidden within the mine of their true and inmost selves.”
Sunday devotional meetings, children and jr. youth classes
www.bahaicommunities.com/whiterock
604-536-4477
Baha’i Faith
1 SERVICE ON SUNDAY10:00 AM
Saturday August 1 & Sunday August 2
10 am - 5 pm
Drayton Harbor Days
Blaine Harbor Boating Center235 Marine Drive, Blaine, WA ~ Just off 1-5, exit 276
www.blainechamber.com ~ tel: 360-332-4544
Plover Ferry Rides
Vintage Steam Boats
Arts & Crafts
Presitigious George Raft Race
Fun Family Activities
Outdoor Movie Night
& Much More!
A Celebration of Everything Maritime
www.peacearchnews.com 21 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015 www.peacearchnews.com 21 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015
sports…on the Semiahmoo Peninsula
Team misses PBL playoffs
Season still successful: Tritons coachNick GreenizanSports Reporter
A season after the White Rock Tritons ended a five-year stretch without qualifying for BC Premier Baseball League playoffs, the under-18 squad will again be on the sidelines when the post-season begins.
But it wasn’t for lack of trying. The Peninsula crew started the season
poorly, and had just two wins in their first 15 games, before rallying over the final six weeks to finish with an 16-28 win-loss record. They came within two games of securing the eighth and final playoff berth – and were one game away from, at the very least, forcing a do-or-die play-in game against the Abbotsford Cardinals for that final spot.
Instead, they missed the post-season party after losing both ends of a dou-bleheader Sunday against the Cards, plus a game ear-lier in the week against the Langley Blaze.
In the first game Sunday, Abbotsford pitcher Carter Loewen threw a no-hitter, and in the second contest, a 3-1 loss, the Tritons gave up runs on a balk and an error.
“We did everything that we possibly could, but we just couldn’t get in there,” White Rock head coach Russ Smithson said.
“We just had a rough final week. We had two chances to beat Langley, and couldn’t do it. And against Abbotsford, we had the error, the balk. And in Game 1 (Loewen) just pitched a gem. We couldn’t touch him.”
Though the season ended on a down note, the veteran coach refused to call the season a disappointment, instead pointing to the late-season run his team went on, after starting with so many losses.
“We didn’t have the most talented team, but they worked so hard. They battled their asses off every game,” Smithson said. “I still think it was a positive year – they never gave up.”
The Tritons were beset by a handful of key injuries this season, too. First baseman Tom Melenchuk – one of the PBL’s top slug-gers – missed the majority of the season with an elbow injury that required surgery, and against Abbotsford last weekend, Smithson’s lineup card was missing veterans Janssen Crossley and Jason Hill, who were out with injuries. The team called up six players from the U16 Junior Tritons as a result.
Russ Smithsoncoach
see page 23
Gary Ahuja photoLongtime professional wrestler Don Leo Heaton, 84, is set to be honoured by Cloverdale’s All-Star Wrestling today (Friday.)
Gary AhujaBlack Press
Don Leo Heaton still dreams of wrestling – literally.
“Once in a while I have dreams that the match is ready to go on and they are calling me to the ring and I don’t have my shoes tied up or some silly damn thing,” Heaton says with a laugh.
Heaton is seated on a chair in his Langley home. A wall in the nearby hallway shows him in his younger days, a strapping young man in wrestling trunks and boots. His waist is adorned with a championship belt, one of the many titles he won during his illustrious career.
That was a long time ago. The pictures date back four, five, even six decades.
Heaton, 84, retired from professional wrestling in 1980.
And today (Friday), he is set to be honoured by All Star Wrestling at the Cloverdale
Fairgrounds.He is one of four – along with
Ed ‘Moondog’ Moretti, Bob Steele and the late Roy McClarty – being recognized.
• • •Heaton followed his father into
professional wrestling.He grew up in Utah and
remembers being as young as four or five years old and accompanying his father — who wrestled under the moniker Brother Jonathan — to professional bouts across North America.
After high school, Heaton enlisted in the U.S. Navy, while also wresting semi-professionally. In 1950 — at age 19 — he became a full-time wrestler.
“The whole thing was exciting for me; it was something I had thought about ever since I was a young boy,” he said.
Heaton wrestled mainly under the name Don Leo Jonathan, but also sometimes
as the Mormon Giant. He even participated in a tag-team match alongside his father.
He loved performing for an audience, whether he was playing the ‘good guy’ or the ‘heel’.
“In Vancouver, I could do no harm (but) in Quebec City, I didn’t speak enough French,” he said with a chuckle.
Back in his heyday, Heaton stood six-foot-six and weighed
320 pounds. He wrestled for 30 years, participating in more than 3,000 matches, securing numerous championships along the way, in several different wrestling associations.
He still remembers a match in Montreal in 1952 where he wrestled for his first world championship title.
“I was so excited, I didn’t even know it was going on,” Heaton recalled. ‘It never sank in until I was sitting on my step the next morning, and one of the guys walks by and says, ‘Hi, champ.’”
Another highlight was fighting seven-foot-tall André the Giant back in the 1970s.
Heaton was able to body slam his opponent — the 550-pounder would go on to be known as the Eighth Wonder of the World in later years, when he rose to fame in the World Wrestling Federation.
Until that point, no one had been able to body slam the
Don Leo Heaton to be recognized at Cloverdale event
Wrestling great to be honoured
see page 22
Contributed photoWrestler Don Leo Heaton in his championship heyday.
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Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News22 www.peacearchnews.com Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News22 www.peacearchnews.com
Giant.“I had no doubts I
could do it,” Heaton said. “I had slammed Haystacks Calhoun before that, and he was 602 pounds.”
Slamming the Giant was quite the feat, but it also injured Heaton’s back, to the point that he had to retire in 1980.
“That’s how I got hurt, saddling him up for a slam,” Heaton said.
To this day, Heaton’s back is bothersome.
“I have always said, if you want to dance, you have to pay the fiddler. For 30 years of glory, I got 30 years of misery,” he said, adding he has no regrets
His career took him to Mexico, Europe, South Africa, Australia and Japan.
Heaton also appeared in a handful of movies, including 1978’s Paradise Alley, which starred Sylvester Stallone
In 2006, he was inducted into the Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame, and many of his biggest wrestling moments are documented in the book, Wrestling in the Canadian West, by author Vance Nevada, a promoter and wrestler himself.
Nevada will also be hosting Friday’s induction ceremony.
Friday’s event will be held at the Fairgrounds’ Alice McKay Building (17607 62 Ave.), starting at 8 p.m. For more, visit www.allstar-wrestling.com
sports
Heaton from page 21
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he N
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entr
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4 m
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See
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taile
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. ©20
15 N
issa
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anad
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c. N
issa
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nanc
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ervi
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Inc.
is a
div
isio
n of
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san
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ada
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www.peacearchnews.com 23 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015 www.peacearchnews.com 23 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015
sports
A successful summer of baseball for a team of White Rock nine-year-olds ended with yet another win last weekend in Langley.
The White Rock all-star squad cruised to a Little League BC District 3 championship last weekend, winning eight games in a row, including a 13-10 win over Whalley in the title game.
Against Whalley, White Rock jumped out to a big, early 13-4 lead, with the pitching of Leif Friedrich and Sebastian Cazorla keeping the Whalley offence at bay.
At the plate, the Peninsula crew received timely hits from Jordan Hounsell, Lucas Johnson, Landen Hilditch and Adam Folia.
As the game progressed, White Rock’s bats cooled down, but a stout defence and more strong pitching – this time from Jackson Nadon and James Lawson – kept the team in front until the final out.
Earlier the same day, White Rock
advanced to the championship game after knocking off Hastings (Vancouver) 14-3 in semifinal action.
Grayson Frers started on the hill for White Rock in that contest, and catching Jett Carroll led the way with two hits.
Logan Johnston and Dylan Garland also fared well at the plate, rounding out what assistant coach Todd Nadon called “a true team effort.”
En route to the finals, White Rock also defeated South Vancouver, Kerrisdale, Trout Lake, Jericho, Little Mountain, and Whalley again.
The District 3 title wraps up a strong season for the summer-league all-star bunch; White Rock finished with an overall win-loss record of 16-1, and included a second-place finish at a tournament in Kelso, Wash.
– Nick Greenizan
Nine-year-old ballplayers end season with win
District title for White Rock
Contributed photoWhite Rock lines up on the field during District 3 championships.
“Losing Tom was flat-out dev-astating. The guys all stepped up (in his absence) but it’s tough to replace a guy who would’ve been hitting in the No. 4 spot in your
order,” Smithson said. Next season, Melenchuk and 11
other seniors will have graduated the program, leaving returnees like Dawson Veeneman, Jason Hill and Graydon Rasmussen to
lead the way. “We’ll have a lot of fresh faces in
the lineup next year, but I think we can still be a playoff team. That’s still in the cards for us,” Smithson said.
Tritons will have young team next year from page 21
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Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News24 www.peacearchnews.comW
ise
cust
omer
s re
ad t
he f
ine
prin
t: *
, †,
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◆,
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www.peacearchnews.com 25Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015 www.peacearchnews.com 25 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015
Canada’s national women’s softball team has two wins and a loss through the opening few days of the Pan-Am Games, and former White Rock Renegade Sara Groenewegen is largely responsible for one win.
On Monday, Groenewegen – who,
along with her Canadian teammates, placed third at the Canadian Open Fastpitch International Championship in South Surrey – pitched seven innings in a 5-0 win over Cuba. She struck out 12 while giving up just two base hits.
The win was Canada’s second of the Pan-Ams;
the team beat Brazil 6-0 in its opener. In that tilt, another former Renegade, Jocelyn Cater, pitched three innings of
relief, striking out three.Through three games,
Canada’s only loss was a 7-0 defeat to the U.S.
– Nick Greenizan
A handful of White Rock Divers took on some of the top young talent in the country last week, at Junior Elite National Championships in Edmonton.
Carolyn MacFarlane was among the busiest divers at the event, competing in every event despite overcoming a recent bout of mononucleosis.
MacFarlane – who is set to
dive next season at Princeton University – finished fifth in the girls ‘A’ platform event, and was just seven points shy of the bronze-medal position.
She also finished ninth in the girls ‘A’ one-metre event, and was 13th overall in the three-metre discipline. As well, MacFarlane and Jessie Nowotny teamed up and placed eighth in the women’s
three-metre synchro competition.Two other White Rock Divers,
Carlyn McNeely and Tavia Waiz, placed sixth in the three-metre synchro event, while also placing eighth and 15th, respectively, in the girls ‘A’ three-metre competition. In the one-metre event, Waiz was 18th overall, and McNeely 21st.
– Nick Greenizan
Divers strong at nationals sports
Groenewegen leads Canada over Cuba
CAMRY XLE model shown
2015 CAMRY Camry LE Automatic $25,885 MSRP includes F+PDI
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0.0% 36 mos.
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Yaris Hatchback SE model shown
2015 YARIS Yaris HB 3 Door CE Manual $16,155 MSRP includes F+PDI
$1,000CASHBACK
OR
GET UP TO** LEASE AND FINANCE FROM**
0.0% 36 mos.
make a statement.
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Corolla S Model shown
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LEASE FROM*
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#OwnerApproved
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Join Peace Arch News on Facebook and receive local news updates online.Visit peacearchnews.com and click on the Facebook link.
And don't forget to follow us on Twitter, too, for regular tweets. @PeaceArchNews
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Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News26 www.peacearchnews.com
ONLY 30 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN VANCOUVER AND 20 MINUTES FROM YVR
A RARE AND TRULY ONE OF A KIND INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY IN THE LOWER MAINLAND
LUXURY HOMES SITUATED IN THE MIDDLE OF A NEWLY BUILT 18-HOLE, ALL SEASON GOLF COURSE
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A RARE AND TRULY ONE OF A KINDINVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY IN THELOWER MAINLAND
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WHERE HOME BECOMES A HOLIDAY
5099 Springs Boulevard, Tsawwassen
(1595 52nd Street on your GPS) Hours: Tuesday to Sunday 12-5pm
DELTA IS A CITY WITH A TREMENDOUS GROWTH RATE AND TSAWWASSEN IS RIDING THE WAVE. DELTA
NEIGHBOURS THE LARGEST AND MOST DIVERSIFIED PORT IN CANADA, RECENTLY RANKED SECOND BY FDI
INTELLIGENCE AS A CITY OF THE FUTURE FOR BUSINESS FRIENDLINESS AND FIFTH FOR INFRASTRUCTURE.
IN ADDITION, THE COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATION, NAIOP VANCOUVER, RECENTLY
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DEVELOPMENT AMONG 21 MUNICIPALITIES IN THE METRO VANCOUVER AREA.
TSAWWASSEN, WORLD OF OPPORTUNITY
Tsawwassen Springs offers timeless, Arts & Crafts design with expansive views of the golf course, North Shore mountains and water, surrounded by family-run neighbourhood stores with personal and charming service and terrific beaches.
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tsawwassensprings.ca
info@tsawwassensprings.ca
604.948.4663
HW
Y 9
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THIS IS NOT AN OFFERING FOR SALE. ANY SUCH OFFERING CAN ONLY BE MADE WITH A DISCLOSURE STATEMENT. E. & O.E. SALES BY REGENCY REALTY LTD.
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www.peacearchnews.com 27 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015
This is not an offering for sale. Any such offering can only be made with a Disclosure Statement. E.&.OE.
Now Selling: beverleybycressey.com or 604-560-0075
1,047 – 1,289 square foot homes from $589,900 to $721,900
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Visit us Today. 1479 Vidal St., White Rock 12-5pm Daily (Except Fridays)
Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News28 www.peacearchnews.com
Maple Ridge’s most popular new community - Come & see why
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www.peacearchnews.com 29 Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015
Hearthstone homes off er residences with walk out basements, daylight basements and patio garden homes from 2173 to 2320 square feet. Surrounded by park space, Hearthstone is a gloriously green environment. Contemporary living with inviting entries and open concept kitchens which boast beautiful cabinets, quartz countertops, high quality appliances and fi nishes. Th e living spaces feature high ceilings and an abundance of windows, bringing the outside in! Th e master suite is spacious and the ensuite luxurious, making this your private retreat. Th e stylish amenity building, with putting green, helps create that feeling of home....Th at's what Hearthstone is all about.
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Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News30 www.peacearchnews.com
OLD LANDMARK. NEW LIFE.CLOVERDALE’S FASTEST SELLING COMMUNITY.A collection of bold new country residences on an old Surrey
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Prices quoted exclude taxes, are subject to availability at time of visit and/or to change without prior notice and include available homes in all phases. E.&O.E.
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We are pleased to welcome
Lisa MacWilliam to Hugh & McKinnon’s Residential Sales Group.
14007-16th Avenue, South Surreywww.hughmckinnon.com
Lisa MacWilliam
WelcomeWelcome
Offi ce: 604-531-1909Fax: 604-531-4624
Lisa is a Realtor with a passion to serve. She has always loved connecting with her clients and colleagues on a personal level. With years of experience in the hospitality industry, Lisa has brought an unmatched care and patience to the Real Estate Business. Whether you are a fi rst-time buyer or a well-seasoned investor, you can trust that Lisa will bring her integrity, knowledge and attentiveness to all aspects of her work.
Hugh & McKinnon is unique in offering a fully integrated range of services including Residential and Commercial Brokerage and Leasing, as well as Property and Strata Management. We are committed to adding value and creating a single, convenient place where Real Estate owners and investors can have all of their needs met.
REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE LEGAL SERVICESLEGAL SERVICES• Purchases • Sales
• Mortgages • DevelopmentServing our community
since 1986
604-538-9887www.morinlaw.ca
Ron Morin, LawyerNotary Public
Click on e-Editions to view current and past editions
PeaceArchNews.com
online!Open Houses
August Long Weekend!August Long Weekend!Save the Dates!
July 31 to August 2, 2015• Fresh Air Cinema • Fireworks
• 2 Stages with over 25 Performances
featuring the LEGENDARY POWDER BLUES
• Pirates in the Park • Kids Sandcastle Contest & Sand Soccer
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www.peacearchnews.com 31Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015
WIN A HOUSE! WIN A CAR!
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For rules of play, visit pneprizehome.ca Get your lucky tickets today! 604-252-3688 • 1-877-946-4663 • www.pneprizehome.ca
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1012 - 165TH STREET • SOUTHBROOKE19 customized homes being built by Genex.
Three storeys including walk-out basement, all finished.Prices start at $1,045,000.
Susan Vollmer 604-541-4888 RE/MAX Colonial Pacific Realty Ltd.
OPEN SUNDAYJULY 262:00-4:00
P.M.
13331 - 17A AVE. • $1,238,000Amble Greene 3 bed, 3 bath rancher with games room up
and detached double garage on over 10,000 sq. ft. west facing private lot. Roof, kitchen, baths, all updated. Move in ready!
Greg Swanson 604-329-1929 RE/MAX Colonial Pacific Realty Ltd.
OPEN SAT. & SUN.JULY
25 & 262:00-4:00
P.M.
#501 - 1575 BEST STREET • $345,0002 Level Top Floor Condo! Spacious bright 2 bed, 2 bath, & den condo in prime uptown White Rock location. Spacious kitchen with eating area.
Soaring ceilings in living room. Bdrms separated for extra privacy. 1 small pet allowed. Excellent amenities including 2 guest suites, exercise room,
workshop & secure visitor parking. Details at Chapman4RealEstate.ca Margie Chapman 604-538-8888 Sutton West Coast Realty
OPEN SUNDAYJULY 262:00-4:00
P.M.
1360 MAPLE STREET • $1,548,888 • NEW LISTINGBeautiful NEW 5600 sq. ft. White Rock home on 7380 sq. ft. lot.
Nine bedrooms and eight full bathrooms. Two bedroom legal suite.
Great value in White Rock! You won't be disappointed! Lulu Sorbara 604-541-4888 RE/MAX Colonial Pacific Realty
OPEN SUNDAYJULY 262:00-4:00
P.M.
#64 - 2588 - 152 ST., SURREY • WOODGROVE • $524,138Townhome in gated community,1535 sq. ft., 3 bd. 2.5 bath.
New roof, new appliances, well maintained. Children and pets welcome.Great location to transportation, shopping and schools.
Diane Thompson 604-803-0424 Bay Realty Ltd.
OPEN SAT.
JULY 252:00-4:00
P.M.
#1 - 2738 - 158 STREET • CATHEDRAL GROVE • $639,000Duplex style townhouse. Best location in complex, 4 bdrm,
3.5 bath, bright & spacious open floor plan. Many extras, former display home.
Louise McKnight / Leslie Zhao 604-531-4000 Bay Realty Ltd.
OPEN SAT.
JULY 252:00-4:00
P.M.
14230 WHEATLEY AVE., WHITE ROCK • $1,898,000Welcome to Paradise! Spectacular views of both ocean &
mountains. This 4 bed, 4 bath home is next to a private ravine, the end of a quiet road sitting on a 5,100 sq. ft. lot.
Louise McKnight / Leslie Zhao 604-531-4000 Bay Realty Ltd.
OPEN SUNDAYJULY 262:00-4:00
P.M.
13241 - 15A AVENUE • $2,298,000New 5 bdrm home. 6136 sf of luxurious living, prime Ocean Park location. Beautiful entry welcomes you with brushed oak H/W floors, office, formal dining w/butler's pantry & wok kitchen. Open plan great room/eating area/kitchen, S/S appliances/
granite counter/large island/custom white cabinetry, guest bdrm/w ensuite on main. Upstairs stunning master suite with 3 additional bdrms. Conveniently located
to shopping, recreation. Ray Shepard Elem/Elgin Park Sec. Malik Dillon 604-531-4000 Bay Realty Ltd.
OPEN SATURDAY
JULY 252:00-4:00
P.M.
17241 HILLVIEW PLACE • $2,188,000Scenic 1 acre gated property with panoramic
views of N. Shore mtns. and Fraser Valley. This 2x6 custom built rancher w/walk out
bsmt. was built with function and design in mind. Three bdrms., 3 baths, den, spacious
living and dining, large open kitchen w/island and nook. Downstairs offers great flexibility, loads of storage, cold room, and beautiful 1 bdrm., 1 bath suite perfect for extended
family or tenants. Both floors offer views of valley and mtns. with huge deck, covered
patio, overlooking park-like yard surrounded by gardens, cedar hedges, fruit trees. Perfect property for car enthusiasts/
collectors with 1280 sq. ft. detached shop/garage. Chad Hippsley 604-312-8893 RE/MAX Colonial Pacific Realty Ltd.
OPEN SUNDAYJULY 262:00-4:00
P.M.
#108 - 15282 - 19TH AVE. • PARKVIEW - ON THE PARK • $299,900 Excellent South Surrey location, bordering on Bakerview Park. This garden apartment is over 1280 sq. ft., 2 bedrooms + spacious den
leading to a private, fully fenced, west facing patio - bring your BBQ! Upgrades include newer maple kitchen, appliances, B/I laundry room with storage, laminate flooring in hallway, laundry, kitchen and dining room. Main bathroom has new fixtures, lighting, cabinets and
slate floor. Hot water & gas for fireplace included in maintenance. Building amenities include sauna, hot tub, exercise & meeting rms.
This is a stunning condo and it's huge - don't wait!! Wes Spencer (604) 417-2401 or
Marty Smith (604) 802-7418 for a private showing! RE/MAX Colonial Pacific Realty Ltd.
OPEN SUNDAYJULY 262:00-4:00
P.M.
#310 - 15282 - 19TH AVE. • PARKVIEW - ON THE PARK • $255,000 This top floor, west facing 2 bed and 2 bath, 1095 sq. ft. unit is bright
and spacious. It features newer countertops, newer applian.ces, flooring and backsplash. Dining room and sunken living room are nicely done with gas fireplace included in strata fee. Large covered
and enclosed deck faces gardens and courtyard. Just move in or bring your own ideas! Parkview, a fabulous location just a short level
walk to mall, library and transit! This complex was completely rain screened with new Hardie Board siding and all new fencing in 2014. Building amenities include sauna, hot tub, exercise & meeting rms.
Wes Spencer (604) 417-2401 or Marty Smith (604) 802-7418 for a private showing!
RE/MAX Colonial Pacific Realty Ltd.
Advertise on the real estate pages Advertise on the real estate pages at affordable ratesat affordable rates
Call Suzanne 604-542-7417Call Suzanne 604-542-7417Deadline to book space is Tuesday at noon
PLEASE RESERVE EARLY
OPEN SUNDAYJULY 262:00-4:00
P.M.
14796 GOGGS AVE. • WHITE ROCK • $1,599,000 • OCEAN VIEW!
Head turning modern hillside property, 3700 sq.ft over 3 levels, open floor plan, 24 x 16
partially covered deck with ocean views and a legal suite. Hardwood flooring throughout, energy efficient triple pane windows, glass staircase, quartz countertops, large island, commercial grade Jenn Air appliances and a dumbwaiter to cart the groceries. Fully
finished basement features games room, and fully self-contained legal 2 bedroom suite with
separate entrance offering great flexibility for friends, family or tenants. Centrally located and walking distance to schools
(Semiahmoo catchment), beach, shopping, restaurants. 2, 5 and 10 year warranty. Chad Hippsley 604-312-8893 RE/MAX Colonial Pacific Realty Ltd.
OPEN HOUSES
OPEN SAT. JULY 25
2-4 P.M. & SUN.
JULY 261-3 P.M.
1570 BERGSTROM, WHITE ROCKA must see! 4bed 4 bath, 3 year young house, custom EUROPEAN built home, with OCEAN VIEW, Gourmet
kitchen, great room concept, a fully finished basement with legal suite + family media room, detached garage/
work shop on a lane, large lot, Ray Shepard/Elgin catchments.
Michelle Harrison 604-607-5465 Royal Lepage Northstar
OPEN SATURDAY & SUNDAY
JULY25 & 26
2:00-4:00 P.M.
#1604 - 15152 RUSSELL AVE., WHITE ROCK • $869,900 $799,000 See sea forever. Motivated seller. Bring offers. Just like new but NO GST. This 7 year old, 1,180 sq. ft. unit in Miramar Towers has never been lived in. Unobstructed view of ocean,
mtns & town. Features high end finishings, H/W engineered floors, built-in appliances, including cappuccino maker. 2 decks, gas stove, composite stone counter tops, A/C, overheight ceilings & windows. 2 parking, 1 storage locker, guest suite, club room &
caretaker on site. Shopping, schools, beach all within walking distance. Pet & kid friendly. All offers presented on Sun., July 26 at 5pm.
Shama Vohora 778-245-1535 RE/MAX Colonial Pacific Realty Ltd.
REALTORS & DEVELOPERS
Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News32 www.peacearchnews.com32 www.peacearchnews.com Friday, July 24, 2015, Peace Arch News
Nancy May Robinson passed away peacefully on July 18, 2015 at the age of 87. Born November 2, 1927, Nancy grew up in Kingston, Ontario and entered Queen’s University at the young age of 16 where she earned a BA (Honours) in Biology (1948) and an MA in Biology (1949). She was fond of her youth in Kingston and she especially enjoyed Queen’s University where her father was a Department Head and where she met and later
married her husband, Malcolm.
Nancy and Malcolm raised a family of four in a variety of locales including Vancouver, BC, Port of Spain, Trinidad, Denver, Colorado, Calgary, Alberta and White Rock, BC. She had a particular love of the White Rock area where she coveted many friendships and experiences. She was active in the University Women’s Club in both Calgary and White Rock, the White Rock and South Surrey Naturalists Club and the B.C. Waterfowl Society.
Nancy’s professional career commenced as a research assistant in the Atomic Energy of Canada Limited’s (AECL) Chalk River, Ontario facility where she conducted applied research in medical bacteriology. Later, during the 1960s in Calgary, she taught Zoology at Mt. Royal College. Following a move to the west coast, she taught at Douglas College in Surrey.
Nancy was predeceased by her parents James Edwin and Gladys May Hawley, her brother Donald John Hawley, her husband, Malcolm Robinson, and she leaves behind in her legacy her caring children Wendy (Pat) McKay, Dave (Marilyn), Scott (Julie), and Bruce (Lydia) as well as loving grandchildren Tim (Charlene), Katie (Alex), Dillon, Lauren, Lindy, Leah, Logan and Halle along with great-grandchildren Liam and Bridgette.
Many of Nancy’s fondest memories were spent exploring the diversity of the natural world, particularly the ocean areas of the West Coast with her family and friends, imparting her abundant wisdom of the wonders of nature. She also enjoyed traveling to unique areas and learning about indigenous people and eco-systems.
She was a caring and proud mother to her children providing encouragement and support as they pursued their ambitions in life. “Now I know why you always asked me to be strong… because you knew that one day I would need the strength to bear your loss. I miss you mum.”
Sincere appreciation is extended to the thoughtful and hardworking nurses, nurse assistants and other staff at Sarcee Carewest as well as to the staff of Millrise Place, where Nancy resided until two years ago.
A private memorial will be held at a later date.
“Do not stand by my grave and weep; I am not there, I do not sleep.I am a thousand winds that blow – I am a diamond glint upon the snow.
I am the sunlight on ripened grain – I am the gentle autumn rain.When you awake in the morning hush – I am the swift uplifting rush
of quiet birds in circling ight.I am the soft starshine at night.
Do not stand by my grave and cry – I am not there – I did not die.
ROBINSON, Nancy May (Nee Hawley)November 2, 1927- Madison, WI; July 18 - 2015 Calgary, AB
#208 - 10070 King George Blvd. Surrey BCBC COLLEGE OF OPTICS
604.581.0101www.bccollegeofoptics.ca
BECOME AN OPTICIAN...in only 6 months!
...begins September 14, 2015
Optical Dispensing is a high-growth industry with good pay and job security. Or, even start your own business!!
6-month ‘Morning Class’
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
6 IN MEMORIAM GIFTS
Make a gift that honours the memory of a loved one.
604-588-3371championsforcare.com
7 OBITUARIES
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
6 IN MEMORIAM GIFTS
white rock south surrey hospice
society
Bequests& Gifts
support ourHospice Societyand serve as alegacy of
meaning andpurposeto a lifewell lived.
www.whiterockhospice.org
604-531-7484
7 OBITUARIES
BC Cancer Foundation13750 96th AvenueSurrey, BC V3V 1Z2
604.930.4078bccancerfoundation.com
Supporting the BC Cancer Agency
FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
7 OBITUARIES
Macdonald, Donald S. “POPS”
Passed away on July 11, 2015 at the age of 85. He will be missed and forever remem-bered by his three grown children, their spouses, nine grandchildren and spouses, twelve great grandchildren, extended family and many friends. Dad played the hand he was dealt with a positive attitude until the very end. He enjoyed the simple things in life, adventures in his motorhome, camping with family, playing cribbage and horseshoes, a good glass of scotch and his early morning coffee with the boys at the offi ce. In lieu of fl owers, donations can be made to the charity of your choice. No service by request.
WALKERJeannette MarieAugust 8, 1929 -
July 19, 2015Jeannette passed away peacefully in South Surrey after a short, courageous battle with Scleroderma. She is survived by her daughters Annette and Heather (Paul), grandchildren Brian (Martie), Emily (Trevor) and David (Robyn), and many great grandchildren. We remember her as an active Snowbird with a zest for life. Her passions included tennis, dancing, gardening and going to the casino. Thank you to everyone involved in Jeannette’s care. No service by request
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS
21 COMING EVENTS
42 LOST AND FOUND
Found man’s bike last week. Please describe. Call 538-3466.
LOST: BLUE BUDGIENEAR ALDERWOOD PARK.
Please call or text 604-812-3927.
LOST CELL PHONE - IPhone 5 with green cover on Friday July 17th vicinity of White Rock / South Surrey area. Call (604)802-8809
LOST: Silver Haida Bracelet on Sat, July 11th evening near roundabout at Marine Drive/K.George to Fir & Victoria Ave area. Inheritance. Can identify please call 604-535-4084.
CHILDREN
LITTLE STARS DAYCARE.6150 150B St. Sry. Fully lic. ECE, First aid, CPR staff. Hrs-6am-6pm. 604-592-2526
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
GOT 10HRS a Wk to make productive? Operate a Mini-Offi ce from home.Free trainingwww.freedom-unlimited.info
109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
KWAKIUTL Band Council is seek-ing an Elementary School Principal in Pt. Hardy on Vancouver Island. For a full job description email man-ager@kwakiutl.bc.ca Pls send cov-er letter, salary expectations & 3 references via email or fax 250-949-6066 by July 31, 2014.
115 EDUCATION
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
114 DRIVERS/COURIER/TRUCKING
Wetdown Water ServicesHiring Drivers
~ WATER TRUCK DRIVERS ~Class 3 Licence & Experience
required. Burnaby based.Must be avail nights & weekends.Forward Abstract & Resume to:
Email: jobs@atlasg.netor Fax: 604-294-5988
115 EDUCATION
Excavator & Backhoe Operator Training. Be employable in 4-6wks. Call 604-546-7600. www.rayway.ca
126 FRANCHISE
Jim’s Mowing Business for SaleCall 310-JIMS (5467)
130 HELP WANTED
CONSTRUCTION SITEIn your NEIGHBOURHOOD
Req: Carpenters, HelpersLabourers, CSO’s/OFA’s
TCP’s, Cleaners $11-28/hrWork Today, Daily or Weekly Pay
Apply 9AM to 2PM at:118 – 713 Columbia Street
New West 604.522.4900
EXP. NAIL TECHNICIAN required in South Surrey / White Rock
location. Contact owner between 9:30 am & 6pm. (604)531-6889
Landscaping Sales & Service Opportunities
Up To $400 CASH DailyF/T & P/T Outdoors. Spring /
Summer Work. SeekingHonest, Hard Working Staff.
www.PropertyStarsJobs.com
115 EDUCATION
bcclassified.comfax 604.575.2073 email ads@bcclassified.com
604.575.5555Your community Your classifieds.
INDEX IN BRIEFFAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS ............... 1-8
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS ... 9-57
TRAVEL............................................. 61-76
CHILDREN ........................................ 80-98
EMPLOYMENT ............................. 102-198
BUSINESS SERVICES ................... 203-387
PETS & LIVESTOCK ...................... 453-483
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE........... 503-587
REAL ESTATE ............................... 603-696
RENTALS ...................................... 703-757
AUTOMOTIVE .............................. 804-862
MARINE ....................................... 903-920
AGREEMENTIt is agreed by any Display or Classifi ed 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 for typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement.
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DISCRIMINATORYLEGISLATION
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 justifi ed by a bona fi de requirement for the work involved.
COPYRIGHTCopyright and/or properties subsist in all advertisements and in all other material appearing in this edition of bcclassifi ed.com. Permission to reproduce wholly or in part and in any form whatsoever, particularly by a photographic or offset process in a publication must be obtained in writing from the publisher. Any unauthorized reproduction will be subject to recourse by law._____________
Advertise across the Lower Mainland
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newspapers.ON THE WEB:
bcclassifi ed.com
7 OBITUARIES
Check us out atwww.
.com
Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015 www.peacearchnews.com 33
Multi-MediaJournalistThe Abbotsford News, a twice-weekly publication serving more than 45,000 homes, has an opening for a full-time, permanent, multi-media journalist.
Candidates will have outstanding and diverse writing abilities, including a fl air for narrative. The successful applicant for this entry-level position will be a key contributor to the print product, while bringing creative content to our web-based branding.
Advanced photography and video skills will be key attributes, along with a strong grasp of social media best practices.
You will have a diploma/degree in journalism, and/or related experience. Knowledge of basic Photoshop, iMovie and InDesign is a must.
You’re a self-starter and a critical thinker, with keen attention to detail, and the ability to work well under deadline pressures.
The Abbotsford News is part of Black Press, Canada’s largest private, independent newspaper company, with more than 150 community, daily and urban newspapers in B.C., Alberta, Washington State, Ohio and Hawaii.
Those interested should submit a resume, writing and photography samples, and a cover letter to aholota@blackpress.ca
Deadline for applications is July 24.
Only short-listed candidates will be contacted for interviews.
blackpress.ca bclocalnews.com
We have several openings for Press Helpers/Stackers at our Delta location.
Preference given to those with experience in this fi eld, but is not necessary. Shifts are 12 hours/3 shifts per week or 9.5 hours/4 shifts per week. Must be willing to work nights and weekends. References required. Starting wage is $14.31/hr.
Interested applicants should email their resume and references to Linda Wischoff at:lwischoff@blackpress.ca
Competition closes: August 15, 2015We thank all those who are interested in this position, however only those selected for an interview will be contacted.
blackpress.ca bclocalnews.com
Vantage Way7979 Vantage Way, Delta, V4G 1A6
Pressroom Helpers/Stackers
Must have your own reliable CARGO VAN (minimum ¾ ton) and clean driver abstract.
NO CARS, SUVS, MINI-VANS OR PICKUP TRUCKS.
• Tuesday Evenings & Thursday Evenings • Pick up newspapers from our warehouse • Deliver newspapers to our carriers’ homes
in Langley City, Walnut Grove and Aldergrove
Call 604.514.6770 circulation@langleytimes.com
NOW HIRING!Delivery Drivers
HARRISON’S HOME & YARD WORKS• RENOVATIONS• LANDSCAPING• FENCES• DRYWALL• DECK REPAIRS
• PAINTING• SCAFFOLDING• GENERAL
HANDYMANNo Job Too Small
Travis Harrison 778-688-5846.
Honest Work at an Honest Price!
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
130 HELP WANTED
FLAGGERS NEEDED. No Certifi cation? Get Certifi ed, 604-575-3944
136A JANITORIAL SERVICES
HOUSE CLEANERS/ JANITORS
REQUIRED NOWPAY $12-15 PER HOUR
Apply WeekdaysBetween 9AM to 2PM at:
118-713 Columbia StNew West 604.522.4900
130 HELP WANTED
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
138 LABOURERS
PT Maintence & groundskeeper needed for process facility. 1 to 2 days/week with winter months op-tional. Duties include sweep/ clean outside areas, clean vents/lights and tidy storage. $15/hr. Pls fax re-sume to 604-385-1658
142 OFFICE SUPPORT/CLERKS
White Rock/South Surrey Real Estate Offi ce requires a
FULL TIME RECEPTIONIST
- Strong organizational skills- Computer skills (Excel & Word)- Professional phone manner- Able to multi-task- Can take and prepare minutes at company meetings- Have a keen eye for detail- Reliable & dedicated- Lone Wolf software experience would be an asset
Please send cover letterand resume, Attention: Barb
admin@whiterockrealestate.ca
160 TRADES, TECHNICAL
Experienced Crane Operator
Required for 40 Ton HIAB. Must have clean drivers abstract and current full crane certifi cation Level A for B.C. Crane Knowl-edge and rigging experience a must. Competitive wages based on experience & benefi ts
package.
To Apply please e-mail resume to:
resumesdirect@shaw.ca
130 HELP WANTED
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
160 TRADES, TECHNICAL
TOOL REPAIRMANFab shop requires an experienced tool repairman with Electrical / Me-chanical skills to Repair / Replace a variety of small tools and equip-ment. P/T or F/T position, fl exibility of hours and a competitive wage.
Ph: 604-888-7949 Email: info@ndf-fab.com
Fax: 604-888-9755
PERSONAL SERVICES
171 ALTERNATIVE HEALTH
Male Enhancement Pills - Ultimate Results, 97% Satisfaction Guaranteed. 1-800-563-8616
130 HELP WANTED
PERSONAL SERVICES
175 CATERING/PARTY RENTALS
Specializing in Private Events!We Come To You! Doing It All,
From Set-Up - Clean-Up.
• Home Dinner Parties • Meetings • Funerals
• Weddings • B-B-Ques• Birthdays • AnniversariesUnique Taste, Unique Menus...
Gourmet, Customized MenusTailored To Your Function...
Kristy 604.488.9161threescocatering@shaw.ca
or Visit us at: www.threescompanycatering.ca
182 FINANCIAL SERVICES
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
130 HELP WANTED
PERSONAL SERVICES
182 FINANCIAL SERVICES
LARGE FUNDBorrowers Wanted
Start saving hundreds of dollars today! We can easily approve you by phone. 1st, 2nd or 3rd mortgage money is available right now. Rates start at Prime. Equity counts. We don’t rely on credit, age or income.
Call Anytime1-800-639-2274 or
604-430-1498. Apply online www.capitaldirect.ca
Need CA$H Today? Own a vehicle? Borrow up to $25,000. Snapcarcash.com 604-777-5046
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
206 APPLIANCE REPAIRS
Peace Arch Appliance
Service to fridges,stoves, washers, dryers
& dishwashers. Reasonable.
Also Appliance RemovalCall Mark (604)536-9092
236 CLEANING SERVICES
PENINSULA Window Cleaning
D Gutter CleaningD Windows - In & Out D Pressure WashingD Fully Insured / LicensedD Free Estimates - Seniors Disc.D Friendly - Dependable
Mark (778) 855-7038
E & M MAINTENANCEWINDOW WASHING
D Windows Out & InD Gutters cleaned In & OutD Pressure WashingD Serving W. Rock for over 30 yrsD Lic. & WCB insured. D Free Est. Seniors Discount
Eric 604-541-1743
A MAID 2 CLEAN All Your Cleaning Needs
Weekly • Biweekly • MonthlyResidential & Commercial
Services ~ Excellent Rates!!* Licensed * Bonded * Insured
778-883-4262METICULOUS & IMMACULATEResidential & Commercial Services Incl. all supplies. Move-Ins & Move-
outs too. 25 yrs exp. Exc. Refs. Text or phone 604-763-8443
239 COMPUTER SERVICES
Computer Problems? Call Blue Sky Tech 604.512.7082 John Jespersen
Want to turn yourcastoffs into cash?
You don’t need magic to do the trick.
All you need is aclassified ad.
bcclassified.com
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
239 COMPUTER SERVICES
.computer service
257 DRYWALL
PSB DRYWALL LTD.★ All Board-ing, Taping, Framing & Texture. In-sured work. Dump Removal Ser-vice. 604-762-4657 / 778-240-4657
FLATTEN POPCORN CEILINGS
Update your home with beautiful fl at ceilings
* No Scraping * No Sanding * No Mess
CALL FRIENDLY BENJAMIN 604-230-7928
DEAD LEVEL CONSTRUCTION LTD. Complete Drywall Work. Bob 604-830-1322 www.deadlevel.ca BBB Accredited Member
260 ELECTRICAL
YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 Service Call Lic #89402 Same day guarn’td We love small jobs! 604-568-1899
All Electrical. Low Cost. Licensed. Res/Com. Small job expert. Renos Panel changes ~ 604-374-0062
ELECTRICIAN - Dana Thompson Over 24yrs exp. Res/Comm. Free
est. Bonded. #14758 604-353-1519
269 FENCING
DEAD LEVEL CONSTRUCTION. Complete Fencing. Bob 604-830-1322 www.deadlevel.caBBB Accredited Member
275 FLOOR REFINISHING/INSTALLATIONS
HARDWOOD FLOORREFINISHING
✶ Repairs & Staining ✶ Installation
✶ Free Estimates
Century Hardwood Floors 604-376-7224
www.centuryhardwood.com
281 GARDENING
FOR A BEAUTIFUL GARDENGarden Design & Installation
• Fall Clean-Up • Maintenance 604-512-4525
www.gardenbuds.ca
MUSHROOM MANUREDelivery or pick up
Surrey location
Covered Storage.
604-644-1878
283A HANDYPERSONS
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
281 GARDENING
.aaa lawn 604-542-1349
A+ Lawn & Garden - Residential & Commercial services. 604.908.3596
ELECT SERVICESTree Pruning, Topping & Removal
Hedge Trimming ~ DisposalFull Landscape &
Maintenance ServicesInsured ~ WCB Over 25 yrs Exp.*Free Estimate *Seniors Discount
Call 778-245-5006
TOPSOILTurf & Lawn Blend, Planting& Garden Blend, Composted
Mulch, Sand & Gravel
Call 604-531-5935
SHINE LANDSCAPING*Grass Cutting *Hedge Trimming
*Yard Clean *Pruning *Pressure Washshinelandscaping@hotmail.com
Call 778-688-3724
Excavators, Backhoes, Bobcats & Dump
Trucks for hireTOPSOIL & GRAVEL
604-531-5935
283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS
GUTTER & ROOF Cleaning/Power Washing since 1982. WCB/Liability insurance. Simon, 604-230-0627
283A HANDYPERSONS
AT YOUR SERVICE. Carpentry, Concrete, Painting, Rubbish
Removal. Call Dave (604)999-5056
WHITE ROCK HANDYMANRepair - Renovate - Organize
Build - Design - ElectricSENIOR DISCOUNTSSmall or Large JOBS
To Do List? Free QuotesMaZebah 778-788-739030 Yrs. Experience - References
34 www.peacearchnews.com Friday, July 24, 2015, Peace Arch News
Showroom: Unit 62 - 15515 24th Ave. (at King George Blvd.) Tel: 604-538-9622
www.mpbconstruction.com
Designing and renovating new kitchens, bathrooms, basements, house make-overs and additions
Call for FREE in-home consultation
In-house design team and cabinet shop
SHELL BUSEY’SHome Improvements
“OVER 30 YEARS IN HOME IMPROVEMENTS”DEAL WITH A COMPANY YOUR FAMILY CAN TRUST!
Serving the Lower Mainland604.542.2236
CALL TODAY FOR A FREE ESTIMATE
www.askshell.comUnit #7 - 2320 King George Blvd. in South Surrey
**ALL RENOVATIONSALL RENOVATIONS**
HOMES, TOWNHOUSES & CONDOS
Benefi ting the BC Professional Fire Fighters Burn Fund
SATURDAY AUGUST 1STDoors open at 6pm • Buffet Dinner & Entertainment
Cascades Casino - 20393 Fraser Hwy, Langley$75 per person or $600/table of 8
Featuring the comedy of Bobby Henline • Guest Speaker Heidi Cove, Author of Fancy FeetTickets: 604-436-5617 or info@burnfund.org
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
287 HOME IMPROVEMENTS
INTERIOR/EXTERIORRepairs & Reno’s, Sundecks
& Additions, New Homes
European Quality Workmanship
CONTRACT OR HOURLYFREE ESTIMATES
26 YEARS IN BUSINESS
Per Molsen 604-575-1240
HANDYMAN CONNECTIONHANDYMAN CONNECTIONHandyman Connection - Bonded -Renovations - Installations - Repairs - 604.878.5232
DRYWALL or home repairs call Derek 604-219-4639www.dtcarpentryltd.com
DEAD LEVEL CONSTRUCTION LTD. Complete Home Renovations WE DO IT ALL! Call Bob 604-830-1322 www.deadlevel.caBBB Accredited Member
A SEMI-RETIRED CONTRACTOR. European trained. Specializing in Reno’s. Local refs. Reasonable Rates. Call 604-532-1710
FULL RENO’S, NEW KITCHEN &
BATHS, QUICK HANDYMAN FIX-UP
All trades at your disposal within your budget, with timely and
quality workmanship.
Call Al 604-970-7083
www.aboveallcon-tracting.ca
Serving White Rock & S.Surrey since 1990
For All Types of Renovations
Qualifi ed carpenter for all yourhome improvement needs.
- QUALITY WORKMANSHIP-
D Additions D Decks D Bathrooms / Kitchens D Skylights / Windows D Tiling D Laminate Flooring
✔ Complete Renovations from Start to Finish
For a No Obligation ConsultationGIVE ROBERT A CALL
Cell: 604-290-4964Eves: 604-535-0603
287 HOME IMPROVEMENTS
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
287 HOME IMPROVEMENTS
VECTOR RENO’S Specializing in all interior & exterior
home renovations & additions Call 604-690-3327
288 HOME REPAIRS
A1 BATH RENO’S. Bsmt suites, drywall, patios, plumbing, siding, fencing, roofi ng, landscaping, etc. Joe 604-961-9937.
HANDYMANHome Repair Services - 45 Yrs Exp
Call or Text Henry 604-868-5441
300 LANDSCAPING
Complete Landscape ServiceSpecializing in landscape renosBobcat - Excavator - Decks
Retaining Walls - Paving Stones New Lawns-Irrigation-Drainage
Hedging and more*30 Yrs Exp. *Fully Insured
Call Brian for a free estimate604-773-1349
320 MOVING & STORAGE
MOVING?LOCAL & LONG DISTANCE
B & B MOBILE SERVICES
604-536-6620www.BBmoving.ca
1PRO MOVING & SHIPPINGAcross the street - across the world
Real Professionals, Reas. Rates. Best in every way! 604-721-4555.
MIRACLE MOVING Licensed - Bonded - Fully Equip. Residential Commercial, 1-3 Men
BIG OR SMALL MOVESStart $45/hr ~ All size trucks
Free estimate/Senior Discount www.miraclemoving.ca604 - 720 - 2009
~We accept Visa & Mastercard~
AFFORDABLE MOVINGwww.affordablemoversbc.com
From $45/Hr1, 3, 5, 7 & 10 Ton Trucks
Licensed ~ Reliable ~ 1 to 3 MenFree Estimate/Senior DiscountResidential~Commercial~PianosLOCAL & LONG DISTANCE
604-537-4140Affordable Sid’s 1ton, 3ton 5ton for moving & clean-up. 10% Srs disc. W.R. Owned 86. Sid 604-727-8864
329 PAINTING & DECORATING
NORTH STARS PAINTINGwww.northstars-painting.com
AMAZING WORK,AMAZING VALUE!
778.245.9069
.Hayden Painting 778-229-0236Family Owned & OperatedRyan 778.229.0236
~ PRO PAINTERS ~INTERIOR / EXTERIORQuality Work, Free Estimates
Member of Better Business BureauWCB INSURED
Vincent 543-7776
287 HOME IMPROVEMENTS
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
329 PAINTING & DECORATING
Painting, Painting PaintingInterior / Exterior
Stucco, Siding, Trim, Doors, Fences, Pressure
Washing, Concrete Sealing. rene.s@telus.net
RENE’S SPRAY & BRUSH PAINTING 778-855-5361
www.paintspecial.com 604.339.1989 Lower Mainland
604.996.8128 Fraser ValleyRunning this ad for 10yrs
PAINT SPECIAL3 rooms for $299
2 coats any colour(Ceiling & Trim extra) Price incls
Cloverdale Premium quality paint.NO PAYMENT until Job is
completed. Ask us about ourLaminate Flooring.
604-307-4553
LORIS CHRISTIANYour Local Painting Contractor
Professional Servicesdone right
Interior & Exterior House PaintingNew Construction. Insured,
great refs. Free est. BBB A++ rating.
WWW.ELMAPAINTING.COM
A-1 Painting Company - Interior / Exterior 20 years exp. Summer Special 10% off (604)723-8434
338 PLUMBING
.604.536.2216 www.bhserviceplumbing.org
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
338 PLUMBING
FIXIT PLUMBING & HEATINGH/W Tanks, Reno’s, Boilers, Furn’s. Drain Cleaning. Ins. (604)596-2841
A Gas Fitter ✭ PlumberRENOS & REPAIRS
Excellent price on Hot Water TanksFurnace, Boilers, Plumbing Jobs &
Drain Cleaning✭ 604-312-7674 ✭
LOCAL PLUMBER $45 Service Call Plumbing, Heating, Plugged Drains. Mustang Plumbing 778-714-2441
10% OFF if you Mention this AD! *Plumbing *Heating *Reno’s *More
Call Aman: 778-895-2005
341 PRESSURE WASHING
POWER WASHING since 1982. WCB/Liability insurance. Call Simon for prompt service. 604-230-0627
----- PRESSURE WASHING ----- Licensed & Insured - Houses Start
at $150 - Call Anthony 778*228*6302 (qualityonly.ca)
353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS
BEST BUSY BOYS ROOFING LTD.
D Conversion from Cedar to Asphalt, Shingles, FiberglassD Lifetime Material Warranty.D WCB, BBB, Liability Ins.D Also Power Washing
Free Estimates. Call Gary 604-599-5611 or Email:
bestbusyboysroofi ng@gmail.com
A1 TOP CANADIAN ROOFING LTD.
Specializing in Re-Roofi ng New Roofi ng & Repairs.
All kinds of roofi ng. Free Est.
778-878-2617 (BBB)or 604-781-2094
356 RUBBISH REMOVAL
JUNK REMOVAL By RECYCLE-IT!604.587.5865www.recycleitcanada.ca
.Russells Rubbish Removal 604-787-7355 White Rock / South Surrey
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
356 RUBBISH REMOVAL
WHITE ROCKRUBBISH REMOVAL
10% off with this ad RELIABLE, SERVICE 7 days a week
CALL ROGER 604-
9 6 8 - 0 3 6 7
EXTRA CHEAPJUNK / RUBBISH REMOVAL
Almost for free! (778)997-5757
Brads Junk Removal.com. Same Day Service. Affordable Rates! 604.220.JUNK (5865)
RUBBISH REMOVAL
Household / Construction~ FREE ESTIMATES ~
SENIORS DISCOUNTCall Mitch
604-813-9104
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
372 SUNDECKS
. Aluminum patio cover, sunroom, railing and vinyl. 604-521-2688
.Aluminum patio cover, sunroom, railing and vinyl. 604-521-2688 www.PatioCoverVancouver.com
DEAD LEVEL CONSTRUCTION LTD. Deck Construction. Vinyl decking - 10 yr warranty. Call BOB 604-830-1322 www.deadlevel.ca BBB Accredited Member.
373B TILING
A-1 Ceramics, Marble, Glass blocksetc. Install/Repair. Res./Comm.
Free Est. 20 years exp. Peter’s Tile (604)209-0173
PETS
477 PETS
ITALIAN MASTIFF(Cane Corso)
4 Purebred blue males.1st shots, tails / d c removed.
ULTIMATE FAMILY GUARDIANPet homes. $1250. 604-308-5665
NEED A GOOD HOME for a good dog or a good dog for a good home? We adopt dogs! Call 604-856-3647 or www.856-dogs.com
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
506 APPLIANCES
Peace Arch Appliance
Service to fridges,stoves, washers, dryers
& dishwashers. Reasonable.
Also Appliance RemovalCall Mark (604)536-9092
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
520 BURIAL PLOTS
BURIAL PLOT for sale, Victory Memorial Park Cemetery, South Surrey. $3500. 1-250-488-6708
523 UNDER $100
DRYER, KENMORE - Heavy Duty.Extra capacity. Ultracare. In Greatcond. $75 obo. 604-765-2225 msg
542 FRUIT & VEGETABLES
BLUEBERRIES, No Spray. 17318 32nd Avenue.
Picked $4.00/lb & Frozen $3.00/lb. Taking Orders Now. 778-866-3885
Bumbleberry Farms. Delicious Strawberries, Raspberries, Blackberries, Blueberries. 604-835-3416
CHERRY JUBILEE Sour Cherries Pitted & Frozen
July 15, 19 & 2510:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
2017 - 272nd Street, AldergrovePlace Your Order: 604-856-5844
FRESH LOCAL BLUEBERRIES$10/fl at OR $25/3 fl ats & get 1 for
Free. SURREY FARMS 5180-152 Street. 604-574-1390
~ FRESH LOCAL ~
BLUEBERRIES$9.99/box or 3 for $25
Open DailyRai’s Colebrook Farming14176 Colebrook Rd.604-599-3516, 778-878-4650
287 HOME IMPROVEMENTS
551 GARAGE SALES
12258 Northpark Cres. Surrey (Boundary Park) MOVING SALE - Entire
Household -furniture (large & small items), dishes, accessories, toys, games, books, garden tools
& much more. Saturday July 25 - 8am to 1pm
15880 Prospect ESTATE TOOL SALE. Saturday, July 25, 9am-3pm (off Roper)
Garage Sale 3685 - 155 St.South Surrey
Sat. July 25th, 9am - 3pmHousehold items, tools &
teacher’s stuff
**MASSIVE** MOVING/GARAGE SALE. Everything must go. Lots of Free Items. Lawn/Garden, Tools, Lumber, Appliances, Auto, Furni-ture, Sporting Goods, Dishes, Books, Clothing, 12560 OCEAN CLIFF DRIVE, SATURDAY JULY 25TH, 8:00 A.M. - 2:00 P.M.
SOUTH Surrey MOVING SALE SUNDAY JULY 26, 8am - 12 noon, 2621 - 166A St
551 GARAGE SALES
Moving Sale2318 - 151A St.
S. SurreySat. & Sun. July 25 & 26
9am - 12noon
Household, Furniture & Decor
WHITE ROCK
Huge CommunityFlea Market at
FIRST UNITED CHURCH15385 Semiahmoo Ave
Saturday,July 25th, 9am-noon.
Peace Arch News Friday, July 24, 2015 www.peacearchnews.com 35
ACROSS1. Wall panel5. Preen10. Boxes a little15. Engine part, for
short19. Perpetually20. "M*A*S*H"
character21. Frame22. Hautboy23. Opinion24. Like a leaf edge25. Shaw the
bandleader26. Nidus27. Start of a quip by
anonymous: 8 wds. 31. Garland32. Girl in anorak33. To-do34. Literary selections39. Showed again42. Skiers' milieu46. Costa del --47. Intimidate49. Licit51. Roofing piece52. Dirty54. Aster anagram56. Drive back58. Kind of sugar59. Break loose61. Center63. Talk excitedly65. Pennysaver items66. Cogs67. Diva's offering69. Class member71. Part 2 of quip:
2 wds.76. Of old French
royalty79. -- presumptive80. Cash substitute84. Orchid genus85. Underworld god87. Pesters89. Albania's capital
90. Fixes92. Inducive of
shudders94. PM of India96. Chinese gelatin97. Marble99. Like a dunce101. Stage and screen103. Dir. letters104. Vocalists106. Score in tennis108. Like some
stationery110. Quahog112. Jockeyed114. Table scrap115. End of the quip:
5 wds.125. Bye-bye!126. Conscious127. Down source128. Unreliable one129. Dressed130. Plant secretion131. Kind of telescope 132. Fertility goddess133. Hawse134. Expert135. Steep slope136. Playground
challenge
DOWN1. Hindu goddess2. Car rental group3. Profound4. "Animal Farm"
author5. Verb phrase6. -- avis7. Joss8. Certain builder9. Old Roman
magistrate: Var.10. Jack-tar11. Role12. Commune in Italy13. City in France14. Rains icy rain15. Reins
16. Further17. -- Hashanah18. -- noire28. Penury29. Hershiser of
baseball30. Troubles34. Thing of value35. Loop in a rope36. Teddy Roosevelt's
wife37. Cal. abbr.38. Duck genus40. Senesces41. Dozing one43. Of the bishop of
Rome44. Musical work45. Meaning48. Special pleasure50. Russell and
Panetta53. Turner's tool55. Mother of Isaac57. Tempt60. Selfie62. Like some floors64. Human trunks68. Charged particle70. Spandex72. Beget73. Took measured
steps74. Habituated75. Pressed
76. Weight unit for gems
77. Verona's river78. Nonbeliever81. Storms82. Lacking sense83. Cut back on86. -- qua non88. Nursery rhyme
dwelling89. Kind of plane
engine91. Defensive barrier93. Hungry95. CD- --98. Perry's creator100. College subj.102. Angry105. Winged fruit107. Lawn tools109. Unemotional111. Cried like a gull113. Early computer115. Yearning116. "Symphonie
Espagnole" composer
117. Type style: Abbr.118. Facilitate119. Journey120. Old Norse poems121. River dam122. City on the Arno123. Burrow124. Gaelic
Answers to Previous Crossword
CrosswordCrossword This week’s theme:Howdy
by James Barrick
© 2015 United Feature Syndicate, Dist. by Universal Uclick
blackpress.ca bclocalnews.com
The Langley Times has an opening for a Multi Media Sales position.
By joining an award winning community newspaper serving Langley and Aldergrove, you can realize your full potential while contributing to one of the fastest growing communities in Canada. The team environment at The Langley Times will inspire you to the highest level of customer partnership and reward your motivated approach to excellence.
The ideal candidate will have to be a strong communicator, well organized, self-motivated, determined and enjoy working in a fast-paced environment. Your customer service will be second to none. You will be experienced in cold call selling, creative marketing planning and experienced with online and social media marketing
You will also be profi cient in Mac, Excel and Word programs. The Ability to multi-task and meet deadlines is a must. Competitive Base Salary, Commission, Cell and Car Allowance. A car and a valid drivers license is required.
The Langley Times is part of Black Press, Canada’s largest private independent newspaper company with more than 170 community, daily and urban newspapers in B.C., Alberta, Washington State, Ohio and Hawaii.
If you are up to the challenge, please email your resume to:Kelly Myers, Advertising ManagerThe Langley Timesadmanager@langleytimes.com
Posting closes on Friday, July 31, 2015
Advertising Sales Consultant
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
566 MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
MARTIN ACOUSTIC GUITAROM21 Special. $2400. fi rm. Mint condition. Call (604)614-5104
REAL ESTATE
625 FOR SALE BY OWNER
For Sale By Owner $466,500See PropertyGuys.com #149196 4 Bdrm, 3 Bath, almost 3,000 s.f.
$1100 Mortgage Helper. New Roof, Kitchen & Bath. Agents Compensated. 604-820-3226 Open House Sat-Sun 1-4 pm
7932 Stewart St, Mission
526A $499 & UNDER
ELECTRICAL ASSIST 6 spd road BIKE - FUSHIDA, asking $450 obo. (604)445-1596
627 HOMES WANTED
WE BUY HOMES BC• All Prices • All Situations •
• All Conditions •www.webuyhomesbc.com
604-657-9422
636 MORTGAGES
YOU FIND IT & I’LL FUND ITNeed an experienced
broker working for yourMortgage needs?
- Purchase- Refi nance- Private 1st or 2nd- Commercial- Construction- Weak Credit- Divorce- Self-employed- ‘A’ clients wanting best rates- ‘B’/’C’ clients needing help
Call Kumar at 604-580-8080kumar@kumarmortgages.com
RENTALS
706 APARTMENT/CONDO
ACTIVE SENIOR1 & 2 Bedrooms availWell maintained Concrete High Rise in White Rock
close to shopping.Swimming Pool &
All Amenities.UTILITIES INCLUDED. NS/NP
Call 604-538-5337
Affordable Housing & some market rent
units for Seniors55 +, 1 bedroom suites. No pets, No Smoking
South Surrey
Call Mon-Fri btwn 9am-noon.604-538-8308
CRESTWOOD MANOR1321 Foster St.
Bachelor $795/mo1 Bedroom $905/moIN WELL MAINTAINED
NEWLY UPDATED BUILDING. Heat, hot water and secured u/g parking stalls included.
No pets, No smoking. Call: 604-760-7882
SEMIAHMOO MALL. Clean, large 1 bdrm apt, avail now. $750 incl heat & hot/water. 778-241-2609
Skyline AptsWhite Rock
1 bdrm Suites - from $790 in beautiful White Rock, Live-In Manager, Hot Water & u/g
parking inc.
Call 604-536-8499www.cycloneholdings.ca
S.Surrey Pacifi ca Retirement Resort 1 bdrm top fl r apt, view of mts, W/D. All amenities, sec prkg. Sm pet ok.N/S. $2200. Janis 604-202-8000.
~ Fir Apartments ~1455 Fir St WHITE ROCK
1 Bdrm units avail nowHeat & hot wtr incl.
Swimming pool & rec roomOn site mgr
Call 604-536-0379
RENTALS
706 APARTMENT/CONDO
White Rock: Central location. Suites avail. in 2 buildings. 2 bdrm updated, spac., grnd fl oor in 55 +
building. $1000/mo. Walk up1 bdrm $800/mo and up. Updated bathroom. Both 1 yr lease & inc Heat, hot water & prkg. N/S, N/P
604-808-6601 / 604-591-1778
WHITE ROCKSUNSET VILLA
Large 2 Bdrm. - 3rd. FloorD/W in unit. Concrete building.$1050 incls. HEAT & H/W.1 block from Semiahmoo Mall.
Available August 1!Call for appt to view
778.878.0782
WHITE ROCK; Three 1 bdrm suites avail. $890/mo + 1/2 sec dep. Incl heat/hotwater. N/P, N/S, no BBQ’s. Avail Aug 1st. (604)360-1403
709 COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL
S.Surrey. 24 Ave/K.G.B. Village Ctr, HCI zoning. 1000 & 900 sq/ft, $12 & $15 per sq/ft. Grd fl r. 604-536-7236
736 HOMES FOR RENT
CRESCENT. BEACH: 10 min walk to ocean. Fully furnished. Newly renovated home. 3bdrm, 2-1/2 baths., beaut. landscaped. Avail Sept 1-May 31. NS/NP. $2200/mo. 604-306-0341.
Homelife Pen. Property 604-536-0220
.Hugh & McKinnon Rentals 604-541-5244.
RENTALS
736 HOMES FOR RENT
PROPERTY OWNERSBig or small properties,WE MANAGE IT ALL! Houses needed for qualifi ed tenants
Alfred 604-889-6807TENANTS
Rental units available nowwww.bcforrentinfo.ca
Offi ce: 604-534-7974 Ext: 205
741 OFFICE/RETAIL
OFFICE SPACES*ROSEMARY CENTRE
3388 Rosemary Hts Cres. 2nd fl oor offi ce spaces
from 234 sq/ft - 359 sq/ft.
*WHITE ROCK SQUARE1480 Foster St - 347 sq/ft
Call 536-5639 to view/rates
748 SHARED ACCOMMODATIONWHITE ROCK. 2 bdrm condo - Lrg furn’d bdrm & sitting room, ensuite, internet. Nr Bus & Hospital. Suit Fe-male / Senior Gent. N/S. $495. Call or lve msg 604-535-2435
WHITE ROCK: Furnished. Shared accommodation with 1 person nr Peace Arch Hosp. Parking, Near bus. Avail now. NS/NP. $465/mo incl utils/cable. Call 604-536-6303.
750 SUITES, LOWER
S.Surrey 1 Bdrm, full bath, off street pkng, upgraded s.steel appliances,insuite laundry, ns/np, avail Aug 1st.$950 + cble & internet + dam dep. 778-881-5472
S. SURREY/W.Rock 2 bdrm newer grnd lvl legal ste, walk to beach & hosp. $1150 incl inste laundry, heat & cable NS/NP. Call 604-318-1853
WHITE ROCK. 1300 sf - Grnd lvl 2 bdrm, priv. entry. Covered deck w/ yard. Half blk to beach. $1075/mo incl. utils. N/S. Avail. Aug 1st. 604-536-0496 or 604-313-8010
751 SUITES, UPPER
WHITE ROCK: Executive 3 bdrm, fabulous ocean view. Cls to beach & town. Incl utils & off road prkg space. $3000/mo. Avail now. 604-560-9452, 604-314-5427.
757 WANTED TO RENTSNOWBIRDS! Reliable tenant seeks peaceful, quiet studio suite. A++ references 360-510-6827 email: Suite15@outlook.com
TRANSPORTATION
821 CARS - SPORTS & IMPORTS
2010 TOYOTA MATRIX. 99K, auto, 4 cyl, dk blue, many op-tions. $7400 Firm. 604-538-4883
TRANSPORTATION
845 SCRAP CAR REMOVAL
#1 FREE SCRAP VEHICLE REMOVAL
ASK ABOUT $500 CREDIT $$$ PAID FOR SOME
604.683.2200
TRANSPORTATION
845 SCRAP CAR REMOVALThe Scrapper
CHECK CLASSIFIEDS 604-575-5555
Two open heart surgeries.
One big need.
Help us build a new BC Children’s Hospital. Please Give.
1.888.663.3033
beasuperhero.ca
Friday, July 24, 2015 Peace Arch News36 www.peacearchnews.com
MIDWAY MAZDA’S
5YEAR UNLIMITED MILEAGE POWERTRAIN WARRANTY AT MIDWAY MAZDA
THE FIRST EVER
2016 CX-3 GX SUV
$131** @ 3.99%
APR WITH $0 DOWN
For 60 months. Taxes extra.
Offers valid until July 31,2015. See Midway Mazda for complete details and incentive extensions. Financing O.A.C.DL#8333
SUMMER DRIVE EVENT!
$91** @ 2.49%
APR WITH $0 DOWN
For 60 months. Taxes extra.
2016 CX-5 GX SUV
$139** @ 2.49%
APR WITH $0 DOWN
For 60 months. Taxes extra. INCLUDING $300 CONQUEST BONUS
BI-WEEKLY LEASE OFFER FROM BI-WEEKLY LEASE OFFER FROM BI-WEEKLY LEASE OFFER FROM
NEW 2015 PATHFINDER 7 PASSENGER7 PASSENGER, AUTO, AIR, POWER GROUP,
ALLOY WHEELS AND MORE!
UPGRADE TOA 4X4 FOR$440
GET UP TO
$$15001500MY CHOICE BONUS CASH
OR 22 MONTHLY PAYMENTS ON US2
NO CHARGENO CHARGEEXTENDED
WARRANTY PLAN3
UP TO A $2000 VALUEUP TO A $2000 VALUEOR
ON TOP OF ALL OFFERS INCLUDING
FINANCE†AS LOW AS0%
APRFORUP TO 84 MONTHS ON
SELECTED MODELS
+ DON’T PAY UNTIL OCTOBER 2015!
+ YOU CAN ADD 1 YEAR ICBC OR $2000 CASH BACK!
BRAND NEW 370Z! KING GEORGE NISSAN PRICE - $31,888
NEW 2015 FRONTIER CREW 4x4 PREMAUTO, AIR, POWER GROUP, ALLOY WHEELS, CAMERA, FOG
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NOW $29,988OR $33,888
WITH NISSAN FINANCING!
NEW 2015 XTERRA 4x4 or
$84LEASE FROM
WEEKLY$0
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ALL NEW 2015 NISSAN ROGUEAUTO, A/C, POWER ACCESS, CRUISE & MOVE! • BETTER FUEL ECONOMY (HWY)THAN
ESCAPE, RAV4 AND CR-V • AVAILABLE INTUITIVE ALL-WHEEL DRIVE 7 OR 5 PASS
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INCLUDES
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342HP!!
SALE $19,888
SALE $27,888
KING GEORGE NISSAN 604-536-364432 Ave and King George Blvd, South Surrey www.kinggeorgenissan.com
$1500 2NO CHARGE
UP TO A $2000 VALUE
NO MATTER WHAT YOU OWE!
BRAND NEW 2015 ALTIMA
2015 MAZDA 3 GX
SALE $19,888
SALE $27,888
$825 VALUE WITH THIS AD ON OUR BRAND NEW NISSANS!
- 4 YEARS -NO CHARGE OIL CHANGES & TIRE ROTATION
$1500 2NO CHARGE
UP TO A $2000 VALUE
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$825 VALUE WITH THIS AD ON OUR BRAND NEW NISSANS!
333
604 538 5388604-538-5388
All prices are net of all incentives and taxes OAC. See us for Details.
TO 3050 KING GEORGE BLVD.SOUTH SURREY AUTO MALL
SIMPLY THE BEST, BETTER THAN ALL THE REST!