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October 22, 2014 edition of the Kimberley Daily Bulletin
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WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 22, 20 14 Enjoy 20% off everything we sell Wine Works 2014 Annual Fall Sale. October 21-25 Cranbrook (250) 489-2739 109 - 3rd Street South wineworkscranbrook.com Kimberley (250) 427-5155 395 St. Mary Avenue www.facebook.com/ TownsmanBulletin Like Us and keep up to date with all the breaking East Kootenay news. THE BULLETIN $ 1 10 INCLUDES G.S.T. TownsmanBulletin Like Us @kbulletin Follow Us COMMUNITY AWARDS CHAMBER SEEKS NOMINATIONS See LOCAL NEWS page URBAN DEER CRANBROOK GETS CULL PERMIT See LOCAL NEWS page 4 PROUDLY SERVING KIMBERLEY AND AREA SINCE 1932 | Vol. 82, Issue 203 | www.dailybulletin.ca KRISTIN JUBINVILLE PHOTO AND THEY’RE OFF! About the only thing that could possibly be cuter than the annual Weiner Dog Race during Sam Steele Days in Cranbrook, would be an actual Baby Race. The race took place at the Kootenay Baby and Toddler Expo, held at the Kimberley Conference Centre last Saturday, October 18. The event was organized by local photographer Frida Viklund. See more on page 3. Food Bank needs directors CAROLYN GRANT Bulletin Editor The Kimberley Helping Hands Food Bank has just complet- ed its year end and will be reporting to its members at an upcom- ing meeting that they handed out a total of 1644 hampers in 2014 at a total cost of $223,210.12. That total includes estimated price of donated food as well as cash spent. As always a large portion of the 4,223 people fed in the past year were children (1,841). The need never goes away says longtime Food Bank president Stan Salikin and the Kimberley Food Bank is especially fortunate to have a hard working and dedicated team of volunteers to help out. What the Food Bank Society lacks at the mo- ment is directors. “We normally have eight directors, but we have four openings,” Salikin said. While directors are also volunteers, they get much more in- volved planning, orga- nizing, setting policies and fundraising than the standard volunteer does. “We don’t expect you to spend all your life there, but we do want you to be active and believe in the phi- losophy of food banks,” Salikin said. Anyone wishing to become a Food Bank director can call the Kimberley Food Bank at 250-427-5522 and speak to Heather Smith, or call her at home at 250-427-2018. You can also call Stan at 250- 520-0055. Albert Hoglund seeks tenth term CAROLYN GRANT Bulletin Editor Although Councillor Albert Ho- glund is seeking his tenth term as a Kimberley City Councillor, he doesn’t necessarily think people should vote for him just because he is experi- enced. “I think you try to do your best for the community no matter what your level of experience is,” he said. “I’m running again because I just enjoy doing it. I don’t mind all the meetings. I feel like I’m representing 6600 peo- ple at every meeting. “I’ve been retired since 2001 and I feel I have the time and energy to con- tinue on.” Hoglund says that he is certainly aware of all the talk about fiscal re- sponsibility. See HOGLUND , Page 5
Transcript
Page 1: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, October 22, 2014

WEDNESDAYOCTOBER 22, 2014

Enjoy 20% off everything we sellWine Works 2014 Annual Fall Sale. October 21-25

Cranbrook (250) 489-2739109 - 3rd Street South wineworkscranbrook.com

Kimberley (250) 427-5155395 St. Mary Avenue

www.facebook.com/TownsmanBulletin Like Us and keep

up to date with all the breaking

East Kootenay news.

THE BULLETIN$110 INCLUDES

G.S.T.

TownsmanBulletin

Like Us

@kbulletin

Follow Us

COMMUNITY AWARDS

CHAMBER SEEKS NOMINATIONSSee LOCAL NEWS page

URBAN DEER

CRANBROOK GETS CULL PERMITSee LOCAL NEWS page 4

PROUDLY SERVING KIMBERLEY AND AREA SINCE 1932 | Vol. 82, Issue 203 | www.dailybulletin.ca

KRISTIN JUBINVILLE PHOTO

AND THEY’RE OFF! About the only thing that could possibly be cuter than the annual Weiner Dog Race during Sam Steele Days in Cranbrook, would be an actual Baby Race. The race took place at the Kootenay Baby and Toddler Expo, held at the Kimberley Conference Centre last Saturday, October 18. The event was organized by local photographer Frida Viklund. See more on page 3.

Food Bank needs directorsC AROLYN GR ANT

Bulletin Editor

The Kimberley Helping Hands Food Bank has just complet-ed its year end and will be reporting to its members at an upcom-ing meeting that they handed out a total of 1644 hampers in 2014 at a total cost of $223,210.12. That total includes estimated price of donated food

as well as cash spent.As always a large

portion of the 4,223 people fed in the past year were children (1,841).

The need never goes away says longtime Food Bank president Stan Salikin and the Kimberley Food Bank is especially fortunate to have a hard working and dedicated team of volunteers to help out.

What the Food Bank

Society lacks at the mo-ment is directors.

“We normally have eight directors, but we have four openings,” Salikin said.

While directors are also volunteers, they get much more in-volved planning, orga-nizing, setting policies and fundraising than the standard volunteer does.

“We don’t expect you to spend all your

life there, but we do want you to be active and believe in the phi-losophy of food banks,” Salikin said.

Anyone wishing to become a Food Bank director can call the Kimberley Food Bank at 250-427-5522 and speak to Heather Smith, or call her at home at 250-427-2018. You can also call Stan at 250-520-0055.

Albert Hoglund seeks tenth term

C AROLYN GR ANTBulletin Editor

Although Councillor Albert Ho-glund is seeking his tenth term as a Kimberley City Councillor, he doesn’t necessarily think people should vote for him just because he is experi-enced.

“I think you try to do your best for the community no matter what your

level of experience is,” he said. “I’m running again because I just enjoy doing it. I don’t mind all the meetings. I feel like I’m representing 6600 peo-ple at every meeting.

“I’ve been retired since 2001 and I feel I have the time and energy to con-tinue on.”

Hoglund says that he is certainly aware of all the talk about fiscal re-sponsibility. See HOGLUND , Page 5

Page 2: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, October 22, 2014

Page 2 Wednesday, OCTOber 22, 2014

LocaL NEWSdaily townsman / daily bulletin

T r e vo r C r aw l e yTownsman Staff

Cranbrook is doing its part to recognize World Polio Day, which falls on Friday, Oct. 24, as the Sunrise Rotary Club gears up to fund-raise for vaccinations overseas.

Though Friday is the official day, the club will be present at the Kootenay Ice game next Tuesday, Oct. 28, during a contest against the Prince Albert Raiders to show off an iron lung and raise money for overseas vaccination.

The club will have a presence at the game with the option to make donations and the chance to see the iron lung — a medical de-vice that enables a per-son to breathe when normal muscle control has been lost or the work of breathing ex-ceeds the person’s abil-ity.

“Five years ago, our club, Cranbrook Sun-rise Rotary, refurbished an iron lung that was used to treat polio vic-tims, so that’s one of the

we’re going to be doing, is when people make a donation, we’re going to mark their pinky with purple.

“That’s something that they do when they’re doing polio vac-cines worldwide, is once a child has been vaccinated, they mark their pinky, so they know that the child has been done.”

For a minimum do-nation, people will also be able to climb inside the iron lung.

Poliomyelitis, more

commonly known as polio, is an acute, viral infection disease that spreads through water or fecal contamination that causes inflamma-tion of the grey matter in the spinal cord that can extend to the brain-stem and can cause apnea.

The vaccination ef-fort holds a special place for Vanden Broek, who traveled to Paki-stan with his wife in February 2013 to par-ticipate in an immuni-zation campaign for

two weeks. They were based out

of Lahore, where they went to places like local schools to administer vaccinations.

“We did a bunch of vaccinations, went to the schools and did vaccinations, so it was pretty interesting to see,” said Vanden Broek.

“We also saw what they call the ‘draggers’ — those are polio vic-tims. Basically, for a lot of Pakistanis, if you get polio, that’s it, you’re

useless, your family gives up on you. These are people — imagine driving down the Strip here — and they’re just dragging themselves down the street.”

Polio, which has a propensity to affect children, became a pandemic in the first half of the 20th century, until a vaccine was de-veloped in the late 1950s. Now, the virus is all but eradicated.

However, there are still cases that are start-ing to flare up, mostly in

Rotary club raising polio awareness

pieces that we use for awareness,” said Frank Vanden Broek, a Rotary member.

“The other thing that

war-torn regions of Af-rica and Asia. In fact, the World Health Orga-nization (WHO) has been able to track spe-cific cases, noting a rise from 39 to 206 from this time last year.

Vanden Broek attri-butes the rise in polio cases due to pushback from Pakistani authori-ties, who are wary about the intentions of the vaccination campaigns, especially after the American CIA admitted to using such means for intelligence-gathering purposes.

“It’s a couple things,” Vanden Broek contin-ued. “One of them is an outright refusal to allow the vaccinators in, shooting them, whatev-er. A lot of those areas, the police and the army are afraid to go into.

“Also, you still have a lot of the uneducated people there that talk about how it’s a plot by the West to sterilize their kids.”

According to Van-den Broek, polio has been largely contained to only Pakistan, Af-ghanistan and Nigeria, however, a few cases have appeared in Syria due to the flood of refu-gees fleeing the vio-lence between the gov-ernment and Islamic State of the Levant (ISIL).

For more informa-tion on the progress against polio, visit www.polioeradication.org.

For the townsman

The Rotary Club’s refurbished iron lung will be on display at Western Financial Place in Cranbrook, Tuesday, Oct. 28, during the Kootenay Ice/Prince Albert Raiders game.

Sar ah KuCharSKiThe Free Press

A male thief stole three guns and ammunition from Fernie’s Canadian Tire between 3:30 and 3:45 p.m. last Saturday.

The guns were non-restric-tive firearms and Sgt. Lorne Craig of the Elk Valley RCMP

described the occurrence as a “brazen” theft.

“He went virtually unde-tected in front of staff until he was out the doors,” said Sgt. Craig. “We are in the process of reviewing video surveillance of the event, and it’s still under investigation.”

According to reports, the thief allegedly drilled into the gun cabinet and unscrewed the locks on the guns within min-utes before making a quick get-away unseen.

“Due to the manner in which he did the theft, we’re probably looking at someone

who is experienced,” noted Sgt. Craig.

The thief was approximately six feet tall, wearing a dark jacket and ball cap.

If anyone has any informa-tion regarding the theft they are encouraged to contact the Elk Valley RCMP at 250-423-4404.

WeatherOutlook

TonighT

SaTurday

Tomorrow

highnormal

Sunrise

10 0

8:13 am

Oct. 30 Nov. 6 Nov. 14Oct. 23

-2 0record Tuesday

Sunset

210 2003

18:42 pm

-90 1981

0.0 mm

monday

Precipitation monday

21.2 0 1.1 0

Sunday

Friday

low

monday

5

11

7

5

3

POP 80%

POP 60%

POP 30%

10

9

4

2

POP 40%

POP 30%

10

4POP 60%

Temperatures/almanac

waning Quarter

waxing Quarter

new moon

Full moon

Thief snags three guns in broad daylight at Fernie Canadian Tire

Step #1:

Call Karrie and get your access code

number.250-426-5201 extension 208

Step #2:

Go to your browser and type:

www.dailytownsman.com

Step #3:Step #3: Click on E-Edition and start reading!

DON’T BE SCARED!! Just 3 easy steps and you’re reading news online!

Page 3: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, October 22, 2014

Wednesday, OCTOber 22, 2014 Page 3daily bulletin

communitysnapshotKootenay Baby & Toddler Expo - Kimberley Conference Centre

It was wall to wall babies and toddlers in Kimberley last Saturday for the Kootenay Baby and Toddler Expo. parents brought their little

ones along to check out the latest in baby gear and services. organizer Frida Viklund would

like to thank all the sponsors who helped make the day a success.

M. Fritzl photo M. Fritzl photo

F. Viklund photo

M. Fritzl photo

M. Fritzl photo M. Fritzl photoM. Fritzl photoF. Viklund photo

F. Viklund photo

Page 4: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, October 22, 2014

Page 4 Wednesday, OCTOber 22, 2014

LocaL NEWSdaily bulletin

The public is invited to attend the public information open house regarding the ‘City of Cranbrook Cease Fluoridation Bylaw No. 3799, 2014’ electoral assent question as part of the 2014 Municipal Election.

When: Thursday October 23, 2014 – 7:00pm to 9:00pm MT

Where: Manual Training School, 1212 2nd Street North, next to the Cranbrook Public Library

The City of Cranbrook is informing residents about the water system and water � uoridation and is hosting this public open house. All are invited to this free event.

Beginning promptly at 7:00pm, Canadian health experts on both sides of the � uoride debate will address the public with the presentation being moderated by David Walls, President and CEO of the College of the Rockies. The speakers will be available to meet the public and the media to respond to questions for the remainder of the evening. The speakers are:

• Dr. Alastair Nicoll of the BC Dental Association and an area dentist who will discuss the advantages of adding � uoride to the public water system.

• Dr. James Beck, Professor Emeritus for Medical Biophysics at the University of Calgary and co-author of ‘ The Case Against Fluoride’, who is a vocal advocate for removing � uoride from the water system.

The City of Cranbrook’s website also provides public information about the � uoride electoral assent question, the history of water � uoridation in Cranbrook and a place to learn more about � uoride with links to studies, reports and opinions around the pros and cons of water � uoridation. Visit www.cranbrook.ca/� uoride for more information.

City of Cranbrook Public Works water crews will be replacing a water main valve on 2nd Street South between 15th Avenue South and 17th Avenue South on Friday October 24, 2014 from 8:00am and 4:00pm. As a result, that portion of 2nd Street South will be closed to all traf� c during the replacement work. Detours will be in effect.

The City of Cranbrook apologizes for any inconvenience this work may cause. The NEW phone number for

the KTA is 250-432-9729The address is still

201-144 Deer Park Ave.Kimberley, BC V1A 2J4

Kimberley Teachers’ Association

Any cull would still need Council approval

Arne Petryshen

The Ministry of For-ests, Land and Natural Resource Operations has granted the city a permit that allows for a population reduction of the urban deer herd anytime between Dec. 1, 2014 to March 15, 2015.

“That permit allows us to reduce the popu-lation by 50 animals,” noted CAO Wayne Staudt at Monday night’s city council meeting.

Staudt pointed out that the permit is just one part of the process, and a move for a cull would still have to come from council de-cision.

That process would also include a deer population count by the Urban Deer Man-agement Committee. The count is planned for this fall though no date has been set as of yet.

Coun. Denise Pallesen asked wheth-

er the city had a con-tractor lined up for a cull. Staudt said the city did not.

“Council hasn’t even decided whether we would proceed with any reduction of the herd using this permit or not,” Staudt said. “So we have not con-tracted this out or re-quest for proposal at this time.”

Coun. Angus Davis noted jokingly that from his count, the deer population is thriving.

“Just as an item of information I want you to know that the 11th Avenue herd — all five generations of it — are doing well,” Davis said.

He noted the herd is often in his yard.

The city made the permit application to the province after an unanimous approval of council at the July 14, 2014 meeting.

Mayor Wayne Stets-ki was quick to point out at that meeting that even if the permits are granted, it will like-ly be up to the next sit-ting council to approve any culls. The munici-pal election is Nov. 15, which means there is only one more council meeting on Nov. 3, be-

fore then.In February 2013

council approved a cull of 30 deer, with plans to cull more in the fall of 2013. How-ever the cull was can-celed upon recom-mendations from the Urban Deer Manage-ment Advisory Com-mittee.

The committee rec-ommended canceling because the number of complaints about urban deer was down from the year before.

The committee fo-cused on areas where they had public safety concerns with the deer.

Back in November of 2011, Cranbrook conducted the first cull in the East Kootenay communities. Cran-brook culled 25 urban deer — 11 white-tail and 14 mule — using clover traps.

Kimberley culled 100 deer in January 2012, and Invermere was set to cull 100 deer in February  2012 be-fore a court injunction put a hold on the plans.

Eventually Inver-mere was able to cull 19 deer before its per-mit expired.

Cranbrook receives permit to cull 50 deer

Photo submitted

The students at KIS are taking full advantage of the glorious fall weather and learning all about creek science with Patty Kolesnichenko and Dave Quinn. Patty and Dave with Mainstreams supply the equipment and guidance for students to learn all about aquatic life in our area.

Cranbrook considers scootersArne Petryshen

Townsman Staff

They can dash from sidewalk to street, but are mobility scooters a vehicle or a pedestrian?

That question arose in a recent council meeting and city staff was back with an an-swer on Friday.

“There was a ques-tion last council meet-ing about scooters and what is the legal juris-diction, and where to they fall,” CAO Wayne Staudt said. “Bylaw (Services) did some re-search and a scooter, according to RCMP in-formation, is classified as a pedestrian. So they follow the rules as a pe-destrian, whether they be on the sidewalk or the road or anywhere else.

“Because you are in a scooter, you are still considered a pedestrian and not a motor vehi-cle.”

Mayor Wayne Stetski noted the question does come up quite fre-quently, but also said the issue is one for the province to decide on.

Coun. Gerry Warner wasn’t so content with the idea of scooters as pedestrians.

“We all know that for all intensive purposes —and legally — bicy-cles are considered motor vehicles and have to adhere to all rules and regulations that vehicles do,” War-ner said. “I’ve never seen a scooter with a set of lights.

“How did the RCMP reach the conclusion that scooters are closer

in essence to human beings with legs, when they have four wheels themselves and have motor means of power, be it electricity or what-ever and can scoot all over. I think that’s fun-damentally wrong.”

Stetski said that would be a question for the Attorney General.

“I don’t think we can answer that here tonight,” Stetski said.

Warner said they should write a letter to the Attorney General as a council and ask for an explanation.

“It certainly doesn’t make sense to me,” Warner continued. “Scooters can go faster than people walk.”

Warner noted that he’d once ridden one for a story he was cov-ering back when he was a reporter.

“It could go up to 15 kilometres. People don’t walk at that speed and to me that makes them closer to a vehicle then it does to a pedes-

trian.”Warner said the

problem is that there aren’t always sidewalks available to the scooter users so they have to go into traffic. He said having it both ways isn’t a safe situation.

The issue was brought up at the Union of B.C. Munici-palities meeting two years ago, but the dele-gates chose not to take any action.

Coun. Diana J. Scott said the bicycles and scooters differ in one big way.

“The scooter is the person’s legs. That’s why they are using it,” Scott said. “And the person should be on the sidewalk, because it’s safer. The wheels act as the person’s way to get around. Bicycles should not be on the sidewalks on the other hand, they should be on the roads acting in the same fashion you would drive your car.”

Page 5: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, October 22, 2014

Wednesday, OCTOber 22, 2014 Page 5

LocaL NEWSdaily bulletin

TAKE NOTICE THAT The City of Kimberley is considering amendments to the City of Kimberley O� cial Community Plan and the Zoning Bylaw No. 1850.

The amendments are proposed to allow for future subdivision and development of a portion of land owned by the Kimberley Golf Club. The subject land comprises approximately 9.6 ha (23 ac) situated west of the existing golf course and east of the Riverside Campground and Homesteads development area between the St. Mary Lake Road and the St. Mary River.

Bylaw No. 2505 (Amendment No. 10, 2014 to the O� cial Community Plan) proposes to change the Planned Land Use Map by re-designating the subject land from “Golf Course” to “Low Density Residential”, “Open Space” and “Parkland.” The bylaw will also designate the subject land to be included in the Wild� re Hazard Development Permit Area.

Schedule “A” to Bylaw No. 2505

Bylaw No. 2506 (Amendment No. 122, 2014 to Zoning Bylaw No. 1850) proposes to create a new “Low Density Residential: R-13” zone and to rezone the subject land from “Community Recreation Zone” P-3” to the new R-13 zone. The proposed intent of the R-13 zone is to allow for low density residential development while preserving signi� cant open space and restricting use and development of natural hazard areas and environmentally sensitive lands.

Schedule “A” to Bylaw No. 2506

The proposed bylaws 2505 & 2506 apply to a portion of land legally described as Lot 1, District Lots 2378, 2379, 6064, 7031 Kootenay District, Plan NEP21462 and shown in heavy bold outline on the above maps.

A Public Hearing for bylaws 2505 & 2506 will be held on Monday, October 27, 2014 at 7:00 pm in the Council Chamber at City Hall, 340 Spokane Street, Kimberley, BC.

If you believe that your interest in property is a� ected by the proposed bylaw, you may:

a. Submit written presentations to City Hall prior to the hearing, or

b. Submit written and/or verbal presentations at the hearing.

You may inspect the proposed amending bylaws and the supporting documentation at City Hall, 340 Spokane Street, Kimberley, BC, from 8:30 am to 4:45 pm weekdays until the date of the hearing.

For further information, please contact the Manager Planning Services at City Hall, 250-427-9664 or [email protected].

A GOOD PLACE TO BE.

340 Spokane Street, Kimberley, BC V1A 2E8 I Tel: 250.427.5311 I Fax: 250.427.5252 I Kimberley.ca

PUBLIC NOTICE

British Columbia

Community Achievement

AwardsPresented by the

British Columbia Achievement Founda-tion, The British Colum-bia Community Achievement Awards celebrate British Co-lumbians who go above and beyond in their dedication and service to others and who de-vote time and energy to making their communi-ties more caring, dy-namic, beautiful, healthy, and unique.

The Kimberley & District Chamber of Commerce invites you to nominate someone deserving from the Kim-berley community whose spirit, imagina-tion, dedication and commitment has truly made a difference to this community, either as a volunteer or throughout the course of their work. If you know someone who meets these crite-ria, this prestigious award is a great way to

provincially acknowl-edge them for their ef-forts.

The Kimberley & District Chamber of Commerce would like to thank City Council for recognizing the Cham-ber to take on this proj-ect. The Chamber has volunteered to submit all nomination packag-es on behalf of the com-munity, to ensure that the nomination packag-es are completed cor-rectly, as well as consol-idate and track nomi-nees and send any addi-tional support letters.

You can pick up a nomination form from the Chamber office, or download a copy on the Kimberley Chamber website at www.kimber-leychamber.com. The Chamber requests nomination packages be provided by Wednes-day, November 12.

More information about the British Co-lumbia Community Achievement Awards can be found on the British Columbia Achievement Founda-tion website at www.bcachievement.com.

Community awards

From Page 1“If you want to talk

about fiscal responsi-bility, we are the only level of government that has to have a bal-anced budget.

“All we can do at budget time, is to ask our managers to priori-tize the projects they’d like to see done.

“I don’t think any-one wants to see taxes go through the roof but in order to maintain a level of service, it must be paid for by taxes.”

This past term, Council had to deal with a number of large projects, such as the flume rehab, but Ho-glund says that infra-structure has been on Council’s radar as long as he has been a part of it.

“We are no different than any other city in Canada in terms of aging infrastructure. Before Kimberley was incorporated, Comin-co looked after every-

thing and they put in what was sufficient for the day, and now a lot of it has to be replaced, which we are doing year by year.

“Our job as Council is to try to keep taxes as low as possible. No-body wants to see taxes go up and everything is looked at in terms of operation expenses. We do as much infra-structure work as our tax revenue will allow us to do and this past Council did increase water and sewer rates to try to build up some extra money for that.”

Hoglund says he would look forward to seeing the Sun Mine come to fruition and also wants to see the completion of the flume project and con-tinue to serve all of Kimberley.

“I don’t belong to any special interest groups. My view is for all the citizens of Kim-berley.”

Hoglund seeks tenth term

Page 6: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, October 22, 2014

PAGE 6 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2014

“You are the classiest ol’ scruff I know.” Jill Warland

It must really be Jim Dandy to be a dog or a cat. Just think about it for a mo-ment as you decide what you should

wear for your next activity. Cats and dogs, like most animals except we humans, are always dressed appropriately. This as-sumes, of course, that some misguided human hasn’t put stuff on them and made them look ri-diculous.

No, animals are always ready to go. You don’t say,”Hey, Fido! Let’s go walk-ies, eh?” to have Fido reply with a glazed look in his eye, “Hang on a bit. I’ve got to change. What d’you think I should wear? Does this look all right?” Not even female pets fuss about what apparel they should don on this or that occasion. They get up, stretch, and they’re off.

I have always wanted to be that way myself but, to start with, my parents always insisted that I wear some suitable apparel. Somehow or other, they found difficult the concept of their boy-child taking off into the unknown stark naked.

Luckily, I was born way after that era when even boys had to suffer the indignity of a dress for a couple of years of their childhood but, once past ‘nappies’, I have been sternly instructed when it was appro-priate to wear short pants, when to switch

to ‘longies’, when I should sport ‘plimsolls’ and when to use ‘welly boots’, and when highly polished dress shoes would be ‘au fait’.

Anyway, after long bouts of scratchy school uniforms — though not always uni-formly — itchy cub uniforms, strangulat-ing boy-scout uniforms with scarves, and RAF uniforms with those ridiculous pol-ished buttons, I finally escaped into my fa-

vourite ensemble, usual-ly described as ‘scruffy casual’.

I was expected to ‘tart up’ a tad when I got mar-ried — families are funny that way — to look pre-sentable whilst teaching in high school and whilst

visiting doctors. Incidentally, I have no idea why this occurs; doctors apparently don’t give a fig what I am wearing; it’s the scrawny, naked thing underneath that fas-cinates them.

But clothes are useful, especially if they have pockets. Our ancient ancestors must have had an awful time trying to pack ev-erything like stone tools and halves of woolly mammoths in their hands; even the Scots had to invent sporrans so they could carry stuff like haggis and bag-pipes.

Clothes are also useful if the weather becomes inclement, like forty below, so, over the decades I have created what I call ‘my ensemble’. It consists mainly of a T-shirt (looking into my clothes closet

these days is like pressing your eye to a kaleidoscope of T-shirts), underwear, socks, either long or short pants, and the appropriate footwear for walking in the hills, for skiing or for general grubbing about. In fact, one summer, I wore the very same clothes every day for a month. This involved some determined washing every evening but the system seemed perfect so¸ when two old friends proposed to visit us for a month one summer and asked what clothing they should bring, I set to work with a camera, a tripod and a very useful daughter.

I posed for pictures of myself dressed to climb in the Rockies, to water ski, to go yachting, to ride horses, to play tennis – with an ancient racquet plus dog-chewed balls – to snorkel and to travel by either bicycle or by car. I wanted to do a golf one but I had misplaced my archaic wooden shafted mashie niblick. In each photo, I sported the appropriate accoutrements plus my usual general purpose ensemble. I fired those pictures off to England before my friends boarded their plane at Heath-row.

Several years later, when we visited the U.K., we found those self-same pictures hung in our friends’ living room but now, thanks to the tenacity of our friends’ daughter, those photographs, probably fading and a trifle crinkled like me, are on show in the British Museum of Social An-thropology for all to see and admire. They appear to fascinate female visitors.

The ultimate ensemble

LETTERS TO THE EDITORLetters to the Editor should be a maximum of 400 words in length. We reserve the right to edit, condense or reject any contri-bution. All letters must include the name and daytime phone number of the writer for verification purposes. The phone number will not be printed. Anonymous letters will not be published. Only one letter per month from any particular letter writer will be published. Email letters to [email protected]. Mail to The Daily Townsman, 822 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook, B.C. V1C 3R9. In Kimberley, email [email protected]. Mail to The Daily Bulletin, 335 Spokane Street, Kimberley, BC V1A 1Y9.

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DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

Peter Warland

Page 7: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, October 22, 2014

Wednesday, OCTOber 22, 2014 Page 7

OpiniOn/EvEntsdaily townsman / daily bulletin

KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDARKIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK What’s Up?

Place your notice in your “What’s Up?” Community Calendar FREE of charge. This column is intended for the use of clubs and

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CRANBROOK TOWNSMAN & KIMBERLEY BULLETIN COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Drop off : 822 Cranbrook St. N. • Drop off : 335 Spokane StreetE-mail: [email protected] • Fax: 250-426-5003

ONGOING Mark Creek Lions meet 1st and 3rd Wednesdays at the Kimbrook. Meet & Greet from 6:00-6:30pm, supper 6:30-7:00, meeting 7:00-8:00pm. Contact 250-427-5612 or 250-427-7496. New members welcome – men and ladies! Help Big Brothers Big Sisters of Cranbrook: One way you can help is by donating to our “Blue Bin” located outside to the left of Wal- Mart. This bin is there for any clothing items or soft items. (250)489-3111 or email us at @bigbrothersbigsisters.caVolunteers always needed for the Marysville Thrift shop! Please contact Marilyn @ 427-4153 or Jean @ 427-7072.Seniors Autobiographical Writing for those aged 60 or wiser at the Kimberley Library. No writing experience necessary. It’s free. Tuesdays 10:00 - Noon. Register: Kim Roberts CBAL Coordinator 250-427-4468 or [email protected] Cellar Thrift Store Open Mon. to Sat., noon to 4:30 p.m. Our revenues support local programs and outreach programs of Cranbrook United Church. Baker Lane Entry at 2 – 12th Ave. S. Cranbrook, B. C. Donations of new or gently used items welcome.CRANBROOK QUILTERS’ GUILD hold their meetings every 2nd & 4th Tuesday of each month at 7:15pm upstairs in the Seniors’ Hall, 125-17th Ave. S. Everyone welcome. Info: Donna at 250-426-7136.Canadian Cancer Society- if you have spare time and would like to volunteer, interested applicants can call 250-426-8916, drop by our o� ce at #19-9th Avenue S, Cranbrook or go to www.� ghtwithus.ca and register as a volunteer.Parkinson’s Support Group are meeting at 2 pm on the third Wednesday of each month at the Heritage Inn. For more info. phone Linda @ 250-489-4252. No meetings July, Aug or Dec.Do you have the desire to stop eating compulsively? Overeaters Anonymous (a 12-Step Program) meets Wednesdays from 7-8pm at Cranbrook United Church, 2-12th St. S., downstairs. Contact: [email protected]/Practice: every Saturday. Practice from 7 to 8 PM, dancing until 11 PM. Dance With Me Cranbrook Studio, 206-14 A 13th Street, South, behind Safeway.SPECIAL GOSPEL SERVICES: Each Sunday from September 14 to October 26, 2014, from 3 - 4 PM, except no service September 21st. Ja� ray Community Hall, 7375 Ja� ray Village Loop Rd. Phone contact: (250) 426-4791.North Star Quilters Society Meetings are held the 2nd & 4th Monday at 7:00 PM, basement of Centennial Centre, 100 4th Ave Kimberley. Welcoming all! Info call Heather 250 427-4906Volunteers are needed to assist sta� with childminding while parents attend programs at the Kimberley Early Learning Center. Come play!! Weekly or monthly for 2 hours. Diana 250427-0716

UPCOMING“Rafting the Grand Canyon”, a travelogue with Greg Ross, Wednesday, October 22 at the College Lecture Theatre at 7PM. Sponsored by GoGo Grannies with donations going to the Stephen Lewis Foundation to help grandmothers in Africa.Thursday Oct 23, 11:00 a.m. 50+ Legacy Builders’ Turkey Dinner. FREE - just call ahead to say you will attend. Abundant Life P.A. 250-426-2866, 501 - 11 Ave. S., Cranbrook.Volunteer English as a Second Language tutors needed. Next training session – Oct 24-25th at CBAL o� ce, Cranbrook. Call Katherine 250-417-2896Monday, October 27, 2014. JUBILEE CHAPTER # 64, Order of the Eastern Star will meet at 7:30 pm sharp at the Masonic Hall, 401-3rd Avenue South, Cranbrook. Cranbrook Garden Club Meeting in the hall of Christ Church Anglican, 46-13 Ave. S., Monday, Oct. 27 at 7:00pm. Come out and join us. New members always welcome. Info: April 778-517-1222.Tuesday Oct 28 Cranbrook & District Arts Council presents the launch of Janice Strong’s DVD, “Earth Wind Fire and Water”, a fascinating narrated exploration and collection of inspiring photographs of what connects us to where we live. College of the Rockies Lecture Theatre, Room 250, 7:30 pm. Entry by donation to Cranbrook & District Arts Council Building Fund. 250-426-4223, [email protected] Camera Will Travel.... a travelogue series. Come join Karen & Bryn Oakley as they present “Incredible India” at Centre 64 on Tuesday, Oct 28 at 7:30 pm. Admission by donation to the Kimberley Arts Centre.October 31, 3:00-5:00pm, Cranbrook United Church invites kids ages 2 to 10 to a Spooktacular Hallowe’en Carnival. Please bring your parents. No admission but food bank donations welcome. #2 - 12 Ave. S.Fall Conference: “Who Am I ?” Discovering Our Identity, Value and Worth. Speakers: Peter and Heather Jackson from Toronto, Catch the Fire School of Ministry, at House of Hope Cranbrook, October 31 –Nov 1; Fri 7pm, Sat; 10 am, 2 and 7pm. Registration: www.ihopecranbrook.ca or phone 250-421-3784Saturday, November 1, 2014. 3rd Annual COFFEE AND MUFFINS GALORE will be held by Jubilee Chapter #64, Order of the Eastern Star, at 401- 3rd Avenue South, 10:00 am to 12:00 noon. Admission includes co� ee or tea and a fresh mu� n and entry for door prize. Crafts, jewellry baking and more. It’s a fun time for everyone!

CAROLYN GRANTentertainment@

dailytownsman.com

The display case at the Cranbrook Public Library for the month of October is stunning and provocative custom cor-sets by Jenny Frank, of LaBelle Fairy

Kimberley Camera Club

Commencing Octo-ber and through to May each year Kimberley Camera Club meets on the second and fourth Wednesday evenings at 7 p.m. at the St. Andrews Presbyterian Church, 97 Boundary St Kimberley. Further Information: John Lyon, President 250 427-2421

Thurs. OCTOber 23TOasTmasTers

Special meetings to celebrate the 90th anni-versary of Toastmasters. All are welcome to at-tend. Cranbrook First Club meets at The Col-lege of the Rockies, Room 210 on every sec-ond and fourth Thurs-day at 7:15pm. Contact Kathy, VP Membership, at 250-489-2526 for more information. Cranbrook Phoenix Club meets at the Heri-tage Inn, every Thurs-day at 12:10. Contact Roberta, VP Member-ship, at 250-489-0174 for more information.

saT. OCTOber 25ChariTy

Challenge

The Cranbrook Ea-gles Boxing Club are hosting the 2nd Annual Charity Challenge Box-ing Event Oct. 25, 7:00 pm, Cranbrook Eagles Hall. This event will fea-ture amateur boxers from the Eagles Club, BC, and Alberta clubs as well. The “Main Events” for the show will feature Cranbrook “celebrities” boxing for charity. All proceeds from this event go to needy fami-lies in Cranbrook. Get your tickets early as this show sold out last year.

Tickets can be pur-chased at the Cranbrook Eagles Boxing Club at #16 11th ave. S in Cran-brook Mon.thru Thurs. between 7 and 8:30 pm.

saT. OCTOber 25hOmegrOwn

The Kimberley

Home Grown Music’s first coffeehouse of the season is Saturday Octo-ber 25th. Show is at 8pm sharp and doors open at 7:30 p.m. The MC for the evening performance will be Laurie Stewart and will feature; Gordie Blake, Tucks Trouba-dours, Jim Marshall, Brian Ironmonger, a cowboy poet, Van and Shelagh Redecopp and Mark Casey High school student Mac Ramsay and a Little bit of Grass featuring Bud Decosse, Doug Simpson and Dave Carlson. Tickets are $8 and available at the Snow Drift Café and Centre 64 For informa-tion about future coffee houses please call Carol at 250-427-2258.

saT. OCTOber 25aT The elKs

The Elks Club is proud to present Tucks Troubadours, a great country band featuring Larry Tuck, Bud Decosse, Doug Simpson and Dave Carlson. They will be playing and singing country music from 4-6 pm.

saT. OCTOber 25symPhOny Of The

KOOTenays

Season Premier Con-cert From Old Worlds To New, featuring works by: Sibelius, Grieg and Dvor-ak. Saturday, October 25, 7:30 p.m. Key City The-atre Tickets available at Key City Theatre 250-426-7006 Join us for the fre open rehearsal Oct. 25, from noon until 1:30 p.m.

saT. OCTOber 25big band aT bJs

The Don Davies Quartet will be enter-taining with the sounds of the big band music from the swing era at BJ’s on Saturday the 25th from 7:30 p.m. until clos-ing. If you plan to eat the fine food on the dinner menu it is suggested you make a reservation.

OCT. 25 and 26gelli iT uP!

Weekend Playshop with Artist Win Dinn. Starting on Saturday Oc-tober 25th from 9am to 4pm and continuing on Sunday October 26th from 9am – 4pm. CDAC will be hosting a Gelli it Up! Weekend Workshop

Coffee house, symphony and morewith Creston artist Win Dinn. Cost for this Work-shop is $175.00 for both days. To register for this workshop or for more in-formation, please phone 426-4223 and talk to Marisa or email: [email protected].

saT. OCTOber 25CranbrOOK

firefighTers hallOween bash

In memory of Gor-don Ratcliffe, Ron Sauve, Kelly Ferner, Aaron Pen-ner and all departed Brothers, the Cranbrook Firefighters invite you to the second annual Hal-loween Bash at Colombo Lodge. Cocktails at 6, dinner at 7, dance to fol-low. Tickets $40. Prizes for best costumes. Spon-sored by NorthStar GM. all MaryAnn at 250-426-2325 for tickets or email [email protected]

Tues. OCTOber 28TravelOgue

Have Camera Will Travel.... a travelogue se-ries. Come join Karen and Bryn Oakley as they present “Incredible India”. At Centre 64 on Tuesday, Oct 28 at 7:30 pm. Admission by dona-tion to the Kimberley Arts Centre.

Tues. OCTOber 28have Camera

Join Bryn Oakley and her Mom, Karen Vold-Oakley for slides and stories from their trip to “Incredible India”. Centre 64 Oct 28th at 7:30 p.m.

Tues. OCTOber 28JaniCe sTrOng

Cranbrook and Dis-trict Arts Council is proud to present the launch of Janice Strong’s DVD Earth Wind Fire and Water, a fascinating narrated exploration and collection of photo-graphs of what connects us to where we live. COTR lecture theatre, room 250 7:30 p.m. Entry by donation to Cran-brook and District Arts Council Building Fund.

Thurs. OCTOber 30hallOween danCe

ParTy@Kootenay Dance

Academy (in the platzl) 7 to 10. Dress up. Dance. Or jump around! Call Randy/Kim Cranbrook

Dance Connection 250-421-9930.

fri. OCTOber 31hallOween danCe

ParTy

@Cranbrook Dance Connection. 428 6 Ave. S. 7 to 10. You can be scary, funny or sexy but have fun and dance. Call Ran-dyKim Cranbrook Dance Connection 250-421-9930. [email protected]

saT. nOvember 1ChrisTmas in The

COunTry

On Saturday, No-vember 1st, the twen-ty-fourth annual ‘Christ-mas In the Country” Market and Sale will be held in the Jaffray Com-munity Centre in Jaffray. Sponsored by the ven-dors of the Jaffray-Baynes Lake Farmers’ Market, it will be held all day from the hours of 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

saT. nOvember 8ChrisTmas fair

Kimberley Sacred Heart Church Hall. Home baking, preserves, crafts, books, refresh-ments available. Door prize. 10 a.m to 2 p.m.

Tues. nOvember 11remembranCe day

Kimberley Heritage Museum will be open November 11th from 1 pm to 4 pm for Remem-brance Day with its fea-ture exhibit “Kimberley Remembers - World War

I & World War II”. The exhibit features Kimber-ley’s involvement in both world wars with a focus on those who served their country, both men and women. Admission is by Donation. For fur-ther info. contact Marie 250-427-7510

saT. nOvember 15fall fair

The Marysville Ele-mentary PAC presents their annual Trade and Craft Fair in the Marys-ville Elementary School Gym from 10 to 3. Con-cessions, draws, door prizes, fun for the whole family. Admission $2, students and children free.

5Th annual CranbrOOK

winTer farmer’s marKeT, nOvember

28Th, 29Th and 30Th

The Cranbrook Farm-er’s Market is pleased to announce that the popu-lar Winter Market, now in its 5th year, is growing! We have added a third day to give market goers more time to shop The market will take place on the evening of Friday, November 28th from 5 until 9 pm, in conjunc-tion with the Santa Claus Parade, and on Saturday and Sunday, November 29th & 30th, from 10 am until 3pm, at 1114 Baker Street, in downtown Cranbrook.

Know it all

Bryn oakley in india at next Have Camera will travel in Kimberley.

Page 8: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, October 22, 2014

Page 8 Wednesday, OCTOber 22, 2014

Sports News? Call Taylor 250-426-5201, ext. 219

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Cruisin’ KootenaysCranbrook’s Jim Nichol & Rocky Mountain Rally chair Jim Blaber hope to grow racing in the region

Taylor rocca PhoTo

Cranbrook’s Jim Nichol takes his 1993 Subaru Impreza out for a rip last week as he prepares for the 2014 Rocky Mountain Rally, scheduled for Oct. 31 and Nov. 1 in the Invermere/Columbia Valley area.

Taylor rocca PhoTo

Jim Nichol calls his 1993 Subaru Impreza a “Frankenstein car” not just for its green color, but mostly for all the wrench time and modifications it has undergone.

Taylor rocc aSports Editor

The Rocky Mountain Rally is making a return to the Columbia Valley and for the second con-secutive year, Cran-brook will be represent-ed at the Canadian Rally Championship event.

Rally car driver Jim Nichol and co-driver Jeremy Friesen, both of Cranbrook, will be rac-ing for the second time at the event, which runs Oct. 31 and Nov. 1 in In-vermere, B.C.

“I’ve always been in-terested in motor sport,” Nichol said.

“I found out rally is in our own backyard. It’s here in the Kootenays.”

The Rocky Mountain Rally is one of six nation-al rally races in the Cana-dian Rally Champion-ship series. This is the second year the race will be run out of Invermere.

“Two years ago, we actually hit on Inver-mere as a key location,” said John Blaber, chair of the organizing com-mittee and clerk of the course for the Rocky Mountain Rally.

“We’re looking to make this a long-term base for the rally. We’re looking to develop things with the towns,

with the communities and to really just expand it and make it an annual thing that everybody knows about.”

There are two rally distances drivers can compete in -- national and regional. Nichol will be competing in the re-gional rally distance, which features 117 kilo-metres over six stages. The national rally stretches 185 km over 10 stages.

As of Oct. 21, there are 26 drivers registered to run in the race.

“There’s a lot to do. You start early in the morning and you go until late at night,” said Nichol, who drives a modified 1993 Subaru Impreza. “I didn’t real-ize it would be so busy and there would be so much to do. There’s a lot to keep track of and I have my co-driver [Jere-my Friesen] with me.

“He tells me the gra-dient of the turns, how sharp the turns are and what to expect on the road. He also has to keep track of the timing. We have to be at certain places at certain times and if you don’t get there at the right time, you get penalized.”

As far as he knows,

Nichol is the only rally car driver in the East Kootenay. Blaber hopes the sport will grow in the area with increasing at-tention on the Rocky Mountain Rally.

“People understand what rally is and they’re usually keen to learn more about it,” Nichol said. “It’s just they don’t know that it’s here. They don’t know that it’s close by and they can go and see it.”

The ceremonial start for the race will take place on Main Street in Invermere Oct. 31 from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. The rally officially gets underway at 11:30 a.m.

“Last year was the first year we were here in the Columbia Valley,” Blaber said. “We had to build the rally, find the roads. We worked very hard with the Ministry of Transportation and also the forestry depart-ments, to find those roads.

“We purposely kept [the 2013 rally] low key because we just didn’t know what we were going to get…This year, we’ve focused more on the PR and spectator side of things. We’re working hard with the two towns of Invermere

and Radium. They’re coming out and support-ing us in various ways.”

There are a variety of spectator locations scat-tered throughout the Co-lumbia Valley with the first four stages of the event taking place Fri-day, Oct. 31. The first two stages of the event can be viewed along West-side Road south of Inver-mere. The third and fourth stages of the event

swoop further south be-tween Canal Flats and Skookumchuck. Stages five through eight take place Saturday, Nov. 1 in and around the Radium area. Those wishing to take in the event are en-couraged to follow the signs and directions of course marshals and volunteers.

“You can actually be standing no more than five or 10 metres from

the cars,” Blaber added. “[You can] see the whites of the [drivers’] eyes, is probably the best way to put it.”

The Rocky Mountain Rally was first run in 1973, organized by three separate Alberta car clubs -- the Edmonton Light Car Club, the Northern Alberta Sports Car Club and the Cal-gary Sports Car Club. The 1974 edition of the

event saw racers drive from Jasper to Banff, racing approximately 1,500 km in three days. The event has moved lo-cations over the years, beginning in places such as Calgary, Ed-monton and the Pinch-er Creek/Crowsnest Pass area.

The Calgary Sports Car Club is still involved in the presentation of the event to this very day.

Page 9: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, October 22, 2014

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2014 PAGE 9DAILY BULLETIN

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Harrison is smiling because of his brother.

Share Your Smiles!Share Your Smiles!Share Your Smiles!So many people visiting our offi ce have commented on how much they love to see photographs of kids, pets and adults alike – smiling. Happiness shared is a good thing and you can do that in this spot – for FREE.

Drop off your photo and name(s) of subject at the Cranbrook Townsman or Kimberley Bulletin offi ce or email your high-resolution jpeg to [email protected]. Photographs will appear in the order they are received.

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Help Kids Stay off the Sidelines!

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The primary goal of children’s sport programming is that each child should have so much fun that they can’t wait to play again next season!

Learn how you can now help children.

Donate to the Wendy Ladner-Beaudry Memorial Project.Visit: www.kidsportcanada.ca and click on the donate link at the bottom of the page.

So ALL Kids Can Play!

Help Kids Stay off the Sidelines!We believe that no kid should be left on the sidelines and all should be given the opportunity to experience the positive benefits of organized sports. KidSport™ provides support to children in order to remove financial barriers that prevent them from playing organized sport.The primary goal of children’s sport programming is that each child should have so much fun that they can’t wait to play again next season!Learn how you can now help children.

Donate to the Wendy Ladner-Beaudry Memorial Project.Visit: www.kidsportcanada.caand click on the donate link at the bottom of the page.

So ALL Kids Can Play!

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Page 10: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, October 22, 2014

Page 10 Wednesday, OCTOber 22, 2014 daily townsman / daily bulletin

SPORTS

4386

Publication: Cranbrook Daily Townsman (BCNG) Size: 5.8125" x 113 linesInsertion date: Oct 14, 15, 16, 20, 21, 22, 23, 27

NOTICE OF MAINTENANCE POWER OUTAGE MARYSVILLE AND KIMBERLEY

We will be making electrical system improvements in your area. To ensure the safety of our work crews, it will be necessary to interrupt electrical service for approximately 30 minutes.

Where: Marysville

When: Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Time: 5:00 a.m. to 5:30 a.m.

Areas affected: The City of Kimberley, Meadowbrook area, Kimberley Ski Hill, Blarchmont, Chapman Camp, the town of Marysville, Highway 95A to St. Mary River including Wycliffe-Mission, Fortier’s Corner, Pighin Road, Clearview—including Canadian Rockies International airport, and St. Mary Lake Road.

To prepare for this interruption and protect your equipment from damage, please turn off all lights, electrical heaters and major appliances and unplug all electronics.

We are sorry for the inconvenience. We will restore power as soon as we can.

Visit bchydro.com/outages or call 1 888 POWERON (1 888 769 3766) for more information.

Please note: Only those customers receiving this notice will be affected. Due to the configuration of the distribution circuits, you will be affected but your neighbour may not be. In the event of adverse weather conditions or other related impacts, this power interruption may be cancelled or rescheduled. For the most up-to-date status of your planned outage, please visit bchyro.com/outages.

‘Little things’ sink Ice in Prince AlbertRaiders claim late victory despite star performance from Hoflin; Ice move on to Saskatoon

Taylor rocc aSports Editor

The Kootenay Ice dropped their sixth con-secutive road game Tuesday night, falling to the Prince Albert Raid-ers 3-2 in front of 2,071 fans at Art Hauser Place.

“Little things that we’ve been harping on in practice that don’t seem to matter to the players are showing through,” said Kootenay Ice head coach Ryan McGill over the phone following the game. “They can see the fact that the little things and the little details they have to do to be suc-cessful are the things that are letting us down right now.

“Hopefully this is a wake-up call.”

The loss dropped the Ice to 3-8-0-0 overall this season, and 1-6-0-0 on the road. The win improves the Raiders to 5-6-0-0.

The Ice got out to a quick start in Prince Al-bert, claiming a 2-0 lead before the game was even 10 minutes old.

Forwards Levi Cable and River Beattie scored back-to-back tallies less than three minutes apart to shock the hometown crowd be-fore the mid-mark of the first period.

Beattie’s goal was the first of his WHL career and came off a nice feed from second-year for-ward Zak Zborosky.

After that, it was all Raiders.

Matteo Gennaro got the hosts to within one

before the end of the first period before Win-nipeg Jets prospect Josh Morrissey knotted things 2-2 in the second period.

Offensive struggles and power-play strug-gles often go hand-in-hand and that was the case in the third period Tuesday in Prince Al-bert.

After Jayden Hart put the Raiders ahead 3-2, over-age defenceman Sawyer Lange was given the gate for holding with 5:25 to play, handing the Ice a prime opportunity to tie the game on the man advantage.

“Our execution just isn’t where it needs to be right now on the power play,” McGill said. “So we need to work on that.”

The Ice came up empty-handed on their third power-play chance of the night.

“When you have a good game plan, you’ve got to execute,” McGill said. “Unfortunately, you can lead a horse to water but you can’t make him wear a bathing suit.

“[The players] have to execute the plays themselves.”

Wyatt Hoflin once again give his team a chance to win, turning aside 33 of the 36 shots sent his way in a perfor-mance worthy of the second star of the night. At the other end of the rink, Nick McBride blocked 28 of 30 shots for the win.

As it was the last time the Ice ventured out to Saskatchewan, the team

faces a quick turn-around between games. Kootenay moves on to face the Saskatoon Blades (3-7-0-0) tonight at 7 p.m.

“We’ve got to look at ourselves in the mirror, execute plays, be deter-mined and have a sec-ond effort around the net,” McGill said. “We’ve got to do all the little things right.

“Our goalie was a star again tonight and our goalie needs to stop being a star. Our team needs to be a star.”

Saskatoon rang up three wins in a row be-fore the Edmonton Oil Kings visited Credit Union Centre Oct. 18 and put a stop to the Blades’ winning streak with a 6-4 defeat.

Despite travelling with the team, forward Tim Bozon missed Tues-day’s contest in Prince Albert and isn’t sched-uled to play tonight in Saskatoon due to a low-er-body injury. He is ex-pected to be ready when

the Ice return home to host the Calgary Hitmen Friday night at Western Financial Place.

Defenceman Rinat Valiev missed his 11th game with a lower-body injury and won’t be ready for another one to two weeks. After playing four periods of hockey this past weekend, Jon Martin was returned to the injury list and missed his first game in a second bout with an upper-body

injury. He is also expect-ed to be unavailable for one to two weeks.

“When you put Rinat [Valiev] into the lineup and you put Tim Bozon into the lineup, every-body falls to where they need to play,” McGill said.

Forward Vince Los-chiavo returned to the lineup for the first time since suffering an up-per-body injury Oct. 8 in Regina.

Wednesday, Oct. 22

KOOtenay Ice at sasKatOOn Blades

GAME TIME: 7 P.M. (MT) KOOTENAY ICE vs. SASKATOON BLADES (3-8-0-0) RECORD (3-7-0-0) Fifth (Central) DIVISION Sixth (East) 11th (Eastern) CONF. 10th (Eastern) 22 GF 26 41 GA 47 19th (13.2%) PP Sixth (23.7%) T-8th (81.8%) PK T-17th (76.9%) J. Descheneau (5-4-9) TOP SCORER A. Forsberg (4-4-8) W. Hoflin (3.29 GAA) TOP GOALIE A. Moodie (4.00 GAA) L2 STREAK L1 3-2 L at PAR LAST GAME 6-4 L vs. EDM Oct. 24 vs. CGY NEXT GAME Oct. 24 vs. LET

Kootenay Ice Scoring SummaryTueSday, OcT. 22

KOOTenay Ice 2 aT PrInce alberT raIderS 3

First Period1. KTN - L. Cable, (2) (J. Descheneau), 5:432. KTN - R. Beattie, (1) (Z. Zborosky), 8:103. PAR - M. Gennaro, (2) (unassisted), 14:34Second Period4. PAR - J. Morrissey, (2) (C. Leverton, J. Tkatch), 13:25Third Period5. PAR - J. Hart, (3) (S. Lange, G. Quinney), 13:43Shots 1 2 3 TKootenay Ice 11 8 11 30Prince Albert Raiders 13 14 9 36Goaltenders Saves Mins SV%KTN - Wyatt Hoflin 33/36 57:44 0.917PAR - Nick McBride 28/30 60:00 0.933 Power playsKootenay Ice 0/3 (0.0%)Prince Albert Raiders 0/3 (33.3%)Three Stars: 1) J. Hart (PAR); 2) W. Hoflin (KTN); 3) N. McBride (PAR)

Upcoming GamesOct. 22 at SaskatoonOct. 24 vs. CalgaryOct. 25 at SpokaneOct. 28 vs. Prince AlbertOct. 31 vs. Red DeerNov. 1 vs. LethbridgeNov. 7 vs. EdmontonNov. 8 vs. Swift CurrentNov. 14 vs. CalgaryNov. 15 at LethbridgeNov. 19 vs. Medicine HatNov. 21 vs. LethbridgeNov. 22 at Medicine HatNov. 23 vs. Moose JawNov. 28 at PortlandNov. 29 at SeattleNov. 30 at EverettDec. 5 vs. SpokaneDec. 6 at SpokaneDec. 7 at Tri-CityDec. 9 vs. Medicine HatDec. 12 vs. Prince AlbertDec. 13 vs. Edmonton

Scoring StatisticsPlayer GP G A PTS PIM J. Descheneau 9 5 4 9 18 Luke Philp 10 4 3 7 6Zak Zborosky 11 2 4 6 0Levi Cable 11 2 3 5 4Troy Murray 11 1 4 5 4Cale Fleury 11 0 5 5 0Tyler King 11 0 5 5 9Austin Vetterl 11 1 2 3 6Jon Martin 7 2 0 2 17Bryan Allbee 8 1 1 2 4River Beattie 10 1 1 2 4Tanner Faith 9 0 2 2 12Dylan Overdyk 10 0 2 2 7Vince Loschiavo 6 1 0 1 0Kyle O’Connor 11 1 0 1 4Jared Legien 9 0 1 1 2Ryan Chynoweth 11 0 1 1 16Austin Wellsby 7 0 0 0 0J. Steenbergen 9 0 0 0 20Matt Alfaro 11 0 0 0 4

Goaltending StatisticsPlayer W L OTL SO GAA SPWyatt Hoflin 3 6 0 1 3.29 0.907 Keelan Williams 0 2 0 0 5.24 0.855

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Page 11: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, October 22, 2014

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2014 PAGE 11

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Page 12: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, October 22, 2014

PAGE 12 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2014

COMICSANNIE’S MAILBOX

by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar

HOROSCOPESby Jacqueline Bigar

DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

Tundra By Chad Carpenter

Garfield By Jim Davis

Hagar the Horrible By Dick Browne

Baby Blues By Kirkman and Scott

Rhymes with Orange By Hillary B. Price

ARIES (March 21-April 19) You might want to reconsider various options that might seem like they are being shoved down your throat. Claim your power, and make choices that work for you. You could be creating a lot of aggravation around you. Don’t worry -- it will pass. Tonight: Hang with a dear friend. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Pace yourself, and get as much done as possible. You could feel as if you are trying too hard to get on top of a situation. You might need a break more than you realize. Sometimes it’s OK to take an afternoon off from the daily grind. Tonight: Do some-thing just for you. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You might want to make a change to your schedule with-out making a big deal out of it. The person who dropped this surprise on you was looking for a reaction. If you don’t want this behavior to repeat, be calm and

direct. Tonight: Flirt up a storm. CANCER (June 21-July 22) You could be exhausted by what is happening around you. You might question what choic-es you have. Make a point to detach in order to gain a more encompassing perspective at this moment. A family matter will cause a lot of chatter and calls! Tonight: Head home. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You keep conversations moving with little effort. Make time to schedule a checkup with the doctor or dentist. Your nerves seem to be more frayed than usual. Dealing with someone at a distance will force you to detach. Tonight: Where you are, everyone has a good time. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Tap into your creativity, but don’t take a risk right now; otherwise, it could backfire. Someone -- and it might be you -- could be overreacting about a financial matter. You might not like what the possibilities are. Try to see the big picture. Tonight: Happy to be alone. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)

You might say too much if you are not careful. You generally weigh your words with care, but a touchy or difficult situation could be taking its toll on you. Friends seem to surround you, and they’ll want to help you perk up. If you can, let it hap-pen. Tonight: All smiles. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You could experience low-level fatigue. You might keep re-playing a certain situation over and over again in your mind. A must appearance will work out far better than you would have thought possible. Those around you are likely to be impressed. Tonight: Do a vanishing act. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Rethink an agreement involv-ing finances. You could be un-usually exhausted by a loved one who is an energizer in your life and full of surprises. Screen calls from friends, as they likely are about social matters. Try to squeeze in some R and R. To-night: Be nice. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You could be a major force in a power play without even real-

izing it. A conversation with a respected associated or some-one who wants to be respected could be more informative than you might have imagined. Lis-ten well. Tonight: A force to be dealt with. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You will be seeking answers. You might be willing to reach out to just about anyone in or-der to see if they can help. Don’t hesitate to call someone you consider to be an expert. You’ll resolve an issue and come up with a great solution. Tonight: Go for something unusual. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Reach out to a loved one you can count on. At first, it might appear as if your goals are sig-nificantly different. Honor your differences, and you could see where there is a similarity. You both might be motivated by the same issue but have different responses. Tonight: Together-ness. BORN TODAY Actor Jeff Goldblum (1952), psychologist Timothy Leary (1920), singer Shaggy (1968)

Dear Annie: A few years ago, I obtained a quote from a company for a manufacturing service. My business ended up not using them. Two months later, I received an invita-tion from this company to an open house. I initially thought, “How nice.” However, on reading further, it said a religious organiza-tion would give a presentation and dona-tions would be encouraged. I felt I was being used. Within the week, I received a follow-up call regarding the original quote. I informed them that their prices were not in our range, and at some point during the conversation, I gently mentioned that I thought the open house invitation was in poor taste. I proba-bly should have been more diplomatic, but I thought the person on the other end could use some constructive criticism. In return, I was blasted. It turns out she was the daugh-ter of the owner. In yelling at me, she also said that one of her sisters suffers from a ge-netic birth defect and that the presentation was to raise funds for the disease. After all this time, it still bothers me. I just figured this family-owned business was giving jobs to relatives who perhaps were unaware of appropriate business practices. Was it OK for this company to use its busi-ness contacts to try to raise funds for a char-ity this way? -- A Reader Dear Reader: First of all, if the religious presentation was to raise funds for a specif-ic medical cause, it should have been stated on the original invitation. Otherwise, people could easily get the wrong idea, as you did. And while we cannot blame a family for wanting to reach out to as many contacts as possible, it was inappropriate to use their minor business contact with you to solicit funds for a personal charity. But it would have been better had you not chastised the company employee over the phone, even with good intentions. A simple “yes” or “no” to the invitation would have sufficed, and then this wouldn’t be bothering you years later. Please try to let it go. Dear Annie: My sister lives 30 minutes away. We all pile into my parents’ car for the ride. The problem is, my sister serves dis-gusting food: fish that’s not fresh, and salad drenched in dressing that she makes hours in advance, so it gets soggy. She covers the table in glitter, which gets into the food. Bringing a dish is not allowed. I usually eat lunch before going so I won’t be hungry. When my sister asks why I’m not eating, I make some excuse. What should I do? I don’t want to say her cooking is horri-ble. Should I just put up with it? -- Big City Dear Big City: How often do you go? If it’s less than once a month, we’d put up with it. How sensitive is your sister to criticism? If you go every week, you might offer to bring a dish by saying, “You host so often, I feel guilty not helping out. I insist on bringing the salad.” Your sister may also learn (in time) to be a better cook and get the glitter off the table. Right now, she’s still trying to impress you. Dear Annie: I read the letter from “Salem, Ore.,” the couple wondering how to tell friends and family not to buy them Christ-mas gifts. Years ago, our parents told us the same thing. They asked that instead of buy-ing for them, we buy for someone else. Many stores in our area have a “giving tree.” Each ornament has a gift idea and a child’s age and size. I was thrilled to find a tag for a little girl who wanted Barbie doll clothes, as I make those. The gifts are then taken to the area social services to be distributed. The stores are also involved with the food pantry at our church. There are so many people in need. -- Giving Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to [email protected], or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. To find out more about Annie’s Mailbox and read features by other Creators Syndi-cate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syn-dicate Web page at www.creators.com.COPYRIGHT 2014 CREATORS.COM250-426-5201 ext 208 250-427-5333

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or Kimberley Bulletin offi ce or email your high-resolution jpeg to [email protected]. Photographs will appear in the

order they are received.

Ryker is smiling at Grandma and Grand as se

In times of grief, these caring professionals are here to serve and comfort your family.

Sympathy & Understanding

2200 - 2nd Street SouthCranbrook, BC V1C 1E1

250-426-3132

1885 Warren AvenueKimberley, BC V1A 1R9

250-427-7221www.mcphersonfh.com

Kootenay Monument Installations

6379 HIGHWAY 95ATA TA CREEK, B.C. 1-800-477-9996

Granite & Bronze Memorials, Dedication Plaques,

Benches, Memorial Walls, Gravesite Restorations,

Sales & Installations

www.kootenaymonument.ca

IN-HOME CONSULTATION OR VISIT OUR SHOWROOM

End of Life?Bereaved?

May We Help?

250-417-2019Toll Free 1-855-417-2019

Your community foundation.

Investing in community for good and forever.250.426.1119 www.cranbrookcf.ca

We build endowment funds that benefit the community forever and

help create personal legacies

INDEX IN BRIEFFAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTSTRAVEL

CHILDRENEMPLOYMENT

BUSINESS SERVICESPETS & LIVESTOCK

MERCHANDISE FOR SALEREAL ESTATE

RENTALSAUTOMOTIVE

ADULT ENTERTAINMENTLEGAL NOTICES

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

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

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

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

COPYRIGHTCopyright and/or properties subsist in all advertisements and in all other material appearing in this edition of bcclassified.com. Permission to reproduce wholly or in part and in any form 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 in law.

ON THE WEB:

Bring your used stamps to The Townsman822 Cranbrook St. N.

This is a year-round fundraiser by the Eastern Star Lodge for funds to supply cancer dressings.

PLEASE CUT your stamped envelopes in ‘half’ and bring the stamped portion to the Townsman.

Do not cut or tear the stamp off the envelope.Skip Fennessy picks them up, checks them and

takes them to the Cancer Office where the Eastern Star picks them up.

Thank you for your support.Marvin ‘Skip’ Fennessy

NOTICE

Baker Hill Dental Clinic is growing again and requires an additional receptionist. We are a friendly, fast-paced family

oriented dental practice. This is a full-time position (4-5 days per week). Experience preferred but will train the

right candidate. Deadline for applications is October 30, 2014. Please send resumes to Dr. David Burwash 100 9th Avenue South,

Cranbrook, BC V1C 2M2. Only those candidates selected for interviews will be contacted.

RECEPTIONIST

Legal

3 bedroom, 2 bathroom, finished

rec room, large double lot, large mature trees,

GREAT LOCATION!

PRICED TO SELL!

CALL250-426-3939

OR 250-421-6796

House for Sale

by owner

Introduction Service

AreYou New to theArea?

We’d like to

Welcome you and your

family with various gifts and local

information!Cranbrook

& Kimberley:778-517-4106

[email protected]

Personals

KOOTENAY’S BEST ESCORTS

Introducing:

**NEW** Leaha - 24Tall, Slim, Norwegian

Blonde

Lily - 24, Curvy, blonde beauty, G.F.E.

Brianna - 45, Busty, best legs, pleaser

Enjoy quality relaxations by our hand-picked beauty’s

Swedish relaxation/massage.

Spoil yourself today!!!

(250)417-2800in/out calls daily

Hiring

Children

Daycare Centers

FULL-TIME or PART-TIME spot available in

Registered Daycare for children aged 0-5 years.

Please call (250)581-1328

Employment

Help Wanted

HELP WANTED

Full-Time and Part-Time Driver/Counter PersonPlease apply in person

with application, resumé and driver’s abstract to

150 Spokane Street,IN THE PLATZL, KIMBERLEY.

Help Wanted

GOLD CREEK MARKET

$13.00/hr.FULL TIME & PART TIME

M - F 3pm to 11pmSat/Sun 7am to 5pm

Available Immediately

Must be 19 years of age. Gold Creek Market offers lottery tickets, propane, fuel, alcohol, beer, wine, cigar-ettes, produce, pizza and fresh baked items every day.

Apply in person with resume

2455 - 30th Ave S., Cranbrook BC. V1C 6Z4

HELP WANTED: Cook. Full time.

Apollo Restaurant. Please apply in person with resume to: 1012 Cranbrook St. N.

HELP WANTED. Under New Ownership. All positions. Part/Full time. Apply in person with resume to:

Cranbrook Super 8 2370 Cranbrook St. N.

Volunteers

We have a BIG wait list

Do you have a Big Heart?1 HOUR A WEEK Kimberley / Cranbrook

Big Brothers Big Sisters

250-489-3111

Big Brothers Big Sisters

Help Wanted Help Wanted

Classifi edsGet Results!

Breathe through a straw for 60 seconds. That’s what breathing is like with cystic fibrosis.

No wonder so many people with CF stop breathing

in their early 30s.

Please help us.

Page 14: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, October 22, 2014

PAGE 14 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2014 DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN Wednesday, October 22, 2014 PAGE 15

Janis Caldwell-SawleyMortgage SpecialistRoyal Bank of Canada

[email protected]/janis.sawley

Serving the East Kootenays Tel.: 250-417-1336

4:00 - 5:00pm 2525 - 25 St. S.

$459,0005 acres, 5 mins from city. 3 bdrm,

1200 sq ft on each floor, amazing view, fenced, 20x25 Quonset, storage buildings.

2396717 Waunita Mackintosh

5:30 - 6:30pm 210 - 7 Ave. S.

$209,000Bright & welcoming 3 bdrm home,

many upgrades, close to downtown, on bus route.

2399192 Waunita Mackintosh

6:00 - 7:00pm 514 - 6 St. S.

$279,900Great upgraded home, 3+1 bdrm, 2 bath,

oak flooring, new windows, furnace, AC, heat pump, garage, fenced yard with deck.

2401113 Brian Burch

E a c h o f f i c e i n d e p e n d e n t l y o w n e d a n d o p e r a t e d .BLUE SKY REALTY

250-426-87001111 Cranbrook St. N. www.blueskyrealty.ca

www.mls.ca

OPEN HOUSES Thursday Oct 23

Services

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

1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com

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

Contractors

• Construction • Renovations • Roofing • Drywall-large or small• Siding • Sundeck Construction

• Aluminum Railings We welcome any restorational work!

(250) 426-8504

GIRO

Merchandise for Sale

Auctions

STORAGE WARS

Lock n Load Mini Storage is having an auction

of unclaimed storage units.

Saturday, Oct 25/14 at 10 am

1525 Industrial Rd F2 Cranbrook, BC

ph: (250) 919-9900

Purchaser qualifi cation

starts at 9:00 am

Free ItemsLOST: Pair of Pontoon boat oars on Oct 7th, Old Meachen Creek Bridge Rd. Please call 250-919-0042 Reward.

Firewood/Fuel

FIREWOODLogging truck load

Larch - $2,500.Pine/Larch mix - $1,800.Pine - $1,400Cord of Larch - $220.

250-421-3750

Merchandise for Sale

Misc. for SaleA-STEEL SHIPPING DRY STORAGE CONTAINERS

Used 20’40’45’53’ and insulated containers all

sizes in stock. SPECIAL

Trades are welcome. 40’Containers under $2500!DMG 40’ containers under $2,000 each. Also JD 544

& 644 wheel Loaders. Wanted to buy 300 size

hydraulic excavator. Ph Toll free 1-866-528-7108

Delivery BC and ABwww.rtccontainer.com

Misc. WantedPrivate Coin Collector BuyingCollections, Accumulations,Olympic Gold & Silver Coins +Chad: 778-281-0030. Local.

Real Estate

Acreage for SalePRIVATE 150 ACRES

5 minutes from Cranbrook . Borders crown land on 3 sides. Mixture of timber and fi elds. Surveyed, drilled well, power and Shaw cable. Not in ALR zoned RR60. Serious inquiries only. $695,000.

250-489-9234

Real Estate

Houses For SaleHOUSE FOR SALE

Updated home in desirable location in Marysville. Great

views and walking distance to elementary school. 3 bdrms with

2½ bths, attached garage, lrg enclosed back yard and covered rear deck. Remodeled kitchen

inc. matching stove, microwave, refrigerator, also dishwasher.

Central vac for house and garage. W/D also inc. Beautifully

remodeled entrance way comple-ments newer windows and siding

and new roof. Extra storage under the deck and a 12x10 tool

shed. UG sprinklers system.

Priced to sell at $365,000 For viewing, call 250-427-3228

Rentals

Apt/Condo for Rent2BDRM, 1 1/2 BATH apart-ment for rent, in Canal Flats. Great view, 2parking spac-es, F/S, D/W, full size W/D, microwave. $750 + utilities

& D.D. Available immediately. Call (250)349-5306 or

(250)489-8389.

GLEN Livet Manor Cran-brook. 1 Bedroom $750/month avail. Nov 1, and 2 Bedroom $850/month avail. Dec 1, Very close to Rec centre, Curling, Hospital, Shopping & College. Heat & hot water included, on site coin-op laundry, storage locker, no smoking, cat ok. Phone 778-517-0777

Mortgages

Open Houses

Rentals

Suites, Lower

HUGE 890 sq ft upper suite on quiet street in Kimberley

Free wifi, separate locking entrance, f/s, convection oven, dishwasher.

“No pets-No parties-No night owls.” References required. Available immed.

$650 month, utilities included. 250-427-1022 or cell 250-432-5773

Suites, Upper

Kimberley Studio Suite. Furnished, $495./mo. in-cludes utilities, hydro, gas, basic cable and internet. Laundry available on-site. Sorry, no pets. References required.

Call Peter at East Kootenay Realty ~ 250-908-0045 ~

Transportation

Recreational/Sale

Become a Snowbird and Go South for the Winter!

In your own25ft Class ‘C’Motor Home

Winterized, Solar pan-els on roof, Hardware for towing passenger

vehicle or trailer.Telephone:

(250) 489-4490

Mortgages

Open Houses

Transportation

Sport Utility Vehicle

2008 CHEVY EQUINOX SPORT

Only 122,000 kms, Auto, A/C, Sunroof, Power Windows &

Locks, Keyless Entry. Excellent Condition

$11,000 250-349-5306

Trucks & Vans

2005 Dodge 3500 HD Laramie

Diesel 4x4Leather seats, 4 door, loaded.

Fully serviced, safety checked. Priced to sell

quickly

$17,50000

stk#8508

EK Transmission Ltd.DL#29679

1019 Kootenay St. N.,Cranbrook, BC • 426-4157

Legal

Legal Notices

WILLIAMS MOVING & STORAGE

Under the Warehouseman’s Lien Act:

The following goods will be sold at public auction in

Lethbridge, AB.

Rocky Mountain Rams

WILLIAMS MOVING & STORAGE

Under the Warehouseman’s Lien Act:

The following goods will be sold at public auction in

Lethbridge, AB.

Walter Richard-Grams

Nathan Stelmacker

Venue For Hair

WHERE DO YOU TURN

YOUR NEWSPAPER:The link to your community

TO LEARNWHAT’S

ON SALE?

BEAR NECESSITIESHOME WATCH SERVICE

•Planning a holiday and need your home

checked for insurance?

•Snow removal, mail p/u,plants, cat care & more.

BONDED & INSURED

For Peace of Mind Travelcall 250-464-9900

www.thebearnecessities.ca

HANDYMAN to the

*SENIOR STARS*

Carpenter, Plumber, Installer, Repairs,

Bathroom makeovers, Laminate ooring, Painting, Fence,

Decks.

Cranbrook/Kimberley

~Steve~ 250-421-6830

LEAKY BASEMENT

• Foundation Cracks

• Damp Proofi ng

• Drainage Systems

• Foundation Restoration

Residential / CommercialFree estimates

250-919-1777

PLAN DESIGNNew construction,

Additions, Renovations, Electrical, Landscape

Start with a good set of plans and be assured your investment will

FEEL, FUNCTION and LOOK GREAT!

Jody ~ 250-919-1575www.CHARLTONHOMES.CA

SONNY & CHRIS NOMLAND

We rebuild Electrolux vacuums to

like-new condition.

We also repair all other brands.

Phone 250-489-2733

TREES • LAWNS GARDEN • LANDSCAPE

Weiler Property Services

• Professional Tree & Shrub pruning

• Landscaping (planting of trees, shrubs and stone work repair)

• Bobcat Service Available

- You’ll be comfortable knowing that we both are

Forest Technologists (School of Natural

Resources - Fleming College), with over 25 years experience, are fully insured

and enjoy what we do.

David & Kimberly Weiler

[email protected]

Cranbrook, Kimberley and surrounding areas.

TRIPLE J WINDOW CLEANING

~residential~

For a brighter outlook, call Jim Detta

250-349-7546

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

To advertise using our “SERVICES GUIDE” in the Cranbrook Daily Townsman, Kimberley Daily Bulletin and The Valley, call us at 250-426-5201, ext. 202.

SERVICES GUIDEContact these business for all your service needs!

Read the DAILY newspaper for

local happenings!

250-426-5201

250-427-5333

Need help with current events?

Smart newspapers today recognize

they can run a very protable business by providing relevant, enter ta ining and innovative ideas and content.“Let’s not miss the point, either”, says Bill McDonald, group publisher of Metro English Canada. “Maybe there are some trends in place that show some declines in some areas. But newspapers still deliver a massive audience in every city across the country. That’s not changing. The Toronto Star still delivers one million readers every day. There’s no other medium with that kind of reach in one day.” In fact, three-quarters of Canadians (13.9 million) read a printed edition of daily newspaper each week, according to NADbank readership data.“Increased media competition, besides raising the editorial bar at dailies, doesn’t change one crucial fact”, says media buyer Bruce Claassen, CEO of Genesis-Vizeum (Toronto) and chair of Aegis Media Canada. “Dai ly newspapers offer the same benets they always have: the abi l i ty to reach customers quickly. Only with a daily paper are you able to choose to do an ad and run with it in two days, and reach a sizeable portion of the population, in a fairly mass, fairly broad and fairly fast way. That’s a set of qualities very few other media can match.”“Major pubishers and media buyers agree—strong readership gures are testament to improved product.

For daily delivery of your local newspaper

in Cranbrook, call 250-426-5201.

In Kimberley call 250-427-5333.SOURCE: NADBANK JOURNAL SEPT/08

Strong outlook for daily

newspapers

Kidney disease strikes families,not only individuals.

THE KIDNEY FOUNDATION OF CANADAwww.kidney.ca

Page 15: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, October 22, 2014

Wednesday, OCTOber 22, 2014 Page 15

NEWSdaily townsman / daily bulletin

AssociAted PressKABUL, Afghanistan — Opium

poppy cultivation in Afghanistan grew to an all-time high in 2013 despite America spending more than $7 bil-lion to fight it over the past decade, a U.S. report showed on Tuesday.

Federal auditors SIGAR reported that Afghan farmers grew an unprece-dented 209,000 hectares of the poppy in 2013, blowing past the previous peak of 193,000 hectares in 2007.

As of June 30, 2014, the report said, the United States had spent approxi-mately $7.6 billion on counter-narcot-ics efforts in Afghanistan.

One factor for the surge was afford-able deep-well technology, which over the past decade turned 200,000 hectares of desert in southwestern Af-ghanistan into arable land much of which is now being used for poppy cultivation.

Nangarhar province in the east, and other provinces, once declared “poppy

free,” have seen a resurgence in culti-vation. Nangarhar had been consid-ered a model for successful counterin-surgency and counter-narcotics efforts and was deemed “poppy free” by the U.N. in 2008. It however saw a fourfold increase in opium poppy cultivation between 2012 and 2013.

An Afghan government official says that Taliban and opium smugglers are fighting for the income of opium in different parts of the country, while cultivation takes place mostly in the south and southwest where insurgents are highly active and the government has little influence.

“The recent fights in Helmand and other provinces of the country are in fact the fight against opium,” Afghan Counter Narcotics Minister Mubarez Rashedi told the country’s upper house of parliament. “The big opium smugglers alongside the Taliban are fighting against the Afghan govern-ment.”

Poppy cultivation hit record high in Afghanistan in 2013

AssociAted PressJERUSALEM — Is-

raeli archaeologists said Tuesday they have dis-covered a large stone with Latin engravings that lends credence to the theory that the rea-son Jews revolted against Roman rule nearly 2,000 ago was be-cause of their harsh treatment.

Israel’s Antiquities Authority said the stone bears the name of the Roman emperor Hadri-an and the year of his visit to Jerusalem, a few years before the failed Bar Kochba revolt in the second century A.D. The inscription backs up historical accounts that Rome’s Tenth Le-gion was present in Je-rusalem in the run-up to the revolt.

The cause of the Jew-ish revolt, which result-

Ancient stone suggests Jews revolted against Romans

over harsh measures

ed in their exile, is dis-puted. It is unclear whether they rose up independently or were provoked by harsh Roman measures, but the presence of the le-gion would give cre-dence to the latter.

Hadrian is reviled in Jewish history for im-posing dictates aimed at persecuting Jews and forcing them to aban-

don their religion.Along with Jewish

accounts, the history of the Bar Kochba revolt is also known from the works of Roman histori-an Cassius Dio, who mentions that Hadrian visited Jerusalem in 129 A.D., three years before the revolt erupted.

The stone was found outside Jerusalem’s Old City.

Goran Tomasevic/reuTers

Afghanistan produces more than 80% of the world’s illicit opium, with prof-its helping fund the Taliban.

Garo nalbandian/museum of The sTudium biblicum franciscanum

Dedication to Emperor Hadrian on a stone piece.

bbc

A Swedish naval vessel Visby searches the Stockholm archipelago

AssociAted PressThe search for a foreign un-

derwater craft in waters off Stockholm has brought back memories of Sweden’s subma-rine hunts during the Cold War — and exposed a key difference.

Back then Sweden actually had a robust anti-submarine force.

Sweden, which is not a NATO member, has downsized its mili-tary significantly since the Iron Curtain fell and has scrapped some of the resources it used to hunt for Soviet submarines, in-

cluding helicopters equipped with sonar and anti-submarine weapons.

The military says the helicop-ters used in the current search don’t have that equipment.

As the search continued for the fifth day on Tuesday, the deputy operations commander condemned the undersea activi-ty in Swedish waters.

“It’s extremely serious that we’re searching for something or someone who has violated Sweden’s territorial integrity,” Rear Adm. Anders Grenstad told

reporters in Stockholm.He said the military had re-

ceived reports of two more sight-ings in addition to three record-ed on Sunday but did not want to speculate on the type of vessel or object in question.

Earlier Tuesday, Prime Min-ister Stefan Lofven said that Sweden’s military “needs to im-prove its capacity.” He cited Rus-sia’s increasing military activity in the region but added that “we do not regard that as an immedi-ate threat to Sweden.”

Hunt exposes gap in Sweden’s anti-submarine capabilities

AssociAted PressPoland’s former Foreign Mi-

land’s former Foreign Minister Radek Sikorski came under fire Tuesday from the prime minis-ter and political opponents over a U.S. magazine interview in which he allegedly said Russia’s president offered Poland the op-portunity to jointly carve up Ukraine in 2008.

Sikorski, now the parliamen-tary speaker, was quoted as say-ing in Sunday’s issue of Politico Magazine that Russian President Vladimir Putin “wanted us to become participants in this par-tition of Ukraine.”

He said Putin made the offer to then Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk in Moscow in 2008.

Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, described Sikorski’s

comments as false.“First, we don’t know much

about the work of this publica-tion,” Peskov told Russian news website Gazeta.ru. “In general, this information seems like a fable.”

In a news conference on Tuesday, Sikorski was vague about whether he made those exact remarks to Politico Maga-zine and told journalists to refer to another interview he gave to a Polish media website. He said there that he didn’t hear Putin’s words firsthand, but stressed that they were treated in 2008 as “surrealistic” or a joke.

Later in the day, he held a second news conference where he said his memory had failed him in the interview with Politi-co Magazine and that the bilat-

eral meeting between Tusk and Putin didn’t take place in Mos-cow, as he said earlier, but at the NATO summit in Bucharest in April 2008.

Prime Minister Ewa Kopacz, who’s in the same party as Sikor-ski, criticized him for dodging reporters’ questions on the issue at the first conference. Political opponents want him fired, say-ing there is no room in politics for what they called irresponsi-bility.

Kopacz said she expected Sikorski to directly answer re-porters’ questions.

“I will not tolerate this kind of behaviour. I will not tolerate this kind of standards that Speaker Sikorski tried to present at to-day’s (news) conference,” Ko-pacz said.

Polish ex-foreign minister Sikorski under fire over Putin remarks

Carving up Ukraine?

The Cranbrook Food Bankneeds your help.

Drop boxes at Safeway and Save On FoodsFood Bank office 104-8th Ave. S. • 250-426-7664 (from 10am-3pm)

Page 16: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, October 22, 2014

PAGE 16 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2014

Step #1:

Call Karrie and get your access code

number.250-426-5201 extension 208

Step #2:

Go to your browser

and type:

www.dailybulletin.ca

Step #3:Step #3: Click on E-Edition and start reading!

DON’T BE SCARED!! Just 3 easy steps and you’re reading news online!

DAILY BULLETIN

TS

42378 REV 0

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REGION BC

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DATE INITIAL

TRIM: 10.312” x 11.786” Cyan

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

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ber 2

0, 2

014,

rece

ive 0

% A

PR p

urch

ase

fi nan

cing

on

new

201

4 Fo

rd E

dge,

Fle

x, E

scap

e m

odel

s fo

r up

to 6

0 m

onth

s, a

nd F

ocus

, C-M

AX, F

usio

n (e

xclu

ding

HE

V an

d PH

EV) m

odel

s fo

r up

to 7

2 m

onth

s to

qua

lifi e

d re

tail

cust

omer

s, o

n ap

prov

ed c

redi

t (OA

C) fr

om F

ord

Cred

it. N

ot a

ll bu

yers

will

qual

ify fo

r the

low

est i

nter

est r

ate.

Exa

mpl

e: $

25,0

00 p

urch

ase

fi nan

ced

at 0

% A

PR fo

r 60/

72 m

onth

s, m

onth

ly pa

ymen

t is

$416

.66/

$34

7.22

, cos

t of b

orro

win

g is

$0

or A

PR o

f 0%

and

tota

l to

be re

paid

is $

25,0

00. D

own

paym

ent o

n pu

rcha

se fi

nanc

ing

offe

rs m

ay b

e re

quire

d ba

sed

on a

ppro

ved

cred

it fro

m F

ord

Cred

it. ‡ U

ntil

Nove

mbe

r 20,

201

4, re

ceive

$50

0/ $

750/

$1,

000/

$1,

750/

$2,

000/

$2,

500

/ $2,

750/

$3,

000/

$3,

500/

$4,

000

/ $4,

500/

$4,

750/

$5,

000/

$5,

500/

$6,

000/

$6,

500

/ $7,

000/

$8,

000/

$8,

500/

$9,

000

/$10

,000

in M

anuf

actu

rer R

ebat

es w

ith th

e pu

rcha

se o

r lea

se o

f a n

ew 2

014

C-M

AX, F

usio

n, E

scap

e 2.

0L /

2015

F-1

50 R

egul

ar C

ab X

L 4x

2 (V

alue

Lea

der)

/ 201

5 Ta

urus

(exc

ludi

ng S

E), E

xped

ition

, Tra

nsit

Conn

ect,

E-Se

ries/

201

4 Fo

cus

S M

anua

l, Ed

ge/ 2

014

Flex

, F-1

50 R

egul

ar C

ab X

L 4x

2 (V

alue

Lea

der)

and

2015

F-3

50 to

F-5

50 C

hass

is C

abs

/ 201

4 E-

Serie

s an

d 20

15 F

iest

a S

/ 201

4 M

usta

ng V

6 Co

upe

/ 201

4 Tr

ansi

t Con

nect

/ 20

14 F

iest

a (e

xclu

ding

S),

Taur

us S

E, E

xplo

rer a

nd 2

015

F-15

0 Re

gula

r Cab

(exc

ludi

ng X

LT) /

201

4 F-

350

to F

-550

Cha

ssis

Cab

/ 20

15 F

-150

Sup

erCa

b an

d Su

perC

rew

/ 201

4 Fi

esta

S/ 2

014

Mus

tang

V6

Prem

ium

/ 201

4 Ta

urus

(exc

ludi

ng S

E)/ 2

014

Mus

tang

GT

(exc

ludi

ng G

T500

) / 2

014

Expe

ditio

n / 2

015

F-25

0 to

F-4

50 (e

xclu

ding

Cha

ssis

Cab

s) G

as E

ngin

e/ 2

014

F-15

0 Re

gula

r Cab

(exc

ludi

ng X

L 4x

2), F

-250

to F

-450

(exc

ludi

ng C

hass

is C

abs)

Gas

Eng

ine

/ 201

4 F-

150

Supe

rCre

w 4

x4 X

LT 3

00A

and

2015

F-2

50 to

F-4

50 (e

xclu

ding

Cha

ssis

Cab

s) D

iese

l Eng

ine

/ 201

4 F-

150

Supe

rCab

and

Sup

erCr

ew (e

xclu

ding

F-1

50 S

uper

Crew

4x4

XLT

300

A)/ 2

014

F-25

0 to

F-4

50 (e

xclu

ding

Cha

ssis

Cab

s) D

iese

l Eng

ine

– al

l cha

ssis

cab

, stri

pped

cha

ssis

, cut

away

bod

y, F-

150

Rapt

or, M

ediu

m T

ruck

, Mus

tang

Bos

s 30

2 an

d Sh

elby

GT5

00 e

xclu

ded.

Em

ploy

ee P

rice

adju

stm

ents

are

not

com

bina

ble

with

CPA

, GPC

, CFI

P, Da

ily R

enta

l Allo

wan

ce a

nd A

/X/Z

/D/F

-Pla

n pr

ogra

ms.

Del

ivery

allo

wan

ces

are

not c

ombi

nabl

e w

ith a

ny fl

eet c

onsu

mer

ince

ntive

s. ^

Rece

ive a

Win

ter S

afet

y Pa

ckag

e w

hich

incl

udes

: fou

r (4

) win

ter t

ires,

four

(4) s

teel

whe

els,

and

four

(4) t

ire p

ress

ure

mon

itorin

g se

nsor

s w

hen

you

purc

hase

or l

ease

any

new

201

4/20

15 F

ord

Fies

ta, F

ocus

, Fus

ion,

Esc

ape,

Edg

e (e

xclu

ding

Spo

rt) o

r Exp

lore

r bet

wee

n Oc

tobe

r 1 a

nd D

ecem

ber 1

, 201

4. T

his

offe

r is

not a

pplic

able

to a

ny F

leet

(oth

er th

an s

mal

l fl e

ets

with

an

elig

ible

FIN

) or G

over

nmen

t cus

tom

ers

and

not c

ombi

nabl

e w

ith C

PA, G

PC, C

FIP

or D

aily

Rent

al A

llow

ance

s. S

ome

cond

ition

s ap

ply.

See

Deal

er fo

r det

ails

. Veh

icle

han

dlin

g ch

arac

teris

tics,

tire

load

inde

x an

d sp

eed

ratin

g m

ay n

ot b

e th

e sa

me

as fa

ctor

y-su

pplie

d al

l-sea

son

tires

. Win

ter t

ires

are

mea

nt to

be

oper

ated

dur

ing

win

ter c

ondi

tions

and

may

requ

ire a

hig

her c

old

infl a

tion

pres

sure

than

all-

seas

on ti

res.

Con

sult

your

For

d of

Can

ada

Deal

er fo

r det

ails

incl

udin

g ap

plic

able

war

rant

y co

vera

ge. † O

ffer o

nly

valid

from

Sep

tem

ber 3

, 201

4 to

Oct

ober

31,

201

4 (th

e “O

ffer P

erio

d”) t

o re

side

nt C

anad

ians

with

an

elig

ible

Cos

tco

mem

bers

hip

on o

r bef

ore

Augu

st 3

1, 2

014,

who

pur

chas

e or

leas

e a

new

201

4/20

15 F

ord

(exc

ludi

ng F

iest

a, F

ocus

, C-M

AX, G

T500

, 50th

Ann

ivers

ary

Editi

on M

usta

ng, R

apto

r, an

d M

ediu

m T

ruck

) veh

icle

(eac

h an

“El

igib

le V

ehic

le”)

. Lim

it on

e (1

) offe

r per

Elig

ible

Veh

icle

pur

chas

e or

leas

e, u

p to

a m

axim

um o

f tw

o (2

) sep

arat

e El

igib

le V

ehic

le s

ales

per

Cos

tco

Mem

bers

hip

Num

ber.

Offe

r is

trans

fera

ble

to p

erso

ns d

omic

iled

with

an

elig

ible

Cos

tco

mem

ber.

Appl

icab

le ta

xes

calc

ulat

ed b

efor

e CA

D$1,

000

offe

r is

dedu

cted

. ®: R

egis

tere

d tra

dem

ark

of P

rice

Cost

co In

tern

atio

nal,

Inc.

use

d un

der l

icen

se. ©

2014

Siri

us C

anad

a In

c. “

Siriu

sXM

”, th

e Si

riusX

M lo

go, c

hann

el n

ames

and

logo

s ar

e tra

dem

arks

of S

irius

XM R

adio

Inc.

and

are

use

d un

der l

icen

ce. ©

2014

For

d M

otor

Com

pany

of C

anad

a, L

imite

d. A

ll rig

hts

rese

rved

.

bcford.ca

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