FRIDAY
< Out-of-control fire, 1908
NOVEMBER 2, 2012
Weddings, Maternity, Newborn, Families and everything in between.
Not as out-of-control as the headlines | Page 7
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Vol. 60, Issue 212
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A fire broke out at the former Tembec planer mill on the evening of November 1 and no death or injuries were reported. The City of Cranbrook said 16 firefighters responded to the blaze that started at 9:55 p.m. The crews remained on scene into the morning watching for flair ups and Theatre Road will be closed to traffic in the morning. All commuters will need to find alternate routes. Bystanders at the scene told the Townsman that the fire razed the building that housed the former planer equipment. The City said the building had been out of use for a number of years and it was still unclear if the fire involved the kiln or the joint plant on the property. No cause for the fire has been determined and there are no damage estimates available at this time. See next week for more information.
Bullying rally seeks to unite people from all walks of life ANNALEE GRANT Townsman Staff
Two local women are refusing to sit idly by in the wake of recently publicized teen suicides. Renee Savarie and Danielle Port are joining with communities across the province to host an anti-bul-
lying and suicide awareness rally on November 10. “It is important to have this rally now because we are getting sick and tired of hearing about it in the news of another death from someone being bullied,” Savarie said. “I have known two kids personally who have com-
mitted suicide from being bullied.” Port, who grew up in Cranbrook and recently returned to the area, said she sees the same problems in this city that were prevalent before she left. “Having spent most my life in Cranbrook, I know
what it’s like growing up here and that the bullying itself is a real problem,” she said. “After being gone for 10 years and coming back I still see the problem and I refuse to just sit back and watch it happen.”
See BULLYING , Page 5
St. Mary’s Band has new chief Jim Whitehead narrowly elected over Cheryl Casimer ANNALEE GRANT Townsman Staff
A difference of one vote made Jim Whitehead the new chief of the St. Mary’s Band in last week’s election. St. Mary’s Band members headed to
the polls on October 25 to elect three new councillors, with the highest vote-getter named the chief. Cheryl Casimer is the outgoing chief.
See BAND, Page 3
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Page 2
Friday, november 2, 2012
Weatoheurtlook Tonight 2
POP 20%
NEWS
Tomorrow 8 4
Sunday 5
POP 30%
Tuesday
Monday 13 2
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Gun registry data has been destroyed 9
POP 30%
Wednesday 7 -2
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daily townsman
POP 40%
Almanac Temperatures
High Low Normal ...........................6.2° .................-3.9° Record .......................17°/1981........-18.7°/1991 Yesterday 10° 4.4°
Bruce Cheadle Canadian Press
OTTAWA — The federal government says millions of records of registered long guns have all been destroyed, with the exception of court-protected data from Quebec. A spokeswoman for Public Safety Minister Vic Toews confirmed the registry’s destruc-
tion “as of last night’’ after gun enthusiasts began spreading the word. No formal news release appears to have been issued by a Conservative government that has made repeal and destruction of the long-gun registry one of its bedrock promises. Nor has the government said exactly how
much taxpayer money will be saved by repealing the registry, although a study by The Canadian Press suggests it is a small fraction of the millions spent annually on gun licensing. Last year there were almost eight million firearms logged in the registry, including more than seven million “non-restricted’’ weap-
ons. The latest data from the RCMP shows that, as of last July, there are still more than 564,000 restricted firearms and more than 191,000 prohibited weapons in the federal gun registry. “Our Conservative government is proud to say that as of last night, all contents of the longgun registry have been
Precipitation Normal..............................................0.8mm Record...................................13.6mm/1984 Yesterday ........................................2.2 mm This month to date...........................2.2 mm This year to date..........................405.4 mm Precipitation totals include rain and snow
Tomorrows
unrise 8 36 a.m. unset 6 16 p.m. oonset 12 53 p.m. oonrise 9 53 p.m.
Nov 6
Nov 13 Nov 20
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Across the Region Tomorro w Prince George 5/-3 Jasper 2/-3
Edmonton -1/-4
How did that slip into the budget?
Banff 5/1 Kamloops 10/7
Revelstoke 7/5
Kelowna 10/6 Vancouver 12/11
Canada Yellowknife Whitehorse Vancouver Victoria Saskatoon Regina Brandon Winnipeg Thunder Bay S. Ste. Marie Toronto Windsor Ottawa Montreal Quebec City Fredericton
Castlegar 11/8
destroyed, except those related to Quebec,’’ Toews’ director of communications Julie Carmichael said in an email Thursday. “Make no mistake, the tax-and-spend NDP will not hesitate to bring back the long gun registry. Now that these data have been deleted, they can never be recovered — even by Thomas Mulcair,’’ wrote the government spokeswoman. While there was no formal news release from Public Safety, groups such as the Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters were out issuing public praise for the move after Toews apparently told representatives at a federalprovincial meeting Thursday in Regina. “We are delighted that the Harper government has followed through on its promise in such a timely fashion,’’ Greg Farrant of the Ontario association said in a release.
Calgary 7/0
UK diplomats say they paid $16,000 to re-stuff snake
Cranbrook 8/4
C anadian Press today
tomorrow
p.cloudy -11/-13 flurries -4/-10 flurries -6/-11 flurries -7/-9 showers 12/10 rain 12/11 showers 12/9 showers 13/11 flurries -2/-5 cloudy -1/-5 snow 0/-3 cloudy 0/-5 snow 0/-4 flurries 0/-4 flurries -1/-4 p.cloudy 2/-6 m.sunny 3/-6 m.sunny 3/-5 p.cloudy 2/-2 p.cloudy 3/-2 showers 5/1 flurries 6/0 p.cloudy 6/0 p.cloudy 7/2 showers 6/1 cloudy 6/-2 showers 7/3 showers 9/0 showers 7/3 showers 12/-2 p.cloudy 12/6 showers 13/0
The World
today
tlanta Buenos ires etroit eneva avana ong ong iev ondon os ngeles Miami Paris Rome Singapore Sydney Tokyo Washington
sunny sunny cloudy rain sunny p.cloudy rain rain p.cloudy p.cloudy rain sunny tstorms p.sunny sunny p.cloudy
tomorrow
22/8 24/20 7/0 12/9 26/16 26/21 6/6 11/8 17/13 27/16 13/7 19/13 32/27 17/16 15/11 12/3
p.cloudy sunny p.cloudy showers p.cloudy rain p.cloudy rain p.cloudy p.cloudy showers p.sunny tstorms cloudy sunny p.cloudy
25/14 26/20 8/0 15/12 27/18 27/23 10/9 10/5 21/15 27/18 13/8 18/13 32/27 19/16 14/11 12/4
The Weather Network 2012
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LONDON — At a time when U.K. politicians are trying to squeeze budgets, British diplomats’ big bill for restuffing an ancient anaconda has left some observers hissing. A freedom of information request filed by British politics blog Guido Fawkes has revealed that the Foreign Office forked out 10,000 pounds ($16,000) to restore “Albert,’’ a stuffed anaconda believed to have been donated to a British official in what is now Guyana during the 19th century. British diplomats defended their decision to re-stuff the venerable serpent, saying “Albert’’ was an asset to Britain’s diplomatic corps and was due for “essential maintenance.’’ But the Taxpayer’s Alliance, a lobbying group, said diplomats might have been better off sending the snake to a museum.
daily townsman
Local NEWS
friday, november 2, 2012
Page 3
Medical care lacking for disadvantaged No drop-in clinic in Cranbrook means marginalized people have no access to a physician, service providers claim
Sally MacDonald Townsman Staff
ANKORS, Street Angel and the Women’s Resource Centre are raising concerns about the lack of medical care for the disadvantaged in Cranbrook and Kimberley. “The current condition of the health care system is failing our most marginalized citizens. The vast majority of clients who access our services are without a physician,” said Heidi Hebditch, manager of Operation Street Angel, a drop-in centre for homeless and those at risk of homelessness. Hebditch, ANKORS coordinator Gary Dalton and Women’s Resource Centre manager Vicky Dalton presented their concerns to Cranbrook city council last month. Council agreed to refer the concerns to a special committee to recommend action for the city. Gary Dalton said that since the beginning of the year, public health nurses no longer offer testing and treatment for HIV and sexually transmitted infections (STI). This means that people in Cranbrook who don’t have a family doctor
have only two options for testing: they can see a nurse practitioner at Street Angel who is only available a few hours each week, or they can go to Emergency at the hospital. “It is now possible through treatment to have an AIDS free generation. In order to have that treatment, you first have to identify the virus. That’s not possible if testing has been removed from our clinics,” he said. Vicky Dalton said the problem is wider than STI and HIV testing: many of the disadvantaged in Cranbrook and Kimberley are unable to get medical attention. “Many people have no access to medical care. It’s not just HIV and mental health issues, it’s all kinds of physical care,” she said. “It’s a dire situation in our community.” Hebditch said she has heard from Street Angel clients that physicians sometimes conduct interviews to choose patients. “The complex cases of HIV and multiple diagnoses – mental health, drug addictions – are not being chosen as patients. So we have clients
Notice of Intention to Issue a Park Use Permit Per Section 20 of the Park Act, this advertisement serves as notice that the Ministry of Environment (BC Parks) intends to issue a park use permit for the following purpose: Name of Park
Activity
Purcell Wilderness Conservancy
Commercial Mechanized Ski Guiding (Heli-Ski) restricted to that portion of the Park permitting mechanized use and previously tenured for this activity by Crown Lands.
If you have any questions concerning this notification, please contact the Ministry of Environment Regional Office at 205 Industrial Road G, Cranbrook or 250-489-8540.
who are losing doctors and those are clients with higher needs, clients who need ongoing medication, need treatment, and need to be seen,” she said. “These are just more barriers for people to overcome who are already in a weakened state; they are marginalized from society.”
Gary Dalton said the three service providers have resorted to referring clients to the dropin clinic in Nelson for medical care. The public health unit at East Kootenay Regional Hospital does have a drop-in clinic, explained Maryann Simpson, Interior Health’s community integration
administrator for the area. However, the unit is staffed by nurses, not physicians or nurse practitioners, so they are unable to write prescriptions. “All prescriptions have to go to a physician. In Cranbrook, there is no drop-in clinic. It is the emergency department,” said Simp-
son. “But pharmacists can now often prescribe so it depends on the prescription.” The good news is that three physicians have arrived in Cranbrook in the past few months, Simpson went on. “I do believe if you phone the Associate Clinic, people can get in.
Right now, I think they are taking on new patients,” she said. “I’m happy there are physicians and openings for patients. That puts our community in a good position.” She said that seeing a physician is the best course of action for someone seeking STI and HIV testing.
Submitted
Cranbrook Mayor Wayne Stetski was recently joined by members of the Royal Canadian Legion, Branch 24, Cranbrook to proclaim the week of Nov. 5 - 11 Veterans Week in Cranbrook. Left to right: Colin Anderson, Mayor Stetski, Harold Garrison and Legion Branch President Clive Brown. Remembrance Day ceremonies this year will take place at Rotary Park on Sunday, Nov. 11.
St. Mary’s Band’s new chief set to assume office Friday Continued from page 1 The band’s new chief will assume office today (Friday) in a ceremony at the band hall at 12 p.m. that will be followed by lunch. The election results originally announced on October 25 were overturned after a recount was called by chief electoral officer Marion Eunson. Originally, Casimer was reelected to her position by a margin of one vote. The initial results put her at 80 votes, and Whitehead at 79. After the recount, Whitehead had earned 83 and Casimer, who was a councillor for 12 years before
assuming the chief position, was behind with 82. Marty Williams and Casimer will retain their seats on council after the vote. Eunson said in a memo to the candidates, voters and community members that there were two spoiled ballots in the initial vote but it was later determined they fit the standards to be accepted. On the ballot were six candidates in total for the three vacant council positions including Troy Hunter, Remus Clement and Rod Birdstone.
The chief is elected in the same way the councillors are. The electorate will vote for the councillors and the person who receives the most votes becomes the chief. Each voter gets three votes for their chosen councillors and there were 120 total voters. Joe Pierre and Corey Walkley were not up for re-election. The band holds elections every two years with each position lasting for four. Vickie Thomas, chief operating officer for the St. Mary’s Band Administration, said in September that the overlap allows at least two
members to remain on the board to welcome in potential new members and provide their expertise. This year’s election was handled slightly differently with the new members being sworn in immediately. Previously, newly-elected councillors would be voted in during October, and would spend November and December shadowing the former councillors in their final months. Now the new councillors will be sworn in November 2 and will have voting power as of that day.
Page 4
Friday, november 2, 2012
daily townsman
Local NEWS
Annalee Grant photo
MADD Kimberley/Cranbrook officially launched its first ever red ribbon campaign at Cranbrook City Hall on November 1. Firefighter Brandon Cavener tied a ribbon onto one of the city’s fire trucks as Mayor Wayne Stetski and Cpl. Pat Prefontaine did the same to a city vehicle and an RCMP cruiser. Ribbons are available at the Cranbrook Daily Townsman office and other locations around town.
MADD enough to see red
C anadian Press
spots where the toxins are showing up in the river. He says testing shows fish in the river are safe and the company is confident that the treatment plant — which should be fully implemented in five years — will render the groundwater safe within federal guidelines. The problem was discovered by Teck in 2001 and is the remnant of operations conducted in Trail for more than a century. In September, Teck admitted in a U.S. court that slag from the smelter has polluted the Columbia River in Washington state for more than a century.
LE • REC YC
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VANCOUVER — Teck Resources has submitted a remediation plan to Environment Canada to deal with toxins that seeped into the groundwater decades ago from its smelter in Trail, B.C. Company environmental health manager Richard Deane says the plan calls for a treatment plant to remove heavy metals like arsenic and lead that have tainted the groundwater under the plant and an aquifer in east Trail. The plume of tainted water runs under the Columbia River but Deane says monitoring shows there are only a few localized
MADD Kimberley/ Cranbrook (Mothers Against Drunk Driving) officially launched its first ever red ribbon campaign in the two communities on November 1. Katryna Sigurdson, community leader for the local branch, said MADD will be distributing millions of red ribbons throughout Canada this holiday season, and now they will be available in Kimberley and Cranbrook as well. “Our mission is to stop impaired driving and it is possible,” she said. “By displaying the MADD Canada ribbon you make the commitment to drive safe and sober.” Sigurdson said her hope is for all Canadians to get involved simply by tying a ribbon onto their vehicle, backpack or purse and for people to get involved in their community’s safety by contacting the RCMP if they spot a potentially impaired driver. Sigurdson was
joined at the launch event by Mayor Wayne Stetski, RCMP Cpl. Pat Prefontaine and Councillor Gerry Warner. Prefontaine welcomed the local MADD branch’s work as the police officers are on the front lines of reducing drunk drivers. “We’re happy to support this campaign,” he said. “We too share this ongoing effort to reduce the number of impaired drivers on the road.” Like Sigurdson, he encouraged the public to come forward if they spot a potential impaired driver. “We’ll accept the information however you can get it to us,” he said. Stetski talked about the penalties of being caught drunk driving from the fines to the emotional penalty of injuring or killing another member of the community. He quoted a Transport Canada report that said 40,000 Canadians have been killed in alcohol related incidents since 1982 – but the toll
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Teck submits remediation plan for groundwater tainted by Trail smelter
Annalee Grant Townsman Staff
could be much higher had MADD Canada not stepped in 25 years ago. Transport Canada predicts the toll could have been as high as 70,000 had MADD not started doing public awareness campaigns. “Don’t drink and drive are four of the most important words we will ever hear,” Stetski said. “City council is very pleased to support the work of MADD.” Prefontaine encouraged those planning on enjoying the holiday season with alcohol to find another way home via a designated driver, a taxi or other modes of transportation like walking or public transit. The campaign runs from November 1 to the first Monday after New Years Day. Ribbons are available by calling Sigurdson at (250) 432-9590 or visiting the MADD Canada website. They are also available at the Cranbrook Daily Towns-
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Submitted
Cranbrook’s Community Action Program for Children play groups, Wiggle, Giggle & Grow, had an apple juice making day on October 17. Wildsight’s Patty Kolesnichenko brought an apple press and helped parents and children turn apples to juice! Above: Patty Kolesnichenko helps Ava grind juice.
Local branch of Mothers Against Drunk Driving launches red ribbon campaign
man office, city hall, Drive FM, B104 and Bear’s Eatery. Sigurdson ended her address by sharing
the MADD Canada Christmas wish that the season passes by without a single drunk driving death.
Notice of Intention to Issue Park Use Permits Per Section 20 of the Park Act, this advertisement serves as notice that the Ministry of Environment (BC Parks) intends to issue a park use permit(s) for the following purpose(s): Names of Parks • Purcell Wilderness Conservancy • Akamina Kishinena • Champion Lakes • Elk Lakes • Erie Creek • Kianuko • Kikomun Creek • Morrissey • Mount Fernie • Nancy Greene • Pilot Bay • Stagleap • Syringa • Top of the World
Activities Commercial Non-Mechanized Guiding: • Climbing & Mountaineering, • Wildlife Viewing & Nature Discovery, • Education & Training, • Hiking
If you have any questions concerning this notification, please contact the Ministry of Environment Regional Office at 205 Industrial Road G, Cranbrook or 250-489-8540.
daily townsman
friday, november 2, 2012
Local NEWS
Markets back by popular demand Annalee Gr ant Townsman Staff
This year’s Farmer’s Market was bigger than ever, and as the season turns to winter there are some opportunities coming up to soothe those impatiently waiting for the 2013 season. Erna Jensen-Shill, market manager, said they can’t keep up with the demand for more markets, but they’re doing their best. There were 16 total markets this summer, starting in June and extending all the way to Thanksgiving. JensenShill said they extended the season again this year because growers had surplus produce after an excellent grow-
ing season. “We’ve got some pretty keen market shoppers,” she said. The final Thanksgiving market was a great way to end the season, with local folk band the Good Ol’ Goats performing. “It was definitely a good day,” Jensen-Shill said. With that success still fresh in the minds of Cranbrook residents, Jensen-Shill is happy to announce the next market will be November 20 and December 1 at 1114 Baker St. That market will happen in conjunction with the Santa Claus Parade just like last year. Jensen-Shill said the Baker Street lo-
cation serves the market well, as parade goers head over after the floats have passed by. So far 55 vendors have signed up, and unfortunately the number is capped due to space limitations. Jensen-Shill said the vendors signed up in record time and there will be a lot of variety at the pre-Christmas sale. While fresh produce most likely won’t be on the menu, JensenShill said many vendors will have value added products like garlic, apple cider and perhaps root vegetables. And speaking of Christmas, Jensen-Shill said they are planning three more markets in the lead up to the holi-
days. The Cranbrook Farmer’s Market is in talks with the Tamarack Centre to have some space for 12 vendors on the three Saturdays before Christmas. The details are still being worked out, but JensenShill said it’s exciting for those who can’t get enough of the markets. “One more place and one more taste of the market,” she said. “The spirit of the market is alive and well. The community seems to be asking for more markets.” The society received the final piece of a survey they had done earlier this summer by the B.C. Farmer’s Market Society that compared Cranbrook’s market to
others in the province. The earlier results told the society that their humble market was injecting $1 million into the local economy, but further results showed the city on a provincial map. Jensen-Shill said these new results will help as the market begins to plan its fifth season. “It sort of helps put our market on the map on a provincial scale,” she said. “We’ve been sort of flying by the seat of our pants and it has worked really well so far.” For more information on the coming markets, visit www.cranbrookfarmersmarket. com.
Bullying a serious problem in Cranbrook, say organizers of rally Continued from page 1 Port and Savarie took on the rally for different reasons, but the common thread is an unwillingness to let another suicide happen in the community. “I was bullied and even bullied others,” Port admits. “I also had drug and alcohol problems and thoughts of suicide trying to figure out how to deal with my own personal hurt and anger.” Savarie said she’s involved to try to prevent another tragedy. “What inspired me to do this is the fact I am a mother who has recently lost a child – not from bullying – but I know what it is like to have the death of your child from something that could have been prevented,” she said. Port agrees, and said it’s time for bystanders to step up when they think a loved one is at risk. “The goal of this rally is to make our voices heard that we will not tolerate this hate crime in our community and that we will not let anymore lives slip between the cracks,” she said. Savarie said the issue of suicide extends far beyond what people see on the news. “Some get made
public on the news and there are numerous people that are never mentioned in the news,” Savarie said. Port agrees, and said it’s sad that it took a tragedy for the public to wake up. “Right now the problem is in the spotlight after Amanda Todd committed suicide. She has become the poster child for bullying and youth suicide,” she said. “It’s unfortunate that it took another child taking their own life for our schools and govern-
ment to get truly serious about a very serious problem.” The rally will also serve as a way to get the message out that there are caring people out there and resources that can help. “People are crying out for help everyday and they need to know that there is hope and there are people that care,” Port said. The rally will take place on November 10 at Rotary Park between 12 p.m. and 3 p.m. There will be a variety of guest speakers such as Cranbrook city
councillor Sharon Cross, psychic medium and motivational speaker Donna Hartt, leader of Young Life Jesse Jarvis, and Port herself. “I want to see people of all ages and walks of life coming together to show that they too are tired of this trend and want to see a change and are ready to stand up and say ‘no more,’” Port said. The pair hope to keep the momentum going and hold another rally next year during Suicide Awareness Week in September. For Port, seeing her
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nine-year-old daughter help spread the word of the rally has been great. “She has been extremely helpful every step of the way because she already sees the problem at such a young age and doesn’t want to see anymore people hurt,” Port said. “She is telling everybody she meets and knows to come out and get in touch with me if they want to help out.” Crisis Help Lines: Crisis Centre: 1-800-SUICIDE Kids Help Phone: 1-800-668-6868
Page 5
Kimberley Rotary Club 2nd Annual
ribs rock n roll
margarita-ville Friday Nov. 2
Cocktails 5:30 pm Dinner 6:30 pm Dance 7:30 pm Centennial Hall - Tickets: $40.00 Proceeds go to the Kimberley Rotary Playground Park. Tickets available at the Kimberley Chamber of Commerce, or call Wendy Moore, 250-427-6670 or at the door at 5:30 p.m.
Fellowship Baptist Church wishes to announce the appointment of
Rev. D. Cyril Marlatt as Pastor, effective November 1st, 2012. Everyone is invited to come hear him proclaim God’s good news message. Our church is located at 2000 - 5th Str. North in Cranbrook.
Legion Remembrance Day Wreaths Will all organization representatives who wish to place wreaths on the Cenotaph Sunday, November 11th, please be sure to obtain wreaths at the Old Telus office 4411 Ave. S. 9:00 a.m. Remembrance Day to ensure elimination of delay. Royal Canadian Legion Cranbrook Branch No. 24 Downstairs in the Heritage Inn, use rear parking lot.
PAGE 6
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2012
OPINION
DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN
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Notes from Underground, 1964
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In
August of 1964, Los Angeles became a city ignited. The DUI arrest of a young African-American sparked a full-scale riot that lasted six days. 1,600 police were joined by 14,000 National Guard members to help quell the destruction — which resulted in 4,000 arrests and 34 deaths. Watts made headlines around the world, with the L.A. Times labelling the citizens of Watts as “criminal terrorists.” The paper also urged people not to think of the riot “as the inevitable result of economic and sociological pressures.” This was the stance taken by every single newspaper in the United States. Except for one: The L.A. Free Press. The Free Press — often referred to as the Freep — was the very first Underground newspaper of the ‘60s. At the exact moment when the values of mainstream America violently collided with the values of its youth, a revolution in printing technology happened. Mimeograph and offset presses became unbelievably inexpensive; one could print 5,000 copies of a small newspaper for just under $200. It was the perfect medium for the counterculture to express their hopes as well as their rage. It also acted as a unifying force, where people of the Movement could connect with each other. The war in Vietnam, civil rights, peace and love, flower power, and smoking banana peels were the most frequent topics of the Underground papers. It was Art Kunkin who wrote about Watts in the L.A. Free Press, which he printed himself, having started it just a few weeks before. While the national news press dissected just about everything they could
about the riot, none of them thought to ask what started the disturbance in the first place. By interviewing those who lived in Watts, he was able to report about the inherit anti-negro stance of the authorities, as well as a complete denial of the neighbourhood’s overwhelming poverty. Being the first UnderMIKE’S ground paper, the L.A. Free BOOKNOTES Press was the model for all the ones that followed. Mike These included the Berkley Selby Barb, East Village Other, Chicago Seed, SF Oracle, and the Rat. Although there were less than a half dozen papers in the early ‘60s, by the mid-’60s there were well over 500, not including the thousands of high-school and GI protest papers of the time. In fact, there were so many papers being produced that two separate syndicates were formed to at least try to manage and support this new outbreak of publishing. Contemporary studies have shown the underground press to have a readership of over 15 million. And it was about this time that the underground press had an underground press of its own. Using tactics they had successfully used to bring down the Ku Klux Klan, the FBI began to publish and distribute a handful of their own counterculture papers. Hoover himself authored a twelve-step plan, hoping to cause dissent which would divide and end the counterculture’s papers. He needn’t have bothered. By the time the ‘70s came around, the Underground press was all but gone. The Movement itself had been co-opted by the more political radicals (such as members of the Weather Underground), who began to advocate for violence and terrorism as a
Art Kunkin means to their ends. Success began to kill off the papers as well. The Vietnam War was winding down; so was the draft. Much of the outrageous topics the papers featured had slowly been adopted into the mainstream. Some papers began to make a massive profit, which didn’t sit well with the Age of Aquarius people. Art Kunkin, the person most responsible for the Underground press, left the hard way. After he had published the names and home addresses of 40 undercover narcotics agents (not realizing he had put the agent’s wives and children in danger), a lawsuit forced him to turn over ownership of the L.A. Free Press (which by then was grossing over a million dollars annually). The last thing Kunkin wrote at this time was a piece about a break-in at the Watergate hotel… but the paper’s new owners weren’t interested. Mike Selby is Reference Librarian at the Cranbrook Public Library
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Letters to the Editor should be a maximum of 400 words in length. We reserve the right to edit, condense or reject any contribution. 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. Email letters to barry@dailytownsman.com. Mail to The Daily Townsman, 822 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook, B.C. V1C 3R9. In Kimberley, email bulletin@cyberlink.bc.ca. Mail to The Daily Bulletin, 335 Spokane Street, Kimberley, BC V1A 1Y9.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
features
The firestorm that swept North America JANUS: Cranbrook Then & Now Jim Cameron
To
say that Sat. Aug. 1 1908 was not a good day for the town of Fernie would be an understatement. To say that the reports across North America of the events of that day were overstated would be an understatement of large proportion. What exactly happened? Let’s start by checking the newspapers. On Aug. 2, a Los Angeles Herald article read: “The entire town of Fernie, B.C., has been destroyed by fire. News has been received at Cranbrook to forward all available provisions. Relief trains have been started with doctors, nurses and food on board. A neglected bush fire is the cause of the calamity. Fires are raging between Cranbrook and Crow’s Nest. A report is received from Hosmer that the Hosmer Lumber Company’s mill was on fire and that 6 families are cut off by the blaze. All men available have been called out to fight the flames.” In terms of the facts, the newspapers of North America should have left it right there. Reports that followed told an entirely different tale, in fact, a whole lot of different tale. The front page headlines (and there were many) across the continent cried out in alarm: MILLIONS ARE LOST IN GIGANTIC FIRE (Honolulu Bulletin), HUNDREDS PERISH IN GREATEST CONFLAGURATION IN CANADA’S HISTORY (Los Angeles Herald), 170 KILLED AND 6,000 MADE HOMELESS (New York Evening World), THREE TOWNS SHARE FERNIE’S FATE (New York Sun), CROW’S NEST COUNTRY A SEETHING FURNACE (Arizona Republican), WESTERN CANADA IS FIRE SWEPT (Warren Sheaf, Minn.), 500 DEAD 10,000 HOMELESS $20,000,000.00 LOST IN FLAMES (San Francisco Call), and on and on. The Spokane Spokesman Review and the Phoenix Republican called it the greatest disaster since the San Francisco fire; the Alexandria Virginia Gazette placed it second. One town destroyed, three towns destroyed, six towns, the entire Kootenay, Kootenai, Kootena Valley. Fernie flattened. Michel flattened, Sparwood, Sharwood, Cokado,
Victoria Avenue Fernie, as it was before the great fire of August 1, 1908 – photo J.F. Spalding
The ruins of Victoria Avenue after the fire – J.F. Spalding Elko, Coal Creek, Hosmer, Posmer, Homer and Morrissey all gone. The mysterious, nonexistent towns of Olson, Wardrop and Woodtown completely wiped out. The Salt Lake Herald claimed 70 dead, San Francisco 125, the Albuquerque Citizen 170 fatalities. Honolulu estimated 200 and the Spokane Press 700. The New York Sun hit the bell with estimates of 800 to 900. Mr. Forrester, his wife and 30 men trapped while fighting to save the Sparwood Lumber Co., make that logging camp No. 4. Make that sixty men and four women. Men died trying to save the Great Northern Railway bridge at Michel, men died trying to save their homes, four drunkards were left to burn in the Waldorf Hotel, one woman died of fear, an old lady wrapped in a wet blanket and abandoned by her son and his family to die in her yard, a woman dead and quickly bur-
ied by neighbours in her garden as the flames approached. Brave firemen extinguished in great numbers, fighting to the end. From Los Angeles: “THE AIR ITSELF IS AFIRE. - Bodies recovered burned beyond recognition. In scores of instances flesh has been burned to a crisp. It is probable many human beings have been reduced to ashes.” All railway bridges, tracks and rolling stock destroyed. Nothing left in Fernie but six shacks and a coal mine office. Two coal mine offices, the Trites – Fikes - Woods warehouse, 10 cottages, 6 residences, 25 houses and a railway car. Fernie is still burning. Part of Fernie is safe. Absolutely nothing is left. The Fort Steele Brewery was the first to go. The fire started at the P. Burns Meat Market when a flaming piece of wood flew into town. A 70-foot long building rose into the air from
the heat and landed in the middle of Main Street. “The Hosmer dynamite magazine blown up by committee when it became certain the town was in the path of the flames,” declared the Bemidji (Minnesota) Daily Pioneer. “One man killed as the massive explosion tore a great hole in the mountain side and shook the country for 20 miles.” The people are trapped, the people are escaping. Thousands have escaped and are camped on a small prairie surrounded by smoke and flames, living in huts made of brush and blankets. Premier Campbell arrived at Michel on a railway handcar carrying three badly burned men. Dead bodies of several little girls found in different parts of the city. Men screaming and women hysterical. Women screaming and men hysterical.
See JANUS , Page 15
friday, november 2, 2012
Page 7
What’s Up?
KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDAR
UPCOMING Interested in computers? Didn’t learn in school? CBAL is hosting a 6 week Introduction to Computers for adults of any age beginning Friday Nov 2 at 1pm at the Cranbrook Public Library followed by refreshments. Free! Registration required: Katherine 250-417-2896 Ladies Aid of Knox Presbyterian Church Tea & Bazaar, Saturday, Nov. 3rd, 2-4pm. Saturday Nov. 3rd, 10am - 4pm, Craft Sale featuring local artisans, at the Cranbrook Golf Course. Sponsored by Cdn Federation of University Women. Proceeds to bursaries, scholarships and education to East Kootenay students. Info: 250-426-4804. Sat, Nov 3rd. - 11:00 am-1:30 pm. Jubilee Chapter #64, Order of the Eastern Star will have homemade muffins. Start your Christmas shopping early, enter our draws and enjoy a light snack. 401 - 3rd Avenue South, Cranbrook. Christmas in the Country Market & Sale, Jaffray-Baynes Lake Farmers’ Market. Sat. Nov 3rd, 9am to 4pm, Jaffray Community Centre. Over 35 tables of Christmas shopping at its best! HARMONY CHAPTER #45 Order of the Eastern Star, November Meeting, Monday, November 5th, 7:30 pm Kimberley Masonic Hall, 40 Deer Park Avenue. Visiting Members Welcome!!!!! 2012 FREE PUBLIC SWIM Wednesday, November 7th, 5:00-6:00 PM is sponsored by Chateau Kimberley. Exhibit “The Perfect Gift – Christmas Opportunities” runs Nov. 8th to Dec. 5th. Art, jewellery, pottery, or something one of a kind - stop by the CDAC Art Gallery for your holiday shopping. Reception held on Friday, Nov. 16th, 7 to 9pm at CDAC Art Gallery at 135 10 Avenue S (corner of 2nd St. and 10th Ave. S) Saturday, Nov 10: annual Minkha sweater sale - hand knitted by Bolivian women - held at Christ Church Anglican from 10am to 5pm. More info: 250-489-4528 or email beurskensaa@shaw.ca Nov.14 Kimberley Garden Club is back on winter sessions. Nov. program: Hands on Evergreen Centrepiece construction. Selkirk High School Library 7-9 pm. New members welcome. FMI: Nola 250-427-1948. Kimberley Nature Park Society Meeting on Wednesday, Nov 14 at 7:00 pm at the Kimberley Nordic Centre Clubhouse. Guest Speaker: Nigel Kitto. Topic: Recreating in the Nature Park. All Welcome! Refreshments Served! Cranbrook Community Theatre is proud to present Steel Magnolias. Directed by Bob McCue, the play runs for 10 nights, November 16 & 17, November 21-24, November 28-30 and December 1, at The Stage Door, Cranbrook. Tickets at Lotus Books.’ ONGOING Cranbrook Quilters’ Guild hold their meetings on the 2nd and 4th Tuesdays each month at 7:15 pm upstairs in Seniors Hall, 125-17th Ave. S. All skill levels welcome. FMI Betty 250489-1498 or June 250-426-8817. Cranbrook Branch of the Stroke Recovery Association of BC. Meetings are from 10:00am-1:00pm the 2nd and 4th Wed. in the lower level of the Senior Citizen’s Hall, 125-17th St. S. Bring bag lunch. Tootie Gripich, 426-3994. KIMBERLEY North Star Quilters meet 2nd and 4th Monday of each month at 7pm downstairs Centennial Hall, 100 4th Avenue. Everyone welcome. Info: Carol at 250-427-7935 or Joan at 250-427-4046. The Cranbrook Senior Floor Curling is looking for new members. Curling is Monday and Wednesday afternoons, upstairs in the Curling Rink. Info: Dave at 250-426-5387. Cranbrook Senior Centre, Branch 11 holding their meetings every third Thursday a month. 1:30pm at the hall. We always welcome new members. Do you have 2 hours every 2 months to give? E.K. Senior Caregivers Network is seeking new members for the policy making Board of our non-profit organization. Call Louise 250-426-2362. Play and Learn Parenting/Literacy Program – 8 week registered program for parents with preschool children with a facilitated play and activity component for children. Kimberley Early Learning Centre Kim 250-427-4468. StrongStart BC - FREE family drop-in program for preschoolaged children accompanied by a parent. Kimberley Early Learning Centre. Activities include circle time, play centers, nutritious snack and active play. Monday 9 - 12, Tuesday 9 - 12, Thursday 9 – 12, Friday 9 - 12. Gina 250-427-5309. Treehouse—Families with children 5 & under are invited to come play. Free drop-in program in gym of Kimberley Early Learning Centre. Transportation avail. Tuesdays, 9:00 - 12:00. Diana 250-427-0716. Canadian Cancer Society- if you have spare time and would like to volunteer, interested applicants can call 250-4268916, drop by our office at #19-9th Avenue S, Cranbrook or go to www.fightwithus.ca and register as a volunteer. ICBL-Duplicate Bridge–Senior Center in Cranbrook. Mon & Wed 7pm, Thurs & Fri 1pm at Scout Hall, Marysville. Info: Maggie 250-417-2868. Place your notice in your “What’s Up?” Community Calendar FREE of charge. This column is intended for the use of clubs and non-profit organizations to publicize their coming events — provided the following requirements are met: • Notices will be accepted two weeks prior to the event. • All notices must be emailed, faxed or dropped off in person. No telephone calls please. • Notices should not exceed 30 words. • Only one notice per week from any one club or organization. • All notices must be received by the Thursday prior to publication • There is no guarantee of publication. Notices will run subject to space limitations.
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SPORTS BRIEFS Cody Fowlie scores twice as Rockets snap Blazers’ 14game winning streak KELOWNA, B.C. _ Cody Fowlie scored twice as the Kelowna Rockets beat Kamloops 3-0 to snap the Blazers’ 14-game winning streak in Western Hockey League action Thursday. Tyrell Goulbourne also scored for Kelowna (9-62), which handed Kamloops its first regulation-time loss of the season. Rockets goaltender Jordon Cooke stopped 19 shots for his second shutout of the season. Kelowna hadn’t played since Sunday and was the fresher of the two clubs, especially in the third period when Fowlie scored both of his goals. Cole Cheveldave made 23 stops for the Blazers (16-1-1), who were playing their fifth game in seven days. The loss was also Kamloops’ first shutout defeat of the season. The Blazers’ last loss was 4-3 in a shootout to Victoria on Sept. 28. Canadian Press
Hunter Shinkaruk scores twice as the Tigers defeat the Giants 5-1 MEDICINE HAT, Alta. _ Hunter Shinkaruk scored twice as the Medicine Hat Tigers beat the Vancouver Giants 5-1 in Western Hockey League play Thursday. It was Medicine Hat’s fifth straight win and put the team above .500 for the first time in a month. Elgin Pearce, Jacob Doty and Trevor Cox also scored for the Tigers (9-8-1). Former Tiger Kale Kessy, playing in his first game back in Medicine Hat, responded for the Giants (411-0). Tigers goaltender Cam Lanigan made 34 saves for the win. At the other end, Liam Liston left the game with an injury after making 14 saves and was saddled with the loss. Tyler Fuhr made 19 saves in relief for Vancouver. Canadian Press
SPORTS
Ice send prospects to Giants for player TRE VOR CR AWLEY Sports Editor
The Kootenay Ice traded with the Vancouver Giants on Thursday, adding forward Austin Vetterl to the roster while dealing away prospects Kyle Krabben and Doug Morris. Kootenay Ice general manager pulled the trigger on the deal, which adds 18-year-old Vetterl to the forward ranks, who is playing in his second year in the WHL. The Ice are considerably younger this year and the departure of team captain Drew Czerwonka and injuries to forwards Collin Shirley (upper-body) and Luke Philp (appendix removal) forced Chynoweth’s hand. “Austin will bring much needed experience to a roster that is currently the youngest in the WHL,” Chynoweth said. “We are hoping for him to play significant minutes in all key situations.” In 60 games last year,
Vetterl posted seven goals and 10 assists, along with 27 minutes in penalties. It’s the second trade in as many days from the Giants, who earlier dealt David Musil, their No.1 defenceman and Edmonton Oilers prospect to the Edmonton Oil Kings for Mason Geersten and a first-round pick in the 2013 WHL Bantam Draft. Vetterl was on the road with the Vancouver Giants, which are currently swinging through the Central Division, when head coach Don Hay informed him of the trade. Ice assistant coach Chad Kletzel went and picked up the new acquisition in Lethbridge, and made it for practice on Thursday. He will likely get into the lineup for this weekend’s tripleheader in a home set with the Blades and Giants, along with a quick road jaunt to Medicine Hat on Sunday. “I’m a two-way time
“From what I’ve been told, he’s a good twoway player, he can play in all three zones of the ice, he’s a very good penalty killer. He can play right side and centre and he’s good on the draws.” Jeff Chynoweth centreman,” said Vetterl, of what he brings to the team. “I want to win my draws, I’m going to check against top guys, I can skate and am able to make a play or two every now and then.” Chynoweth had been in contact with Scott Bonner, the general manager for the Giants, and the two talked about a few players on the Giants roster, before agreeing on Vetterl. “Austin is a good kid,” stated Bonner, in a press
release. “We felt that he deserved an opportunity to be an everyday player and Kootenay seemed like a good fit.” The Surrey, B.C. native had previously earned the attention of Kootenay scouts, and head scout Garnet Kazuik gave the scoop to the Ice GM before the deal was made. “From what I’ve been told, he’s a good two-way player, he can play in all three zones of the ice, he’s a very good penalty killer,” said Chynoweth. “He can play right side and centre and he’s good on the draws.” The Ice surrendered Krabben, a defenceman taken 125th overall in the 2010 WHL Bantam Draft along with Morris, a listed but undrafted player out of Alberta.Both were released from the Ice after a few exhibition games in September. “From our end, we don’t like giving up some of our top prospects,” said Chynoweth, “but at the same time, we’re very
deep in that 1995-born age group already with eight guys on our roster and with a lot of 1996 and 1997s coming up the pipe, we felt that we could afford to give up two for a player who’s played for a year in the Western Hockey League.” ICE NOTES: Kootenay spent a good deal of Thursday’s practice working on special teams, as the club ranks 20th overall on the manadvantage, at 16.1 per cent. The Ice sit in the same spot on the penalty kill, which is ranked at 69.8 per cent. Jeff Hubic was skating in a yellow jersey, which usually indicates no body contact. Luke Philp had his appendix removed a few days ago, and the rookie will be out of the lineup for at least a month. Hudson Elynuik and Troy Murray—two Ice prospects taken in the 2012 WHL Bantam Draft—are currently in Calgary competing in the Western Canada U16 Challenge Cup.
Avalanche ready for first home action TREVOR CRAWLEY Sports Editor
The Avalanche are ready for the first home action of the season, as the men and women’s teams host the Columbia Bible College Bearcats on Friday eve-
ning and Saturday afternoon. The College of the Rockies wants to make it a lively atmosphere on Friday evening, which will be barbecuing burgers starting at 5:30 p.m. and local folksters The Good Ol’ Goats will be around to liven up the atmosphere as well.
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The College is offering free admission to elementary and high school students who show up wearing their volleyball jerseys. The Avs have had a two weeks of rest, as the previous weekend was their bye, but both teams are itching to get back into some league action. And after opening their season on the road, playing four games in as many days in the Lower Mainland, the teams are
eager to switch roles and face opponents that may be a little tired from the long 13-hour bus ride. The women opened their season, splitting their four game set with two wins and two losses. The Bearcats have the same .500 record, but are 3-3, with two more games experience. “We’re feeling pretty good because we’ve got a lot of good chemistry on our team,” said setter Nikki Valgardson. “It’s a lot easier to play well as a team instead of as individuals. We’re feeling confident, but CBC just beat VIU 3-0 so we’re confident, but a little nervous.” Vancouver Island University is second in the Pacwest league, with CBC right behind them, while the Avs sit in fourth. Even though the Bearcats are going to be a tough opponent, the
Avs are ready to step up their game. “We kind of sink down to other teams’ level sometimes, so I think it will be the peak of our season so far, because we’ll play up to their level of gameplay,” said Valgardson. The mens side is equally jacked to get on the court in front of a home crowd. “We’re super excited for our first home-opener of the season, I think it’s going to be a good one,” said Kellan Ward, a fifth-year libero with the volleyball team. The Bearcats men’s team won the Canadian College Athletic Association (CCAA) national championship two years ago, but Ward believes some roster turnover allows the Avalanche to be competitive. “There’s not many guys left on that squad,
so I think we got a real good shot at taking some games off them this weekend.” The men took away one match in four during their opening road trip, and Ward said the team has been identifying areas of improvement since then.
Kellan Ward
“We’re just dialling in the basics and that’s really important at this stage,” Ward said. “Whichever team doesn’t make the most mistakes tends to win most of these matches. So we’re making the basics work for us and going from there.” omen start things off on Friday at 6 p.m. and the men follow at 8 p.m. Saturday’s action begins at 1 p.m. with the women, while the men hit the court at 3 p.m.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
friday, november 2, 2012
Page 9
Sports Galaxy end Whitecaps’ season with 2-1 playoff win Monte Ste wart Canadian Press
CARSON, Calif. — The Vancouver Whitecaps saw their Major League Soccer season end Thursday night with a 2-1 playoff loss to the Los Angeles Galaxy. Landon Donovan’s penalty-kick goal in the 73rd minute gave the defending-champion Galaxy the come-frombehind win at the Home Depot Center.
L.A., which finished fourth in the Western Conference, will now meet the first-place San Jose Earthquakes in a two-game, total-goals series. Mike Magee also scored for Los Angeles. Darren Mattocks scored Vancouver’s lone goal. The Whitecaps posted just three victories in the second half of the 34-game regular season, but looked like they
would pull off a major upset after Mattocks scored when the game had barely begun. L.A. had earned home-field advantage in the do-or-die game by finishing fourth in the Western Conference. The Whitecaps placed fifth, getting into the playoffs as a result of a Seattle victory over Dallas. Donovan was awarded the spot kick after
Whitecaps second-half substitute Martin Bonjour knocked him down from behind. The foul came just a minute after Bonjour entered the game for injured captain Jay DeMerit. Magee tied the game in the 69th minute as he volleyed a cross behind Vancouver goalkeeper Brad Knighton from the centre of the 18-yard box. L.A. pressed several
times in the first half, but the scoring attempts were either thwarted by timely Vancouver defensive plays, including a number of blocked shots, or saves by Knighton. Mattocks opened the scoring in just the fourth minute. Midfielder Matt Watson broke down the left flank with the ball and put a slight-angle pass back to Mattocks in the middle of L.A.’s 18-
Argos head into CFL playoffs, beat Hamilton 43-40 Dan R alph Canadian Press
TORONTO—Chad Owens and the Toronto Argonauts are heading into the CFL playoffs on the craziest of rolls. Owens broke the CFL’s single-season allpurpose yards record and Swayze Waters booted a 51-yard field goal with no time remaining as the shorthanded Argos, minus 11 regulars, rallied for a wild 43-40 win over Hamilton on Thursday night that eliminated the arch-rival Tiger-Cats from playoff contention. Toronto (9-9) rested 10 starters _ including quarterback Ricky Ray _ and linebacker Brandon Isaac served a one-game suspension for an illegal hit last weekend against Saskatchewan’s Darian Durant. But that didn’t deter the Argo subs, who surged to a stunning 20-3 first-quarter advantage before Waters’
game-winning boot brought the season-best Rogers Centre gathering of 27,283 to its feet on Fan Appreciation Night. “When they scored to tie it up at the end I knew we were going to have a chance so I went on the sidelines, hit a few into the net and tried to prepare myself,’’ Waters said. “You have to prepare for that situation all the time because that’s why they have you here, to make kicks and win games. “But it doesn’t happen very often so I was excited to be able to put it through the pipes . . . it gives us momentum heading into the playoffs.’’ Toronto will host either Edmonton or Saskatchewan in the East Division semifinal Nov. 11. Hamilton’s loss clinched a playoff berth for the Eskimos, who can finish third in the West by downing Calgary on
Friday and having the B.C. Lions beat the Riders on Saturday. Should Edmonton lose or Saskatchewan win, the Riders will take third and the Eskimos will travel to Toronto and face their former starter in Ray. The Esks were 2-0 this season against the Argos, who obtained Ray from Alberta last December. “That was a clutch kick,’’ Argos head coach Scott Milanovich said of Waters’ winning boot. “I mean you have (Chris) Williams back there . . . with the game on the line. “We’re playing better, there’s no doubt about that. I know offensively we’ve picked up the pace the last three weeks. I think we’ve got our confidence back. If you have a great quarterback and some confidence you’ve got a chance to win.’’ The Ticats (6-12) played all of their regu-
lars, and with good reason: they desperately needed the win to keep their slim playoff hopes alive. But Hamilton continually shot itself in the foot against the Argos’ B-team, which played veteran Jarious Jackson and rookies Trevor Harris and Zach Collaros at quarterback in the contest, with Collaros’s 13yard TD pass to Sammy Tranks putting the home team ahead 37-26 at 3:38 of the fourth. Starter Henry Burris, 37-of-55 passing for a career-high 497 yards and four TDs, pulled Hamilton to within 40-33 with 2:47 remaining with a three-yard TD strike to Avon Cobourne. After two incompletions that
took just 26 seconds by Collaros, the Ticats got the ball at the Toronto 39-yard following a 35yard punt return by Williams with 2:15 to play. Burris and Williams then hooked up on fiveyard touchdown pass _ giving him a career-high 43 this season _ that tied the score 40-40 with 1:10 remaining. Burris finished the season with 5,367 yards passing _ another career high _ while Williams had four catches for 104 yards and two TDs, boosting his clubrecord total to 18. But Collaros took over at the Toronto 42 with a minute remaining and marched the Argos to the Hamilton 44 to set up Waters’ winning boot.
NEW YORK _ The NFL and the players’ union are combining to donate $1 million to the American Red Cross to help in the recovery efforts in the Northeast after Hurricane Sandy. Also, the league and its network broadcasters will run TV pregame and in-game messages to promote donations during this weekend’s games, beginning with Thursday night’s game on NFL Network between Kansas City and San Diego. Commissioner Roger Goodell and NFLPA Executive Director DeMaurice
Smith announced the donations Thursday. “This contribution on behalf of all 32 clubs and players throughout the league will help the American Red Cross assist people in need in the affected areas,’’ Goodell said. “We salute the dedication of those who have been working so hard on the rescue, relief and recovery effort.’’ The NBA and its players’ union followed suit with a similar donation to the Red Cross and other organizations, including The Salvation Army, New York Cares and Jersey Cares, that have mobilized to assist the peo-
ple and communities affected by Hurricane Sandy. And the NBA’s broadcast partners will air messages to encourage fans to support relief efforts by the Red Cross. “Many homes and lives were devastated by Hurricane Sandy and our thoughts, abiding concerns and hopes are with all those affected,’’ said NBA Commissioner David Stern. “The immeasurable damage and heartbreaking impact of this latest natural disaster continues to shock all of us,’’ added NBPA Executive Director Billy Hunter.
F
ute, limping off with an apparent leg injury. Scottish striker Kenny Miller, who has come under criticism for his lack of scoring, took his place. After Donovan scored, Whitecaps assistant coach Paul Ritchie was ejected for heckling referee Siliviu Petrescu from the bench.
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Pro sports leagues donate funds to aid hurricane relief efforts C anadian Press
yard box. The Jamaican striker then put a low shot into the right corner of the Galaxy net. The goal was the first Whitecaps’ first-ever goal against the Galaxy at the Home Depot Center. Vancouver had gone seven games without an away goal before then. Mattocks left the game in the 59th min-
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Page 10
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Friday, november 2, 2012
NEWS Europe’s oldest town unearthed near salt deposits V e s e l i n To s h kov Associated Press
SOFIA, Bulgaria _ A prehistoric town unearthed in eastern Bulgaria is the oldest urban settlement found to date in Europe, a Bulgarian archaeologist said Thursday. Vasil Nikolov, a professor from Bulgaria’s National Institute of Archaeology, said the stone walls excavated by his team near the town of Provadia are estimated to date between 4,700 and 4,200 B.C. He said the walls, which are 3 metres (10 feet) high and 2 metres (6 1/2 feet) thick, are believed to be the earliest and most massive fortifications from Europe’s prehistory. ``We started excavation work in 2005, but only after this archaeological season did we gather enough evidence to back up this claim,’’
Nikolov told The Associated Press. The team has so far unearthed remains of a settlement of two-story houses with a diameter of about 100 metres (328 feet) encircled by a fortified wall . Excavations have also uncovered a series of pits used for rituals as well as parts of a gate. Carbon analysis has dated them to the Chalcolithic age to between 4,700 and 4,200 B.C., he said _ more than a millennium before the start of the ancient Greek civilization. ``New samples of the excavations have been sent to the University of Cologne, Germany, for further evaluation,’’ Nikolov said. Bulgaria, a Balkan country of 7.3 million, hosts numerous Neolithic, Chalcolithic and Bronze Age settle-
The prehistoric town at Provadia features two-storey houses and a defensive wall. ment mounds as well as significant remains of Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine urban centres. Nikolov said the settle-
ment near Provadia was home to some 350 people who likely produced salt from the nearby rock-salt deposits.
NDP deny raining on Liberal parade C anadian Press
VICTORIA – B.C. Opposition New Democrat Leader Adrian Dix denies his party is upstaging the Liberal government in connection to a tourism-related announcement. Dix promised today that if an NDP government were elected next May it would re-establish Tourism BC, the industry-led, government-funded
tourism marketing body the Liberal government dumped six months before the 2010 Winter Olympics. The Liberals say their own news conference announcing the return of Tourism BC was set for Monday, something Jobs, Tourism and Innovation Minister Pat Bell told the Vancouver Board of Trade in August. Dix says the New Democrats
have been calling for a return to an industry-led Tourism BC model, with its formula-based provincial funding since the provincial marketing plan was eliminated. He says when the government folded Tourism BC into tourism ministry budgets the industry became tied to the ups and downs of provincial revenues.
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AFP
``They boiled brine from salt springs in kilns, baked it into bricks, which were then exchanged for other commodities with neighbouring
tribes,’’ Nikolov said, citing as possible evidence the gold and copper jewelry and artifacts that have been unearthed in the region. The most valuable is a collection of 3,000 gold pieces unearthed 40 years ago near the Black Sea city of Varna. It is believed to be the oldest gold treasure in the world. ``For millenniums, salt was one of the most valued commodities, salt was the money,’’ Nikolov said adding that this explained the massive stone walls meant to keep the salt safe. The two-story houses, as well as the copper needles and pottery found in graves at the site, suggest a community of wealthy people whose likely work was the once-lucrative production of salt.
Argentina drops voting age to 16 ahead of election Almudena C al atr ava Associated Press
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina _ President Cristina Fernandez on Thursday celebrated a new law that lowers the voting age to 16, a move that could have a big influence in next year’s congressional elections. The law that won final approval Wednesday evening expands ``the rights of our young people so that they can use one of the most important weapons, the showing their opinions at the voting booths,’’ Fernandez said. The change adds 1.4 million young voters, expanding the elector-
ate by close to 5 per cent. The government has tried hard to court these voters. The ruling party and its allies control congress, but they lack the two-thirds majority in both houses needed to change the country’s constitution. Opponents fear Fernandez could then eliminate term limits and rule indefinitely. Fernandez was reelected in October 2011 with more than 54 per cent of the vote. If her opponents can manage to hold onto enough seats in the House and Senate next year, they can prevent any constitutional
changes until after her second term is over in 2015. Despite rampant speculation about a ``re-re-election,’’ Fernandez has kept both supporters and opponents in line by declining to define her plans. Ruling party Deputy Diana Conti, who presides over the lower chamber’s constitutional commission, ridiculed term limits as ``stupid.’’ ``If the main thing is to alternate leaders and alternating means putting in someone inept, democracy and even civil society suffers,’’ she told Radio Continental on Wednesday.
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friday, november 2, 2012
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friday, november 2, 2012
COMICS Horoscopes by Jacqueline Bigar
• Siding • Custom Bending • Leaf Covers • Custom Down Spouts
• 5” Continuous Eaves Troughs • Gutter Cleaning • Soffit • Fascia
Mark Lee
Phone: 250.426.0422
ARIES (March 21-April 19) You could be more gruff than you realize. You say what you think and do what you say. Be careful, as some people are not used to your forthright style. Anger or hostility could come out with the wrong person. Ouch! Tonight: A force to be dealt with. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) When you’re frustrated, no other sign rivals your ability to become overindulgent. You could be attacking your checkbook, or a partner might be acting as if money grows on trees. You’ll want to assume control for now, so be sure to utilize your self-discipline. Tonight: TGIF. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You come off much stronger and more rigid than you might realize, especially right now. You could hear some sharp words, which might be directed at you but really have nothing to do with you. Let those comments slide right off you. Tonight: All smiles, beaming into the night.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You might want to funnel your energy -- both negative and positive -- into a project. You could be overwhelmed by everything that comes up. It would be better to incorporate your vigor into a pending project than to let it get out of control. Tonight: Choose a stressbuster. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Zero in on what is happening within your immediate circle. A child or loved one could act up out of the blue. Tempers will flare, but as long as no one holds a grudge, a resolution is possible. You might be catering to someone more than you wish you were. Tonight: You are the party! VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Pressure builds among those around you. Delivering what you promised remains critical. You have the same expectation of others. Do not allow anyone to rain on your parade. Use care with a volatile roommate or family member. Tonight: A must appearance. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) If you find yourself at an impasse, detach ... at least until you can get
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a variety of perspectives on the situation. You could be careless around machinery. Stay current with electrical and mechanical equipment. Tonight: Go with an unusual invitation. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Realize that you are doing an excellent job of juggling various interests. You understand where a partner is coming from, and you get his or her logic. You could be frustrated with yourself and your lack of self-discipline. Go for a walk rather than blow your top. Tonight: Go along with a loved one’s suggestion. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Do you really think you can sit on your feelings and put up a front? Somehow your body language and facial expressions will tell on you. You are better off gently expressing your anger and frustration with your words so that others can hear what you have to say. Tonight: Remain responsive to a key person in your life. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Focus on your ability to get a job done. A friend or loved one might want to pitch in at the last min-
ute; however, you could be more rigid than you think, and someone else’s style and organization might irritate you. Tonight: Out with a cohort. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Remain playful and open with others. You could become frustrated with a friend, or vice versa. Try not to get assertive, fussy and/ or critical. Someone lets you know just how much he or she is aggravated. Avoid a reaction, if possible. Tonight: Follow the fun, and make sure there is music. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Be sensitive to a family member who might be distressed by the amount of time you spend with an older friend or a respected associate. The smart thing is to not get into it with this person -- neither of you needs a fight right now. Tonight: Stay close to home. BORN TODAY Singer Erika Jo Heriges (1986), political commentator Pat Buchanan (1938), former Queen of France Marie Antoinette (1755) ***
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Rhymes with Orange
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Page 13
Annie’s Mailbox by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Annie: I live in Europe. I visit my parents twice a year with my kids, and my parents visit us annually. I recently asked that no relatives visit during my son’s spring break so he can concentrate on his SATs and AP exams. My parents, however, insist they would not be a bother and against my wishes are planning to come during spring break and live at our house for two weeks. They always expect us to entertain them and take them out of town on the weekends. What can I say to make them change their minds? -- 50 Years Old but Still Feeling 5 Dear Old Enough: Unless there is a good reason why your folks picked this time to visit, we strongly urge you to put your backbone in place. Tell your parents as sweetly as you can manage that if they insist on coming at precisely the time you asked them not to, you are so sorry, but you won’t be able to put them up in your home because your son cannot have any distractions. You also won’t be taking weekend trips for the same reason. Tell them how awful it is that you can’t provide the type of company they were hoping for and that your son won’t be able to enjoy their visit. Give them the name of a local bed-and-breakfast and suggestions for day trips and places of interest. Do it nicely but firmly, and don’t back down. They will be upset, but they’ll get the message. Dear Annie: Three years ago, I moved back to my hometown. My older brother, “Jerome,” lives here. He is an outspoken and grumpy old man. His wife and I are friends and talk on the phone often. Here’s the rub: I haven’t been invited for a holiday or birthday celebration since I moved here. We exchange gifts, but they have cake or dinner after I leave. Yet my sister-in-law’s family is always invited. I would often take baked treats over, but I stopped. Should I stop exchanging gifts, too? My sister-in-law knows this is hurtful, but she says only that Jerome doesn’t like a lot of people around. Is he that uncaring? I rarely talk to him now, and I haven’t been to his house in months. He has dropped over here a few times to bring produce or canned pickles. I wish I could just get over it. -- Baffled Dear Baffled: We think the fact that Jerome drops by with produce and canned pickles indicates that he’d like a closer relationship, but doesn’t know how to achieve it. Have you invited him to your home for a birthday or Christmas party? That street runs both ways. You also could tell him directly that you’d love to stay for cake and ice cream at the next birthday party and see how he reacts. It can’t hurt. Dear Annie: In response to “Another Lonely Wife” (and many other unhappy wives), I share your pain from a husband’s point of view. After countless romantic dinners, fun weekend getaways and vacations, tickets to her favorite events, a 25th wedding anniversary cruise and doing my fair share of household chores, the “return” on my efforts is nearly zero. It’s not that I expect it for every gesture I make, but being constantly rejected sexually has taken its toll on my happiness. I would never reject any advances from my wife -- not that she has made many in 10 years. She says she loves me, but she should add, “But I don’t want to have sex with you ever again.” It’s like I have a roommate, not a soul mate. It reminds me of the story of the couple who put a dollar in a jar every time they made love. After 10 years, they paid for a trip to Hawaii. In my case, I wouldn’t be able to pay for the gas to get to the airport. -- Sad Husband Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, 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 Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2012 CREATORS.COM
Page 14
Friday, november 2, 2012
TV GUIDE
Saturday Morni n g/Afternoon Saturday Morning/Afternoon
7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30
Cbk. Kim.
# Cbk. $ # % $ & % _ & ( _ ) ( + ) , + ` , 1 ` 3 1 4 3 6 4 7 6 8 7 9 8 : 9 < : = < ? = @ ? @ A A B B C C D D E E F F G G H H I I K K L L M M N N O O P P W W ¨ ¨ ≠ ≠ Ø Ø ∂ ∂ 102 102 105 105
Rememb-When # KSPS-PBS Amer FlyTy Motor Gree Wood Rough Home Old House Kitche TBA Cook Cook’s Victory Antiques Kim. 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 Cash 3:00 Cash 3:30 $ CFCN (6:00) Juicebox Anne Hobo Marilyn Denis Cash Living Written Car Operat’n Smile Worst Drivers Lovett Dr. Amer FlyTy Motor Gree Wood Rough Home Old House Kitche TBA Cook Cook’s Victory Antiques Rememb-When # KSPS-PBS College Football % KXLY-ABC Paid Paid Good Morning Hanna Ocean College Football Juicebox Anne Cash Liberty Living Paid Written Back Car Operat’n Smile Worst Drivers Lovett Dr. Cash Cash $ CFCN (6:00) This Morning Doodle Hobo Doodle Marilyn Busy Denis Busy Liberty Cindy Foot Foot College Football & KREM-CBS Paid KHQ GoodNews Morning College % (6:00) Today SaturdayHanna Ocean College Football Lazy Wiggle Paid Sports Illus College Football Football _ KXLY-ABC KHQ-NBC Paid This Morning Doodle GameDay Doodle Busy Busy Liberty College Football & College Motor Liberty Scott FirefitPaid Back 30 for 30 Cindy Foot CFL Foot CFL Football ( KREM-CBS TSN F1 Racing (6:00) Today KHQ NewsEnglish Saturday Lazy WiggleLeague Paid Soccer Sports Illus College Football _ Premier League Soccer English Premier Soccer UEFA Cricket Motorsports ) KHQ-NBC NET Sportsnet Con. Pre Racing College GameDay Motor Scott Firefit 30 for 30 CFL CFL Football ( TSN F1 Fishful Saturday Morning News Fishn Fishing Power Driving News Con Howie Simp Simp + GLOBAL BC Can Con. Pre English Premier League Soccer English Premier League Soccer Soccer UEFA Cricket Motorsports ) NET Sportsnet Nelly Martha Rolie Tree Jelly Lilly Arthur Upside Miss Dino Wild Dogs Dogs Rivers Rivers Mega Builders , KNOW Dino Fishful Saturday Morning News Fishn Fishing Power Driving News Con Howie Simp Simp + GLOBAL BC Can Busy Animal Super Dood Gold Absolutely Nature/ Things fifth estate Figure Skating ` CBUT Mon Dino Nelly Martha Rolie Tree Jelly Lilly Arthur Upside Miss Dino Wild Dogs Dogs Rivers Rivers Mega Builders , KNOW Saturday Morning News Driving Fishing Power Can House Con Howie Simp Simp Simp X-Men M CICT Nature/ Things fifth estate Figure Skating ` CBUT Mon Busy Animal Super Dood Gold Absolutely Driving House Con Howie O CIVT Saturday Saturday Morning Morning News News Driving Fishing Fishing Power Power Tradi Can House Con Howie Simp Simp Simp Simp Simp Simp X-Men X-Men M CICT Cat in News Rated Kid Almost Spong Spong Po Power Simp Yu-Gi- Simp Mon Simp Victo X-Men Victo 6 YTV Kid Saturday Morning Driving T.U.F. 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November 4
7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30
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November 3 Sunday Afternoon/Evening
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daily townsman / daily bulletin
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4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30
Profile Space-NASA Doc Martin The Midwife Masterpiece Broadway Foyle’s War Art in the 21st KSPS-PBS Electoral Dysfunction Gas Engrave-Nation News Upon a Time The Mentalist Amazing Race Mob Doctor News News The Mentalist CFCN Gas V.Dyke V.Dyke News ABC News Made Funny Videos Upon a Time Revenge 666 Park Ave. News V’Impe KXLY-ABC American Ski Edition News News News Up 60 Minutes Amazing Race The Good Wife The Mentalist News 5th KREM-CBS (2:00) NFL Football (:20) NFL Football Mark CSI: Miami Criminal Minds News Paid KHQ-NBC Paid Youth Football Night/America Football Night (:15) NFL Football SportsCentre Motor SportsCentre SportsCentre TSN NASCAR Sportsnet Con. Hall of Fame ATP Tennis UFC Wired Ultimate Fight Sportsnet Con. Poker NET (2:00) NFL Football News News Hour Simp Cleve The Simpsons Movie The Good Wife News Block GLOBAL BC Mr. & Mrs. Smith Victorian Farm Helen of Troy Frontiers of Great Migr. New Tricks Dalziel Pascoe Dalziel Pascoe Spellbound KNOW Hope-Wildlife Over Lilo & Stitch Heartland Over the Rain Just/Laughs National News fifth CBUT Reci Over the Rain News Evening News Simp Cleve The Good Wife The Simpsons Movie News Block Paid Paid CICT (3:00) Mr. & Mrs. Smith News News Hour Simp Cleve The Good Wife The Simpsons Movie News Block Paid Paid CIVT (3:00) Mr. & Mrs. Smith Dr. Seuss’ The Cat in the Hat Tooth Fairy Celebrity Splatdown The Pick Weird The Weird YTV Stuart Little NFL Trout McCar Ray Theory Two Simp Cleve The X Factor News Bones Sunny KAYU-FOX NFL Football Newsroom CNN Presents Piers Morgan Newsroom CNN Presents Piers Morgan Newsroom CNN Presents CNN Newsroom Jurassic Park III Deadliest Deadliest Deadliest Deadliest Ways Ink Master Ink Master SPIKE Res Haz House Hunters Hunt Hunt Four Houses House Hunters Holmes Makes Four Houses Urban Urban Haz Haz HGTV Haz Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Ship Ship Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor A&E Beyond Scared Stor Pick Middle Middle Middle Middle Middle Middle CMT Middle Middle Middle Middle Middle Middle Middle Middle Middle Middle Pick My Undercover Love It-List It What Happens in Vegas Deal W Dine Dine Life as We Know It Beauty World Without Copper Common Law World Without Copper Common Law Die Anthr Day SHOW Die Anthr Day 21st Century MythBusters MythBusters Auc Auc 21st Century TBA MythBusters DISC Cash How/ Science The The Intervention My Shopping Million LA The The Intervention My Shopping Anchorman SLICE My Shopping Me Me Me Long Island Me Me Breaking Me Me Breaking Long Island Me Me TLC Me The Listener Flashpoint Saving Hope Johnny Mnemonic (:15) Lord of War Donnie Brasco BRAVO Missing (:05) Man of the Year The American President (10:55) Dave AF1 EA2 Primary Colors (:15) American Dreamz Drama Drama Johnny Ska Game- Johnny Deten Deten Deten Deten Crash Fugget Amer. Robot Robot Archer TOON Johnny Jim Jessie Wiz Shake Austin Good Really Wiz Deck Big Concert Wendy Wu: Warrior Eddie’s Cook-Off FAM Good Ran Win a Date With Tad Hamilton! The Closer American Pie 2 WPCH Theory Theory Theory Theory My Best Friend’s Girl LOL :-) LOL :-) Match Match Just/Laughs COM Sein Sein Russell Peters Theory Com Match Match Com Com Just/Laughs The Pink Panther The Lion Pandora’s Box Lola TCM (2:45) Fiddler on the Roof Liqui GetS Mantracker GetS Liqui Mantracker Ghost Hunters Ghost Hunters Ghost Hunters OUT GetS Liqui Mantracker Pawn Pawn Amer Amer Truckers Amer. Pickers Pawn Pawn Mountain Men Bomb Hunters HIST (2:00) Defiance Shark Wrnglr. Supernatural Grimm True Blood (:15) Lesbian Vampire Killers Supernatural Inner Blood SPACE Weather Wars Falling Skies Walking Dead Walking Dead Walking Dead Talk Comic Walking Dead Talk Comic Walking Dead AMC (3:30) Constantine NASCAR V.L. SPEED Center Wind Tunnel Clas Crazy Formula One Racing Monte SPEED Center SPEED F1 Racing Frasier Frasier Friend Friend Jokers Jokers Outlaw Bikers ’70s ’70s 3rd 3rd Friend Friend TVTROP Casino Casino Outlaw Bikers (:25) Gone Larry Wilmore Larry Wil Dexter Take Me Home Tonight One MC1 (3:50) The Help News News Friend Friend KTLA 5 News Sunday Edition News at 10 Two Two KTLA All the President’s Men WGN-A Videos Bloop Bloop Mother Mother Mother Mother Mother News Replay Rock Rock Rules Rules Scrubs Scrubs Sunny Sunny (:25) Papillon The Pelican Brief (:25) A Beautiful Mind Man EA1 American Dreamz Cana Popoff Christ Armor V’Impe Tom Super Tribal VISN Prince Hope Discov. V’Impe Turn Facts Hagee Meyer Osteen Be De De De MuchMusic Countdown Inbe Hip Trial Music Trial Trial The Voice 102 102 MM De Air de famille Telejnl Découverte Dieu Tout le monde en parle TJ Nou Pour Dona 105 105 SRC Coeur d’encre
daily townsman / daily bulletin
friday, november 2, 2012
Religion/features
Page 15
Remembering: The courage to make peace
of their own. These were not heroic people. They were small–time farmers, struggling to make a living. They had no power to match the mighty Nazi war machine. The struggle in Le Chambon happened in the privacy of peoples’ homes. Decisions which became turning points in that struggle were made in kitchens with husbands and wives and children quietly sitting across the table from each other, trying to figure out what to do. The Chambonais hid Jews in their homes, sometimes for as long as four years. They provided forged ID and ration cards for the refugees, and helped them over the border to safety in Switzerland. They were not fighting to liberate their
Janus: The Fernie Firestorm Continued from page 7 How did it start, this firestorm of epic proportions racing across the mountains and valleys of western Canada? A carelessly discarded match, rampaging forest fires or worse still — conspiracy theorists take note — set deliberately by the Black Hand, that subversive Italian crime organization bent on extortion and, in Fernie, bent on releasing five of their members from the local jail by starting fires in three different locations in order to create a diversion allowing them to spring their comrades. Fernie requests Cranbrook to send as many guns and leg irons as possible. A special train carrying weapons
is on its way. So sayeth San Francisco, New York and Albuquerque. And that was just the tip of the flaming iceberg. The reporting of the Fernie Fire of 1908 is a study. That the stories could be spread so quickly using nothing more than word of mouth and telegraph wires should not really be surprising. Newspapers and telegrams were the main source of information and the systems in place were both fast and effective. That such wildly diverse tales could be spread should not be surprising either. Where there are people there are stories, lots of stories. The facts may be a different story altogether. Next Week: The Great Fernie Fire.
No charges in Bantam on-ice injury C anadian Press
NANAIMO, B.C. _ The RCMP say no charges will be laid against a 14-yearold hockey player after another player was injured during a Bantam game in Nanaimo, B.C., in September. The RCMP investigated after the injured player’s father complained his son suffered a ruptured spleen during a game between a Nanaimo team and a visiting team from Saanich on Sept. 23. Police say they looked into allegations involving a body check on the in-
jured Saanich player, and a subsequent hit in which the Nanaimo player’s stick was apparently used in a spearing fashion. However, police say after speaking to witnesses to watching a video of the game, investigators have determined there was no criminal intent in either of the checks. Const. Gary O’Brien says the players, parents and Nanaimo minor hockey officials have been told about the results of the investigation.
told by Philip Hallie in a wonderful book called Lest Innocent Blood be Shed: The Story of the Village of Le Chambon and How Goodness Happened There. It is the compelling story of ordinary people who became extraordinary, not by attempting something spectacular, but by being faithful in their ordinary day–to–day lives. It is a story of faith, courage and heroism. Every November 11, when I hear the words “Lest we forget”, I remember the Chambonais and their pastor, André Trocmé. I remember because of what these people did. Remembering gives me courage and a reason to act. In the midst of an increasingly warlike world, I pray I too might have the courage to be a peacemaker. The witness of André Trocmé and the Chambonais encourages and challenges me to embody
the gospel of peace and compassion. “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.”
LE • REC YC
Yme Woensdregt is Pastor at Christ Church Anglican in Cranbrook
THIS WEEK
Cranbrook Ministerial
Church Directory Knox Presbyterian Church
Cranbrook United Church #2 12 Avenue S.
Corner Victoria & 3rd St. S. 250-426-7165
Senior Pastor: Dr. Ron Foubister Pastor to Young Families: Al Brouwer Sunday Worship, Children’s Classes – 10:00am Friendly congregation, biblical preaching, traditional and contemporary music. Everyone welcome.
(downtown by Safeway)
with Rev. Frank Lewis Ph: 250-426-2022 / Fax: 250-426-2085
Sunday Worship...10:00 am Sunday School 1st & 3rd Sundays www.cranbrookunited.com
First Baptist Church Christ Church Anglican Pastor Kevin Ewaskow Worship Service 10:30 am 334 - 14th Ave. 250-426-4319 office@fbccranbrook.org
46 - 13th Ave. S. 250-426-2644
The Reverend Yme Woensdregt, Incumbent Holy Eucharist & Sunday School 9:15 am Holy Eucharist 11:00 am
Cranbrook and Kimberley
Calvary Chapel Cranbrook 10:30 am Sunday mornings
LE • REC YC
Yme Woensdregt
country or their village. On the contrary, their resistance put their little village in grave danger of massacre, especially in the last two years of the war when the Germans were becoming desperate. Under the guidance of their spiritual leader, they were trying to act in accord with their consciences in the middle of a very bloody, hate–filled war. They acted on their conviction that their duty was to help their neighbours in need. They followed their consciences and decided that they could not hate or kill any human being. They refused to do so. Human life was too precious. It could not be taken for any reason. They chose to save as many lives as they could, even if it meant endangering their own lives. They did all this for only one reason. Their consciences were formed by the gospel. They were Christian people. They belonged to Jesus Christ. Their primary loyalty was to God. They lived by different rules than the society around them. The story of Le Chambon is eloquently
LE • REC YC
ers had an obligation to stand against this terrible wrong. And so, in his preaching, in Bible studies, in talking with his people, Pastor Trocmé convinced his small congregation to begin hiding these desperate refugees. The villagers were ordinary people, with ordinary concerns: raising their children, making ends meet, surviving this terrible war. Like many, they were afraid of what might happen to them if the Germans discovered what they were doing. Despite the danger, they agreed with Pastor Trocmé to risk their lives, disobey the powerful German army, defy the Fűhrer, and refuse to comply with the orders of the pro–Nazi Vichy government established by the Germans in Paris. It seems incredible to me that they should dare to do such a dangerous thing. How could a small village hope to withstand the mighty German empire? How would they endure? Yet they did. Goodness happened in Le Chambon. The Chambonais saved human lives at the peril
LE • REC YC
I’ve
w r i tt e n about the people of Le Chambon and the pastor of the small Reformed Church in the village before, but this is a terrific story which deserves to be well known. It’s worth repeating, particularly as Remembrance Day draws near. Le Chambon is a small town in the mountainous region of southeastern France, near the border with Switzerland. The time was 1940, early in World War 2. The cast of characters included most of the 3,000 people in the town, guided by André Trocmé, the pastor of the small Reformed Church. Across the border, in Germany, Hitler and his armies and storm troopers were implementing their program of exterminating Jews and others whom they considered to be less than human. Refugees began to flee from Germany, making their way to wherever they might be safe, and some ended up in Le Chambon. André Trocmé understood that what the Third Reich was doing was wrong. His conviction was that the villag-
The Studio/Stage Door 11 - 11th Ave. S., Cranbrook
Kimberley United Church 10 Boundary St. – 250-427-2428
Rev. Christine Dudley Sunday Worship at 10 am www.kimberleyunited.ca
250-421-1822 www.calvarychapelcranbrook.com
Interpreter for the deaf available Text 250-919-6335
Weekday Morning/Afternoon Cbk. Kim.
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dailyTOWNSMAN/DAILY townsman / daily bulletin DAILY BULLETIN
Page 16 november 2, 20122, 2012 PAGE 16 Friday, Friday, November
Share Your Smiles!
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INDEX IN BRIEF FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS TRAVEL CHILDREN EMPLOYMENT BUSINESS SERVICES PETS & LIVESTOCK MERCHANDISE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE RENTALS AUTOMOTIVE ADULT ENTERTAINMENT LEGAL NOTICES
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Obituaries
Obituaries
In Memoriam CHRIS A MAKELKI (Oct 13, 1933 - Oct 28, 2011) Chris passed away 1 year ago in White Rock BC, after battling Dementia, surrounded by his daughter Diane (& Brian), son Brent (& Donna), plus Grandaughters; Kayli, Elyse, Cheyanne and Breena. Chris was predeceased by his wife Phyllis in 2004. Chris moved his family to Cranbrook in 1972 from Nelson (formerly Saskatoon SK) and worked as a heavy duty mechanic. He always joked about â&#x20AC;&#x153;just pulling wrenchesâ&#x20AC;? but he was highly skilled and admired for his abilities. Chris had many great friends and co-workers in Cranbrook and valued meeting the boys for coffee after retirement. Chris and Phyllis moved to Chilliwack in 1996 and made some new friends but the ones in Cranbrook were very dear to their hearts. Both Chris and Phyillis were layed to rest together at the Sunneyside Cemetery in South Surrey BC close to family.
CLASSIFIEDS WILL SELL WHAT YOU WANT SOLD!
CALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202
Obituaries
Drop off your photo and name(s) of subject at the Cranbrook Townsman or Kimberley Bulletin office or email your high-resolution jpeg to bulletinprod@cyberlink.ca. Photographs will appear in the order they are received.
Gordon Benton June 4, 1952 to October 21, 2012 It is with great sadness we announce the sudden passing of Gordon Benton on October 21, 2012 in Mackenzie, BC
Gordon was born on June 4, 1952 in Kimberley, BC. He married his life-long partner, wife Jaquline (Jackie) in 1976. Gordon worked for Mackenzie Redi Mix and Sonic Concrete in the construction industry for many years. Gordon loved to ski, garden, golf and do work projects at home. He was always willing to lend a hand to those in need and would do so with a big smile. He had an awesome sense of humour and full boisterous laugh.
Business/OfďŹ ce Service
Business/OfďŹ ce Service
SERVICES GUIDE Contact these business for all your service needs!
To advertise using our â&#x20AC;&#x153;SERVICES GUIDEâ&#x20AC;? in the Cranbrook Daily Townsman, Kimberley Daily Bulletin and The Valley, call us at 250-426-5201, ext. 202. ALLIANCE
CUSTOM CLADDING
He is survived by his loving wife Jaquline (Jackie), sister Barb (Ron) Ball, brother Jim (Pat) Benton, sister-in-laws Maryanne (Tom) Datt, Terry (Wayne) Hockley, brother-inlaw Jamie Hargreaves, nieces, nephews, cousins and wonderful friends.
is a licensed centre serving the Cranbrook Community. We currently have full and part-time spaces available for children 3 yrs to pre-kindergarten age. daycare@cranbrookalliancechurch.com
Custom cladding is a Maintenance free Pre-coloured Aluminum Product, formed & fit to beautify & protect the exposed wood on your home, for years to come.
He will be very fondly remembered and very sadly missed by all who knew him. A celebration of Gordonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s life was held in Mackenzie on October 27. Donations can be made to the BC Lung Association. Guest book Tributes and Condolences can be made at www. assmanfuneralchapel.com27.
(250)489-5426
Sympathy & Understanding Kootenay Monument Installations 2200 - 2nd Street South Cranbrook, BC V1C 1E1 250-426-3132 1885 Warren Avenue Kimberley, BC V1A 1R9 250-427-7221 www.mcphersonfh.com
96*20,: 3(> J V Y W V Y H [ P V U >PSSZ ,Z[H[L 7SHUUPUN 7YVIH[L ,Z[H[L (KTPUPZ[YH[PVU
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Granite & Bronze Memorials, Dedication Plaques, Benches, Memorial Walls, Gravesite Restorations, Sales & Installations IN-HOME CONSULTATION OR VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
6379 HIGHWAY 95A TA TA CREEK, B.C. 1-800-477-9996
www.kootenaymonument.ca
End of Life? Bereaved? May We Help?
PU HZZVJPH[PVU ^P[O :[LPKS 2HTILP[a 3H^ *VYWVYH[PVU
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FRIENDSHIP PLACE Daycare Centre & Preschool
250-417-2019
No More Painting
IS YOUR COMPUTER SLUGGISH OR HAVING PROBLEMS? Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s time for a tune-up! Why unplug everything, send away & wait when SuperDave comes into your home? Specializes in: *Virus/Spyware Removal, *Troubleshooting, *Installations, *PC Purchase Consulting.
BEAR NECESSITIES
-Window & door frames. -Patio & deck, beams/ columns/stairs. -Wood trims & fascia. -Decorativeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s & shutters. -Functional vents. -Over 20 colours to choose from.
SuperDave offers affordable, superior service & most importantly; Honesty. SuperDave works Saturdays & evenings too!
Planning Winter Vacation?
Call Ken (250)919-2566. kmtapp@shaw.ca.
Call SuperDave (250)421-4044
Contractors welcome.
www.superdave consulting.ca
DUSTAY CONSTRUCTION LTD
JJ EXCAVATION & TRUCKING
(Located in the Cranbrook Alliance Church)
HOME WATCH SERVICE
~We do: ~Home checks to validate insurance ~Snow removal ~Water Plants ~Cat care and more. BONDED & INSURED
Canadian Home Builders Association
For Peace of Mind Home Vacancy.
Award Winning Home Builder
Call Melanie (250)464-9900 www.thebearnecessities.ca
Available for your custom home and renovation needs.
CONCRETE WORKS!!
You dream it, we build it!
All aspects of concrete work done from start to finish. Any finish available (stamped, polished, etc.)
www.dustayconstruction.com (250)489-6211
Mini Excavator and Dump Truck Service.
TIP TOP CHIMNEY
No job too big or too small. For free quotes call Jason (250)464-5595
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Sweeping the Kootenayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Cleanâ&#x20AC;?
R.BOCK ELECTRICAL For reliable, quality electrical work *Licensed*Bonded*Insured*
2PTILYSL`
>HSSPUNLY (]LU\L 2PTILYSL` )* ;LS!
Business/OfďŹ ce Service
Residential, Commercial Service Work No Job Too Small! (250)421-0175
Small Ads work!
SERVICES
STILL TIME TO GET THOSE JOBS DONE! Mini Excavator & Dump Truck Available -Utility excavation & installation -All types of excavation -Water & sewer line trenching -Leaky basement excavation -Landscaping -Retaining walls -Delivery & haul away of materials -Concrete & asphalt breakage & removal -All aspects of concrete from start to finish
Chimney Sweeping Fireplace & Woodstove Servicing Visual Inspections and Installations Gutter Cleaning Available
(250)919-6150 (250)489-2155
Call for Free Estimate from a W.E.T.T Certified Technician
CLASSIFIEDS
Richard Hedrich (250)919-3643
WILL SELL WHAT YOU WANT SOLD!
tiptopchimneys@gmail.com
CALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202
Not sure about the whole
Ph: 250.426.6006 Fx: 250.426.6005 2104D 2nd Street S. Cranbrook, BC theďŹ&#x201A;owerpot@shaw.ca
In times of grief, these caring professionals are here to serve and comfort your family.
digital NOW thing? is the time to get with it! On-Line Advertising â&#x20AC;&#x201C; call your advertising representative today. Townsman: 250-426-5201 Bulletin: 250-427-5333
DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN daily townsman / daily bulletin
Announcements
Announcements
Information
Personals GIRL NEXT DOOR.
Are You
Pretty Amy HOT 38, sassy blonde, fit & curvy, private sessions.
New to the Area? We’d like to
New,daytime specials Time guarantee.
Welcome
Call (250)421-6124 Cranbrook
you and your family with various gifts and local information!
KOOTENAY’S BEST ESCORTS *For your safety and comfort call the best. *Quality and V.I.P Service Guarantee *Licensed studio
Employment
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Medical/Dental
BANNISTER COLLISION & GLASS CENTRE, VERNON, BC. Due to growth in our ICBC Express Repair Body Shop, we are seeking to fill the following position: LICENSED AUTO BODY TECHNICIAN 2ND/3RD YEAR APPRENTICE Competitive Wages Good Benefits. Preference may be given to applicants with previous ICBC Express Shop Experience. Please forward your resume with cover letter by fax or email to the attention of Bill Blackey. Fax 250-545-2256 or email bodyshop@bannisters.com
DRIVERS
PSYCHIATRIC Nurses urgently required for immediate needs. Visit www.travelnurse.ca or 1-866-355- 8355
BOBCAT,
PLOWTRUCK
Local company is looking for drivers for approximately 4 to 5 hours per day with various stops. All routes are within the Cranbrook/Kimberley area. Applicants must provide a clean drivers abstract, reliable vehicle (truck or van) with current insurance. All deliveries are Monday to Friday. Please reply to: Box ‘M’, c/o Daily Townsman 822 Cranbrook St. N. Cranbrook, BC V1C 3R9 Required for an Alberta Trucking Company. One Class 1 Driver. Must have a minimum of 5 years experience pulling low boys and driving off road. Candidate must be able to pass a drug test and be willing to relocate to Edson, Alberta. Fax resumes to: 780-725-4430
Lost & Found LOST IN DOWNTOWN Kimberley. Silver Panasonic Lumix digital camera. In green and yellow mitten. Call (250)417-5577
EXPERIENCED ON-LINE marketing expertise needed. Cranbrook area. Call (250)417-0047 sds1612@yahoo.com
S.M. QUENNELL Trucking in Cranbrook, is looking for self/load and regular log truck drivers, based in Cranbrook. Full time work, home every night. Excellent medical, dental, pension benefits, etc. Wages competitive with union rates. Fax resume and drivers abstract to: (250)426-4610 or call (250)426-6853
*NEW - Ginger. Petite, HOT, 23 *Mia- Exotic, tanned beauty, slim-30 *Crystal-Pretty brunette, legs for days-25
250-426-1015 www.welcomewagon.ca
(250)417-2800 in/out calls daily Hiring
Children
Career Opportunities
Employment
operators required for snow removal season. Duties include snow removal for business and store parking lots. Must have clean drivers record and three years experience. Must be available during or after snowfalls. Sanding truck experience an asset. Opportunities for year round positions. Email resume to dwayne@ kootenaylandscape.com
Cranbrook & Kimberley:
1-800-222-TIPS
friday, november 2012 Friday, November 2, 2,2012
Daycare Centers FULL-TIME or part-time spot available in Registered Daycare for children aged 0-5years. Please call (250)581-1328
North Okanagan Sawmill is looking to hire Millwrights,Fabricators and Heavy Duty Mechanics. We offer competitive wages along with a comprehensive benefit package. Please fax resume to 250-8389637.
Career Opportunities
SMITHERS Logging Contractor is hiring Buncher, Skidder, and Processor Operators. Call Shari at 250-847-1531 or fax resume to 250-847-1532.
Art/Music/Dancing
Employment
Services
Financial Services Need CA$H Today? Own A Vehicle?
Borrow Up To $25,000
No Credit Checks!
Cash same day, local office.
www.PitStopLoans.com 1.800.514.9399
Contractors
(*30
s #ONSTRUCTION s 2ENOVATIONS s 2OOlNG s $RYWALL LARGE OR SMALL s 3IDING s 3UNDECK #ONSTRUCTION s !LUMINUM 2AILINGS 7E WELCOME ANY RESTORATIONAL WORK
Merchandise for Sale Firewood/Fuel PREMIUM
FIREWOOD,
delivered. Call Jason details. (250)464-5595.
for
Furniture SOLID OAK dining room set. Extendable oval table with two leaves, 2 captains chairs and 4 standard. Excellent condition throughout. Asking price $1,400. Phone (250)426-5251
Art/Music/Dancing
PIANO LESSONS Learn to improvise, accompany, read music and play by ear. Jazz, Classical, or Popular Styles. Adults or children, your home or in studio, — East Kootenay area. 18 years of professional experience. Graduate of Grant MacEwan College, Edmonton. Royal Conservatory background.
Geoffrey Haynes
Garage Sales
ROCKY’S SKI and SNOWBOARD. New and used skis, snowboards, boots and clothing at garage sale prices. Saturday Nov. 3. 10am to 5pm.
Misc Services
Excellence in Delivery = Results!
The Cranbrook Daily Townsman and the Kimberley Daily Bulletin have been publishing for 100 years and have been instrumental in providing the East Kootenay area the very best in local news, sports, entertainment, events and happenings that matter to our communities. In addition, the Townsman and Bulletin have developed a strong on-line news source that keeps our readers informed seven days per week, 24 hours a day with breaking news updates. Our customers expect the very best and our commitment is to deliver the very best. It starts with producing an exceptional community newspaper filled with great local stories in an easy-to-read tabloid format. Then we support it with eye-catching design, provide a good balance of advertisements to inspire the reader to seek sales and service opportunities and finally, ensure that delivery standards are at the highest level. Call For Home Delivery in Cranbrook: 250-426-5201 ext 208. Call For Home Delivery in Kimberley: 250-427-5333.
250-432-9544
Garage Sales
THE CANDYMAN, 634 Rotary, Kimberley, (across from McKim). Incredible stocking stuffers, cotton candy spun all day. Saturday, November 3rd. 9am to 4pm.
Misc Services
MARKET PLACE To advertise using our “MARKET PLACE” in the Cranbrook Daily Townsman, Kimberley Daily Bulletin and The Valley, call us at 250-426-5201, ext. 202.
WATKINS PRODUCTS
Watkins Associate Loretta-May (250)426-4632 www.watkinsonline.com/ lorettamaystewart or at Woodland Grocery.
Biodegradable Environmentally Friendly Kosher Spices Personal Care Products Ointments/Linaments, etc **Since 1860**
N
ewspapers are not a medium but media available for everyone whenever they want it. They are growing and evolving to meet the consumer’s interests and lifestyles and incorporating the latest technological developments. This is certainly great for readers and advertisers. SOURCE: NADBANK JOURNAL SEPT/08
Fight Back. Volunteer your time, energy and skills today.
PAGE Page 17 17
dailyTOWNSMAN/DAILY townsman / daily bulletin DAILY BULLETIN
Page 18 Friday, november 2, 2012 PAGE 18 Friday, November 2, 2012
Open Houses
Open Houses
OPEN HOUSES Saturday Nov. 3 11:30 am to 12:30 pm #115, 1004 -23rd Ave. N., Cranbrook $179,800 One level living, immaculate end unit, 2 bdrms, 1½ bath, great location, includes all appliances. K215295 Jeannie Argatoff 12:00 to 2:00 pm 5075 Booth Creek Rd, Cranbrook $339,900 Peaceful .55 acre, 4 bdrm, 2½ bath, huge covered deck, hot tub, large carport - this is a must see! K216056 Joy Anderson 1:00 to 2:00 pm 417 - 14th Ave. S., Cranbrook $206,000 Sunny 2 bdrm, 1 bath, single carport, private fenced yard, upgraded electrical, great starter home. K215680 Shelley Lepage & Ingrid Boudreau 1:00 to 2:30 pm 1304 - 23rd St. S., Cranbrook $424,900 4 bdrm, 3 bath, in quiet cul-de-sac, innovative design, walkout bsmt, dble garage, ug sprinklers, RV parking. K216139 Jeannie Argatoff
Merchandise for Sale
Real Estate
Real Estate
Misc. for Sale
Apt/Condos for Sale
Houses For Sale
ARE YOU MOVING?
BEAUTIFUL OCEAN front (Tiara Sands), 3bdrm, 2 bath condo. Large deck, stainless appliances, granite counters. Great opportunity, great price. Mazatlan, Mx. cvertes@telus.net. (604)857-7670
BOXES
FOR SALE Only
20 Boxes
10
$
00
LIMITED QUANTITY! OFFER ENDS SOON
822 Cranbrook St. N.
Ph: 426-5201
2:15 to 3:00 pm 522 - 5th St. S., Cranbrook $199,900 Large 50x157 lot, fenced, in *yro 3ark area - ready to move into today. K215687 Shelley Lepage & Ingrid Boudreau
Woodfired Boiler. Tarm Innova 50 controls & storage. 250-344-2603 evenings. jcross@redshift.bc.ca
3:00 to 4:30 pm 2201 - 13th St. S., Cranbrook $549,000 Beautiful home on 2.3 acres just outside city. 6 bdrm, 4 bath, garage plus 35x90 detached shop, 2 in-law suites. K215195 Jeannie Argatoff
Private Coin Collector Buying Collections, Accumulations, Olympic Gold & Silver Coins + Chad: 250-863-3082 in Town
Misc. Wanted
OPEN HOUSES Sunday Nov. 4 EAST KOOTENAY REALTY
1:00 to 2:30 pm 1004 - 17th Ave. S., Cranbrook $274,900 Beautiful 3+1 bdrm, 2 bath, gorgeous hardwood Ă&#x20AC;oors, great kitchen, large detached garage & so much more! K new Jeannie Argatoff
MOBILE HOME on own lot.
1975 Mobile Home 3bdrm, 1 bath 2 sheds in back. Parking back and front. Lot size: 112â&#x20AC;&#x2122; x 45â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Mobile size:12â&#x20AC;&#x2122; x 60â&#x20AC;&#x2122; . Partly renovated.
Asking $129,000. (250)489-4034
Open Houses
Open Houses
$SBOCSPPL t 4BUVSEBZ /PWFNCFS SE 11:30-12:00 #66-724 Innes Avenue South $174,900 Manufactured home on own land. K214505 Rob Stang
3:00 to 4:30 pm 1708 - 2nd Ave. S., Cranbrook $439,900 This home has it all. Deluxe 2 storey, dream master bedroom, cutting-edge technology plumbing & heating. Must see! K214769 Jeannie Argatoff
BLUE SKY REALTY
SOURCE: NADBANK JOURNAL SEPT/08
For Sale By Owner
pick up at
Open Houses
N
ewspapers are not a medium but media available for everyone whenever they want it. They are growing and evolving to meet the consumerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s interests and lifestyles and incorporating the latest technological developments. This is certainly great for readers and advertisers.
12:00-12:30 224 17th Avenue South $176,900 Updated home on large lot. K214687 Rob Stang
250-426-8700 1111 Cranbrook St. N. www.blueskyrealty.ca www.mls.ca
1:00-2:00 1908 2A Street South $239,000 Excellent 4bdrm starter home in great location. K216577 Rob Stang
Each office independently owned and operated.
SUBSCRIBE FOR ONLY
PENNIES A DAY
3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths. Has sunken living room with vaulted ceiling. Wood burning fireplace insert. Large country kitchen and dining room. Full basement, hardwood, floors, metal roof. New windows, cabin and greenhouse. Many upgrades. Great views. Must see to appreciate. asking
$
Cars - Domestic
Cranbrook: 250-426-8211
t XXX FLSFBMUZ DPN
EAST KOOTENAY REALTY
UI "WFOVF 4PVUI
Grand Prix GT. Supercharged V6.
87,000kms. Silver, leather, loaded. New windshield, brakes and rotors. OnStar. Mint condition.
$11,500. (250)427-4314
2006 SUBARU Impreza AWD wagon. New rear brakes. Additional rims and winter tires. Clean and well maintained. Only 89,000km.
(250)908-0460
Sport Utility Vehicle 2008 Jeep Patriot North Edition
SAT. NOV. 3RD: 11am - 1pm SUN. NOV. 4TH: 1pm - 3pm 308 5th St. S., Cranbrook
2001 Mazda ProtegĂŠ LX
Upgraded throughout, 3 bed, 2 bath, views! Phone: 250-489-3906.
Manual transmission, full tune-up, new brakes, fully serviced, safety inspected. Stk# 0290
269,900
$
$
3,49500
Rentals
EK Transmission Ltd.
Homes for Rent
1019 Kootenay St. N., $SBOCSPPL #$ t
DL#29679
2BDRM HOUSE for rent. 2 full baths. 2300 square ft. Fully furnished. $1100./mo. + 2/3 utilities. Jim Smith Lake. (778)517-4508 or (250)344-1120.
Open Houses
Black. Heated seats, cruise, tilt, power windows & locks, power mirrors, 132,000kms. Great fuel economy. Immaculate condition. Priced for quick sale.
$
8,500 Firm
250-417-7184 250-426-0712 (eve)
1993 CADILLAC Sedan deVille, 4/door. Offers. (250)489-5644
Open Houses
Open Houses
SATURDAY November 3rd
BN QN t UI 4U / Ground level condo. 2 bdrm, insuite laundry, gas fireplace, powered parking, conveniently located, well maintained. Can be quick possession. K216334 $165,000. Hosted by Melanie Walsh
QN t UI 4U / 3+1 bdrm, 2 bath, sliders from kitchen to covered deck, very clean, new flooring, some updates, great location, possession can be immediate. K215087 $179,900. Hosted by Melanie Walsh
#BLFS 4USFFU t $SBOCSPPL #$ t 5PMM 'SFF
OfďŹ ce/Retail
2000 Dodge Durango
Fully serviced, new brakes, full tune-up. Stk# 5192
$
4,99500
EK Transmission Ltd. DL#29679
1019 Kootenay St. N., $SBOCSPPL #$ t
Trucks & Vans
99 Tacoma 4x4, Automatic SR5 (fully loaded) BFG All Terrains (over 80 percent), Synthetic oil since new, Needs nothing. $8400. 250-427-2858
Is Reading Your True Passion?
Individual Office Rental Professional Offices
available on an individual basis with common reception area, boardroom and kitchen facilities. The Montrose Professional centre can offer spacious offices with main floor entry in the heart of the downtown core on an individual basis.
Monthly rentals starting at $465 per month
CONTACT:
Jason
WHEELDON
P E R S O N A L R E A L E S TAT E C O R P O R AT I O N
335 Spokane Street
Flyer Distribution Standards Association
Transportation
OPEN HOUSE
250-426-5201
250-427-5333
#43 717 21rst AVE N. Upgraded 2bdrm. lower unit. Complete with stainless steel appliances, hardwood flooring and W/D. Storage included. $750./mo. plus utilities. N/S, N/P. Call (250)421-2590
CLASSIFIEDS HELP YOU SELL CALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202
Open Houses
1:30 - 3:00 1412 21st Avenue South $339,700 1400 sq. ft. Âżnished home w 3 bdrm, 2 baths, double garage & more. K206361
2:30-3:00 124 18th Street South $449,900 Custom built home with a view. K214679 Rob Stang
2BDRM FULLY furnished basement suite. No pets/smoking/parties. $1000./mo. utilities included. Phone (250)417-0059 or (250)426-5706. Near College & Mall.
2006 PONTIAC
$13,500. obo.
(250) 426-5385
OfďŹ ce/Retail
822 Cranbrook Street North
Cars - Domestic
475,000
Please Call
250-421-7195
1:30 - 3:00 1413 21st Avenue South $267,000 1400 sq. ft, carport, 3 bdrms, landscaped & appliances included. K216039
Homes for Rent
Suites, Lower
Hosted by Cary Swanson
1:30 - 3:00 1513 21st Avenue South $308,400 1275 sq. ft. w 2 bath, 3 bdrms, landscaped & appliances & HST included K213309
Transportation
4BDRM HOUSE, $1200./mo + utilities and DD. W/D, F/S. Also, 1BDRM APT., F/S. $700./mo. + DD and utilities. Call (250)489-1324
FAMILY HOME ON 5 ACRES
Saturday, Nov. 3rd 1:30 - 3:00pm
Orchard Heights Subdivision New homes from $267,000-$369,000 New homes complete. Includes HST, Appliances & Landscaped!
Rentals
250-426-8211 250-426-9482 25-10th Ave S, Cranbrook www.cranbrookrealty.com jason@cranbrookrealty.com
EAST KOOTENAY REALTY
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DAILY TOWNSMAN
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2012
NEWS
PAGE 19
Space Station mechanics walk on the wild side MARCIA DUNN Associated Press
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. _ Two spacewalking astronauts worked on a leaky radiator system outside the International Space Station on Thursday, just hours after barely dodging a menacing piece of orbiting junk. NASA ordered the space station to change position Wednesday evening to avoid a fragment from a communication satellite that was destroyed in a high-speed collision three years ago. Thrusters on a docked Russian supply ship were fired to move the orbiting lab out of harm’s way. But a computer error caused the thrusters to malfunction and the space station did not reach the desired altitude. NASA officials said the space station and its six residents were safe despite their lower-than-intended orbit. Space station commander Sunita Williams and Japanese astronaut Akihiko Hoshide successfully rerouted ammonia coolant lines and bypassed a radiator believed to be leaking. They isolated the
suspect radiator to help flight controllers determine in the coming days whether that, indeed, is the source of the ammonia seepage. ``We’ve got smiles all around,’’ Mission Control radioed. Engineers theorize that bits of space junk may have penetrated the radiator or part of its system. Another possibility is that the 12-yearold equipment simply cracked. The radiators are needed to dissipate heat generated by electronic equipment aboard the space station. Toxic ammonia is used as the coolant, and the spacewalkers took care to avoid contamination. One or two frozen flakes of ammonia harmlessly struck Hoshide’s helmet. Thursday’s spacewalk provided some deja vu for Williams. In 2007, she retracted the spare radiator being brought into service Thursday. ``Nice to see it deployed again,’’ she said. A small leak was detected in this area in 2007. Spacewalking astronauts added
extra ammonia last year to shore up the system, but this past summer, the leakage increased fourfold. At that rate, the affected power channel could be offline by the end of the year. That’s why Thursday’s spacewalk was ordered up, even though it comes just 2 1/2 weeks before the departure of Williams and Hoshide. The two are scheduled to return to Earth on Nov. 19, after a four-month mission. Within 5 1/2 hours of going out, Williams and Hoshide had accomplished the bulk of their work. Williams asked how the four guys inside were doing. Busy, but still able to catch some of the spacewalking action, replied U.S. astronaut Kevin Ford. ``We’ll have tea on for you,’’ Ford promised. The spacewalk lasted 6 1/2 hours and bumped Williams into the No. 5 position of most experienced spacewalkers. She has spent 50 hours and 40 minutes out in the vacuum of space over seven spacewalks, the most by a woman.
NASA PHOTO
This NASA graphic shows one of two astronauts who performed a 6.5-hour spacewalk on Nov. 1. They are: NASA astronaut Sunita Williams, and Akihiko Hoshide (pictured), an astronaut with the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA).
YOU USED TO THINK GREAT DEPENDABILITY AND GREAT PRICE REFERRED TO TWO DIFFERENT TRUCKS. THINK AGAIN.
TOYOTA TUNDRA
J.D. POWER AND ASSOCIATES “MOST DEPENDABLE LARGE PICKUP IN THE U.S.“ - 7 YEARS IN A ROW
2012 TUNDRA FOR AS LOW AS
0
%
FINANCING
72
MONTHS
Lease, finance plans, cash incentives & offers from Toyota Financial Services. OAC for qualified retail customers on select new unregistered models sold and delivered between October 2 and October 31, 2012. Representative purchase finance example for 2012 Tundra models only: $35,000 at 0.0% APR for 72 months equals monthly payments of $486. Cost of borrowing is $0 for a total obligation $35,000. Applicable taxes are due on delivery. Dealer may sell for less. See your participating Prairie Toyota dealer for details. All offers subject to exclusions and may change without notice. The Toyota Tundra received the lowest number of problems per 100 vehicles among large pickups in the proprietary J.D. Power and Associates 2006-2012 Vehicle Dependability Studies SM. 2012 study based on 31,325 consumer responses measuring problems consumers experienced
Wise customers read the fine print: •, *, ‡, § The All Out Clearout Event offers are limited time offers which apply to retail deliveries of selected new and unused models purchased from participating dealers on or after September 18, 2012. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Offers subject to change and may be extended without notice. See participating dealers for complete details and conditions. •$37,998 Purchase Price applies to 2012 Ram 2500 Crew Cab SXT 4x4 (26A+AGR) only and includes $5,000 Consumer Cash Discount. See participating dealers for complete details. Pricing includes freight ($1,400-$1,595) and excludes licence, insurance, registration, any dealer administration fees and other applicable fees and applicable taxes. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Dealer may sell for less. *Consumer Cash Discounts are offered on select new 2012 vehicles and are manufacturer-to-dealer incentives which are deducted from the negotiated price before taxes. Amounts vary by vehicle. See your dealer for complete details. ‡4.49% purchase financing for up to 96 months available on the new 2012 Ram 2500 Crew Cab SXT 4x4 model to qualified customers on approved credit through Royal Bank of Canada, Scotiabank, TD Auto Finance and Ally Credit Canada. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Dealer may sell for less. See your dealer for complete details. Example: 2012 Ram 2500 Crew Cab SXT 4x4 with a Purchase Price of $37,998 (including applicable Consumer Cash Discount) financed at 4.49% over 96 months with $0 down payment equals 208 bi-weekly payments of $218 with a cost of borrowing of $7,265 and a total obligation of $45,263. Pricing includes freight ($1,400$1,595) and excludes licence, insurance, registration, any dealer administration fees and other applicable fees and taxes. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Dealer may sell for less. §2012 Ram 2500 Crew Cab Laramie 4x4 shown. Price including applicable Consumer Cash Discount: $51,685. Pricing includes freight ($1,400-$1,595) and excludes licence, insurance, registration, any dealer administration fees and other applicable fees and applicable taxes. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Dealer may sell for less. Based on Ward’s large pickup segmentation with automatic transmission. TMThe SiriusXM logo is a registered trademark of SiriusXM Satellite Radio Inc.
Page 20
Friday, november 2, 2012
SCAN HERE FOR MORE
T:10.25”
$
218 BI-WEEKLY FINANCING ‡
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daily townsman
Ram 2500 Crew Cab Laramie 4x4 shown.§
THE TRUCK THAT GOES ALL OUT, PRICED TO CLEAROUT. 2012 RAM 2500 CREW CAB SXT 4X4 •
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37,998
PRICE INCLUDES $5,000 CONSUMER CASH* AND FREIGHT.
• 5.7 L HEMI® V8 engine • Heavy-duty engine cooling • 4- and 7-pin trailer tow wiring harness • Front and rear heavy-duty shock absorbers • 17-inch chrome-clad wheels • Fog lamps • SiriusXM Satellite Radio (includes one year of service) TM
OR CHOOSE
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