Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 22, 2012

Page 1

THURSDAY

Weddings, Maternity, Newborn, Families and everything in between.

< What would Coleridge do?

NOVEMBER 22, 2012

‘Kubla Khan’ and the state of our infrastructure | Page 6

The zones, they are a-changin’ >

City reducing speed limits around Laurie, Parkland, MBSS | Page 2

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Proudly serving Cranbrook and area since 1951

Vol. 60, Issue 226

www.dailytownsman.com

PHOTO COURTESY KRISTY QUINN

AIRWAVES OF THE SEASON: Cranbrook Community Theatre’s production of “It’s a Wonderful Life, the Live Radio Show” is set to help kick off the Christmas season in Cranbrook. The play is an interesting spin on the holiday classic “It’s a Wonderful Life.” The story comes to captivating life as a live 1940s radio broadcast and the audience becomes the live radio audience of another era. See more, Page 5. Above, left to right: Jennifer Inglis, Peter Schalk, Sioban Staplin, Sean Swinwood and David Popoff. In the meantime, CCT’s production of “Steel Magnolias” is still running at the Studio Stage Door in Cranbrook.

Ktunaxa stand firm Help for families in crisis in opposition to Jumbo Rally planned for November 30 in Cranbrook

AN N A LE E GR AN T Townsman Staff

The Ktunaxa Nation remains steadfast in its opposition after the Jumbo Glacier Resort was granted resort municipality status Tuesday. Kathryn Teneese, Ktunaxa Nation chair, said the nation will gather on November 30 at its new government headquarters to rally for Qat’muk, the home of the Grizzly Bear Spirit, as nation members

launch their application for judicial review of the Jumbo Glacier Resort Master Development Agreement in Vancouver. Teneese will be in Vancouver to deliver the application and the Ktunaxa are expected to make a statement as they file the application in B.C. Supreme Court. “Once again we have been ignored,” Teneese told the Townsman about the new municipality. “Ktunaxa felt it wasn’t appropriate to

make this decision with a legal case to still be resolved. It is another example of the current government forcing this resort through despite local opposition, including Ktunaxa.” The nation alleges the approval of the resort represents a desecration of a principal Ktunaxa sacred site, the likely undoing of Ktunaxa spiritual and religious practices and a significant and unjustifiable violation of Ktu-

naxa constitutional rights. “The Ktunaxa want the judicial review to overturn the government approval of the Master Development Agreement, which would hopefully stop this resort from moving forward, regardless of its new designation as a resort municipality, which could be removed by the next government,” Teneese said.

See KTUNAXA , Page 3

New local branch of Friends of Children gives financial and emotional support to families with sick children SALLY MACDONALD Townsman Staff

Families of sick children in the East Kootenays will now have financial and emotional support by their side. Friends of Children has been providing service to East Kootenay families from its office in Prince George since 2009. But in October, the organization opened an office in Cranbrook and is now offering inperson assistance to East Kootenay families struggling with the burdens of childhood illness. Located in the Kootenay Child Development Centre, Friends of Children has a family support coor-

dinator, Pat Chisholm, who began work in October assisting families from this region. “I am very excited to take on this role,” said Chisholm. Already this year, Friends of Children has assisted families 76 times to pay for accommodation, travel and equipment costs. “It is an amazing opportunity to support families during a very stressful time with tangible and concrete resources, information and linkages that will reduce the burden for families coping with an ill or injured child,” said Chisholm.

See FRIENDS , Page 5

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Page 2 thursday, november 22, 2012

Weatoheurtlook Tonight -5

POP 40%

Sunday -9

Tomorrow 1 -2 Monday

-1

-8

Local NEWS

Saturday -6

POP 40%

Tuesday -8

POP 30%

POP 30%

Cranbrook slowing down school zones 3

-3

POP 60%

Almanac Temperatures

High Low Normal...........................-0.7° ................-7.7° Record.......................8.8°/2002 .......-24.6°/1985 Yesterday 6.4° -1.2° Precipitation Normal..............................................1.1mm Record......................................10mm/1988 Yesterday ........................................3.4 mm This month to date.....................1026.6 mm This year to date........................1429.8 mm

Nov 28

ec 13

ec 6

ec 20

Across the Region Tomorro w

Cranbrook’s transit system is under the microscope. Jasper -2/-10

Edmonton -6/-13

Banff -1/-7 Kamloops 9/0

Revelstoke 3/0

Kelowna 6/-1 Vancouver 9/5

Castlegar 5/2

today

Yellowknife Whitehorse Vancouver Victoria Saskatoon Regina Brandon Winnipeg Thunder Bay S. Ste. Marie Toronto Windsor Ottawa Montreal Quebec City Fredericton

m.sunny flurries showers showers flurries flurries flurries flurries p.cloudy p.cloudy sunny sunny p.cloudy p.cloudy p.cloudy m.sunny

The World

today

tlanta Buenos ires etroit eneva avana ong ong iev ondon os ngeles Miami Paris Rome Singapore Sydney Tokyo Washington

sunny showers p.cloudy cloudy sunny cloudy p.cloudy cloudy sunny p.cloudy sunny p.cloudy tstorms p.cloudy sunny sunny

Calgary 1/-6

Cranbrook 1/-2

tomorrow

-23/-25 -15/-22 8/6 8/7 -11/-23 -10/-18 -7/-20 -5/-20 8/-9 12/-2 13/1 14/1 10/1 9/1 8/0 9/2

p.sunny-19/-26 flurries -20/-22 rain 9/5 showers 10/5 p.cloudy-13/-14 p.cloudy-12/-13 p.cloudy-13/-17 p.cloudy-12/-20 p.cloudy -5/-10 rain/snow 4/-4 rain 10/-3 showers 8/-1 rain 10/-4 showers 9/-2 showers 10/-3 m.sunny 10/-1 tomorrow

21/7 21/18 16/8 4/4 23/13 26/24 2/2 11/8 20/12 24/12 7/6 16/9 32/26 18/15 14/10 15/4

were taken away outside middle schools and high schools,” explained Councillor Gerry Warner. “That is going to change. It is going to be 30 kilometres an

hour in all school zones. All of us are going to have to be very careful in all of the school zones in the city because this is a pretty big change.” What’s more, Cranbrook RCMP have indicated they will be patrolling the roads near the high school and middle schools once the 30 kilometres an hour signs are installed. “A lot of us have got used to driving 50 kilometres an hour in school zones. That’s going to change and I think it’s a good thing. You have been warned,” said Warner.

Review of Cranbrook’s transit system begins next week

S a l ly M ac D o n a l d Townsman Staff

Prince George 3/-4

Canada

Take care when driving past middle and high schools in Cranbrook. City council just reduced the speed limit outside Laurie and Parkland Middle and Mount Baker Secondary schools from 50 kilometres an hour to 30 kilometres an hour. Under provincial legislation, only elementary schools need to have a 30 kilometres an hour zone on roads adjacent to its grounds. But Cranbrook city council decided on Monday, Novem-

ber 19 to reduce the speed limit to 30 kilometres an hour between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. on school days outside Mount Baker, Parkland and Laurie. Elementary schools Amy Woodland, Gordon Terrace, Highlands, Kootenay Orchards, Pinewood, Steeples and TM Roberts will continue to have 30 kilometre an hour zones in front of their properties from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on school days. “I suspect many others in this city didn’t realize this, but by provincial mandate, about 10 years ago, school zones

Just hop on the bus, Gus

Precipitation totals include rain and snow

Tomorrows

unrise 8 07 a.m. unset 16 51 p.m. oonset 3 09 a.m. oonrise 2 27 p.m.

Middle and high schools soon to be 30 km/h zones, as elementary schools already are

S a l ly M ac D o n a l d Townsman Staff

POP 20%

-3

daily townsman / daily bulletin

p.cloudy sunny p.cloudy cloudy p.cloudy showers sunny showers sunny p.cloudy rain p.cloudy tstorms p.cloudy rain p.cloudy

20/4 19/15 7/-2 5/5 23/13 25/21 0/0 11/6 23/12 25/12 6/6 15/8 31/26 20/15 14/13 17/5

The Weather Network incorporates nvironment Canada data

City council has begun a review of its bus services with the guidance of BC Transit. The goal is to maxi-

mize the level of service it provides for its investment, hoping to reduce its $554,486 annual budget over two or

Regional District of East Kootenay

Wasa and Area Planning Process Introductory Meeting

three years. At a Monday, November 19 meeting, council said they have observed buses with few passengers and wish to examine whether the transit system can be changed so that ridership is more consistent. Between November 2012 and June 2013, BC

You are invited to attend an introductory public information meeting which will initiate the Wasa and Area planning process.

by

Bruce

Tuesday, November 27th 7:00pm to 9:00 pm Wasa Community Hall 6145 Wasa School Wasa, BC The introductory meetings, questionnaires, and visioning workshops are opportunities for residents to work together with RDEK staff to provide the history of and envision the future of their communities and to have that vision drafted into a bylaw that provides long range direction and helps guide future decision making. For further information, please contact Michele Bates, Planner, at 250.489.2791 or toll free at 1.888.478.7335 or mbates@rdek.bc.ca.

Transit will lead the city through the review. The process will include public surveys on buses and online, public consultation at workshops and council and staff input on a proposed service review. Look for more on the transit review in coming issues.

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daily townsman

thursday, november 22, 2012

Local NEWS

Page 3

Sally MacDonald photo

CUPE Local 2773 workers were on a two-day strike at the College of the Rockies Tuesday and Wednesday. Starting at 6:30 a.m. on Tuesday, November 20, college support workers took to the picket lines, with support from colleagues in the College of the Rockies Faculty Association. Classes were cancelled until Thursday. The action includes all College of the Rockies campuses in Fernie, Golden, Invermere, Kimberley and Creston, as well as CUPE members at Camosun College, Vancouver Island University, College of New Caledonia, Vancouver Community College and North Island College. CUPE support workers at B.C.’s community colleges have been without a contract since 2010. The unionized workers are looking for a no-concessions four-year deal with two per cent wage increases in the last two years.

A Letters Patent portrait of a municipality

The long and winding road to Jumbo Annalee Gr ant Townsman Staff

Jumbo Glacier Resort may have been named a municipality on Tuesday, Nov. 20, but don’t expect hospitals, roads and homes to spring up overnight. There’s a long road ahead into Jumbo, literally and figuratively, and a copy of the Letters Patent signed by Minister of Community, Sport and

Cultural Development Bill Bennett obtained by the Townsman speaks to the work ahead for the new three-member appointed council. First off, the Jumbo Glacier Mountain Resort Municipality will include 6,131 hectares within the municipality boundaries and will be classified as a village when it is incorporated. The appointed coun-

cil – Greg Deck as mayor, and Nancy Hugunin and Steve Ostrander – as councillors will be just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the governance of Jumbo. A number of advisory bodies will be set up by the council in the coming months and must be in place before June 18, 2013. None of the three panels can be dissolved until the first

election or until 15 years after the incorporation of the municipality. The first is a resort advisory body that the three-member council will consult with on issues related to the proposed financial plan bylaws. However, the panel will not be consulted on issues related to the first financial plan to be prepared by the

municipality by December 31, 2013. The resort advisory panel will be consulted on all bylaws under Section 8 (6) of the Community Charter which reads “A council may, by bylaw, regulate in relation to business.” The second panel will be an environmental advisory body that will be consulted on all proposed bylaws in rela-

Ktunaxa will maintain opposition Continued from page 1

Consultations with the Ktunaxa and other involved First Nations have been ongoing throughout the process but the two sides never agreed on the right path for the Jumbo Valley. “They’re not likely to convince us of anything and vice versa,” Teneese said. Teneese said the Ktunaxa were approached this summer about the creation of a mountain resort municipality and were not surprised about Tuesday’s announcement. The Ktunaxa will launch their application for a judicial review of the Jumbo Glacier Resort’s Master Develop-

ment Agreement on Nov. 30, and Teneese said the Nation will continue on as planned after the municipality was approved. “There’s no reason for us to change our plan,” she said. “We are disappointed and concerned that there’s an attempt to try to distract from whether or not the proposal should proceed.” In a press conference announcing the new municipality on Tuesday, Minister for Community, Sport and Cultural Development Bill Bennett said the judicial review should not effect the new municipality designation.

“My understanding of what they’re asking the government to review is the decision to sign the Master Development Agreement, so that wouldn’t have any impact on government’s decision to issue the Letters Patent today,” he said. “So there is no connection.” But Teneese disagrees, saying that if the judicial review goes ahead, the project cannot proceed. “The Master Development Agreement is the overall guide to whether the project proceeds,” she said. Bennett said that if a judicial review is approved and a Supreme

Court Justice were to find issues with the process that led up to the Master Development Agreement being approved, that could cause issues with the new municipality. “If the judge was to review the Master Development Agreement and the process leading up to it and found some fault, obviously that would have some impact on the process overall,” he said. Teneese said the looming provincial election may be the reason the Mountain Resort Municipality status was granted now. “I think everything right now has to do with the election coming up

in May,” she said. She believes that when British Columbians head to the polls, their opinion of the Jumbo Glacier Resort will be reflected in their vote. After the Nov. 30 rally, the protesters will march from the Ktunaxa Nation Government building to the Cranbrook Law Courts where they are requesting the judicial review take place. “We think it’s important for the hearing to take place in closer proximity to the location,” she said. Teneese urges the public to get informed about all sides of the issue.

tion to Part 26 of the Local Government Act which concerns planning and land use. The final advisory body will be made up of First Nations members. The Letters Patent says the council must invite members of the Shuswap Indian Band and the Ktunaxa Nation and may invite other First Nations to nominate a member to be a part of the panel. The First Nations body will consult on all issues related to section 8 (3 through 8) which include management of public places, municipal services, trees, protection of natural environment, animals and firearms, among others. Any bylaw related to the seizure of animals and penalties to obtain seized animals will be passed by the First Nations advisory body as well as any planning and land use bylaws. The first public council meeting to be held by the three-member appointed council will take place February 19, 2013 and during that meeting the council must adopt a procedure bylaw. The interim municipal corporate officer will set the time and place for that inaugural meeting. The Letters

Patent authorizes the council to hold their first meeting outside of the municipal boundaries. Also at that first meeting, the interim municipal corporate officer must have a proposed financial plan ready to present to council and will enter into planning for the first financial plan on that date until December 31, 2013. The new plan will be complete in that time frame and there will be no public consultation prior to it being sent before council, as written in part 4 section 11 (4) of the Letters Patent. The Jumbo Glacier Mountain Resort Municipality will not be allowed under the Letters Patent to incur any liability or adopt a loan authorization bylaw that communities are usually entitled to under the Community Charter. During 2013, the municipality will have the option to opt out of services usually offered in communities. Once council has had its first meeting in the new year, there’s a new bunch of work to do. By February 28, 2015 the municipality must adopt an official community plan.


daily townsman

Page 4 thursday, november 22, 2012

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daily townsman

Local NEWS

thursday, november 22, 2012

SPCA launches special kitten promotion C AROLYN GRANT Daily Bulletin

The East Kootenay Branch of the Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) is hoping you will ‘fall for kittens’ next week. BCSPCA branches across the province are offering a special deal on kittens, trying to reduce a surplus before winter. The Fall for Kittens event runs from Monday, Nov. 26 until Sunday, Dec. 9. During that time, anyone wishing to give a kitten a home will

receive 50 per cent off all adoption fees. That applies to all feline adoptions. “The BC SPCA takes in more than 17,000 homeless cats and kittens each year and right now our shelters are filled to capacity,” said Lorie Chortyk, general manager of community relations for the BC SPCA. “Normally at this time of year the number of abandoned and surrendered kittens lessens, but the kittens just keep coming this year and we

are really overwhelmed with the number of homeless kittens and cats who need loving homes.” Chortyk says that there are currently 936 adult cats and 1,146 kittens in SPCA facilities across the province needing good homes. A cat or kitten adopted from the SPCA is already spayed or neutered, vaccinated, has been treated for parasites, has an identification tattoo or microchip, and has received a full

medical check up. As an added bonus all cats and kittens are also covered by six weeks pet insurance courtesy of Petsecure to ensure their health during the transition to a new home. According to Chortyk the average cost to the SPCA to care for a cat during its stay is $784. Even regular adoption fees are far less than that. However, as much as the SPCA wants to find homes for these kitties,

CCT offers radio drama in time for Christmas Submit ted

Cranbrook Community Theatre (CCT) is bringing Christmas cheer to the Stage Door this Festive Season. Beginning December 7 and running for six nights, CCT is proud to once again present “It’s a Wonderful Life, the Live Radio Show”. The play is an interesting spin on the beloved holiday classic “It’s a Wonderful Life.” The

story comes to captivating life as a live 1940s radio broadcast and the audience becomes the live radio audience of another era. They will be treated to behind the microphone interactions of the cast, sound effects and the production of this play within a play. This lovely story set in Studio A at WLKT in Manhattan is sure to leave audiences’ hearts

Friends of Children has new local branch Continued from page 1

It’s important that families in the area know the service is available, and that they are not afraid to ask for help early on in the process. “Please don’t be shy. If you have a sick child, ASK EARLY if Friends of Children may be able to help. We are just a phone call or email away and can only cover costs for expenditures we are notified about prior to them being paid for. Families can reach us quickly at our tollfree number 1- 866-5642217,” said Chisholm. To learn more about Friends of Children, visit an open house at the new Cranbrook office in the Kootenay Child Development Centre, 16 – 12th Avenue South, Cranbrook, on Monday, November 26 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. The open house is for the public, service providers and families to learn about the organization’s services and

how families have used this resource in the past, while sharing some tasty food. What’s more, Gail Brown, the East Kootenay representative on the Friends of Children board of directors, will accept a donation at the event. Friends of Children is a non-profit society that raises funds and secures grants to directly assist families and their children. “Donations such as this one are essential in order for Friends of Children to continue our work,” said Brown. Guests at the open house will also hear about opportunities, like this donation, for becoming involved in the work of the society. For more information about Friends of Children, contact Pat Chisholm at 250 4201759, ekoffice@friendsofchildren.ca or check out the website www. friendsofchildren.ca.

warmed. CCT champion and seasoned director Terry Miller is again directing. “This unique version of It’s a Wonderful Life was first brought to the Stage Door back in 2010 and was a huge success,” Miller said. “It’s a great story and watching someone read it to you as a performance is strangely endearing. “This show received very heartfelt comments last time we did it and it’s very much worth sharing again.”

Miller has assembled a stellar local cast with some old faces and some new, including Jennifer Inglis, Peter Schalk, Sean Swinwood, Sioban Staplin and David Popoff. Co-produced by Sally Masters and Kristy Quinn, “It’s a Wonderful Life, the Live Radio Show” will run Dec. 7 & 8 and 12, 13, 14 & 15 at The Stage Door, Cranbrook. Tickets are $13 CCT members/$15 nonmembers and are available at Lotus Books, or at the door.

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pet adoption is a serious commitment and they do want to make sure the cat is going to the right home. The usual adoption application and procedures will apply. For more details on the Fall for Kittens promotion, visit your local SPCA branch or visit spca.bc.ca to view all adoptable animals and for information on SPCA locations across B.C. The East Kootenay SPCA is located at 3339 Highway 3 & 95 in Cranbrook. Call (250) 4266751 or email eastkootenay@spca.bc.ca

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Page 5


PAGE 6

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2012

OPINION

DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

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‘Twice five miles of fertile ground’ “In Xanadu did Kubla Khan A stately pleasure-dome decree: Where Alph, the sacred river, ran Through caverns measureless to man Down to a sunless sea …”

N

osiree, they don’t write ‘em like that anymore. Remember that poem? Samuel Taylor Coleridge took too much opium one day in 1797 and nodded off, and had a virtual dream of an epic poem, until the insurance salesman came knocking at his door and woke him up. After Coleridge got rid of his caller, he could only remember 54 lines. I don’t really see that he had much reason to complain. He still managed to dash off 54 of the greatest lines in English poetry. I guess those Romantics weren’t happy unless they were composing odes. It’s an interesting image. The emperor enclosed a parcel of pastoral land for a beautiful pleasure-dome, with incense-bearing trees, and gardens bright with sinuous rills, etc. But in a spectacular stroke of geological bad luck, the sacred river was forced up from underground, like a geyser, in an explosion of flying rocks, and flooded the whole area. Kubla Khan then heard the disembodied voices of his ancestors prophesying war — a bad portent, presumably. Coleridge’s dream then veered off into a more proper opium-induced hallucination, which though compelling, is harder to summarize neatly. I’m sure I’m not the only one who thought of Coleridge and his famous poem upon reading the news of the state of our infrastructure (Townsman, Nov. 21). It seems that right beneath our feet is a series of geological bugbears whose enemy is everything we lay down for our convenience

— smooth roads, sewer pipes, water mains, and other things we prefer not to look at too closely, but on whose good condition we depend for proper, civilized, 21st century urban living. After all, the pleasure-dome we call Cranbrook is built over a series of swamps, underground rivulets, gravel pits, and of course our own sacred river — still unnamed. This ground is always squirming and groaning restlessly, pushing big boulders around under the surface, frost-heaving at the drop of a hat. Thank you, Colonel Baker. Any day now, we can expect a mighty fountain to be forced, flinging up “momently” the sacred river, and turning our little town, with “forests ancient as the hills,” into the Venice of the Rockies. Barry There are several opCoulter tions to consider: • First of all, we could vote in a referendum to fix all the roads and other infrastructure all at once, using tax dollars to do so. We could all take out second mortgages, thus doing our bit. It would be like buying victory bonds, only different. The infrastructure would be fixed, and then we wouldn’t have to worry about it for 10 years. So every 10 years, we could fix the infrastructure again, all at once, hiring dozens of companies to take the streets apart and put them back together. We could treat this mass construction event as some kind of city-wide festival. The fact that it occurs every 10 years would make it especially fun. • We could go the full-on green route, and let our fancy infrastructure subside while getting used to alternate ways of life. We could all switch to compost toilets, perhaps with the help of a city rebate program. This would cut Cranbrook’s water usage by

50 per cent, and provide a source of, well, compost. Since in our new, green, infrastructure-freer life, we’d all be growing more backyard crops, we’d need to, well, manure our gardens, wouldn’t we? • We could forgo cars. Mules are surefooted, and can circumnavigate sinkholes, potholes or wormholes. A quick City bylaw amendment would enable us to keep mules in our backyard for transportation purposes. This would create jobs in the form of public stables, tack shops and suchlike mule-friendly facilities. So rather than driving over bumpy roads worrying about your tie-rod ends breaking, you could simply mount your mule and amble down to the grocery store with your saddle bags. And if the city is going to allow us to keep mules in our backyards — which I think is the best idea I’ve had yet — then we might as well have our chickens and goats too. The goats would be good for keeping down the grass growing up through the cracks in our streets. I’m sure our wise city leaders will ultimately come up with the ideal solution for our infrastructure, so that in fact we won’t have to live our lives any differently than we ever have, so that we can still speed through school zones on smooth, flat roads and water our lawns within an inch of our lives, which are our fundamental human rights. However, I submit the above great ideas for the City’s perusal, and should they choose to use all or any, I turn said ideas over to them free of copyright. In the meantime, if this is the infrastructure apocalypse, then it strikes me as more whimper than bang. I will continue to live my life in this pleasure-dome Cranbrook, dining on honeydew and drinking the milk of paradise. Barry Coulter is Editor of the Cranbrook Daily Townsman


daily townsman / daily bulletin

Opinion/features

Ceasefires, negotiations and lack thereof

O

ver the last week or so, fighting has raged in Gaza between Hamas and Israel, as the two sides took a break from relative peace to flex their militaristic muscles. Hamas sparked the conflict by lobbing rockets into Israel, which escalated after the Israeli Defence Forces assassinated a senior Hamas military leader in an airstrike. The two enemies continued the charade of tit-for-tat — Hamas with rockets, Israel with airstrikes — until a cease-fire was brokered with help from the U.S. and the Egyptians. We’ll see how far this agreement goes, which came into effect on Wednesday evening, but it’s an encouraging sign from two sides that seem hell-bent on destroying each other in the most volatile region of the world. It makes me think of two other sworn enemies, though not on the world stage, but rather the sporting arena, as the NHL and NHLPA are still searching for a way to come to terms. Don’t get me wrong, I care much more about a peace agreement between Israel and Hamas than I do about the wrangling

between millionaires and billionaires, but I think there’s an interesting parallel. Hamas, an armed political entity, refuses to recognize Israel’s right to exist, while Israel, along with many Western governments, have labeled Hamas a terrorist organization. The two are bitter, bitter enemies, yet they both have recognized in this crisis that it’s in their own best interests to use diplomacy and come to the negotiating table rather than get involved in a protracted ground war that could destabilize the region even further. I wish the NHL and the Trevor NHLPA could have that attiCrawley tude. The lockout has dragged into nearly it’s 10th week and NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman revealed that the league loses between $18 million to $20 million per day, while the players are losing $8 million to $10 million per day. That’s a lot of money gone on both sides. This isn’t about who’s right or wrong, who’s offering the biggest concessions or the best deals, it’s just a statement of fact. Both sides are losing, and not from a

monetary standpoint. The NHL generated $3.28 billion in 2011-2012 fiscal year, as the previous fiveyear collective bargaining agreement had a compound annual growth rate of 6.35 per cent. Revenue grew every year under the last agreement as Bettman spent—or should I say lost—a considerable amount of money trying to keep non-hockey markets viable (Phoenix Coyotes anyone?) while chasing lucrative U.S broadcasting contracts. All that goodwill that the league and players built with fans — the diehards and the newly initiated — has been dashed by the recent round of squabbling, and it will be interesting to see how many fans come crawling back once a deal is reached. My hope is that the two sides eventually look past their respective priorities and see how much their quibbling has damaged their reputations and the game itself and get a deal done. The eventual agreement may be a bitter pill for both sides to swallow, but the NHL and the NHLPA are alienating their revenue source — the fans —the longer this impasse drags out. Trevor Crawley is Sports Editor at the Cranbrook Daily Townsman

The beginning of Beat BOOKNOTES

Mike Selby

“T

he typewriter is holy the poem is holy the voice is holy / the hearers are holy the ecstasy is holy!” These words, first uttered in public in the fall of 1955, were read by Allen Ginsberg, from a work he had written called “Howl.” Ginsberg had been invited to read his work at the Six Gallery Art Museum in San Francisco. None of the young poets that night had ever read their work publically, including Ginsberg, whose dread of public speaking was obvious by the tears welling up behind his glasses. Ginsberg shouldn’t have worried though. It was the “Howl” heard around the world. Although most people feel the Beat Generation begins and ends with Jack Kerouac, it is actually Allen Ginsberg who is the most responsible for this literary group of post-World War II writers. Looking back from today, the Beats were nothing more than Ginsberg’s wish to be surrounded with like-minded friends. As one historian put it, Ginsberg was “the locomotive that pulled the others along like so many boxcars.” Yet the story of the Beats doesn’t begin with new forms of writing — or even with Ginsberg making friends. The story of the Beats begins with a murder. It was the mid-1940s when 18-year-old Lucien Carr enrolled at Columbia University; not so much to study but for a much darker reason. David Kammerer, one of Carr’s middle school teachers, turned out to be a sexual predator, and had been stalking Carr for the past five years. Columbia was the 4th university Carr’s parents had sent him to. Upon moving into Columbia’s dorms, he met Ginsberg, and

Alan Ginsberg (left) and jack Kerouac they became instant friends. Soon after they met Carr took Ginsberg to meet a friend of his from his hometown of St. Louis, William S. Burroughs. At Burroughs’ apartment Ginsberg met Celine Young, another fellow student and Carr’s girlfriend. Also sitting in Burroughs’ apartment — much to Carr’s dismay — was David Kammerer. Retreating back to Columbia, Carr ran into another transplant from his hometown, Edie Parker. It was here that Parker introduced Ginsberg, Carr, and Burroughs to her new boyfriend, a French-Canadian named Jack Kerouac. Kerouac was at Columbia to play football, but he wrecked his knee and now hoped to become a writer. Like the others, Kerouac became one of Ginsberg’s closet friends. Then it all fell apart as suddenly as it had begun. On the evening August 13th, 1944, Carr spent the night drinking with Kerouac at a bar. Kerouac left early, forcing Carr to walk home alone. Crossing a deserted park, he was attacked by David Kammerer. Carr stabbed Kammerer with his pocket knife, and rolled his body into

the Hudson River. Carr was charged with manslaughter, and was sent to prison (he served two years, and was later pardoned). This event profoundly shook Ginsberg’s tightly knit group, and the only way they felt they could deal with it was to write about it. Kerouac did just that with his first book, “The Town & the City.” Ginsberg wrote a novel about the murder in “Bloodsong,” and Burroughs and Kerouac collaborated on a mystery titled “And the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks.” Ginsberg’s friendship and Carr’s imprisonment solidified the Beat Generation; realizing their common bond was in producing literature. Although a famous poet would later state “three people don’t make a generation,” it is hard to deny the influence Ginsberg, Burroughs, and Kerouac would have on what was to come. And what was to come came in a person named Neal Cassady (next week!). Mike Selby is Reference Librarian at the Cranbrook Public Library

thursday, november 22, 2012

Page 7

What’s Up?

KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDAR

UPCOMING St Mary’s Parent Support Group invites you to Art Revival! A silent auction of new and previously loved works of art, jewellery, sculptures, musical instruments and pottery. Nov 22, 7:00pm to 9:00pm. St. Mary’s School Gym, 1701 - 5th S. S. Beer, Wine & Cheese event with no host bar. If you would like to donate an item please drop off at school front desk. November 23 6pm Kimberley United Church Annual Fall Fowl Supper. Serving Roast Tom Turkey & all the trimmings & pies for dessert. Tickets: Shopper’s Drug Pharmacy and church office. Doors open at 5 pm. All Saints Anglican Church – Kimberley. Annual Christmas Tea and Bake sale, with craft table and Purdy’s Chocolates order forms. Saturday, November 24th. 1:00 – 3:00 PM. 360 Leadenhall Street. Everyone welcome. Quality Entertainment: A YoungLife Fundraiser at Parkland Middle School, Nov. 25th. Check out local teen talent. Tickets at 250-4898040 or at the door. Legion Branch 24 803 Cranbrook St. - Grey Cup Party Nov. 25. Doors open 2pm, Potluck at half-time. Come on down, have some fun and a chance to win a prize. FMI call 250-426-8531 or 426-4572. Jubilee Chapter #64, Order of the Eastern Star, will be meeting at the Masonic Hall, 401-3rd Avenus South, Cranbrook, at 7:30 pm sharp, November 26, 2012. Reminder, Dec Meeting early next month. Have Camera Will Travel.... a travelogue series. Join the Kimberley Biker Babes - “Cycling Across Germany - 700 km along the Elbe River” at Centre 64, Kimberley. On Tuesday Nov 27 at 7:30 pm. Admission by Donation. Proceeds to Kimberley Arts Council & Expansion Project. Holiday Shopping Extravaganza at Pinewood Elementary School, Thursday November 29th, 2012, 5:00pm to 9:00pm. Large assortment of vendors! Something for everyone! Table rental proceeds go to supporting Pinewood PAC. Girl Guide Spaghetti Fundraiser, Saturday, Dec 1st, 4:30-6:30pm, Eagles Hall, 717 Kootenay St. N., Cranbrook. Tickets: 250-489-3155. December 1 Harmony Chapter #45 OES Annual Pre Christmas Sale, Kimberley Elk’s Hall, 11am-1:30 pm. There will be Xmas Gift Baskets, Recyclables; Christmas decorations & gift items. Home baking table, hand-crafted items & more! Raffles, too! Proceeds to Cancer & Other Harmony Charities. Home Grown Music Society presents the next Coffee House of the 30th season at Centre 64 on Dec 1 at 8:00 pm. Tickets at The Snowdrift Cafe, Kimberley. December 1 Welcome to the Christmas Fair, 9 to 2 at Cranbrook United Church, #2 -12th Ave S. This location is “kitti-corner” to the Downtown Market; it’s in the big brick church. Free admission, many tables, silent auction, refreshment bar. Please join us. 2012 FREE PUBLIC SWIM Wednesday, Dec. 5, 5:00-6:00 PM is sponsored by Creekside Physiotherapy Clinic. ONGOING Community Acupuncture. By donation – Each Tuesday 4-6 pm, Roots to Health Naturopathic Clinic, Kimberley Health Centre – Lower Level, 260 4th Ave. 778-481-5008. Please visit: www.rootsto-health.com for more info. The Compassionate Friends meet 2nd Tuesday each month at 4:00pm at the East Kootenay Child Care Resource and Referral Boardroom (in the Baker Street Mall parking lot) Info: call Laura @ 250 489-1000/Diane @ 250 489-0154 Do you have the desire to stop eating compulsively? OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS (a 12-Step Program) meets Tuesdays from 7-8 pm at Cranbrook United Church, 2-12 S. S., downstairs. Contact: cranbrookoa@hotmail.com. The Council of Senior Citizens Organizations (COSCO) is an advocacy group devoted to improving “The Quality Of Life” for all seniors. To become a member contact Ernie Bayer, ph 604-576-9734, fax 604-576-9733, email ecbayer@shaw.ca. The Cranbrook Kimberley Hospice Society seeks volunteers to help us provide services to persons at the end of life and their families. Training is provided. Call 250-417-2019, Toll Free 1-855-417-2019 if interested. 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. 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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PAGE 8

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2012

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Nitros head coach Roman Vopat resigns TRE VOR CR AWLEY Sports Editor

The Kimberley Dynamiters have announced that head coach Roman Vopat, after being asked by the executive to temporarily step back from the Kimberley Dynamiters, has decided to resign permanently. Vopat’s resignation comes after he recently agreed to temporarily step away from the team while the club’s executives worked to resolve some undeclared issues. “His decision is indeed a sad day in Kimberley junior hockey history,” said the Dynamiters organization in a brief statement. “Roman did a fine

job in fulfilling his coaching and general manager duties during his tenure with the Nitros. We wish him and his family all the best in whatever the future holds and would like to thank him for bringing the Dynamiters back to being one of the top teams in the KIJHL.” Vopat, a former NHL player, took the helm last year and guided the team to a regular season record of 34-14-1-1. The Nitros made it into the second round of the KIJHL playoffs, but fell to the Fernie Ghostriders in Game 7. The team is currently second in the Eddie Mountain division, with a 14-11-0-0 record.

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Ice cooled by 7-4 road loss in Seattle TRE VOR CR AWLEY Sports Editor

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Playing catch-up was too much for the Kootenay Ice, as the Thunderbirds built on an early lead to win 7-4 on home ice in Seattle on Wednesday night. The T-Birds led 3-1 going into the final period, which is when the bulk of the scoring happened, as Kootenay had it’s three-game win .

streak broken. The Ice were dominant in different parts of the game, but Seattle’s goaltender, Brandon Glover, stood fast. “We were getting pucks to the net but we needed more opportunities off of those,” said Ice assistant coach Chad Kletzel, “and when we do get an opportunity, making sure we bear down and put the puck

in the net.” Kootenay put 40 shots on Glover, who made 36 saves, while Mackenzie Skapski allowed six goals in 32 shots for the Ice. Seattle capitalized once on the man-advantage in three opportunities, while Kootenay was denied on all three of theirs. “When we had good shifts and played the

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Kootenay Ice goaltenders Mackenzie Skapski and Wyatt Hoflin got on the ice with Pee Wee-aged goaltenders on Monday night at Western Financial Place to give some pointers to their young charges.

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system, we were very successful, but we need to make sure that we have more guys working as a unit,” said Kletzel. “We need everyone playing within the system and playing within the best of their ability to make sure we put ourselves in good situations to win games.” The T-Birds had the best chance to score early, as Skapski bobbled a save, but Seattle couldn’t collect the puck and put it into the net. However, the T-Birds struck first, when import Roberts Lipsbergs finished on a pretty threeway passing play seven minutes into the period. The T-Birds doubled the lead three minutes later, when Connor Honey beat Skapski top corner stick side on a three-on-one rush into the zone. However, the Ice had their chances, with Martin putting a backhand a hair wide of the post during a scramble in front of Glover. But Kootenay did capitalize 30 seconds after Honey’s goal, when Zach McPhee beat Glove low stick side on a breakaway. The T-Birds managed to score an early power play goal in the second period, as Riley Sheen tipped a shot by Skapski. However, the Ice took control of the game for

the latter half of the period, as the line of Collin Shirley, Sam Reinhart and Luke Philp caused a lot of misery in the offensive zone, but no goals resulted. The third period was the decider of the contest, as the goal lamps flickered on seven separate times. Jakub Prochazka scored his first career WHL goal, picking up a fat rebound off a shot from Levi Cable. However, Seattle responded twice with two quick goals from Luke Lockhart that were scored roughly a minute and a half apart. Ice defenceman Tanner Muth took a high sticking minor penalty, but Jordyn Boyd managed to score shorthanded after working some magic with Jaedon Descheneau. Down 5-3, the Ice kept trying to play catchup, but it was the T-Birds who scored, off a goal from Justin Hickman, to restore a three-goal lead with five minutes to go. Boyd got his second of the night with two minutes left in the game, but Alexander Delanov potted the empty netter. The Ice continue their swing through the U.S division this weekend, with stops in Portland on Friday and Everett on Saturday.


daily townsman / daily bulletin

thursday, november 22, 2012

Sports

Page 9

NHLPA tables proposal as negotiations resume Chris Johnston Canadian Press

NEW YORK - The NHL and NHL Players’ Association finally seem to be speaking the same language, but they still have a gap to bridge in negotiations on a collective bargaining agreement. The union tabled a comprehensive proposal Wednesday that generated a tepid response from the league. However, commissioner Gary Bettman acknowledged the six-page offer was a step in the right direction and the document appeared to offer a path forward in talks, with the sides now envisioning the same type of economic system. “There was movement on some issues by the players’ association and that was appreciated,” said Bettman. “But we’re still far apart.

Hopefully there will have been some momentum from today’s session that we can build off of to hopefully bring this process to a successful conclusion.” The union proposed a 50-50 split of revenues during the five-year deal along with $393 million in deferred make whole payments throughout the agreement. Two weeks ago, the league offered $211 million and a 50-50 split. NHLPA executive director Donald Fehr acknowledged that his constituents are anxious to end the lockout and indicated that the new offer is “about as good” as the players are willing to make. “(The players) are suffering right along with the fans,” said Fehr. “We made an enormous move in the owners di-

rection to try and end it - at least as of today that hasn’t been successful.” Until now, the union had been pushing for a system that would see players paid a fixed amount of revenue each season rather than receiving a percentage of it. However, the new offer included some safeguards to ensure they’d be protected in the event league revenues stalled, including a clause that states the players’ share can’t drop from year to year. “The players are making enormous concessions to the owners and we want some protection on the downside,” said Fehr. There is still ground to cover on contract issues as well. The new NHLPA offer included a rule that would punish teams who sign players

“There was some movement on some issues by the players’ association and that was appreciated.” Gary Bettman to long-term, back-diving contracts - something the league has identified as an important issue. It also called for players making more than $1 million in the minors to have their salary count against the salary cap. However, the union chose not adopt the NHL’s proposed changes to unrestricted free agency, entry-level deals and salary arbitration, among other things. And the league still hasn’t shown any willingness to budge on those issues.

Raptors lose heartbreaker to Bobcats Ste ve Reed Associated Press

CHARLOTTE, N.C. The Charlotte Bobcats are off to a fast start so far this season. Less than three weeks into the season, the surprising Bobcats are a game away from matching last season’s win total following a 98-97 victory Wednesday night over the Toronto Raptors. Ramon Sessions hit a 16-footer with 28 seconds left and the Bobcats made a late defensive stand to win for the fifth time in six games to

run their record to 6-4 matching the franchise’s best start. The Bobcats were an NBA-worst 7-59 last season. To put this season’s impressive start in perspective, it took the Bobcats 40 games last season before winning their sixth game. This season the Bobcats continue to find ways to win close games, running their record to 5-0 in games decided by four points or fewer. As they’ve done all season, the Bobcats did it with defence.

Disgraced hockey coach Graham James eligible to apply for full parole WINNIPEG - Disgraced junior hockey coach Graham James is eligible to apply for full parole, but has not yet made a request. Last March, James was sentenced to two years in jail after pleading guilty to sexually abusing retired NHL star Theo Fleury and his cousin, Todd Holt, when they were teenage players in the Western Hockey League. James became eligible for day parole in September and for full parole this week, but the National Parole Board says it has not received any applications from him. The Crown is appealing the two-year sentence in a hearing set for Dec. 3. The Crown had asked for a six-year term and, in its appeal, says the judge erred by placing too much emphasis on James’s previous time behind bars. James was sentenced to 3 1/2 years in 1997 for molesting former NHLer Sheldon Kennedy and two other players. Canadian Press

Toronto had four shots to win it in their final possession, but two shots were blocked - one by Jeffery Taylor and the other by Bismack Biyombo - and Andrea Bargnani’s baseline jumper fell short as time expired. Bobcats coach Mike Dunlap called the defensive stand “twothirds willpower and one-third technique.” “We were trying to switch everything, but at the end, coach said just stay with your man,” Biyombo said. “We had to make quick decisions

and I think we made pretty quick decisions and we did a pretty good job as a team. It was just big time.” Kemba Walker had 19 points and seven assists for the Bobcats, while Sessions and Michael Kidd-Gilchrist each had 14 points. Walker and Sessions have both scored in double digits in all 10 games. Bargnani had 25 points and Kyle Lowry added 21 for the Raptors. Jonas Valanciunas added 16 points and 10 rebounds.

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“On the big things, there was ... no reciprocity in any meaningful sense,” said Fehr. “No movement on the players share. No movement on salary arbitration eligibility. No movement on free agency eligibility. No movement on a pension plan, although they say they’d like to do it.” The league and union did have a candid discussion about the NHLPA’s new offer. After giving the NHL a chance to read it through, the sides reconvened Wednesday afternoon and spent two more hours at the bargaining table. “We went through

their proposal point by point,” said Bettman. “We talked about the things that were agreeable, we talked about the things that we could modify, we talked about the things that we had no more room to move on and explained our proposal on each of those elements.” With the lockout into its 10th week, the sides are attempting to reach a deal that would see a shortened schedule played this season. The labour dispute has damaged the sport’s business, with Bettman saying the league is losing between $18 and $20 million every day of the labour dispute. The commissioner

indicated that he was surprised they hadn’t already been able to reach an agreement. “We made a proposal (in October) to save an 82-game season and frankly we’re all mystified as to why we’re not playing in light of that offer and in light of the fact that the players are losing as a group between $8 and $10 million a day,” said Bettman. “We could have been playing, we could have been continuing the momentum this game had on an offer and an agreement that was long term and fair. “So there’s a lot about this process that one could scratch their head about.”

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Page 10 thursday, november 22, 2012

daily townsman / daily bulletin

Sports

Stampeders’ coach bucks tradition at Grey Cup news conference Dan R alph Canadian Press

TORONTO - John Hufnagel bucked Grey Cup tradition Wednesday. As he and Toronto Argonauts rookie head coach Scott Milanovich stood on opposite sides of the Grey Cup, the

Calgary Stampeders’ head coach and GM grabbed one of its silver handles. That gesture caused a stir among reporters in attendance because coaches have traditionally refrained from touching the hallowed trophy until they’ve won it on the

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field. But Hufnagel had no problem bucking that trend because he has won the Grey Cup, most recently in 2008 with Calgary. “I think my name’s on it,” he said when asked why he touched the Cup, prompting much laughter. Milanovich stood next to the trophy, close enough that his reflection could be seen in it. But he refrained from touching it despite earning Grey Cup rings in 2009 and ‘10 as an assistant coach with the Montreal Alouettes. “We decided, as a team, that we weren’t going to touch it,” Milanovich said. Why? “Tradition,” he said. Milanovich will make his first Grey Cup appearance as a head coach Sunday when Toronto hosts Calgary at Rogers Centre. One of his first duties was participating in the coaches news conference Wednesday with Hufnagel at the Royal York

Hotel. Despite a 22-year age difference, the Grey Cup head coaches share many similarities. They both hail from Pennsylvania, played quarterback collegiately as well as in the NFL and CFL, earned championship rings north of the border as assistants and are in this year’s game after leading their teams to second-place finishes in their respective divisions. Hufnagel, 61, got into coaching as a player-coach with the Saskatchewan Roughriders in ‘87 before becoming a full-time coach the following season. But coaching was in Milanovich’s blood as a youngster as his father, Gary, was a former assistant football coach in Butler, Pa. Gary Milanovich attended Toronto’s 27-20 road win over Montreal in the East Division final Sunday but it’s not clear if he’ll be in attendance for the Grey Cup. “I thought the world of my dad,” Milanovich

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Frank Gunn

Calgary Stampeders head coach and GM John Hufnagel and Toronto Argonauts head coach Scott Milanovich pose with the Grey Cup during the coach’s news conference ahead of Sunday’s Grey Cup said. “He used to take me as a young child and we’d watch film together on that old 16-millimetre projection screen on a white bed sheet and he started to teach me the game of football. “Then I became a quarterback and his message was always about poise. His mantra

YOUR CITY WORKING FOR YOU! RECRUITMENT FOR 2013 CITY OF CRANBROOK COMMITTEES APPLICATION DEADLINE - NOVEMBER 26, 2012 There are several opportunities for public participation and involvement in the City of Cranbrook advisory committees. Membership is open to residents of the City of Cranbrook. Committees accepting applications include: Advisory Planning Commission, Athletic Commission, Board of Variance, Cranbrook Public Library Board, Economic Development, Environment and Utilities, Family and Community Services, Key City Theatre Society, Wellness and Heritage and the Urban Deer Management Advisory Committee. Terms of Reference for all the Committees and the Volunteer Application form are available from the City website at www.cranbrook.ca or by visiting City Hall. Applications will be accepted at City Hall (attention Maryse Leroux) or by email leroux@cranbrook.ca, no later than Monday, November 26, 2012 at 4:00 p.m. local time.

FIVE YEAR FINANCIAL PLAN BYLAW Within Council’s policy direction and key objectives, the Budget process is guided by the Finance and Computer Services Department and spans eight City departments. Each department is responsible for overseeing a multitude of programs that keep City operations running smoothly. Once the City’s Senior Management team completes their review following both the policy direction and priorities of Council, the Budget is presented to Council and the public in a series of open budget meetings. Council debates the issues presented and directs Administration on final Budget decisions. The process begins in early fall of each year and wraps up in March or early April of each year, when Council adopts the Financial Plan Bylaw. Visit our website and click on ‘Bylaws’ for more on all of our City bylaws.

Thursday, November 22, 2012 CRANBROOK FIRE & EMERGENCY SERVICES 1ST ANNUAL

COMMUNITY CALENDAR ON SALE! The 16 month Cranbrook Community Calendar developed in partnership with Cranbrook Fire & Emergency Services, the Cranbrook Daily Townsman and Rocky Mountain Printers is to raise funds and awareness for the British Columbia Professional Firefighters Burn Fund and help promote the local area. Purchasers of the calendar will be asked to enter their calendar number, name, address and email on a special link on the City of Cranbrook website – www.cranbrook.ca. The website will generate random monthly winners who will receive some local monthly prizes. Calendars are $10 each and only 1500 copies are available. Calendars will be available for sale

to me was: Always stay even keeled. I learned the same lesson from Tony Dungy when I was fortunate to have played for him in Tampa Bay. All that stuck with me, it’s just a great environment to grow up in.” Hufnagel said no one should be surprised to see two former quarterbacks in the

Grey Cup as head coaches. “It is a passing league, you have to have a real good understanding of pass offence and pass protection but don’t neglect the running game,” he said. “Usually the quarterback does have a little bit of a head start in that area.”

Reminde

rs...

Satur da the M y Decemb er 8 – ayor @ Co KRC ( 1 – 4p ffee with m) Mond ay City C Decembe r1 ouncil Meetin 0 – Final 2 012 g@6 pm. Tuesd ay De cem Brown Bag L ber 11 – F unch @ 12 inal 2012 noon.

Watch the latest

Cranbrook City Council meeting when you want. Visit www.cranbrook.ca

JOB OPPORTUNITY

at the Cranbrook Fire Hall on 2nd Street South, the Cranbrook Daily Townsman, Rocky Mountain Printers, Cranbrook City Hall and the Leisure Services desk at Western Financial Place.

2012 TOILET REBATE PROGRAM ENDS Another successful rebate program has come to a close. The final rebate of 2012 was released November 14, 2012. Thank you to all our residents who participated in the rebate program. Since its inception in 2010, 600 water guzzling fixtures have been taken off the City water system.

TAX AND ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE CLERK (12 MONTH TERM) Applications will be accepted up to 4:00pm MT on Monday December 3, 2012. For more information on the job description and where to apply, please visit our website – www.cranbrook.ca and click on ‘Job Postings’ under Quick Links.


daily townsman / daily bulletin

thursday, november 22, 2012

NEWS

Page 11

Fighting silenced as Hamas and Israel reach cease fire Mohammed Dar aghmeh,Sar ah El Deeb Associated Press

Israel and the Hamas militant group agreed to a cease-fire Wednesday to end eight days of the fiercest fighting in nearly four years, promising to halt air strikes and rocket attacks that have killed scores and to discuss easing an Israeli blockade constricting the Gaza Strip. Gazans emerged from their homes after a week, cheering and chanting. Gunmen fired in the air, and chants of ``God is Great’’ echoed from mosque loudspeakers. Residents hugged and kissed in celebration, while others distributed candy and waved Hamas flags. However, rocket fire continued to slam into southern Israel long after the cease-fire deadline had passed, authorities said, and schools in the region planned to stay shut Thursday as a precaution in case rockets continue to be launched. The deal was brokered by the new Islamist government of Egypt, solidifying its role as a leader in the quickly shifting Middle East after two days of intense shuttle diplomacy that saw U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton race to the region. Under the agreement, Egypt will play a key role in maintaining the peace. Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal said the deal in-

AP Photo/Alaa Badarneh, Pool

AP Photo/Bernat Armangue

Smoke billows from the site of an Israeli airstrike in Gaza City, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, left, shakes hands Wednesday, Nov. 21, 2012. Israeli aircraft pounded Gaza with at with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas during a meeting in the West Bank city of Ramallah, Wednesday, Nov. 21. least 30 strikes overnight, hitting a number of targets. cluded an agreement to open all border crossings with the Gaza Strip, including the important Rafah crossing with Egypt. A copy of the deal appeared to be somewhat vague about the details on the crossings. ``The document provides for the opening of all crossings,’’ he insisted. Minutes before the deal took effect at 9 p.m. local time. (2 p.m. EDT) there was a spasm of Palestinian rocket attacks and Israeli airstrikes, including one that killed a man minutes before the deadline. After 9 p.m., the airstrikes cease, but rocket fire continued, with at least 12 fired into Israel an hour into the truce, said police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld. Israel had launched well over 1,500 airstrikes and other attacks on targets in Gaza since fight-

ing started Nov. 14, while more than 1,500 rockets pounded Israel. In all, 161 Palestinians, including dozens of civilians, were killed, while five Israelis died. Standing next to Clinton, Egypt’s foreign minister, Mohammed Kamel Amr, announced the truce breakthrough that capped days of intense efforts that drew the world’s top diplomats into the fray. The agreement will ``improve conditions for the people of Gaza and provide security for the people of Israel,’’ Clinton said at the news conference in Cairo. In Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he agreed to the cease-fire after consulting with President Barack Obama to allow Israeli civilians to get back to their lives. He

KEY CITY THEATRE Meaghan Smith

said the two leaders also agreed to work together against weapon smuggling into Gaza, a statement confirmed by the White House. Netanyahu also left the door open to a possible ground invasion of Gaza at a later date. ``I know there are cit-

izens that expected a wider military operation and it could be that it will be needed. But at this time, the right thing for the state of Israel is to take this opportunity to reach a lasting ceasefire,’’ he said. According to a copy of the agreement obtained

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by The Associated Press, Israel and all Palestinian militant groups agreed to halt ``all hostilities.’’ For the Palestinians, that means an end to Israeli airstrikes and assassinations of wanted militants. For Israel, it brings a halt to rocket fire and attempts at cross-border

incursions from Gaza. After a 24-hour cooling off period, it calls for ``opening the crossings and facilitating the movement of people and transfer of goods, and refraining from restricting residents’ free movement.’’ Hamas officials said details on the new border arrangements would have to be negotiated. Israel imposed its blockade of Gaza after Hamas, a militant group sworn to Israel’s destruction, seized control of the territory five years ago. It has gradually eased the closure, but continues to restrict the movement of certain goods through Israeli-controlled crossings. Among the restrictions: a near-complete ban on exports, limited movement of people leaving the territory, and limits on construction materials that Israel says could be used for military use.

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Available until November 26, 2012, on a 3-year term with any rate plan or rate plan plus add-on(s) totalling $50 or more per month. TELUS, the TELUS logo, the future is friendly, Clear Choice, PERKS and telusmobility.com are trademarks of TELUS Corporation, used under license. All rights reserved. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. © 2012 TELUS.


daily townsman / daily bulletin

Page 12 thursday, november 22, 2012

www.cranbrookchamber.com

B2B BUSINESS TO BUSINESS Our Mission Statement:

To promote and improve trade and commerce and the economic, civic, educational and quality of life in the City of Cranbrook and surrounding district.

Holiday LED lights http://www.fortisbc.com/Electricity/PowerSense/BrightIdeas/eLibrary/Lighting/Pages/ Holiday-LED-lights.aspx

the PROBLEM SOLVER

This year use holiday LED light strings to decorate your tree, windows, or entire house. These energy-efficient light strings use a new light-emitting diode (LED) technology that is superior to standard incandescent light strings. Compared to holiday incandescent light bulbs, holiday LED strings: • use up to 90% less energy* • last at least 10 times longer* • are more durable, with no filaments or glass bulbs to break • produce very little heat, reducing the risk of fire

C

HOLIDAY LIGHTING COMPARISON Decorating an 8-foot christmas tree: Type of Bulb

Power Required (Watts)

Energy Used (kWh/season)

Cost of Electricity/season

Approximate number of strings & bulbs needed

Incandescent C-7 (5 watt)

500

93

$8.45

4 strings, 100 bulbs total

Incandescent mini lights

150

28

$2.54

3 strings, 300 bulbs total

LED C-6 “strawberry” lights

19

4

$0.36

4 strings, 280 bulbs total

Decorating a 100-foot building outline (windows and eaves): Type of Bulb

Power Required (Watts)

Energy Used (kWh/season)

Cost of Electricity/season

Approximate number of strings & bulbs needed

Incandescent C-7 (7 watt)

3150

586

$53.26

6 strings, 450 bulbs total

Incandescent mini lights

600

112

$10.14

12 strings, 1200 bulbs total

LED C-6 “strawberry” lights

29

6

$0.55

6 strings, 420 bulbs total

ENERGY SAVING TIPS

Assumptions • Holiday lighting is used for 31 days a year, for 6 hours a day. • The cost of electricity is about 9.09 cents per kilowatt hour (kWh) * Source: Natural Resources Canada, Lighting – Decorative Light Strings

BASEBOARD HEATERS AND RADIATORS Clean heating units once per year to increase efficiency levels and extend the life of the product. PROGRAMMABLE THERMOSTATS Install Programmable Thermostats away from heat and draft sources. Many people already see the advantage of Programmable Thermostats. Remember, the location of the thermostat is just as important as its operation.

Freedom. Comfort. Piece of mind. www.falkins.com

Gary Knight

TURN DOWN THE HEAT Set HVAC settings to a minimum in storage areas where customers and staff do not spend a lot of time

oping with the death of a loved one is difficult. The family and legal representative(s) will need to comply with the requirements of the Income Tax Act (ITA) and provide Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) with certain information and tax returns on behalf of the deceased person. What should you do first? You should provide CRA with the deceased’s date of death as soon as possible if any of the following situations apply: * the deceased was receiving the Goods and Services Tax (GST) credit; * you are receiving GST credit payments for yourself and the deceased; * the deceased was receiving, or the deceased’s spouse or common-law partner receives Canada Child Tax Benefit (CCTB) payments for a child; * the deceased was a child for whom CCTB or GST credit payments are paid; or * the deceased was receiving Canada Pension Plan Benefits and/or Old Age Security Benefits. Arrangements have to be made to stop these payments and, if applicable, transfer them to a survivor. You can call or complete the applicable information form and send it to your tax services office or tax centre. Was the deceased paying tax by installments? If the deceased person was paying tax by installments, no further installment payments have to be paid after his or her death. The only installments required are those that were due before the date of death, but not paid. What do you do with the GST credit? Generally, GST credit payments are issued on the fifth day of the month in July, October, January, and April. If the deceased was receiving GST credit payments,

Final Tax Returns of Deceased Persons CRA may still send out a payment after the date of death because they are not aware of the death. If this happens, you should return the payment. What if the deceased’s GST credit is for the deceased only? If a single person dies in a month before CRA sends a quarterly GST credit payment, no one else can receive the payment. If a single person dies during or after a month in which CRA sends a quarterly payment, the person’s estate is entitled to that payment. Return the cheque to CRA, and they will make the cheque payable to the estate. If the deceased had children for whom he or she was receiving the GST credit, the new caregiver should contact CRA as he or she may qualify to receive GST credit payments for these children. What if the deceased’s GST credit is for the deceased and his or her spouse or commonlaw partner? If the deceased had a spouse or common-law partner, that person may be eligible to receive the GST credit payments based on his or her net income alone. If the deceased’s GST credit included a claim for that spouse or common-law partner, he or she should: * contact CRA and ask to receive the GST credit payments for the remainder of the year for himself or herself and any children, if applicable; and * file an income tax and benefit return for the applicable previous year if he or she has not already done so. What if the surviving spouse’s or common-law partner’s GST credit includes a claim for the deceased? If the surviving spouse’s or common-law partner’s GST credit includes a claim for the deceased, the payments will be recalculated based on the spouse’s or common-law partner’s net in-

What our clients are saying ...

come alone, and will only include a claim for himself or herself and any children, if applicable. What if the deceased is an eligible child? Entitlement to GST credit payments for a deceased child stops the quarter after the child’s date of death. You should notify CRA of the date of death so that they can update their records. You are the legal representative of a deceased person if: * you are named as the executor in the will; * you are appointed as the administrator of the estate by a court. As the legal representative, your responsibilities under the Income Tax Act include: * filing all required returns for the deceased; * making sure all taxes owing are paid; and * letting the beneficiaries know which of the amounts they receive from the estate are taxable. If you are the legal representative, you may need information from the deceased person’s tax records. Before CRA can give you this information, they will need the following: * a copy of the deceased’s death certificate; * the deceased’s social insurance number; and * a copy of the will or other legal document that shows you are the legal representative. You should also provide your address so that CRA can reply directly to you. Send this information to your tax services office or tax centre. What is the due date for the final tax return and any balance owing? You have at least six months before the deceased’s final return is due to be filed. The final return and any balance owing are due

on or before the following dates: Period when death occurred January 1 to October 31 Due date for the return April 30 of the following year Period when death occurred November 1 to December 31 Due date for the return Six months after the date of death

If the deceased or the deceased’s spouse or common-law partner was carrying on a business during the year when the death occurred, special rules apply, unless the expenditures of the business are primarily in connection with a tax shelter.

If you file the final return late and there is a balance owing, CRA will charge a late-filing penalty. If you do not pay any balance owing from the final return in full by the due date, CRA will charge interest on the unpaid amount. The interest will start to accumulate from the day after the return is due to be filed to the date you pay the amount owing.

Previous year return If a person dies after December 31, but on or before the filing due date for his or her return (usually April 30), and that person had not yet filed that return, the due date for filing it as well as the payment of the balance owing is six months after the date of death. -----------------------------------G a r y K n i g h t , C.M.A.,C.G.A.,T.E.P. author of “The Problem Solver” is owner of Knight & Co., Certified General Accountant, in Cranbrook, B.C. He can be reached by calling 489-3140 or 1-800-338-1124 or via e-mail at knightco@cyberlink.bc. ca. --------------------------------

The material presented is for information purposes only. You should consult a professional advisor before taking any action.

Scott Young:

Hi, this is Scott Young owner of Pioneer Lodge. Gary and the team at Knight & Co. is our choice for accounting services. I find Gary to be diligent and tenacious when it comes to representing our Company. We came to Gary two years ago with tax questions and he found the answers because of his extensive knowledge, research and work ethic. Coming from a business background I can recognize a good accountant and that is Gary Knight.

Call now for an appointment 489-3140

or 1-800-338-1124 42-12th Avenue South, Cranbrook, BC

V1C 2R7


daily townsman / daily bulletin

B2B

thursday, november 22, 2012

Page 13

T Su r ve y S P A big thank you to the chambers which have sent this info out already.

We need significantly more responses, however, if we are to achieve a robust sample size. Having a good representation of businesses across BC will enable us to leverage a major strength of the chamber network and generate media coverage for your chambers. As a reminder, this is part of our efforts to assist you with competition from CFIB, and is designed to create media interest and add an additional value proposition for the chamber network.

BUSINESS TO BUSINESS

If you haven’t already done so, please send the following link and messaging to your members. The deadline is extended to end of day on Wednesday, November 21st to aid your efforts in getting feedback. · Survey link: http://www.bcchamber.org/survey.html. Take the PST Survey. Your input will remain strictly confidential and only be used in aggregate.

New Orleans Mardi Gras, Chamber Style was the theme of the Chamber’s 17th annual Awe$um Auction held November 17th. Our appreciation to all of those who donated and supported. A special thanks to Christy Wheeldon and Marla Smith for their time and efforts and to Jason Wheeldon, D’Arcy Kennedy and Jay Savage who kept the evening rolling. It was a great event!

B

lack Friday is traditionally the start of Holiday spending in the U.S. and now, many deal seekers can stay in their homes in Canada and enjoy those deals without the hassle of crossing the border. Initiated here from a small group of concerned Cranbrook retailers, this phenomenon is spreading and expanding each year. The Tamarack Centre frenzy started right when the doors opened at 9:30 a.m. and continued until our 9:00 p.m.close. Our shoppers got to experience the start of their holiday

shopping with in-store bargains – for example, 40% off everything in Northern Reflections, 25% off everything in Bootlegger and 50% off sweaters,30% off boots at Shoe Warehouse – and in our common area, they received free hot chocolate and snacks, free movie passes with $75 purchase, live entertainment and they did this all without any Christmas décor having to prod them! We have had a lot of encouraging comments and look forward to expanding the promotion next year as a way to provide our

re and Both our Ashley HomeSto llerGa re itu The Bedroom Furn helmies experienced an overw day Fri ck Bla l sfu ingly succes we re we ek en d. Th e str ee ts find a to packed and it was hard to wn wn Do in ot sp g pa rk in energy Cranbrook. The positive was contagious

Thank you to all the cu sto who came out to support mers Friday! Thank you for inv Black in our community. Every esting you spend allows busines dollar su pp or t, loc al sp or ts ses to tea ms , non-profit initiatives an d many other worthwhile causes . holiday season, let’s ke This ep the ball rolling and shop for our friends and loved ones locally as much as possible.

customers with more fantastic deals and enjoyable customer experiences. Collectively, the retail sector is the largest employer in Canada and provides jobs for more than two million Canadians, The success of this sector is a critical component in Canada’s economic well-being and more importantly, here at home. Thanks to all of you that shopped “Black Friday Cranbrook”.

JEANNETTE OOSTLANDER

Mr. Floyde Spencer Physiotherapist I am pleased to announce that Cranbrook Physiotherapy Clinic is celebrating 40 years of service to the East Kootenays.

CRAN BRO O K

NOV. 23: 5 - 9 PM NOV. 24: 9:30 AM - 8 PM NOV. 25: 10 AM - 4 PM

Conveniently located in downtown Cranbrook opposite the RCMP building. Please call 250-426-7097. In Kimberley our office is in the Kimberley Health Centre Building. Please call 250-427-7087.

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daily townsman / daily bulletin

Page 14 thursday, november 22, 2012

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Cranbrook Kia 1101 Victoria Ave N, Cranbrook, BC (250) 426-3133 or 1-888-616-3926 Offer(s) available on select new 2012/2013 models through participating dealers to qualified customers who take delivery by November 30th, 2012. Dealers may sell or lease for less. Some conditions apply. Offers are subject to change without notice. See dealer for complete details. Vehicles shown may include optional accessories and upgrades available at extra cost. All offers exclude licensing, registration, insurance, other taxes and down payment (if applicable and unless otherwise specified). Other dealer charges may be required at the time of purchase. Other lease and financing options also available. **0% purchase financing is available on select new 2013 Kia models on approved credit. Terms vary by model and trim, see dealer for complete details. Representative financing example based on 2013 Rio5 LX+ AT (RO753D)/2013 Rio4 LX+ AT (RO743D) with a selling price of $18,572/$18,272 [includes delivery and destination fees of $1,455, $1,000 Everybody Wins savings, other fees and certain levies (including tire levies) and A/C charge ($100, where applicable)] financed at 0% APR for 36 months. 78 bi-weekly payments equal $225/$221 per payment with a down payment/equivalent trade of $0. License, insurance, applicable taxes, variable dealer administration fees (up to $699) and registration fees are extra. Retailer may sell for less. See dealer for full details. ♦Every eligible contestant will win (subject to correctly answering a skill-testing question) an Instant Win prize consisting of a discount in an amount from $1,000 to $10,000 towards the purchase or lease of any new 2012 or 2013 Kia vehicle. One Grand Prize consisting of a $25,000 cheque will be randomly awarded from among all eligible contestants at the conclusion of the contest. No purchase necessary. Contest open to Canadian residents with a valid driver’s license over the age of majority. Odds of winning vary by prize and by region. See kia.ca or your participating Kia dealer for complete contest rules. 2013 Kia Rio and Rio5 awarded the “Best of the Best Finalist” by Canadian Automotive Jury (CAJ). Visit thecanadianautomotivejury.ca for full details. Cash purchase price for 2013 Optima LX AT (OP742D) is $21,572 and includes a cash savings of $3,400 (which is deducted from the negotiated selling price before taxes and cannot be combined with special lease and finance offers), $1,000 Everybody Wins savings, delivery and destination fees of $1,455, other fees and certain levies (including tire levies) and A/C charge ($100, where applicable). 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See your dealer for complete details. §Lease offer available on approved credit on new 2013 Sportage 2.4L LX MT FWD (SP551D)/2013 Rio5 LX+ AT (RO753D)/2013 Rio4 LX+ AT (RO743D) is based on monthly payments of $214/$181/$181 [includes delivery and destination fees of $1,655/$1,455/$1,455, $1,000 Everybody Wins savings, other fees and certain levies (including tire levies), A/C charge ($100, where applicable), $350 lease service fee and a lease savings (lease credit) of $500/$0/$0] for 48 months at 0.9% with a $1,999/$1,550/$1,400 down payment/equivalent trade, security deposit and first monthly payment due at lease inception. Total lease obligation is $12,259/$10,242/$10,069 with the option to purchase at the end of the term for $11,858/$8,680/$8,553. Lease has 16,000 km/year allowance and $0.12/km for excess kilometres (other packages available). License, insurance, applicable taxes, variable dealer administration fees (up to $699) and registration fees are extra. Retailer may lease for less. See dealer for full details. ΔModel shown Manufacturer Suggested Retail Price for 2013 Optima SX Turbo AT (OP748D)/2013 Sportage 2.0T SX with Navigation (SP759D)/2013 Rio4 SX with Navigation AT (RO749D) is $35,550/$39,145/$23,450 and includes delivery and destination fees of $1,455/$1,650/$1,455 and A/C charge ($100, where applicable). License, insurance, applicable taxes, other fees and certain levies (including tire levies), variable dealer administration fees (up to $699) and registration fees are extra. Retailer may sell for less. Available at participating dealers. See dealer for full details. The First Time Vehicle Buyer Program offer is available on approved credit to eligible retail customers who finance a select new 2012/2013 Rio 4 door, 2012/2013 Rio 5 door, 2012/2013 Forte Sedan, 2012/2013 Forte5, 2012/2013 Forte Koup, or 2012/2013 Soul. Eligible purchase finance customers will receive a credit in the amount of five hundred dollars towards the purchase of their new vehicle. Some conditions apply. See your dealer for complete details. Offer ends January 2nd, 2013. Highway/city fuel consumption is based on the 2013 Optima 2.4L GDI 4-cyl (A/T)/2013 Sportage 2.4L MPI 4-cyl (M/T)/2013 Rio4 1.6L GDI 4-cyl (M/T). These updated estimates are based on Transport Canada’s approved criteria and testing methods. Refer to the Government of Canada’s EnerGuide Fuel Consumption Guide. Your actual fuel consumption will vary based on driving habits and other factors. Some conditions apply to the $500 Grad Rebate Program. See dealer or kia.ca for details. Information in this advertisement is believed to be accurate at the time of printing. For more information on our 5-year warranty coverage, visit kia.ca or call us at 1-877-542-2886. KIA is a trademark of Kia Motors Corporation and Kia Canada Inc. respectively.


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WISE BUYERS READ THE LEGAL COPY: Vehicle(s) may be shown with optional equipment. Dealer may sell or lease for less. Limited time offers. Offers may be cancelled at any time without notice. Dealer order or transfer may be required as inventory may vary by dealer. See your Ford Dealer for complete details or call the Ford Customer Relationship Centre at 1-800-565-3673. *Purchase a new 2013 Focus SE Sedan/2013 Fiesta SE Sedan/2013 Fusion SE with automatic transmission for $19,999/$17,499/$20,999. Taxes payable on full amount of purchase price after Manufacturer Rebate of $0/$0/$4,750 has been deducted. Offers include freight and air tax of $1,650 but exclude variable charges of license, fuel fill charge, insurance, dealer PDI (if applicable), registration, PPSA, administration fees and charges, any environmental charges or fees, and all applicable taxes. Manufacturer Rebates can be used in conjunction with most retail consumer offers made available by Ford of Canada at either the time of factory order or delivery, but not both. Manufacturer Rebates are not combinable with any fleet consumer incentives. **Until November 30, 2012, receive 0%/0%/6.19% annual percentage rate (APR) purchase financing on a 2013 Focus SE 4 door (excludes S, ST and BEV models)/2013 Fiesta SE 4 door (excludes S model)/2013 Fusion SE with automatic transmission for a maximum of 72 months to qualified retail customers, on approved credit (OAC) from Ford Credit. Not all buyers will qualify for the lowest APR payment. Purchase financing monthly payment is $250/$215/$302 (the sum of twelve (12) monthly payments divided by 26 periods gives payee a bi-weekly payment of $115/$99/$139 with a down payment of $2,000/$2,000/$2,900 or equivalent trade-in. Cost of borrowing is $0/$0/$3,614.66 or APR of 0%/0%/6.19% and total to be repaid is $17,999/$15,499/$27,713.66. Offers include a Manufacturer Rebate of $0/$0/$4,750 and freight and air tax of $1,650 but exclude variable charges of license, fuel fill charge, insurance, dealer PDI (if applicable), registration, PPSA, administration fees and charges, any environmental charges or fees, and all applicable taxes. Taxes payable on full amount of purchase price after Manufacturer Rebate deducted. Bi-Weekly payments are only available using a customer initiated PC (Internet Banking) or Phone Pay system through the customer’s own bank (if offered by that financial institution). The customer is required to sign a monthly payment contract with a first payment date one month from the contract date and to ensure that the total monthly payment occurs by the payment due date. Bi-weekly payments can be made by making payments equivalent to the sum of 12 monthly payments divided by 26 bi-weekly periods every two weeks commencing on the contract date. Dealer may sell for less. Offers vary by model and not all combinations will apply. ‡‡Receive a winter safety package which includes: four (4) winter tires, four (4) steel rims (2012 Escape receives alloy wheels), and four (4) tire pressure monitoring sensors when you purchase or lease any new 2012/2013 Ford Fiesta, Focus (excluding BEV & ST), Fusion (excluding HEV), Escape, Edge (excluding Sport) or Explorer on or before November 30/12. This offer is not applicable to any Fleet (other than small fleets with an eligible FIN) or Government customers and not combinable with CPA, GPC, CFIP or Daily Rental Allowances. Some conditions apply. See Dealer for details. Vehicle handling characteristics, tire load index and speed rating may not be the same as factory supplied all-season tires. Winter tires are meant to be operated during winter conditions and may require a higher cold inflation pressure than all-season tires. Consult your Ford of Canada dealer for details including applicable warranty coverage. ***Estimated fuel consumption ratings for model shown: 2013 Focus 2.0L I4 5-speed Manual transmission: [7.8L/100km (36MPG) City, 5.5L/100km (51MPG) Hwy] / 2013 Fiesta 1.6L I4 5-speed Manual transmission: [6.9L/100km (41MPG) City, 5.1L/100km (55MPG) Hwy] / 2012 Fusion 2.5L I4 6-speed automatic transmission: [9.0L/100km (31MPG) City, 6.0L/100km (47MPG) Hwy]. Fuel consumption ratings based on Transport Canada approved test methods. Actual fuel consumption will vary based on road conditions, vehicle loading, vehicle equipment, and driving habits. ©2012 Sirius Canada Inc. “SiriusXM”, the SiriusXM logo, channel names and logos are trademarks of SiriusXM Radio Inc. and are used under licence. ©2012 Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited. All rights reserved.

FALL IN LOVE WITH A FORD AND SWAP YOUR RIDE. VISIT BCFORD.CA OR YOUR BC FORD STORE FOR DETAILS. VIEW OUR SWAPISODES ONLINE AT FORD.BLOG.CA/SWAPISODES

MONTHS

daily townsman

thursday, november 22, 2012

Page 15

Where in the world wide web will you find out what’s happening right here at home?

www.dailytownsman.com

bcford.ca

Available in most new Ford vehicles with 6-month pre-paid subscription


daily townsman / daily bulletin

Page 16 thursday, november 22, 2012

COMICS Horoscopes by Jacqueline Bigar

• 5” Continuous Eaves Troughs • Gutter Cleaning • Soffit • Fascia

Mark Lee

Phone: 250.426.0422

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ARIES (March 21-April 19) By midday, you could experience a change in your mood and energy, and your empowered self will emerge. As a result, you might be asked to handle a confusing matter. You will make the right decision if you can detach from the situation. Tonight: Get into some holiday music. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You know what you need to act on this morning. Even if you are confused, you will come up with a good result. In the afternoon, you might be confronted by someone’s hesitancy. Do some fact-gathering over turkey dinner. Tonight: Feeling very satisfied. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Someone you care about is demanding, and you will respond accordingly. Trust your judgment when others are spinning their wheels. Your softer side emerges. Follow your instincts when dealing with family and friends. Tonight: Watch a game together. CANCER (June 21-July 22)

Your ability to pull away from emotional content could define your Thanksgiving. You need to see the big picture in order to sort through an apparent problem. You might be surprised at what you perceive when you’re not triggered. Tonight: Someone appreciates you. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A partner does everything he or she can to make your path easier. Choose to be spontaneous, and you naturally will get into the mood of the day. At the same time, you could be drawn to the unexpected or unusual. Tonight: Listen to someone’s whispers. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Defer as much as you can to someone else. You often could be confused by this person, yet ultimately his or her caring comes through one way or another. A partner knows exactly which way to go with an investment or security-related matter. Tonight: Dinner could go late. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) You get a lot done very quickly, as long as you remain focused. Your imagination tends to drift. To stop

For Better or Worse

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time for loved ones. Tonight: A long-overdue visit. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Be aware of your own sensitivities, which might be pushing you away from your core values. Sometimes you don’t realize how strong your inner agenda is. Keep conversations going and stay open to others’ ideas. Tonight: Share with friends and partake in the holiday spirit. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Use the early part of the day to push a prime objective ahead. You might want to touch base with your inner voice once more before going out on a limb. Do not forget a friend or family member at a distance. Make an important call. Tonight: Your treat. BORN TODAY Actress Jamie Lee Curtis (1958), actress Mariel Hemingway (1961), tennis player Billie Jean King (1943) *** Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet at www.jacquelinebigar.com. (c) 2012 by King Features Syndicate Inc.

By Lynn Johnston

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East Kootenay Realty

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your mind from wandering, you might want to touch base with a loved one at a distance. Sitting on feelings rarely works. Tonight: Play it easy. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Your imagination affects nearly everything you do today, even banal conversations. You add cleverness to any question or conversation you have. Spend quality time with a loved one and/or a child. Make more time for this person. Tonight: Decide “yes” or “no” to Black Friday spending. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Don’t worry if you are slow to start once more, as you will be energized as soon as you smell some turkey. You know what to do -- follow that unusual or unique idea. Understand what is happening with a child or loved one. Share more of your feelings. Tonight: Ever playful. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You might want to focus on what is going on with your friends and family. Though work might be on your mind, you want to support those close to you. Stay sensitive to their needs. Make plenty of fun

Garfield

By Jim Davis

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Christmas Open House Saturday November 24th • 6-9 pm Wide selection of all natural clothing & fairly traded gift ideas!

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Baby Blues

By Kirkman and Scott

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Black Forest Haus of Gifts Are you getting ready for Christmas? Yes... so are we, with lots of new stock! Just Arrived - Remote Control Cobra Helicopters & Cars, Lego, Transformers, Hot Wheels, Plush, Jewelry, Accessories, Greeting Cards, Clothing, Stocking Stuffers and much more for Everyone on your list. FREE GIFT BAGGING! “In the Heart of the Platzl” 205 Spokane St, Kimberley 250-427-3233

Rhymes with Orange

By Hillary B. Price

Annie’s Mailbox by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Readers: Happy Thanksgiving to one and all! We hope you are fortunate enough to be spending the holiday with family and friends. We also hope you remembered those who are alone today and would love to be part of your family on this occasion. If it’s too late to include them this year, please make a note on your calendar to invite them next year. Our special thanks to those readers who are spending the day volunteering at shelters and soup kitchens. Bless you for your kind hearts and generosity of spirit. Dear Annie: A few times in the past, you have printed a Thanksgiving Prayer. The first time I saw it, I cut it out of the paper and read it at our Thanksgiving table. It perfectly expressed what I wanted to say. Unfortunately, I misplaced the poem last year. With all of the chaos after the big meal, I think it was accidentally thrown out. Would you please print it again? This time I will be sure to put it in a very special place so I can have it to read every year. -- Grateful in Arizona Dear Grateful: With pleasure. Here it is: Thanksgiving Prayer We come to this table today, O Lord, humble and thankful and glad. We thank Thee first for the great miracle of life, for the exaltation of being human, for the capacity to love. We thank Thee for joys both great and simple -For wonder, dreams and hope; For the newness of each day; For laughter and song and a merry heart; For compassion waiting within to be kindled; For the forbearance of friends and the smile of a stranger; For the arching of the earth and trees and heavens and the fruit of all three; For the wisdom of the old; For the courage of the young; For the promise of the child; For the strength that comes when needed; For this family united here today. Of those to whom much is given, much is required. May we and our children remember this. Amen. Dear Readers: Here’s one more poem, on the lighthearted side, sent in by a longtime reader. We hope you enjoy it: Twas the Night of Thanksgiving, author unknown Twas the night of Thanksgiving, but I just couldn’t sleep. I tried counting backwards, I tried counting sheep. The leftovers beckoned -the dark meat and white, but I fought the temptation with all of my might. Tossing and turning with anticipation, the thought of a snack became infatuation. So, I raced to the kitchen, flung open the door and gazed at the fridge, full of goodies galore. I gobbled up turkey and buttered potatoes, pickles and carrots, beans and tomatoes. I felt myself swelling so plump and so round, till all of a sudden, I rose off the ground. I crashed through the ceiling, floating into the sky with a mouthful of pudding and a handful of pie. But, I managed to yell as I soared past the trees... Happy Eating to all! Pass the cranberries, please! Annie’s Snippet for Thanksgiving (credit Dick Gregory): “One of the things I keep learning is that the secret of being happy is doing things for other people.” 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


Outerbulletin Limits Zone ¨ ¨townsman KTLA Zone /Zone daily daily

≠ ≠ WGN-A Chris Chris Ø Ø EA1 (:05) Network ∂ ∂ VISN Sue Thomas 102 102 105 105

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New Music Les Docteurs

Zone News News Mother Mother Mother Mother (:10) Owning Mahowny Murder, She... Eas Ab Fab Columbo Prince Prince Top Model Top Model Sens Union C’est ça la vie Telejournal Funny Videos

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PUZZLES

November 23

thursday, november 22, 2012

Page 17

Men’s Lingerie

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

Word Wild Biz Kid News Busi PBS NewsHour Wash. Need Doc Martin Land Girls Worst Worst Charlie Rose KSPS-PBS Sid News News CTV News etalk Theory Happiness Is CSI: Cri. Scene Grimm News News The Mentalist CFCN Ellen Show The Doctors News TBA News News Ent Insider Last Malibu Shark Tank (:01) 20/20 News N’tline KXLY-ABC Football Dr. Oz Show News CBS News Inside Ac Frosty Frosty Hoops Spon Person-Person News Late KREM-CBS Dr. Phil Judge Judge News News News Million. J’pard Wheel The National Dog Show Dateline NBC News Jay KHQ-NBC Ellen Show Vanier University Football SportsCentre Engrave-Nation SportsCentre SportsCentre TSN SportsCentre Poker Tour Sportsnet Con. CHL Hockey On the Edge Sportsnet Con. Sportsnet Con. Central UFC NET Bobsledding The Young News News News Hour Ent ET Iron Man Office News GLOBAL BC Ricki Lake Wild Ani Parks Mega Builders Murder Myster. Silk Party Animals Mega Builders KNOW Dino Arthur Clifford Word Olly Ste Dragons’ Den News News News Ex Georg Cor Market Mercer fifth estate National CBC Georg CBUT Reci News News News News ET Ent 16x9 Iron Man News Hour Fi ET CICT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent 16x9 Iron Man News Hour ET CIVT The Young T.U.F. Kung Kung Kung Kung Robots Spong Spong Spong Spon Young Young Boys Boys YTV Po Anderson Live Simp Ray Theory Two Theory Two Happiness Is Simp Simp News Rock Sunny TMZ KAYU-FOX Football Cooper 360 Piers Morgan Cooper 360 E. B. OutFront Piers Morgan Cooper 360 E. B. OutFront CNN Situation Room E. B. OutFront Star Wars: Episode I -- The Phantom Menace Star Wars: Episode II -- Attack of the Clones Tattoo Tattoo SPIKE Jurassic 3 Hunt Hunt Celebs Celebs Ext. Homes Hunt Hunt HGTV Holmes/Homes Hunt Prop Bryan Bryan Celebs Celebs Ext. Homes A&E Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Little Big Town Reba Reba Rules Rules Rules Rules Little Big Town Rules Rules Rules Rules Reba Reba CMT Clark Classics Dine Dine Love It-List It Cand Cougar Undercover Property Bro Property Bro Whip It Closer W Seattle Superstorm Haven Fast & Furious Haven Mummy: Dragon Emp. SHOW Beauty Worst Driver Salvage Hunt Jungle Gold Cash Cash Salvage Hunt Worst Driver Mayday DISC Cash How/ Daily Planet Trans/Preg Mob Wives Brides Brides Trans/Preg Mob Wives Brides Brides Nightmares SLICE Debt Debt Nightmares Say Say Say Bride Bride Say Say Brides Brides Say Say Brides Brides Bride Bride Say Say TLC Say The Mentalist Criminal Minds TBA Flashpoint Criminal Minds The Mentalist Criminal Minds BRAVO Criminal Minds Flashpoint (:15) The Amityville Horror (:20) White Noise Red Dawn Tremors Amity EA2 The Sting II Trans Ulti Aveng Star Ftur Family Fugget Robot Archer Dating TOON Scoob Loone Drag Drag Drag Drag Johnny Nin ANT Phi Gravity Dog Good Shake Austin Jessie ANT Aquamarine Dog Sharpay’s Fabulous Prin FAM Wiz Sein Family Family Amer. Just Like Heaven Long WPCH Office Office Theory Theory Brown Payne Brown Payne Sein Sein Match Work. Key Theory Laugh Laugh Gags Gas Match Simp Theory Anger Just/Laughs Com Com COM Sein My Fair Lady Camelot The Tempest TCM Dial M for Murder Stor Stor Stor Stor Haunted Coll. Stor Stor Stor Stor Haunted Coll. Stor Stor Ghost Hunters OUT Mantracker MASH MASH Museum Se Ancient Aliens Secret Secret Amer Amer Amer Amer Pickers HIST Pawn Pawn Amer. Pickers Supernatural 2 Headed Shark Attack Stargate SG-1 Star Trek: Voy. Supernatural 2 Headed SPACE Inner Ripley Stargate Atl. Constantine Walking Dead Comic Hush... Hush, Sweet Charlotte Walk AMC (2:30) Brubaker Pinks - All Out Pinks - All Out Pinks - All Out Pinks - All Out F1 Debrief Formula One Racing Victory Unique Whips SPEED Pinks - All Out Friend Friend Law & Order MASH MASH Debt ET Friend Friend Law & Order Law & Order TVTROP Casino Casino Outlaw Bikers (:15) The Vow The Hunter (:45) Cross Tinker MC1 Gone Gnomeo-Juliet Christmas Com Maury Family Family News News Two Two Reindeer The Happy Elf News Sports Friend Friend KTLA Cunningham Mother Mother Mother Mother News at Nine Funny Videos Rules Rules Rock Scrubs Rock Sunny WGN-A Chris Chris Funny Videos (4:50) High School High (:20) Growing Op Born in East L.A. CB4 Starsky & Hutch Bad EA1 Strangers Murder, She... Eas Wine Gaither Gospel Time- Sing! Apoca I Pro Bullets Over Broadway Super Popoff VISN Sue Thomas Arrow Arrow De De Hot Tub Time Machine Arrow Arrow De De 102 102 MM New Music Sens Union C’est ça la vie Telejournal Paquet voleur Télé sur-divan Terre TJ Nou Telejournal 105 105 SRC Les Docteurs

Inside unit fourth floor Shannon Heights. Very clean!! New patio door and bedroom window, totally renovated bathroom and new linoleum in kitchen, dinette and bathroom. View from balcony. MLS K214559 $102,900

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Far-Reaching Delivery!

The Cranbrook Daily Townsman and the Kimberley Daily Bulletin are delivered to over 5000 households, 5 days a week and over 300 businesses. In town and rural! Home Delivery in Cranbrook: 250-426-5201 ext 208. Home Delivery in Kimberley: 250-427-5333.

Not sure about the whole

digital NOW thing? is the time to get with it! On-Line Advertising – call your advertising representative today. Townsman: 250-426-5201 Bulletin: 250-427-5333

CALL 426-3272 OR VISIT

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

Fill in the grid so that every row (nine cells wide), every column (nine cells tall) and every box (three cells by three cells) contain the digits 1 through 9 in any order. There is only one solution for each puzzle.

www.tribute.ca

for this week’s movie listings


Page 18 thursday, november 22, 2012

3

daily townsman / daily bulletin

NEWS

Alleged theft of 100,000 toys FACTS You Need to Know ‘targeted,’ Salvation Army says About…

PAID ADVERTISEMENT

C ANADIAN PRESS

BC’s Economic Growth With

MLA,

Bill Bennett

1

The 14 members of BC’s Economic Forecast Council recently met with Finance Minister Mike deJong to provide essential advice in preparation of the upcoming provincial budget. The council gave an up-to-date view of the private sector outlook for BC in the coming years. Their advice ensures the budget can be as well informed as possible and major program areas like health and education remain protected.

TORONTO — The Salvation Army believes 100,000 toys were stolen from its Toronto warehouse over the past two years in a “targeted,’’ strategic plot to defraud the charity. Police have been investigating the alleged theft, estimated to be worth about $2 million, since late September, but have not made any arrests. The news comes as the Salvation Army is preparing to start its annual Christmas Kettle Campaign, where volunteers solicit donations in high-traffic areas like shopping malls and on the street. About 140,000 toys are distributed to families in need each holiday season from the Toronto warehouse, but spokesman John Murray said at a news conference Wednesday that no one will go without.

“I can assure you that anyone in need this Christmas will be helped by the Salvation Army,’’ he said. “To those Canadians who routinely and generously give to the Salvation Army I would appeal to you this afternoon to not lose confidence in the work of the Salvation Army and the work that we do on your behalf in Canadian cities.’’ A whistleblower within the organization tipped the Salvation Army off a few months ago and internal auditors made the “troubling’’ discovery, Murray said. Executive director David Rennie was then fired. No criminal charges have been laid. Police have not yet determined what happened to the toys at the Toronto warehouse. . “This is an isolated situation,’’ Murray said.

CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young

Major John Murray of the Salvation Army attends a news conference at their food and toy distribution centre in Toronto on November 21, 2012, after discussing the alleged theft of several million dollars worth of items. “We believe that it’s been very specific. It’s been targeted. It’s been very strategic in the way that it was put together. It was thought out.’’ The warehouse has video surveillance and security systems, but the Salvation Army has re-

2

The Majority of council members predicted BC’s real GDP growth will slightly outperform the Canadian average in 2013, estimating growth of 2.2 % in 2013, 2.6% in 2014 and 2.6 percent for 2015.

3

Despite global economic turmoil, BC remains a safe harbour for investors by controlling spending, balancing our budget, investing in skills training, exploring opportunities in natural gas, taking action to make life more affordable, and maintaining a triple-A credit rating.

Bill Bennett, M.L.A. (Kootenay East)

Province of British Columbia Constituency Office: 100c Cranbrook Street N. Cranbrook, B.C. V1C 3P9

Phone: 250-417-6022 Fax: 250-417-6026 bill.bennett.mla@leg.bc.ca

MBSS Wild Theatre Presents

YOU CAN’T TAKE IT WITH YOU by Moss Hart and George S. Kaufman

presented by special arrangement with Dramatists Play Service Inc., New York

tained KPMG to do an audit to determine what other checks and balances can be put in place. The security system is good, so the alleged theft signals that when there is a will, there is a way, Murray said. “If an individual wants to defraud an organization there are ways and means to do that,’’ he said. The hearts of people at the Salvation Army go out to whoever committed the alleged theft, but

Alta man drives car with 1.2 million km on odometer C ANADIAN PRESS

RED DEER, Alta. — A tough old car has brought new fame to a

Steel Magnolias Presented by Cranbrook Community Theatre Nov. 16, 17, 21-24, 28-30, Dec. 1

November 29-30 7:30pm December 1st 2:00pm Adults $15 Students/Seniors $12

Tickets available at the Key City Theatre or at 250-426-7006

if people have problems in their lives they should instead come to the organization for help, Murray said. “I also would remind people that when you’re stealing from an organization like the Salvation Army, you’re not stealing from the Salvation Army,’’ he said. “You’re stealing from those people who the Salvation Army helps every day and in Canada that’s 1.8 million Canadians in 400 Canadian communities.’’

Tickets $15 CCT Members $13 at Lotus Books & at the door

Location

THE Stage Door Cranbrook

Red Deer, Alta., man. Tim Lasiuta’s 1982 Toyota Corolla has nearly 1.2 million km on its odometer, a feat that has earned him a place in the auto makers advertising. Toyota is featuring the car in one-minute animated video called To The Moon and Back. Lasiuta says he paid $150 for the 30-yearold car four years ago and has since added 40,000 km to its 1,160,000 total. Still in good repair, he drives the two-door twotone automatic daily, using it to deliver newspapers and make trips to Calgary and Edmonton. He says strangers are so impressed they offer to help him get parts for the car to keep it on the road.


daily townsman / daily bulletin

thursday, november 22, 2012

NEWS

Page 19

Canadian museum gives up mummified head C ANADIAN PRESS

MONTREAL — The mummified head of a Maori warrior, the last one believed to be in the possession of a Canadian museum, is on its way home. The remains of the male warrior with tattooed skin were handed over to authorities of a New Zealand museum in a traditional ceremony Wednesday. In keeping with the tradition of the Maori, the indigenous people of New Zealand, the ancestral head was not permitted to be filmed or photographed. But the relic was visible to the handful of people attending the ceremony. Laying under a sheer black cloth, it was wrapped in cellophane and packaged in a series of protective boxes for transport. All the while, a group of Maori chant-

ed, prayed and sang during an emotional ceremony. Maori officials said they have spent a quarter-century trying to have human remains removed from display around the world and returned home for a proper burial. In the 19th century, Europeans became enamoured with the heads and the Maori began using them almost like currency to trade for muskets and other coveted objects. While some were sold and traded, others were stolen because of their value as curiosity items. “Before, they were received as works of art. They were people and they are people,’’ said Michelle Hippolite, codirector of the Museum of New Zealand. “In our culture, remembering that they are people first is what is

CANADIAN PRESS/Graham Hughes

Representatives of the Maori people sing at the Museum of Fine Arts in Montreal, Wednesday, November 21, 2012, during a ceremony where a Toi Moko (Maori head) was returned by the museum to the Maori of New Zealand. most important.’’ The head that ended up in Montreal was obtained by F. Cleveland Morgan in 1949 at the

Berkeley Galleries in England, before being donated to the museum. The Maori estimate

Celebrities offer custom recordings for fundraiser ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — Imagine having William Shatner supply your outgoing voicemail message. Or maybe you’d prefer Morgan Freeman coolly telling callers to wait for the beep. Or perhaps having Betty White joke around is more your speed. All it takes is $299 and some luck. The advocacy group Autism Speaks is offering custom-recorded messages from those celebrities as well as Will Ferrell, Carrie Fisher, Tom Hanks, Derek Jeter, Leonard Nimoy, Patrick Stewart and Ed Asner. From Dec. 3 to Dec. 9, a limited number of 20-second long MP3 messages will be recorded by each celebrity on a first-come, first-served basis for fans to do with as they wish. All requests must be of the PG variety. Asner, the curmudgeonly Emmy Award winner of “The Mary Tyler Moore Show’’ and “Lou Grant,’’ dreamed up the unusual fundraiser with his son Matt, who works for Autism

that they have retrieved about 320 of the 500 known remains around the world, located in 14 different countries. That doesn’t count private collections, but some collectors have come forward after hearing about the campaign to repatriate the heads. All the known Canadian ones have now been retrieved.

Many museums have been more than willing to return the artifacts, called the Toi Moko by the Maori, but some have balked. Rahui Papa, a cultural expert and a member of the tribal group on hand Wednesday, said those museums have argued that they own the heads or that they were part of larger collections donated to

San Francisco places ban on public nudity ASSOCIATED PRESS

Photo by Vince Bucci/Invision/AP

Actors and cast members William Shatner (left) and Martin Short perform at the 22nd Annual Simply Shakespeare reading of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” Benefit in Los Angeles on Sept. 27, 2012. Speaks. “I think people will get a charge out of it,’’ says Asner, who is currently on Broadway in the play “Grace.’’ “I’ll probably say, ‘What are you wearing?’ Or, ‘Take it off.’ Something like that.“

All proceeds will support autism research and advocacy efforts. If he could get a message from one of the other stars participating, which would Asner want? “I’m awfully stuck on Will Ferrell, having been

subjected to him in ‘Elf,’’’ Asner says. “But they’re all such standouts — Patrick Stewart, Leonard Nimoy, Shatner. The list doesn’t stop. Even Betty White,’’ he adds about his “MTM’’ costar. “She’s still got some good left in her.’’

them and shouldn’t be returned without consent. “Some believe they are their property and they’re not willing to relinquish them even to the ancestral home from where they came,’’ Papa said. Hippolite estimates that recovering all the known remains could take another decade or two. Wednesday’s ceremony at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts marked the fifth and last Canadian head to be returned from a museum in this country, said Nathalie Bondil, the museum’s director. The other heads, located at the Canadian Museum of Civilization and the Royal Ontario Museum, were returned in 2008. The Montreal artifact dates back to the 19th century. It was briefly on display at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts between 1982 and 1984. Since then, the head has been in storage and, last year, the Montreal institution’s board voted unanimously to return it.

SAN FRANCISCO — San Francisco shed a vestige of its free-spirited past as local lawmakers narrowly approved a citywide ban on public nudity. Casting aside complaints that forcing people to cover up would undermine San Francisco’s reputation as a city without inhibitions, the Board of Supervisors voted 6-5 on Tuesday in favour of an ordinance that prohibits exposed genitals in most public places, including streets, sidewalks and public transit. Boos filled the board’s chambers after the vote. Gypsy Taub, a nudist activist who organized naked protests and marches in the weeks leading up to the meeting, disrobed in protest before sheriff’s deputies escorted her from the room. A federal lawsuit seeking to block the ban already has been filed. Supervisor Scott Wiener introduced the ban in response to escalating complaints about a group of men whose bare bodies are on display almost daily in the city’s predominantly gay Castro District. He said at Tuesday’s meeting that he resisted for almost two years, but finally felt compelled to act. “It’s no longer an occasionally

and quirky part of San Francisco. Rather, in the Castro, it’s pretty much seven days a week,’’ Wiener said. “It’s very much a, ‘Hey, look what I have’ mentality.’’ Wiener’s opponents on the board said a citywide ban was unnecessary and would draw police officers’ attention away from bigger problems. Supervisor John Avalos also expressed concerns about what the ordinance would do to San Francisco’s image. “We are a beacon of light to other parts of the country, and sometimes there is a little bit of weirdness about how we express ourselves,’’ Avalos said. Exemptions to the ban would be made for participants at permitted street fairs and parades, such as the city’s annual gay pride event and the Bay-to-Breakers street run, which often draws participants in costumes or various states of undress. Under Wiener’s proposal, a first offence would carry a maximum penalty of a $100 fine, but prosecutors would have authority to charge a third violation as a misdemeanour punishable by up to a $500 fine and a year in jail. The law still must pass a final vote and secure Mayor Edwin Lee’s signature to take effect early next year.


dailyTOWNSMAN/DAILY townsman / daily bulletin DAILY BULLETIN

Page 20 thursday, november 22, 201222, 2012 PAGE 20 Thursday, November

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AreYou New to theArea? We’d like to

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Cards of Thanks •

Obituaries

•

Obituaries

Obituaries

Kootenay Monument Installations

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SASSY BLONDE, 30’S ~Fit and Foxy ~Private Sessions ~In/out Calls ~Specials Daily

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

Call Amy Call (250)421-6124 Cranbrook

Lost & Found LOST: NOV. 5 in Kimberley, downtown - brown prescription sunglasses in black case. Please call 250-427-0223.

Children Daycare Centers FULL-TIME or part-time spot available in Registered Daycare for children aged 0-5years. Please call (250)581-1328

Fred will be sadly missed by Joanne Schaeffer and his children; Cathy (Ed) Moyer, Roberta (Dave) Hamilton, Kieth (Sherry) Schaeffer and Darcy (Janice) Schaeffer. Also left to mourn his passing are his grandchildren; Joanne (Landon) King, Marcy (Dan) Moir, Katie (Josh) Sauve, Tyson (Chelsea) Hamilton, Joel Hamilton and Kayla Grant and his great grandchildren; Damin, Jade, Malia, Braxton, Calin & Colton, Ebany, Isabelle and Charlee. Fred is survived by his siblings; Matilda, Minnie, Flo, Liz, Norm, Allan, Diane and Barbara. Fred had a very special friend and companion in his dog, Rambo. He was his constant buddy for many years and Rambo has also been laid to rest. A Memorial Service will be held for Fred Saturday, November 24, 2012 at 2:00 pm at Mark Memorial Funeral Home, 2024 Industrial Road No. 2, Cranbrook. If friends desire, memorial donations may be made to the Canadian Cancer Society, 19 - 9th Ave. S., Cranbrook, BC V1C 2L9 or to the SPCA, 3339 Hwy 3&95, Cranbrook, BC V1C 7B2. Condolences may be left for the family at www.markmemorial.com. Mark Memorial Funeral Services in care of arrangements (250) 426-4864

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Frederick Frank Schaeffer passed away peacefully on the evening of Friday, November 9, 2012 at the age of 85 years. Fred was born on December 16, 1926 in Earl Grey, Saskatchewan. He worked for many years with the Canadian Pacific Railway in various locations around BC until his retirement.

Diane Johnson and Family.

•

Obituaries SCHAEFFER, FREDERICK FRANK 1926 - 2012

A big hug to all our good friends in Cranbrook. Thank you for your cards, phone calls, donations and for joining us for Wayne’s (Ole) Celebration of Life. We are blessed by all of the kindness shown and the special people we call friends.

Sympathy & Understanding

Personals

Obituaries

Thank You

FULL TIME CERTIFIED Dental Assistant required for busy dental office. Phone: (250)421-3883. Email: dririnabaciu@shaw.ca WANTED SUN LIFE FINANCIAL, a leader in financial services, is looking for exceptional people to train as financial sales professionals. Please call or send resume to: Bus: (250)426-4221 ext.2202, Fax: (250)426-8516 josee.bergeron@sunlife.com

Cards of Thanks •

www.welcomewagon.ca

LOOKING FOR Dave, owner of Silver Rock Co. I lost your business card! Please call Ken for business inquiry. (250)464-5639 or (250)489-6118

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.

Adopt a Shelter Cat! The BC SPCA cares for thousands of orphaned and abandoned cats each year. If you can give a homeless cat a second chance at happiness, please visit your local shelter today.

John Robert MacDonald January 19, 1936 - November 19, 2012 It was a major shock to his family and friends when Johnny succumbed to liver cancer one month after his diagnosis. He was predeceased by his parents Bert and Ruby MacDonald and granddaughter Grace Beattie. He is survived by his wife Karen; his daughter Christine (Scott) Beattie, granddaughters and grandson Hope, Noa and Fynn Beattie; his son Richard (Kristin) and granddaughters Skylar, Mackenzie and Sierra; brother Gary (Donna) and cousin Lynn Gartside (Richard). Johnny was a true Cranbrook boy as his father and grandfather were both born here. In his work as a provincial district gas inspector, he travelled up and down the East Kootenay Valley. He loved skiing, golfing and spending time at the cabin at Moyie Lake. He particularly loved having coffee with the guys at Arby’s. He enjoyed building models and tugboats were his specialty. He loved the many cruises that he and Karen shared as long as it didn’t take him away from his beloved cats Katie and Kisa for more that a couple weeks. He was a member of the Cranbrook Masonic Lodge and past president of the Shrine Club. A memorial service for Johnny will be held at McPherson Funeral Home in Cranbrook on Saturday, November 24, 2012 at 2:00 pm. Donations in remembrance of Johnny may be made to the: East Kootenay S.P.C.A., PO Box 2. Cranbrook, British Columbia, V1C 4H6 or the: Gizeh Transportation Fund, 350 - Weyburn Drive, Burnaby, British Columbia, V5G 3K9. Arrangements entrusted to McPherson Funeral Service. Condolences for the family can be offered at: www.mcphersonfh.com

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DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN daily townsman / daily bulletin

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

thursday, november 2012 Thursday, November 22,22,2012

Help Wanted

Friends of Fort Steele Heritage Town

Manager of Human Resources and Volunteer Services Summary The Friends of Fort Steele Heritage Town is seeking a full time Human Resources professional to implement human resource management strategies, policies, and procedures to manage the human resource functions of both staff and volunteers. This position reports directly to the General Manager and assumes the role of General Manager in the absence of, or unavailability of, the General Manager.

Key Responsibilities: r Develops, administers, and evaluates the operations of human resources and volunteer services within the organization in the interest of supporting staff and volunteers in carrying out the mandate of the organization. r Provides direct supervision and point of contact for operations in the absence of, or unavailability of, the General Manager r Plans for human resource requirements in cooperation with senior staff r Provides all staff with information about policies, duties, working conditions, compensation and benefits

Qualifications: r Bachelor’s degree in Human Resource management, Business Administration, or related discipline, or an equivalent combination of education, training, and experience r Minimum five years’ experience in various areas of human resources management preferably in a non-profit setting r Demonstrated knowledge, experience, and training in volunteer management

Contact: To apply for this position please forward a cover letter and resume, in confidence, to Jennifer Dunkerson, General Manager, Friends of Fort Steele, jendunk@telus.net by 4:00 p.m., Friday November 30, 2012. No phone calls please. For a detailed job posting, please visit www.fortsteele.ca We thank all applicants for their interest in this position but only candidates selected for an interview will be contacted. The Friends of Fort Steele is committed to equity in employment and encourages applications from women, men, Aboriginal persons, persons with disabilities, and members of visible minorities.

Business/OfďŹ ce Service

Business/OfďŹ ce Service

Business/OfďŹ ce Service

Employment

Services

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Financial Services

Summit Community Services Society Early Childhood Educator Little Summit Daycare

POWER DRYWALL LTD.

Employment

Requires Tradesmen for Steel Stud/Drywall project in Cranbrook BC. Project starting within the next couple of weeks.

Summit Community Services Society is seeking an Early Childhood Educator for a permanent full time position with Little Summit Daycare. Little Summit Daycare runs an Infant/Toddler program as well as a 3 years to School age program. 4ualiÀed candidates will have an Early Childhood Education CertiÀcate current Àrst aid certiÀcate and a current criminal record check. Possessing an Infant Toddler Diploma would be an asset. Resumes with references can be submitted in person or by mail no later than 1ovember 3 to Little Summit Daycare th Street South Cranbrook %C 9 C 9 Attention: Gillian Snider-Cherepak )a[ - - 33

North Valley Gymnastics Society is seeking • CertiďŹ ed Full or Part-Time Gymnastics Coaches • Full or part-time Manager for our new gym (prefer certiďŹ ed coach). Please email your resume to: petra@nvgym.com FAX it to: 1 250 545 4793 or CALL: 1 250 545 0516

SERVICES GUIDE

Positions available are Site Foreman, Steel Stud Framers, Boarders, Tapers, Laborers along with T-bar installers. Please contact Pat at #604-626-4900 or email Corey at corey@thepowergroup.com with resume or work history.

Merchandise for Sale

Need CA$H Today? Own A Vehicle?

ALLIANCE

FRIENDSHIP PLACE Daycare Centre & Preschool

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

250-489-5426 (Located in the Cranbrook Alliance Church)

BEAR NECESSITIES

HOME WATCH SERVICE Planning Winter Vacation? ~We do: ~Home checks to validate insurance ~Snow removal ~Water Plants ~Cat care and more. BONDED & INSURED For Peace of Mind Home Vacancy. Call Melanie 250-464-9900 www.thebearnecessities.ca

GIVE THE GIFT of Music Music teacher

Linda Rothero. 30 years experience.

Flute, piano & theory. Cranbrook and Kimberley

Call 778-517-1793

HANDYMAN

to the senior stars. All Indoor and Outdoor Renovation Projects including Painting, Staining & Plumbing. Cranbrook/Kimberley.

Steve 250-421-6830

HEALTHY HABITS

Childcare Facility in Kimberley, currently has childcare spaces available for children ages 0-5, also taking enrollment for February. Call Kristie for more details.

250-427-0209

DUSTAY CONSTRUCTION LTD Canadian Home Builders Association Award Winning Home Builder Available for your custom home and renovation needs. You dream it, we build it! www.dustayconstruction.com 250-489-6211

R.BOCK ELECTRICAL For reliable, quality electrical work *Licensed*Bonded*Insured* Residential, Commercial Service Work No Job Too Small! (250)421-0175

IS YOUR COMPUTER SLUGGISH OR HAVING PROBLEMS? It’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.

No Credit Checks!

Cash same day, local ofďŹ ce.

www.PitStopLoans.com 1.800.514.9399

Contractors

SuperDave offers affordable, superior service & most importantly; Honesty. SuperDave works Saturdays & evenings too! Call SuperDave (250)421-4044

NOTICE

2BDRM DUPLEX, $900./mo. plus utilities. No smoking, no pets. Close to bus routes. Prefer mature couple. Available Dec.1. (403)887-1505

TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS RE The Estate of Doris Jean Staples, deceased. Creditors and others having claims against the Estate of Doris Jean Staples, deceased formerly of 508 11th St. South, Cranbrook B.C. are required to send the particulars thereof to the undersigned Executor c/o Duncan Staples at P.O. Box 573 Ashcroft, B.C. V0K 1A0 on or before December 1st 2012 after which date the estate will be distributed having regard only to claims that have been received.

Misc Services

www.superdave consulting.ca

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.

CLASSIFIEDS WILL SELL WHAT YOU WANT SOLD!

CALL: 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**

Houses For Sale FAMILY HOME ON 5 ACRES

(*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 FIREWOOD, DRY Pine. $90./half a cord. $160./full cord, delivered. Phone after 6pm (250)427-7180.

Call for Free Estimate from a W.E.T.T CertiďŹ ed Technician Richard Hedrich (250)919-3643 tiptopchimneys@gmail.com

BOXES

Oh Dog’s Rescue and Adoption

250-429-3453

the place to pick up the special dog for your family wendy_smith@xplornet.ca

We’re on the net at www.bcclassiďŹ ed.com

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

$

475,000

Please Call

(250) 426-5385

BUNGALOW

FOR SALE BY OWNER

FOR SALE Only

20 Boxes

10

$

00

LIMITED QUANTITY! OFFER ENDS SOON

pick up at

Ph: 426-5201

SERVICES

Chimney Sweeping Fireplace & Woodstove Servicing Visual Inspections and Installations Gutter Cleaning Available

ARE YOU MOVING?

822 Cranbrook St. N.

TIP TOP CHIMNEY “Sweeping the Kootenay’s Clean�

Apt/Condos for Sale

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

Duplex/4 Plex

MARKET PLACE Sonny Nomland, your retired Electrolux Manager, always has a good selection of rebuilt ELECTROLUX vacuums on hand. Like new. Phone (250)489-2733 for more information.

Real Estate

Borrow Up To $25,000

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

Misc. Wanted

Private Coin Collector Buying Collections, Accumulations, Olympic Gold & Silver Coins + Chad: 250-863-3082 in Town

Legal

Contact these business for all your service needs!

Misc Services

PAGE Page 21 21

2 Bdrms, 2 baths, open concept. Windows on all sides makes this home bright. A motivated seller. Call for a viewing.

(250-489-3739)

320,500

$

CRANBROOK

3 YRS OLD, 32� wide Moffat stove. Works like new. $130. (250)427-3826

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dailyTOWNSMAN/DAILY townsman / daily bulletin DAILY BULLETIN

Page 22 thursday, november 22, 201222, 2012 PAGE 22 Thursday, November

Rentals

Transportation

Transportation

Apt/Condo for Rent

Cars - Domestic

Trucks & Vans

1966 Pontiac

1999 Chevy 2500 4x4

1 BEDROOM APT. downtown Cranbrook. $700./mo, DD + hydro. (250)489-1324 2BDRM, 1 1/2 BATH Willow View condo unit for rent, in Canal Flats. Great view, 2 parking stalls, F/S, D/W. Walking distance to arena, park and store. $850 + utilities & D.D., references required. Available immediately. Call (250)349-5306 or (250)4898389, leave mess. CEDAR PARK Apartments: 1&2 Bdrm. Elevator, on-site laundry, central location, live-in manager. Heat & hot water included. N/P, N/S. $675-$800/mo. (250)489-0134.

Modular Homes FOR RENT or lease/purchase. Nice 4bdrm. mobile in centrally located, well run park. All appliances. No dogs allowed. Rent for $900./mo. + utilities. Lease/purchase, negotiable. Phone (250)417-3360

Shared Accommodation ROOMMATE WANTED in 4bdrm house. 2bdrms, private bath, shared kitchen + own fridge, W/D, fully furnished. Available immediately. $600. + 1/2 utilities. (250)344 1120.

PA R I S I E N N E

4 door, hardtop, 283 - V8, 2 spd. automatic. All stock, excellent condition. 84,000 miles, needs seat covers.

Ph. 426-8602

6,000

$

OBO

Recreational/Sale Combination Truck & 5th Wheel RV

Suites, Lower 2BDRM FULLY furnished basement suite. No pets/smoking/parties. $1000./mo. utilities included. Phone (250)417-0059 or (250)426-5706. Near College & Mall.

Transportation Auto Accessories/Parts 4 TOYO WINTER tires. 235/60 x 16. Low mileage. Half price, $250. Phone (250)427-2498

Cars - Domestic

2001 Nissan Xterra

6.5L turbo diesel, ext. cab, short box, 283,400 km, newer auto transmission and tires, new glass, A/C, leather, pwr everything, spray-in liner, canopy, tow pkg w/brake controller and air bags.

2006 GMC Duramax Diesel 2500 HD with Allison Transmission 2008 32.5 ft Quantum 5th Wheel Lots of extra’s added since purchased, Extended Warranty on RV - Combined sale price is

6,900

$

1-780-756-6789

Help Wanted Apply Within

69,000

$

Call: 250-417-4069 or 250-417-1990 to discuss & view the package.

Your path to a better job starts here.

YOUR AD in Open Houses the TOWNSMAN

Open Houses

Open Houses

SATURDAY NOVEMBER 24 V6, 4WD, 230,000 kms, auto, silver. No body rust, runs great. 4 studded tires and 4 allseasons on rims. $4000 OBO

SOLD Contact: 250-427-9377, or 250-432-5831.

95 Saturn SL2

QN t .JTTJPO $SFT $SBOCSPPL 2 bdrm manufactured on its own land. Backs onto greenbelt, paved walking trails, next to Wildstone golf course. Vaulted ceiling, skylight, BBQ deck, room for a garage. K216495 $157,000. Hosted by Melanie Walsh

QN t 8ZDMJGGF 3E 8ZDMJGGF Motivated seller. 11.66 private acres. 3+1 bdrm, 4 bath, in-law suite, 2 offices, laundry on main, dble carport, mtn views. 10 mins to town or airport. Priced well below assessed value. K211339 $489,900. Hosted by Melanie Walsh

QN t UI 4U / $SBOCSPPL 3+1 bdrm, 2 bath, new covering & industrial coating on deck, new flooring, some updates, large windows throughout, great location, possession can be immediate. K215087 $179,900. Hosted by Sharron Billey

#BLFS 4USFFU t $SBOCSPPL #$ t 5PMM 'SFF

Low km’s, sporty air, tilt, cruise, fabric, 60/40 rear seat, 5 speed, 4dr, good mechanical, 6 all seasons.

1,500

$

Leave msg.

250-829-0555

Sex and the Kitty A single unspayed cat can produce 470,000 offspring in just seven years. Sadly, most of them end up abandoned at BC SPCA shelters or condemned to a grim life on the streets. Be responsible - don’t litter. www.spca.bc.ca

has staying power. has selling power!

With so many advertising mediums dividing the attention of potential customers, newspapers remain the most effective source for reaching consumers. Why? Simply put, newspapers reach more people, more often. Highly portable and highly visible, newspaper ads go with people and stay with them. That means your business is more likely to be on their minds when they’re in the market for related products or services. When it comes to spending your advertising dollars, make the choice that’s tried and true: newspaper advertising works harder for you.

To advertise, call today

250-426-5201


daily townsman / daily bulletin

thursday, november 22, 2012

Page 23

Get the word out about your product! ad•ver•tise | ' adver ' tıtız|-z| • verb [ trans. ] to describe or draw attention to (a product, service or event) in a public medium

in order to promote sales or attendance. • to make a quality or fact known. ORIGIN late Middle English : from Old French advertiss-, lengthened stem of advertir, from Latin advertere ‘turn toward.’ Turn toward the Cranbrook Daily Townsman 427-5333 426-5201 & The Kimberley Daily Bulletin for your advertising needs.

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daily townsman / daily bulletin

Page 24 thursday, november 22, 2012

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