Cranbrook Daily Townsman, February 25, 2013

Page 1

MONDAY

FEBRUARY 25, 2013

Nitros on the brink Kimberley down 3 games to none after weekend losses

Page 9

Ice in the thick of it

Pacwest weekend

Kootenay fights for its playoff positioning

Images of Provincial volleyball tournament

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Page 15

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Proudly serving Cranbrook and area since 1951

Vol. 61, Issue 38

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Humphrey named Woman of the Year Nominators, CFUW praise master gardener, volunteer, community activist B A R RY CO U LT E R

BARRY COULTER PHOTO

One of the main contenders for the leadership of the Liberal Party of Canada made a stop in Cranbrook and Kimberley on Sunday, Feb. 24. Martha Hall Findlay met with supporters at a luncheon at the Prestige Inn in Cranbrook, followed by a dinner at the Old Bauernhaus in Kimberley. Hall Findlay took time out to speak to the Townsman on Sunday. See Tuesday’s paper for details.

RCMP fight war on drugs

Task force in Cranbrook and Kimberley has laid 66 charges for possession and trafficking of illicit drugs SALLY MACDONALD Townsman Staff

A special drug task force in Kimberley and Cranbrook has brought a 23 per cent increase in drug charges. Cranbrook RCMP Cpl. Pat Prefontaine and acting officer in

charge Staff Sergeant Lorne Craig presented 2012’s crime statistics to city council on Monday, Feb. 18. In 2012, the Cranbrook detachment laid 48 charges for trafficking and possession of cocaine, marijuana and other controlled drugs. In 2011, it laid 39, meaning a 23

per cent increase in charges. “That’s largely to do with our drug task force. For the year, the drug task force made 66 charges between Cranbrook and Kimberley,” said Cpl. Prefontaine.

See RCMP , Page 3

A master gardener, former teacher and current high profile volunteer is this year’s Woman of the Year for Cranbrook. The Cranbrook chapter of the Cranbrook Federation of University Women announced Jenny Humphrey will be presented with this year’s honour, the 30th since the CFUW started the tradition in 1984. “We often know when we have made the best choice from the nominations we receive,when the response from the surprised candidate is a shocked question wondering what special thing they did,” said Cathryn Henley, Chair of the Woman of the Year Committee of the CFUW Cranbrook Club, who made the announcement in a press release Sunday, Feb. 24. Henley said Humphey was chosen by the Woman of the Year 2013 Committee of CFUW “because of the varied volunteer work she has done recently, as well as in the past several years to improve the lives of its citizens, not only visually and emotionally, but as well as in edu-

Jenny Humphrey cating the community through such things as the Cranbrook Guardian blog …” Humphrey was a teacher for more than 20 years in Cranbrook, while serving as President of the Cranbrook Cooperative Preschool, and a member of the Kinette Club. She was President of the Cranbrook Garden Club, initiating Cranbrook’s annual Open Garden Day among other ventures.

She served on Cranbrook’s Communities in Bloom committee, and was behind many of Cranbrook’s public garden initiatives — including spearheading the restoration of the Fink Fountain in front of Gerick Sports on Highway 3 and designing the Centennial Garden that surrounds it. She now sits on the Highway 3 Committee of the City Council.

See CFUW , Page 5

Caldwell Agencies

290 Wallinger Avenue, Kimberley ❘ 250-427-2221 ❘ www.caldwellagencies.com

The Hometown Experts with a World of Experience®


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Almanac Temperatures

High Low Normal.............................3°...................-7.8° Record......................11.5°/1986 ......-23.5°/1993 Yesterday 1.3° -9.8° Precipitation Normal..............................................0.4mm Record.....................................4.6mm/1976 Yesterday ...........................................0 mm This month to date..........................992 mm This year to date........................1011.5 mm

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K a m lo o p s Da i ly N e ws

The key witness in the murder conspiracy trial of three Cranbrook men is scheduled to testify for an eighth, and final day Monday in B.C. Supreme Court. Garry Shank, a lifelong criminal, signed on as an

Ba rry Co u lt e r

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

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Greely Lake area, where the slide hit Friday afternoon. Poor weather conditions prevented a search and rescue crew from safely removing his body until Saturday. The man, whose name will not be released until Monday

after his family has been notified, had set out for the slopes with a group of five people. Coroner Barb McLintock has said the two skiers who were not hit by the slide dug out the three skiers who were struck, but they were too late

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A well-known photographer, conservationist and wilderness guide will be giving a public presentation in Kimberley and Cranbrook on his knowledge and experiences in the northern Rockies of B.C. Wayne Sawchuck’s “Ride the Divide: Packhorses and Predictions in B.C.’s Northern Rockies,” looks at the spectacular Muskwa-Kechika region in B.C.’s far north. “The Muskwa-Kechika is North America’s most important area for large animals, both for numbers, and for species,” Sawchuck said. “This place of spectacular beauty faces

threats from natural gas development, wind power, forestry and mining, yet it remains almost unknown outside of northern BC.” Sawchuck grew up working in his family’s logging business in northern British Columbia. On the off season, he would explore the Rockies and the Boreal forests with his friends and his horses, and document his experiences. These days he leads wilderness expeditions on horseback, into the Muskwa-Kechika. He has written a book about the area, Muskwa-Kechika: The Wild Heart of Canada’s Northern Rockies. He has

Bruce Kirkby photo

Wayne Sawchuck

been recognized for his conservation work by the provincial and federal Canadian gov-

tomorrow

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that Monday is expected to be the final day of examination in chief of Shank by Crown prosecutors. The court will return Wednesday, the start of what is expected to be a lengthy cross-examination of Shank by defence lawyers.

for one of the skier who died. A 34-year-old German man died in an avalanche near Invermere, B.C., on Monday, and the Canadian Avalanche Centre says there’s a high danger rating for slides in many part of the province this weekend.

Ride the divide with Wayne Sawchuck

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and Carry. Fourteen jurors followed along with a transcript. Recordings from the wire worn by Shank in early 2010 during the investigation were played in court throughout the week, providing details of scenarios set up by police. Justice Dev Dley told jurors

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Across the Region Tomorro w

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RCMP agent to gather evidence against Lonnie Adams, Lorne Carry and Colin Correia. On Friday, dance music was heard in the courtroom from a recording in a Cranbrook bar, providing details of conversation between Shank

Body of Friday’s avalanche victim recovered near Revelstoke Mountain Resort C a n a d i a n P re s s

Tomorrows

Feb 25

Cranbrook Three trial to hear wire recordings

REVELSTOKE, B.C. — The body of an avalanche victim has been recovered near the Revelstoke Mountain Resort in B.C. The man was skiing out of bounds with two others in the

Precipitation totals include rain and snow

unrise 7 31 a.m. unset 6 21 p.m. oonset 7 26 a.m. oonrise 7 56 p.m.

daily townsman / daily bulletin

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The Weather Network 2013

35-1500 Cranbrook St N in the Tamarack Shopping Centre

ernment, in particular for the establishment of the 6.4 million hectares of the Muskwa-Kechika Management Area. Sawchuck said that 30 years of horse travel in the Muskwa Kechika convinced him that if it is to be protected in the long term, people need to see its wonders. Sawchuck’s presentation is sponsored by local environmental group Wildsight. It takes place in Kimberley at Centre 64, March 3, at 7 p.m., and in Cranbrook, March 4, at the College of the Rockies at 7 p.m. The events are public with admission by donation.


daily townsman

Local NEWS

Monday, FEBRuary 25, 2013

Page 3

RCMP talk about task force’s work Continued from page 1

The task force’s goal is to identify, charge and convict people who trafficked in illicit drugs. On the other hand, the detachment has issued fewer traffic tickets and written warnings in the past year. In 2012, it gave out 535 tickets and 767 notices and orders. That’s down from 602 tickets and 1,800 notices and orders in 2011. This translates to an 11 per cent decrease in traffic tickets, and a 57 per cent decrease in notices and orders. “That’s largely to do with our staffing. Traffic work is a lot of self gener-

ated stuff and if you’re running short you don’t have time to do this sort of self-generated stuff,” said Cpl. Prefontaine. There was an 11 per cent increase in person offences such as assaults, sexual assaults, assault with a weapon, robbery, threats and criminal harassment, from 507 in 2011 to 563 in 2012. Property related offences such as break and enter, mischief to property, and thefts were 1,089 in 2012, up from 1,052 in 2011, a three per cent increase. There were 57 motor vehicle accidents with injuries in 2012, while

there were 42 in 2011. That’s a 36 per cent increase. There were 61 impaired driving offences in 2012, as opposed to 88 in 2011, a 31 per cent decrease. In all, the Cranbrook RCMP received 7,439 calls for service in 2012, little change from its 7,602 calls in 2011. “That doesn’t include calls we consider concluded in the cab – we go to a suspicious occurrence, we don’t find anybody, we can write it off in the cab, it doesn’t generate a file but it does generate an occurrence. There is quite a number of those,” said Cpl. Prefontaine.

Two drug seach warrants executed in Cranbrook For the TOWNSMAN

On Feb. 15, Cranbrook RCMP executed two search warrants under the Controlled Drugs and Substance Act. Two residences were searched, one on Anderson Crescent and the other on 8th Avenue South in Cranbrook.

As a result police located and seized close to 13 grams of cocaine, a quantity of cash and items associated with trafficking. One male was arrested and will appear in Cranbrook Court in April. He is facing charges of Possession of a Controlled Substance

for the Purpose of Trafficking. The investigations are continuing and there could be further arrests. Cocaine is typically sold in one half and one gram quantities, so this represents several sales and would not be considered personal use.

The road less travelled New marketing initiative promotes journeys along B.C.’s Highway 3 S a l ly M acD o n a l d Townsman Staff

“Two roads diverged in a wood, and I – I took the one less traveled by/ And that has made all the difference.” This famous phrase from Robert Frost’s “The Road Not Taken” introduces a new tourist initiative to promote British Columbia’s Highway 3, which passes through Cranbrook on its route from Hope to Alberta. ThreeBC promotes the Crowsnest Highway, the lesser travelled southern route through British Columbia. “Where Highways 1 and 16 are deliberate and direct, threeBC takes a more holistic approach to travel. It doesn’t go so much where man would make it go, but more so where nature intended it. There is a sense not so much of purpose but more of opportunity,” said Andrew Stuckey, managing partner of StarNorth Communications. The Osoyoos-based company has created a multiple platform promotion of Highway 3, in conjunction with destination marketing groups in

Cranbrook, Creston, Castlegar, Grand Forks, Osoyoos and Hope. “What we have designed is an interactive opportunity for motorists to enjoy threeBC — before they leave home, while they’re on the road and even after they’re back home again.” said Stuckey. The initiative includes a website, www.threebc.ca, a Twitter handle, @ three_BC, and hashtag, #threeBC, and a Facebook page, 3BC. It lets drivers access things like weather conditions and road closures, suggested side trips, activities along the way, restaurants, accommodation, and maps. “Our intent is to a provide a vehicle that encourages visitors to further explore these communities, to access their websites and print publications,” aid Stuckey. “We want visitors to stop and immerse themselves in the unique opportunities these communities provide. We believe one of the best ways to do that is to get them interested in travelling threeBC.”

Barry Coulter photo

Sales have been finalized from the first annual Cranbrook Firefighters Burn Fund Community Calendar and more than $7,200 dollars was raised for the British Columbia Professional Fire Fighters Burn Fund. The Calendar was a joint project between the Daily Townsman, Rocky Mountain Print Solutions and The Cranbrook Fire Fighters. We would like to thank everyone who submitted photos, advertised in the calendar and everyone who supported the BCPFF Burn Fund by purchasing a calendar. For more information on the Burn Fund visit www.burnfund.org. Above, left to right: Cody Swanson and Murray Robertson of the Fire Department, Townsman Publisher Karen Johnston, and Stephen Wik of Rocky Mountain Print Solutions.

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Page 4 Monday, FEBRuary 25, 2013

daily townsman

Local NEWS

Radium, Jumbo to buddy up

Key Radium staff — including chief administrative officer, chief financial officer and corporate officer — will share duties with new resort municipality Greg Amos Columbia Valley Pioneer

Key staff members at the Village of Radium Hot Springs will soon be filling double roles by also working for the new Jumbo Glacier mountain resort municipality. Against a backdrop of more than 100 anti-Jumbo protesters from across the Kootenays chanting outside Radium’s village offices, the municipality’s inaugural meeting on Tuesday, February 19th solidified severalaspects of how Jumbo Glacier will work. All meetings will be held at the Radium office on the third Tuesday of each month at 1 p.m., a time that’s convenient for both Radium staff and Jumbo’s council, consisting of Mayor Greg Deck and councillors Nancy Hugunin and Steve Ostrander. All three were sworn in by Radium chief administrative officer Mark Read to commence the meeting. “Are you sure you want to do this?” he wryly asked Mr. Os-

Submitted

Joy Fera (nee Ward, above, centre), originally of Cranbrook, was recently presented with the Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal. The presentation was made by Vicki Huntington, Independent MLA for Delta South. Fera volunteers extensively in the Lower Mainland, as a cofounder of the Delta Deas Rowing Club, member of KidSport Delta, Delta Sport Council, and the Olympians BC Board. She is pictured with her husband Steve and MLA Huntington.

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trander, as protesters began pounding on the building’s doors and windows in time with a slogan of “Save democracy”. At that point, Columbia Valley RCMP Staff Sergeant Marko Shehovac, who was in the room, called for backup, as protest organizer Bob Campsall went outside to calm down the crowd. Two additional police cars arrived, though no arrests were made. The new municipality encompasses more than 6,000 hectares in the Jumbo Mountain area located 55 kilometres west of Invermere, where a world-class ski resort is slated to be built on a 104-hectare resort base. The development would include 5,500 bed units, and has faced intense opposition in the region over the 22-year history of the proposed project. The resort would offer year-round glacier skiing at elevations as high as 3,400 metres via 23 ski lifts. The decision to establish a new municipality in the area, which as yet has no buildings and no population, was made by the province last November. To keep costs down, the council will earn lower-than-average remuneration. Mayor Greg Deck will be paid $7,500 for each full year, while the two councillors will earn just $5,000 per year. “You guys are on the bottom of the barrel as far as being paid,” noted temporary administrator Phil Taylor, who will be replaced by Mr. Read within months. “Our constituent load is going to be relatively light,” quipped Mr.

Deck in response. Elderly Shuswap Band chief Paul Sam opened the council meeting with a prayer, and remarked he had never seen a grizzly bear in the Jumbo area in his life. “When you say Jumbo Wild, it’s fine, but what has wild ever done for us?” he said. “They’re protesting everything, but we’ve got our own heart and soul to tell us what to do. I’m glad that you people chose the right way to go.” About two dozen protesters were brought to Radium by Nelson’s West Kootenay EcoSociety, who on Monday, February 18th filed an application for a judicial review of the Jumbo municipality on constitutional grounds. Radium will earn a fee for service in exchange for having their staff members double as the administrator, chief financial officer and corporate officer for Jumbo. Kootenay Savings Credit Union will be the Jumbo municipality’s official banker, while Vancouver law firm Murdy & McAllister — one of the two B.C. law firms that carry out most of the legal representation for local governments — will advise the new community on legal matters. The Municipal Insurance Association of B.C. will insure the municipality, and offer risk management training to help it avoid claims. The key shared staff positions between Jumbo and Radium will be that of chief administrative officer, chief financial officer and corporate officer.

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daily townsman

Monday, FEBRuary 25, 2013

Local NEWS

Page 5

Cranbrook seniors: what is the need? Cranbrook’s Better At Home program developers want to know what services seniors need to stay in their homes longer

Sally MacDonald Townsman Staff

A pair of community developers is working to determine how many Cranbrook seniors are isolated, vulnerable and require in-home non-medical services. Sandra Davis and Pat Wray are seeking input for the Better At Home program, a United Way initiative funded by the Ministry of Health. Once the consultation stage is complete, an agency will be named to offer Better At Home services in Cranbrook. These support services could include light housekeeping, grocery shopping, transportation to appointments, simple home repairs, friendly visiting, light yard work and snow shovelling. “How many seniors do we have in this community who could successfully maintain their independence at home with a little bit of practical support?” said Davis. But first, Davis and Wray need to determine what and where the need is in Cranbrook for seniors in-home services.

“In order for this to happen, we need the support and will of the community to identify priorities and make this program a reality for Cranbrook,” said Davis. The pair are gathering input in a questionnaire for seniors until mid-March. If you or someone you know could benefit from inhome non-medical support, contact Pat at 250464-4889 or Sandra at 250-489-4593, or email cbkbetterathome@ gmail.com. The consultation will be capped off with a community meeting on Friday, April 5 at the Days Inn Ballroom in Cranbrook from 9 a.m. to noon. Please call to register. “If you, or someone you know could use these kinds of support, please add your voice,” said Davis. According to B.C. Stats, 17.4 per cent of Cranbrook residents are aged 65 or older, as opposed to 14.8 per cent of the national population. “We are living longer and the number of residents over the age of 80 continues to increase.

As we age, other risk factors fall into play, such as physical demands, transportation and social isolation as we lose

our friends and loved ones,” said Davis. “The vast majority of our seniors are socially dynamic, healthy and

Her interest in sustainable development led to her involvement with the Citizens for a Livable Cranbrook Society and the The Cranbrook Guardian blog. Humphrey is currently a volunteer with the Cranbrook and District Arts Council. One of the letters of support for her nomination came from Tara Gillanders. She wrote, “…Jenny takes her (volunteer) commitments to the next level.” Nominator Gerry Sobie wrote, “In essence, Jenny Humphrey loves Cranbrook and our East Kootenay. All her efforts center on this passion to the benefit of all our community.” Nominator Pat Adams wrote, “Jenny is very community minded and encourages oth-

ers to be involved in the betterment of this city. “Although I speak my mind, I speak from the heart, say what I believe and always want to do what I consider is the right thing, the fair and proper thing,” Humphrey said. “Doing that doesn’t always make me popular in some circles, but I feel in my heart and soul all citizens need to know all the facts about issues that come to Cranbrook. “Having been honoured in such a way as the CFUW Cranbrook Club choosing to give me this award validates my beliefs and some of the things I have struggled with recently. “Although I was never on a serious debating team, I honestly think all worthy issues

stances can very quickly change the picture for any individual and can lead to a significant loss in quality of life.”

Questionnaire for seniors Phone 250-464-4889 or 250-489-4593 before mid-March

Wendy Hogg photo

The Cranbrook Fraternal Order of Eagles has given $500 to the Kootenay Project Adventure for Visually Impaired Students, for their upcoming spring event. The project’s mission is to provide opportunities for Kootenay children and youth who are blind or visually impaired to participate in different physical and recreational activities. Past KPA activities included camping, rock climbing, dog sledding, kayaking and cross country skiing. KPA is working with Fort Steele Heritage Park, Mount Baker School and Adventure Smart to set up activities for May 2013. Pictured (left to right) is Cheryl Knipe, Vision Resource teacher for School District 5, Steve Chisholm from the FOE, Sam from Steeples School and Sarah Paziuk, Educational Assistant.

CFUW names 2013 Woman of the Year Continued from page 1

capable but we also have others who struggle with day to day tasks that the active take for granted. Life circum-

deserve good discussion and all points should be heard,” she added. The CFUW Cranbrook Club is hosting an award ceremony forJenny Humphrey at 4 p.m., Thursday,

March 7, at the Manual Training School. During International Women’s Week The CFUW Cranbrook Club invites all former “Woman of the Year” recipients to join them.

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PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE Public Notice is hereby given that the Municipal Council of the Corporation of the City of Cranbrook is considering adopting “City of Cranbrook Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 3764, 2013”. The purpose of the proposed bylaw is to amend the R-8, Mobile Home Park Residential Zone by reducing the minimum separation distance required between mobile homes, single family dwellings or structures from 6.0 metres to 4.0 metres, to better facilitate replacement of mobile homes within mobile home parks. “City of Cranbrook Zoning Amendment Bylaw No. 3764, 2013” may be inspected between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding holidays, up until March 4, 2013 as posted on the bulletin board in the foyer at City Hall, or in the office of the Municipal Clerk. The Public Hearing will commence in the Council Chamber, City Hall, 40 10 Avenue South at 6:00 p.m. on March 4, 2013. All persons who believe that their interest in property is affected by the proposed Bylaw Amendment may submit written presentations to the City of Cranbrook prior to the date of the Hearing and they may also submit written and/or verbal presentations at the Hearing, thereby allowing all persons an opportunity to be heard on this matter. SUBMISSIONS WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED AFTER THE PUBLIC HEARING. Municipal Clerk

Leanne M. Cutts Certified General Accountant 1017 16th St. S. Cranbrook, B.C. V1C 5V2 Phone: 778-520-0022 Fax: 778-520-0023 Email: lmccga@shaw.ca


PAGE 6

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2013

OPINION

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Looking ahead to fall election, 2017 “It’s not so much our friends’ help that helps us as the confidence of their help.” Epicurius “Some people only do good because it makes them feel good.” Anonymous

G

eorge likes to say that his wife, Fliss, started it all up again. “She gets at me at my lowest ebb, breakfast, before I’ve had a coffee,” he moans. “Why don’t you guys go and cheer up old Charlie?” George has always known that it is useless to differ with Felicity’s ideas. Oh! He can duck and weave and defer and forget, but she’ll remember that he ‘promised’ to do so and so. Anyway, while he, Malc and I were leaning on a fence doing nothing, George brought up the subject of the cheerless Charlie Noone. “The old fart’s getting worse,” he told us. “Fliss reckons he’ll kill himself if we don’t cheer him up some.” Malc and I pondered the problem of Charlie Noone who, unfortunately, since school days, has been labelled Charlie No one, and has since been inclined to be extremely morose. So he was not truly impressed when Malc and I, two of his closest friends, his boon companions, especially in adversity, through thick and thin, drove round on

Malc’s new – to him, that is – dirt bike because we’d opted to cheer him up. I don’t recall him even cracking a smile until we were leaving. To start with, even before all Hades broke out in his miserable existence, Charlie always managed to act as if he’d had a charisma by-pass early in his career and maybe this, maybe, why his wife had left him some years back saying that she’d prefer to be known as a ‘someone’ for a change. She’d taken the family Buick with her, leaving Charlie with a rattle-trap Ford and an even more sullen scowl. We discovered Charlie bent over some dandelions Peter in his garden, which, inciWarland dentally, would never be mistaken for a World Heritage Site. He stood up, straightened his back and commented in that joyless way of his, “Oh! Hell. Not you again?” Then: “Only two of you. You look like something the wheels’ve come off. Where’s Larry, or is it Moe, the other Stooge?” He has an acerbic sense of what he calls humour. “We’ve come to cheer you up,” said Malc bravely. “George is back home getting stuff ready. We’re going up the Estella Mine, then up on to the ridge.” “On that?” asked Charlie, peering over the ratty hedge at the dirt bike. Then: “So Moe is organizing another bout of chaos, eh?”

“George has got his G.M.C. all fixed up, room for all four of us,” explained Malc, sounding really enthusiastic. Charlie actually went pale. He then proceeded to remind us, slowly and carefully, how the last time we’d all ventured in George’s vehicle into the Rockies, it had stalled at every other puddle in the road and each time the distributor had to be cleaned, how we’d got stuck in a mud- hole up the vehicle’s axles and had to be wrestled clear with a jack-all that not one of us knew how to operate and how, when, way out in the back of nowhere, George managed to get a flat and he discovered that he didn’t own a tire-iron. “I’d be barking mad to come with you idiots,” said Charlie. “I’ll be there; you’ll be in good hands,” I assured him. “Trouble is: they’re not attached to a brain, far as I can see,” snapped Charlie. He can be really vicious when he wants. “Seems I’m the one that gets hurt, gets muddy all over, and doesn’t get no lunch. No thanks.” And that was that. Malc and I got astride the dirt bike. The motor started first kick then the clutch cable snapped. A hint of a smile replaced the scowl on Charlie’s face. Malc swore a great oath, revved the motor, then slammed the bike into gear. He took off in a cloud of blue smoke; I fell off the back. I think we did manage to cheer Charlie up just a smidgen that day.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Letters to the Editor should be a maximum of 400 words in length. We reserve the right to edit, condense or reject any contribution. All letters must include the name and daytime phone number of the writer for verification purposes. The phone number will not be printed. Anonymous letters will not be published. Email letters to editor@dailytownsman.com. Mail to The Daily Townsman, 822 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook, B.C. V1C 3R9. In Kimberley, email editor@dailybulletin.ca. Mail to The Daily Bulletin, 335 Spokane Street, Kimberley, BC V1A 1Y9.


daily townsman / daily bulletin

Opinion/Events Letters to the Editor

Modifications needed

Dear City Of Cranbrook; I’m writing this letter on behalf of my mom and anyone else with walking disabilities. The reason I’m writing this letter is because I know what it is like to know someone with walking disabilities, and seeing them trying to get up and down the steps/stairs of the Western Financial Place. One thing that would help this problem is putting railings in the middle of the steps/stairs. This would help many people and young children, even if some people don’t use the railings, people with disabilities and the elderly will use them. More elderly people may sit at the bottom of the arena to see more of the game. Another thing that has been a problem for my mom and family is the handicap seating. My mom has a legal handicap tag for the province of BC. We asked the people at the Kootenay Ice main office for handicap seating for my mom, but were declined because she was not in a wheelchair. The reason we asked for this was because she can’t get up and down the stairs like all the other people in the arena. I’m only 15 and I am very concerned about my mom’s and other people’s safety. This is the only way I know how to help people I don’t know or love. Handrails would help a lot of people in Cranbrook or visitors from other towns or cities. Thank you for the opportunity to write how I feel about this problem. Naomi Johnston Cranbrook

Dissent isn’t criminal

Re: Mayor on cull: `They’re not our deer’, Feb. 20. It is not that the deer are “owned” by the province, but that they are “managed” by the province, often in accordance to the wishes of municipalities. Through Cranbrook’s own actions, it appears their wish has been to kill because it was easiest to do that and to do it quickly without having to listen to at least half of Cranbrook’s population who do not a cull - All of this despite the proven wasteful and inhumane ineffectiveness of that method. When I served on the Cranbrook Urban Deer Management Advisory Committee (CUDMAC), I tried to bring forth the “try other deer management techniques.” From my perspective I was routinely mocked and antagonized by a few key members. To add insult, I was booted off CUDMAC in December 2012 after serving six short months. It is particularly disingenuous of Mayor Stetski to say they could have “done a better job as council in communication with the public around the deer cull” when in fact they appear to have violated the Community Charter by holding meetings closed to the public when there was no legal rationale for doing so. He cites “safety concerns” for residents “who might want to have a trap in their yard as a result of this process” and contractors. That implies that those of us of the BCDPC who dare speak out against the cull are a threat. We are not. We have broken no laws, do not intend to break

any laws, and resent any implication to the contrary. We should have the right to dissent without it being implied that we are criminals. The “issues in Invermere last year” that he cites, apparently relate to a person damaging a trap to release a very distressed buck who had been captured during the day – which contravened the culling contract requirements. After getting no response from authorities to deal with the distressed buck who had severely injured himself thrashing about in the trap, the concerned citizen decided to free the animal so it didn’t suffer any further. Anything else is unsubstantiated personal opinion which paints all animal advocates with the same brush – that of being criminals. We have no problem with reducing the deer population in Cranbrook, but the process must be done intelligently, humanely, and effectively. The net result following the combination of both culling and other forms of deer mortality have, according to best evidence, been a net increase in the number of deer in the urban areas, as we have predicted. The Mayor claims he wants people to understand how much they have struggled with the issue. In fact, culling has always been the default position. And people in a supposedly free and democratic society can never understand that which is done in secrecy. Colleen Bailey The BC Deer Protection Coalition

The tragic fate of ‘Prisoner X’

B

en Alon, Ben Allen and Benjamin Burroughs are dead. So is Benjamin Zygier, an Australian Zionist who moved to Israel in the 1990s and became an Israeli citizen. He then adopted the curious custom of flying back to Australia at fairly frequent intervals to change his name (Australia lets its citizens change their names once every twelve months). And every time, Zygier would take out an Australian passport in his new name. The reason, it turns out, was that he had been recruited by Mossad, the Israeli external intelligence agency, to supply it with Australian passports for use in its foreign operations. So far, nothing new. Israel has been compelled at various times to apologise to the British, Canadian and Australian governments, among others, for using the passports of Israelis with dual citizenship in its various clandestine operations abroad. But then the Israeli government arrested Zygier, and held him in solitary confinement until he committed suicide in his cell in late 2010. It has taken until now for the story to get out because Zygier’s imprisonment without trial was treated as a state secret. Even his jailers were not allowed to know the name of “Prisoner X” or the reason he was being held – and after his death the Israeli government went to extreme lengths to keep the whole affair secret, even threatening Israeli editors with fines or jail if they reported on it. What could he have known or done to merit such treatment? The likely answer is that the Mossad

hit team that murdered Palestinian leader Mahmoud al-Mabhouh in Dubai in January, 2010 used one or more of Zygier’s passports, and he started to get cold feet. Especially since around the same time the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation woke up and had a little chat with him about his multiple name changes. So did Zygier just lose his nerve and confess the passport scam to the ASIO? That would annoy Gwynne his Israeli employers, but not so much that they Dyer would turn him into “Prisoner X”. The Australian government would complain through diplomatic channels, the Israeli government would solemnly promise not to do it again, and Mossad would just carry on as if nothing had happened. Israel regularly spies on the United States, its greatest ally, and then shamelessly lobbies Congress to get its convicted spies released, so it’s obviously not going to worry about offending the Australians. But what if the ASIO turned Zygier into a double agent, and pumped him for information on Israeli “black” operations? Whatever. The point is not Zygier’s personal tragedy, or even Israel’s misuse of the passports of its friends and allies in its black ops. It is rather that all this Boy’s Own cloak-and-dagger stuff is profoundly foolish. Or at least the dagger part is. When Mossad occupies itself in gathering intelligence and doing strategic analysis, it does good work. For example, it has been successful so far in its attempts to talk Binyamin Netanyahu’s

government out of launching an extremely ill-advised attack on Iran over its alleged nuclear weapons ambitions. But Mossad’s assassination programme is a long-running disaster. Sometimes it kills the wrong person, as when it murdered an innocent Moroccan waiter in Norway whom it mistook for one of those responsible for the massacre of Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics. But what enemy of Israel was deterred, what further attack on Israel was prevented, by Mossad’s success in hunting down and killing more than a dozen other people whom it suspected of being involved in that atrocity? When five Mossad agents, travelling on Canadian passports, poisoned Khaled Meshaal, then head of Hamas’s political bureau, in Amman in 1997, it nearly wrecked Jordan’s peace treaty with Israel, and in the end Israel had to come up with an antidote for the poison. Canada even withdrew its ambassador from Israel for a time. And when it murdered Mahmoud al-Mabhouh in Dubai three years ago, just three days after the first-ever visit by an Israeli cabinet minister to the United Arab Emirates, it put a promising detente between the two countries into the deep freeze indefinitely. The whole wig-and-fake-passport nonsense is worse than a distraction from Mossad’s real job. It is self-indulgent and counter-productive. And often, when innocent bystanders are killed in these operations, it is criminal. You know, like those US drone strikes that kill innocent bystanders every month. Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist based in London

Monday, FEBRuary 25, 2013

Page 7

What’s Up?

KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDAR

UPCOMING The Kimberley Health Care Auxiliary’s GM will take place Monday February 25 at 1pm in the meeting room next to the Loan Cupboard in the Kimberley Health Centre, 4th Ave in Kimberley. Square Foot Gardening Seminar, Monday Feb 25th, 7:00pm. Baynes Lake Community Hall, Baynes Lake. Square Foot Gardening is a new approach to gardening that takes: 1/2 the cost, 1/5 the space, 1/10 the water, 1/20 the seeds and 1/50 the work! FMI: Doug Lyon at 250-429-3519. Jubilee Chapter #64, OES, will meet at 7:30 PM sharp, on Monday, February 25, at the Masonic Hall, 401-3rd Avenue South, Cranbrook. It’s Birthday Night! Have Camera Will Travel.... Join Teresa and Keith Corbould in their travelogue presentation “Walking in Central Italy & Sicily” at Centre 64, Tuesday, Feb 26 at 7:30 pm. Admission by donation. Proceeds to Kimberley Arts Council & Expansion Project. Feb 27, 7pm at EK Credit Union Banking Bldg, Inaugural meeting of Cranbrook Rotaract Club - a social/service club for ages 18-30. Register now for the 2013 East Kootenay Regional Science Fair, March 1 and 2 at the College of the Rockies, Cranbrook. This year’s theme is water cooperation. Visit www.ekrsf.ca to enrol. Volunteers needed for stints from two hours to all day. Anita 250-420-7287. The World Day of Prayer is being held at Christ the Servant Church on Fri. Mar. 1st at 1.30pm. Everyone is welcome. World Day of Prayer Service-Friday March 1st 2013 @2pm. Holy Cross Lutheran Church. 105 Howard St Kimberley Sat. March 2nd, Easter Craft Fair, 10am to 4pm, Abundant Life Assembly, 501 - 11 Ave. S., Cranbrook. Chocolate Sale Fundraiser for the KCA Library. To book stall, call Carole Telman, 250-426-5779. 2013 Crown Managers Forum: Large Landscapes: Working Across Boundaries, held at Prestige Rocky Mountain Resort, Cranbrook, March 5-7, 2013. Visit the Crown Managers Partnership website for more information and to register: www.crownmanagers.org. 2013 FREE PUBLIC SWIM Wednesday, March 6, 5:00-6:00 PM is sponsored by H&R Block. Wed March 6th. GoGo Grannies Travelogue. You just can’t miss in Barcelona–if you want to sample this diverse and cosmopolitan city join Gerry and Sandra Warner March 6 at the College of the Rockies for a fabulous show. Admission by donation East Kootenay Wild Turkey Asociation General Meeting is Thursday March 7, 2013 at 7:00 pm, meeting room, Days Inn in Cranbrook BC. Details call Rob 250-426-7732 or Abbie 250-427-5236. ONGOING Canadian Cancer Society- if you have spare time and would like to volunteer, interested applicants can call 250-4268916, drop by our office at #19-9th Avenue S, Cranbrook or go to www.fightwithus.ca and register as a volunteer. Royal Canadian Legion Branch 24; Friday Meat Draw: 4:30- 6:30, Saturday Meat Draw: 3:30-5:30. ICBL-Duplicate Bridge–Senior Center in Cranbrook. Mon & Wed 7pm, Thurs & Fri 1pm at Scout Hall, Marysville. Info: Maggie 250-417-2868. Tai Chi Moving Meditation every Wednesday 3-4 pm at Centre 64. Starts November 7th. Call Adele 250-427-1939. Cranbrook Phoenix Toastmasters meet every Thursday, noon - 1:00 Heritage Inn. Toastmasters teaches communication & leadership skills. Roberta 250-489-0174. 1911.toastmastersclubs.org. Breast Cancer Support Group in Kimberley. Information about meetings please call Daniela 250-427-2562 or Lori 250-427-4568. Kindergarten boosters are available for children between the ages of 4 and 6 years at the Cranbrook Health Unit. For an appointment call 250 420-2207. Do you have 3 hours a week to give? Contact the Kimberley Health Care Auxiliary Thrift Shops at 250-427-2503 (Brenda) or 250-427-1754 Gayle) for volunteer opportunities: cashiers, sorters, after hours cleaners. CRANBROOK QUILTERS’ GUILD hold their meetings every 2nd & 4th Tuesday of each month at 7:15pm upstairs in the Seniors’ Hall, 125-17th Ave. S. Everyone welcome. Info: Betty at 250-489-1498 or June 250-426-8817. 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. ESL: CBAL hosts Conversation Cafe Tues 7-9pm, morning class Wed 10am-12noon & Evening class Wed 7pm-9pm. All sessions held at CBAL office 19 9th Ave S. Childcare upon request. All programs are FREE. FMI: Bruce 250-9192766 or khough@cbal.org 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 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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Johnson cruises to Daytona 500 win JENNA FRYER Associated Press

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. - A big first for Danica Patrick, but an even bigger second for Jimmie Johnson. Patrick made history up front at the Daytona 500 Sunday, only to see Johnson make a late push ahead of her and reclaim his spot at the top of his sport. It was the second Daytona 500 victory for Johnson, a five-time NASCAR champion who first won “The Great American Race” in 2006. “There is no other way to start the season than to win the Daytona 500. I’m a very lucky man to have won it twice,” said Johnson, who won in his 400th career start. “I’m very honoured to be on that trophy with all the greats that have ever been in our sport.” It comes a year after Johnson completed only one lap in the race because of a wreck that also collected Patrick, and just three months after Johnson lost his bid for a sixth Sprint Cup title to go two years without a champion-

ship after winning five straight. Patrick, the first woman to win the pole, also became the first woman to lead the race. She was running third on the last lap, but faded to eighth at the finish and admitted she’ll replay it over in her mind. “I would imagine pretty much anyone would be kicking themselves about what they coulda, shoulda have done to give themselves an opportunity to win,” she said. “I think that’s what I was feeling today, was uncertainty as to how I was going to accomplish that.” There were several multi-car crashes during the race, none approaching the magnitude of the wreck that injured more than two dozen fans a day earlier in the second-tier Nationwide Series race on the same track. Daytona International Speedway workers were up until 2 a.m repairing the fence that was damaged in the accident, and track officials offered Sunday morning to move any fans who felt uneasy sitting too close to the track.

Heat topple Cavaliers for 11th straight win TIM REYNOLDS Associated Press

MIAMI - Dwyane Wade got hot down the stretch, and LeBron James missed a layup in the final minute. Both were huge breaks for the Miami Heat. James scored 28 points, Wade scored 11 of his 24 in the final five minutes - when Miami needed him most - and the Heat extended the NBA’s longest current winning streak to 11 games, beating the Cleveland Cavaliers 109-105 in a back-andforth matchup Sunday night. The Heat blew a 22point second-half lead then rallied from eight down with 5:16 left. “We’re a veteran ballclub and we’ve been in every situation that an NBA game can offer

us,” James said. “We don’t get too high, we don’t get too low, we just play the 48 minutes out and see where it takes us.” Dion Waiters scored 26 points, C.J. Miles added 19 and Kyrie Irving scored 17 for Cleveland, which outscored Miami by a stunning 30 points over a 17-minute stretch of the second half, yet still came up empty. The Cavaliers are now 1-8 against the Heat since James signed with Miami in July 2010. “We had a very good chance against a very good basketball team, the world champions, and we lost the game because of mental mistakes,” Cavaliers coach Byron Scott said. “That’s just something that we can’t have happen again.”

SPORTS

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KOOTENAY ICE

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Kootenay Ice forward Jaedon Descheneau attempts to pounce on a loose puck in the crease during a game against the Calgary Hitmen on Saturday evening at Western Financial Place.

Ice collect big points with two wins Kootenay now chasing Swift Current for seventh place in Eastern Conference

TRE VOR CR AWLEY Sports Editor

The Kootenay Ice extended their win streak to four straight victories by shutting out the Hurricanes 2-0 on the road on Sunday evening. Kootenay was riding high off a 5-1 shellacking of the Calgary Hitmen at Western Financial Place the night before as the club tied a franchise record at 12 consecutive home wins. With the win over the ‘Canes, the Ice have now opened up a five-point cushion between themselves and Lethbridge, which are now on the

outside of the playoffs and looking in. Kootenay is a single point behind the Swift Current Broncos for seventh place, and have the luxury of a game in hand. “When you win and get those points, especially in a division game, it’s always huge and we’ll have to enjoy that work tonight and then it’s back to work, because we still want to close some ground on some other teams,” said Ice assistant coach Chad Kletzel. Kootenay came out guns blazing in the first

period against the ‘Canes, putting 20 shots on Ty Rimmer, while the opposition only mustered five shots in return. “We got a couple powerplays early and had some chances at the net and obviously, Ty Rimmer is a quality goaltender, so you got to make sure you bury your chances in tight, and it just seemed like we couldn’t bury on him early,” said Kletzel. Jon Martin got hit from behind by Josh Derko and had to leave the game. Jeff Hubic went in to dispense pu-

gilistic justice, and the two tussled for a bit. Martin was checked out in the dressing room and eventually returned to the game. The two teams held each other scoreless in the first frame, but the game broke open in the middle frame, when the tandem of Jaedon Descheneau and Sam Reinhart teamed up once again. Reinhart dished off the puck from behind the net to Descheneau in the slot, who banged in 20th goal of the season. Lethbridge got des-

perate in the third period, but Ice goaltender Mackenzie Skapski slammed the door on any scoring chances. “When we needed a save, he was there to help us out and when a goalie gets a shutout, it shows he had a really strong game,” said Kletzel. Descheneau scored an empty netter from behind the red line in the final minute of the game to notch his sixth goal over the last three games.

See ICE , Page 9

Road troubles hit Canucks with 8-3 loss to Red Wings ASSOCIATED PRESS

DETROIT - Less than 30 hours after being burdened with a five-game losing skid, the Detroit Red Wings are suddenly headed in the other direction. Damien Brunner had two goals and two assists, and Joakim Andersson scored twice for the Red Wings in an 8-3 victory over the Vancouver Canucks on Sunday. The Red Wings ended their

losing streak with a 4-0 win over Nashville on Saturday night and then followed it up with a rout of the Canucks. “This was a tough game. You’re playing at 5:00 after playing a 7:00 the night before,” Detroit coach Mike Babcock said. “It’s one on your schedule you look at, you don’t know if you’ll have an opportunity to win. We feel real fortunate to have gotten back-to-back wins.”

Henrik Zetterberg and Niklas Kronwall had a goal and two assists each, Daniel Cleary added a goal and an assist, and Jordin Tootoo also scored for Detroit, which netted three power-play goals in the second period to take the lead. “Of course the team that didn’t play the night before had more energy. It’s natural, but you’ve just got to keep it simple and not get caught out there for a long time,” Zetterberg, the

Red Wings captain, said. “We did that today and we got some goals on the power play, and that helps.” Pavel Datsyuk and Jonathan Ericsson added two assists, and Jimmy Howard made 18 saves. Daniel Sedin had two goals, and Chris Higgins also had a goal for Vancouver. Henrik Sedin had two assists, and Roberto Luongo stopped 20 shots but lost in regulation for the first time this season.


daily townsman / daily bulletin

Monday, FEBRuary 25, 2013

Sports

Nitros on the brink of elimination

Dynamiters get into penalty trouble as Rockets power their way to a 3-0 series stranglehold Tre vor Cr awley Sports Editor

The Nitros are on the brink of elimination from the KIJHL playoffs following two losses over the weekend to the Golden Rockets. The Rockets scored seven powerplay goals and beat the Dynamiters 12-2 on Friday in Golden, and followed up with a 7-3 win on Saturday at the Civic Centre in Kimberley. Golden is now up three games in the series, with the fourth matchup happening Monday evening in Kimberley. The Dynamiters had a parade to the penalty box on Friday, as the Nitros gave up 16 power play opportunities, including a five-minute major infraction. Despite the blowout, it was the Nitros that struck first less than a minute into the game, with a marker from Eric Buckley. However, the Rockets would respond with

four goals—two on the powerplay—by the end of the frame. Golden kept up the pressure in the second period with the same results in the first—four goals, two of which were scored with the man-advantage.

The Nitros managed to get one by the end of the period, on an unassisted effort by Dylan Sibbald. Golden’s special teams continued to rampage in the third period, as three more goals were scored on the power play, while another was a shorthanded. The Rockets put 42 shots in total on net between Jeremy Mousseau and Matthew

Mitchell, who shared duties for the game. James Leonard stood in goal for the Rockets and turned away 29 shots. Golden came down to Kimberley on Saturday and spoiled the Nitros’ playoff debut on home ice, skating away with a 7-3 win at the Civic Centre. The Rockets led 5-3 after two periods, and scored another pair of goals in the final frame to prevent a Kimberley comeback. Golden scored a trio of goals in the first period, but the Nitros responded with markers from Jason Richter and Matt Gann by the end of the opening 20 minutes. Kimberley tied it up in the second period on a goal from Darren Martin, but the Rockets managed to add another pair of goals to regain the lead. It was more of the same in the third period, as Golden got on

KIJHL Playoff Update Eddie Mountain Division Golden Rockets Kimberley Dynamiters Fernie Ghostriders Columbia Valley Rockies

3 0 1 1

Neil Murdoch Division Castlegar Rebels Spokane Braves

2 0

Nelson Leafs Beaver Valley Nitehawks

1 1

Doug Birks Division North Okanagan Knights Kamloops Storm

2 0

Sicamous Eagles Revelstoke Grizzlies

1 1

Okanagan Division Summerland Steam Kelowna Chiefs

2 0

Osoyoos Coyotes Princeton Posse

2 0

the board twice to prevent the Nitros from coming back. Mousseau and Mitchell rated duties again, collectively facing 51 shots, while Leonard turned away

23 pucks for the Rockets. The Dynamiters face off against the Rockets for Game Four on Monday evening in Kimberley.

Homan beats Jones 9-6 to win Scotties Gregory Strong Canadian Press

KINGSTON, Ont. Ontario’s Rachel Homan showed her mettle as a skip and her skills as a team leader Sunday at the Scotties Tournament of Hearts. Her efforts paid off with a 9-6 win over Manitoba’s Jennifer Jones and her first national women’s curling title. Homan helped calm teammate Lisa Weagle after she accidentally burned a rock in the fifth end. It could have been disastrous for a young team against an experienced four-time champion in Jones. But the play didn’t faze the Ontario rink. Weagle responded with excellent sweeping to help Homan draw to the button to cap the end and maintain the team’s momentum. Ontario would put up three points in the seventh and stole two more in the eighth to put the game out of reach. “It’s the final game, so if you’re not going to stick together, it’s not going to work,” Homan said. “Win or lose, I’m just so proud of our team.” Homan and her Otta-

wa Curling Club team of Weagle, Emma Miskew, Alison Kreviazuk and alternate Stephanie Drew will represent Canada at next month’s world women’s curling championship in Riga, Latvia. The 23-year-old Homan displayed steely determination all week. She dropped just a single game in the round robin - to Jones - and beat her twice in a row in the playoffs. The Ontario skip hugged her teammates and coach after the victory and was overcome with emotion while speaking to reporters after the win. She had to pause on occasion as tears of joy welled in her eyes. “I can’t even comprehend what just happened right now,” Homan said. “It’s unbelievable.” The partisan crowd at the K-Rock Centre roared its approval in the opening end as Homan jumped out to an early lead. Jones crashed on a guard and Homan made a nice draw to score three. Jones cut into the lead by scoring one in the second end and adding another single in the fourth.

Play was delayed for a couple minutes in the fifth end when Weagle’s broom accidentally made contact with a stone at the 12-foot. The stone was raised by the broom and the rock actually popped up in the air when the thrown stone made contact with it. “I just kind of lost track of where I was on the sheet,” Weagle said. “I knew we had to sweep it hard, so I tried to get in an extra brush stroke that I shouldn’t have and my broom got wedged in there.” Two displaced stones

had to be returned to their original spots and the Ontario stone was taken out of play. Weagle smiled it off but she appeared more anxious after the error. “She’s a pretty level-headed person but it can definitely get the better of you if your teammates aren’t on your side,” Homan said. “I think she was maybe a little bit nervous about that but we backed her 100 per cent. We were right behind her.” The Ontario skip came through with a draw on her final shot for a 4-2 lead.

“It’s her leadership that’s starting to get better and her ability to call a game really well,” said Ontario coach Earle Morris. “And that would be a good example of it right there.” Jones tied the game with a double in the sixth end but Homan regained the lead in the seventh. She cleared out two Manitoba stones from the eight-foot with her first shot. Jones was heavy with her final throw, leaving Homan with a draw to score three and the crowd erupted when she nailed it for a 7-4 lead.

Buchy punches ticket to provincials Tre vor Cr awley Sports Editor

Kimberley skip Tom Buchy and his team of mixed curlers punched their ticket to the provincials this weekend after clinching one of the qualifying spots during zone playdowns in Nelson. Buchy, who teams up with his wife, Lori, joins Dave and Robyn Toffolo for another run at provincials. The three won the event last year and took

their third trip as a team to the Canadian national event. Dave Toffolo has been at the tournament four times, however, his fourth was with a different team. Team Buchy opened with a 9-4 win over fellow Kimberlite Gord Rowe and his team. That pitted them against Castlegar’s Myron Nichol, who ended up beating the Kimberley team 7-6 by scoring a double in the final end to take the first

qualifying spot. That loss dropped them into the game for the second qualifier, where they faced Donald Bedard out of Grand Forks, and the Buchy team managed to get it done with a 6-3 win. The Vancouver Curling Club will host the mixed provincial championship in March. Ottawa will welcome curlers from across the country for the national championship in November.

Page 9

Hitmen, ‘Canes unable to handle hot Kootenay squad Continued from page 8 Kootenay earlier took out the Hitmen 5-1 on Saturday at Western Financial Place. Both Brock Montgomery and Levi Cable had a goal and an assist each to lead the team to the win, while Skapski made 27 saves. The two teams were scoreless in the first frame, but the Ice took a second period lead off of goals from Cable and Jakub Prochazka. Pavlo Padakin made it a one-goal game in the third period, but Montgomery responded in the latter half of the period, tipping a shot from Joey Leach. Descheneau picked off a rebound from Tanner Faith at the point, and Jordyn Boyd put away an empty netter just outside the blue line on an offside draw. It was Faith’s return to the bench after missing the last 12 games with an upper-body injury. “It’s awesome to get

back out there and not be up in the stands doing the computer,” laughed Faith. “I like being out there with the boys and especially to get a win, is awesome.” Faith returned back to his spot alongside the team captain on the blue line. “He missed a bit of time, but it’s great to have him back out there tonight,” said Leach. Next action for the Ice will be another road game in Medicine Hat against the Tigers on Wednesday. ICE NOTES: The team raised $6,155 during it’s annual Jersey off the Back fundraiser for the Kootenay Ice education fund. The white jerseys, which were auctioned off in a silent auction, will be handed out to the winning bidders at the end of the season. Ice defenceman Jagger Dirk’s jersey sold for the most money, with a $600 bid.

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daily townsman / daily bulletin

Page 10 Monday, FEBRuary 25, 2013

COMICS Horoscopes

keep your ideas to yourself. Tonight: Mosey on home. CANCER (June 21-July 22) ARIES (March 21-April 19) Keep listening, even if you’re You are focused right now, de- shocked at what you hear. You spite some confusion in your might wonder how you can mind about a different situa- balance all of the different faction. Ask questions. Return all tors in your life. Reach out to of your calls and emails. Oppor- someone at a distance whom tunities appear, and you’ll need you admire. This person always to make a choice. Use care when has a lot to share. Tonight: Your dealing with a new person in creativity flows; use it well. your life. Tonight: Work late, if LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) need be. Curb a need to go overboard. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You might want to consider why You can’t control your thoughts, you are doing this. Only when even when you know they’re you have that answer can you not relevant to the moment. decide to hold back some. Your You can choose not to share imagination opens up many difthem, but is that helpful? Center ferent doors. Lose the mindset yourself, and allow your mind that you are stuck. Tonight: Your to be present. Remember, you treat. have limits. Tonight: Squeeze in VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) some exercise. Greet compliments and offers GEMINI (May 21-June 20) positively. A close loved one’s Stay anchored, and know full kind gesture will motivate you well what is happening. At to take a step back and observe times, doing nothing can prove what is happening around you. to be most effective. A boss Changes are necessary, and might try to lure you into a proj- you have more power than you ect, but taking the lead won’t might realize. Tonight: Go with be worth your while. Smile, but someone’s suggestion. by Jacqueline Bigar

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LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) The time has come to assume a low profile. You might want to mellow out and try a different approach. You are surrounded by people who believe that they have better answers than you do. Detach, and you might understand where they’re coming from. Tonight: Not to be found. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Confusion surrounds your longterm goals. Know that they might not be possible, considering your present commitments. Discussions provide unusually creative answers and solutions that might allow you to have it all! Tonight: Look at both the pros and the cons. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Take charge, and try not to worry so much about the here and now. Several different opportunities come from others who present you with one idea after another. Be happy rather than overwhelmed. You have so many choices! Tonight: A force to be dealt with. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Look beyond the obvious. You

could be overwhelmed by everything you need to do right now. Understand that you have one choice: prioritize. Fortunately, you have energy and discretion working for you. Be willing to let go of what doesn’t work. Tonight: In the moment. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Relate to someone directly if you want to resolve a problem. The other party could have many ideas. Instead of making him or her out to be in the wrong, choose to find solutions that work for both of you. Your ingenuity will find the path. Tonight: Dinner and chat. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Others think they have the answers, and they let you know. Don’t get triggered. Look through a long-term lens in order to find alternative solutions. You have many options involving property and investments. Do your research before you decide. Tonight: At home. BORN TODAY Actor Sean Astin (1971), actor Zeppo Marx (1901), actress Rashida Jones (1976)

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Annie’s Mailbox by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Annie: My husband criticizes me all the time. He also says the nastiest, most hurtful things when we argue. I have been called a slut and a troublemaker and threatened about almost everything. I don’t believe he feels bad about the way he treats me, and even when I tell him how painful it is, he continues to do it. We all have made mistakes in our past, but he paints himself as the most innocent and pure person alive. Because of all of this, I find it hard to be intimate with him. My husband tells me he says these things because I am provoking him. Counseling is out of the question, as he would never admit there is a problem with the way he treats me. Would someone behave like this if he doesn’t mean it? -- N.N. Dear N.N.: Your husband is a classic verbal abuser. Constant criticism and calling you names is a way to control and manipulate you. He also threatens you so you will be afraid of angering him. He refuses to discuss his behavior because he doesn’t want to take responsibility for it. You have told him his words are hurtful, but it makes no difference. His abuse is not your fault, but it is important that you make it clear it is unacceptable. Otherwise, he will continue to belittle you, and in some cases, the behavior can escalate to physical abuse. Please lean on your family and friends for support, letting them know what is going on. We also strongly urge you to get counseling on your own in order to decide whether you can set boundaries that he will follow, or whether you must leave for your own safety and sanity. Dear Annie: I am a 25-year-old woman with very short, spiky hair. I wear girly clothes, yet time and time again, people think I am gay. It drives me absolutely crazy. I have seen my hairstyle on other women, and it would never occur to me to think they are gay. I admire guys when they walk by like any other woman my age. I like my hair short because it takes me three minutes to style, which means I can sleep longer. My hair is also rather thin, so a longer style looks straggly. The length of my hair has nothing to do with my sexual orientation. I hope people will see this and think twice. -- Short, Sassy and Straight Dear Short: With so many female celebrities wearing short, spiky hairstyles these days, we are amazed that anyone would make such assumptions. Ask a few friends why your appearance gives others this impression. Or, if it bothers you, consider different makeup to feminize your face, although you do not need to justify your look to anyone. If you like it, that’s all that matters. Dear Annie: Please tell “Frustrated Viewer in Canada” and other readers that almost all newer flat-screen televisions can be set to meet their audio needs. My family recently was surprised to discover that TV stations were already broadcasting programs with wonderful audio. All we needed to do was read the owner’s manual for our TV and make the necessary adjustments to the audio settings. In our case, we also were able to attach external speakers using an amplifier, which gave us even clearer and richer sound. Not only is the dialogue easier to understand, but the hearing-impaired member of our household no longer has to wear special headphones to hear the TV. And what’s even more unbelievable, the music in the commercials sounds so good, we no longer feel an urgent need to push the “mute” button. -- Eureka, Calif. 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 2013 CREATORS.COM


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Page 12 Monday, FEBRuary 25, 2013

daily townsman / daily bulletin

NEWS/business

A local resource in a world of online classifieds Ki r s t en Hild eb r and

Looking for a job, a new car, maybe trying to get rid of an old set of bunk beds; or are you a collector? UsedKootenays.com is a resource not to be overlooked. With the rise of online classified sites such as Kijiji or Craigslist, UsedKootenays.com offers up an alternative that aims to connect with the community offline that it’s bringing together online. “We actually have a genuine concern and care for the communities we serve,” says Erin Richards, Marketing Coordinator for UsedKootenays.com, which is also owned by Black Press. Black Press is the largest publisher of community newspapers in B.C. and has newspapers in every community in the Kootenay region. Recently, all of the Kootenay

Black Press titles began running all of its print classified ads on UsedKootenays.com. “We feel this is a great value for our customers and makes Black Press the best option when it comes to placing classified advertising throughout the Kootenays,” said Chuck Bennett, Group Publisher for Black Press in the Kootenays. “We are really excited about this opportunity for us to grow our business in this area, but more importantly, this is good for our customers.” This partnership also aligns well with the values of UsedKootenays.com, as being truly local. “We have staff on the ground in most of the communities we serve. They involve us in local community events, we partner with local non-profits and chari-

ties... We want to be that different classifieds that cares about the people using our sites,” said Richards. UsedKootenays.com has its own charity as well. Called the Community Angel Program, Richards explains staff, or “angels”, spend time looking for ways to help out a person placing an online ad. “Their job is to search our sites to find people who have posted ads saying they’re in need,” she says. “That can be anyone - from a single mom who needs a birthday present for her son because she can’t afford one this year to a senior needing a new battery for their scooter.” The angel makes contact and meets with them in person to learn their story. “Whether that’s financially, or whether they just need help con-

necting to other resources, we do our best to give them a hand,” says Richards. “We really want to have personal connections with our users.” Also setting them apart from other online shopping venues is tighter moderation, ensuring things like weapons, puppy mills and pornography aren’t promoted. Scams, spam and low quality content are less likely to appear on this site as well. It’s all part of maintaining a high quality service that allows a positive exchange of goods with those living nearby. “People want to buy and sell from their neighbours, from people that they trust, from people living in their own communities,” Richards says. Secondhand bargain shopping is also the trend among many try-

ing to save a buck these days. As well, it’s convenient to shop from a home computer, says Richards. “You can see the item right there online and you all the information and then you just go pick it up.” As part of a network of websites across the country, UsedKootenays.com covers the entire Kootenay region but users can narrow down a search based on how far they’re willing to look. On Facebook and Twitter, UsedKootenays.com is increasing its profile after a few years of operation. The feedback forum on their site is also open for comments from users who see a way they can better serve the immediate area. “I would love to engage in some dialogue with people in the Kootenays,” says Richards.

Ottawa will soon require that tanning beds carry skin cancer warning labels C anadian Press

OTTAWA — It’s not yet moving to the sometimes hideous pictorial warning labels seen on cigarette packaging, but Ottawa wants to get the message across that tanning beds can be hazardous to your health. Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq says Health Canada will soon require that all tanning beds carry warnings about skin cancer and other potential dangers. The proposed changes come after several provinces moved to prevent the use of tanning beds by young people. Nova Scotia already bans people under 19 from using tanning beds while Manitoba requires written parental consent before anyone under 18 can use them. And earlier this

month, legislation took effect that would ban those under 18 from using tanning beds in Quebec. Ontario and British Columbia have announced plans for similar laws. France, Germany and Australia also have bans in place affecting younger people. Using indoor tanning equipment before age 35 significantly increases the risk of developing melanoma skin cancer, according to research by the International Agency for Research on Cancer. Canada’s proposed tanning bed labels don’t forbid their use, but instead warn the devices are “Not recommended for use by those under 18 years of age.’’ The labels would also read: “Tanning

Not sure about the whole

Equipment Can Cause Cancer,’’ and carry a list of other health risks associated with tanning. “The Harper Government is committed to protecting the health and safety of Canadian families,’’ said Aglukkaq. “Young adults should be concerned about the health risks associated with the use of tanning beds, including skin cancer.’’ A public comment

period on the proposals will close in early May with regulations expected to be posted later this year. The regulation of tanning beds for commercial use falls under provincial jurisdiction. However, Health Canada regulates the sale, lease and import of tanning beds under the Radiation Emitting Devices Act and Regulations. “Skin cancer is the

most common type of cancer, but it’s also one of the most preventable,’’ said Canadian Cancer Society president Pamela Fralick. “Stronger labelling and clearer information about the dangers of tanning beds may reduce the number of young Canadians exposed to this carcinogen, and this is an important step in the right direction.’’

Townsman: 250-426-5201 Bulletin: 250-427-5333

10%TUESDAY FEBRUARY 26th

(Excludes tobacco products and caselot items. Minimum $25.00 purchase.)

GROCERIES Purex Bathroom Tissue

Select double 12’s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2/$10.00

Rogers White Sugar

10kg, limit 2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.98

Maxwell House Coffee

Original roast, 925g . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $7.98

Western Family Flour

10kg . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $6.98

Western Family Large Eggs

Wrapped 30 pack . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $5.98

Lays Potato Chips

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Parkay Soft Margarine

427g . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4/$6.00

PRODUCE Navel Oranges

5.98ea . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2/$7.00

California grown, 10lb consumer pack . . . . . . . . .

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Canadian grown #1, 10 lb bag

MEAT Fresh Whole Pork Back Ribs

$3.98ea Value pack. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.98lb/$6.57kg Fresh Chicken Legs Back attached, value pack. . . . . . . . . . $1.88lb/$4.14kg 2 pack . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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digital NOW thing? is the time to get with it! On-Line Advertising – call your advertising representative today.

UsedKootenays.com offers up an alternative that aims to connect with the community offline that it’s bringing together online.

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8am - 8pm 7 Days!


DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN daily townsman / daily bulletin

Monday, FEBRuary 25, 2013 PAGE Page 13 13 Monday, February 25, 2013

Your community. Your classifieds.

Share Your Smiles! Carson WaughMarose is a smiley boy!

250.426.5201 ext 202

bcclassified.com fax 250.426.5003

FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS TRAVEL CHILDREN EMPLOYMENT BUSINESS SERVICES PETS & LIVESTOCK MERCHANDISE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE RENTALS AUTOMOTIVE ADULT ENTERTAINMENT LEGAL NOTICES

AGREEMENT It is agreed by any display or Classified Advertiser requesting space that the liability of the paper in the event of failure to publish an advertisement shall be limited to the amount paid by the advertiser for that portion of the advertising space occupied by the incorrect item only, and that there shall be no liability in any event beyond the amount paid for such advertisement. The publisher shall not be liable for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement. bcclassified.com cannot be responsible for errors after the first day of publication of any advertisement. Notice of errors on the first day should immediately be called to the attention of the Classified Department to be corrected for the following edition. bcclassified.com reserves the right to revised, edit, classify or reject any advertisement and to retain any answers directed to the bcclassified.com Box Reply Service and to repay the customer the sum paid for the advertisement and box rental. DISCRIMINATORY LEGISLATION Advertisers are reminded that Provincial legislation forbids the publication of any advertisement which discriminates against any person because of race, religion, sex, color, nationality, ancestry or place of origin, or age, unless the condition is justified by a bona fide requirement for the work involved.

ON THE WEB:

KOOTENAY’S BEST ESCORTS *For your safety and comfort call the best. *Quality and V.I.P Service Guarantee *Licensed studio New - Lily, 26, Blonde, blue-eyed beauty, BBW New - Scarlett, 19, Sweet, pretty, petite strawberry blonde. New- Phoenix, 25, Mocha Latte, BBW, voluptuous beauty (250)417-2800 in/out calls daily Hiring

RELAX & ENJOY

Adult fun, great conversation & more. Mature 30’s, fit & curvy, sexy redhead. Private in-call. Day specials. Also, magic hands.

Amy

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Cranbrook ~no rush~

Lost & Found LOST: CALICO cat, female, spayed, 4 years old. Super friendly. Answers to Cali. Last seen in the Gordon Terrace School area, Friday, February 15. Please call with ANY info. 250-417-0887

Travel

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

Employment Help Wanted FARM LABOURER wanted

by HyTech Production Ltd., in the Kimberley BC area. May 2013 to Sept. 2013. Outdoor labour, lifting and working with hand tools. $12.00/hr. Apply in writing to Box 1454, Lethbridge AB T1J 4K2 or fax 403-3453489, Attn: BC labourer. GUARANTEED JOB Placement: General Laborers and Tradesmen For Oil & Gas Industry. Call 24hr Free Recorded Message for Information: 1800-972-0209. Journeyman HD mechanic required for oilfield construction company. Duties will include servicing, maintenance and overhaul of our equipment. The job will be predominately shop work , but with a portion of your time spent in the field. A mechanics truck will be supplied for you. The job is based in Edson, Alberta. Call Lloyd at 780-723-5051. Resident Manager for 20 unit Silver Star Motel,Vernon Fax 250-545-3859 email silverstar motel@shaw.ca

Help Wanted UNIFAB

INDUSTRIES

located in Grand Forks, BC, is actively hiring qualified Welder/Fitters. Competitive wages and benefits. Excellent place to raise a family and just two hours southeast of Kelowna. Fax: 250-442-8356 or email: rob@unifab.ca

Trades, Technical SHORE MECHANIC – F/T Heavy Duty Mechanic Certificate or equivalent w/5 yrs exp. www.westcoast tug.ca/shore-mechanic

CLASSIFIEDS HELP YOU SELL

CALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202

Obituaries

Obituaries

Lingard, Shirley Rose Notice of PassiNg September 13, 1927shirley Rose Lingard February15, 15,2013 2013 september 13, 1927 – february Shirley Rose Lingard, 85, Shirley Rose Lingard passed away peacefully at Mountain of Nelson, passed Lake Seniors Community in Nelson, British BC, Columbia, at peacefully on “Dick� Friday, the age of 85. She He and heraway husband, Richard February were well known in the Cranbrook area15asattheMountain owners Lakes Seniors by Community of the Lingard Pharmacy. She is survived her son in Nelson. She was Rose born Rick Lingard of Nelson, BC, grandchildren Hannah 13, 1927, of in Jarvis-Lingard and Graham September Stewart Jarvis-Lingard Nelson, BC, and her brother D’arcy, CharlesSaskatchewan, Ross McIntyrethe of daughter of Charles and Osooyos, BC. Violet McIntyre.

Shirley is predeceased by her husband Richard Cecil Shirley’s happiest times, Lingard and her daughter Leslie Maureen.

aside from horseback riding in her youth and her A funeral Service will be held at Thompson Funeral childhood on the farm with her brother, Chuck and her Service Ltd. In Nelson, BC on Monday, February 25th, parents, were those times spent at her lakeside cottage 2013 at 2:00 PM followed by a service in Kindersley, SK at Moyie, BC with Dick, Leslie, Rick and the family dog. on Wednesday, February 27th, 2013 at 11:00 with burial Shirley loved to draw. Common among her subjects were taking place in D’arcy, SK, the place of her birth. the horses of her youth, mostly her own horse, Laura. Shirley was a wonderful singer and sangand rightfamily up tomay the As an expression of sympathy, friends day she make a passed. donation to The Heart and Stroke Foundation

Sympathy & Understanding Kootenay Monument Installations Granite & Bronze Memorials, Dedication Plaques, Benches, Memorial Walls, Gravesite Restorations, Sales & Installations

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of Canada, Okanagan/Kootenay Area Office, 4-1551 Shirley loved to travel as well. She and Dick went on Sutherland Ave, Kelowna, BC, V1Y9M9

numerous vacations to Hawaii and Mexico with friends are under cruise the direction of and family Arrangements andThompson even a Caribean with Leslie to join Funeral Service Ltd. their son who was working on the ship. Online condolences may be expressed at www.thompsonfs.ca Shirley received her education in Saskatoon and returned to her birth area to teach school in a 1 room, multi-age schoolhouse. After only one year of teaching she was swept off her feet by her soon to be husband; Richard Cecil Lingard, a recent graduate of pharmacy. They began their lives in the Crowsnest Pass and gave birth to the first of two children, Leslie Maureen on September 8, 1954. A move to BC found them in Chilliwack where their second child, Richard James was born on September 4, 1958. Shirley, “Dick� and the kids moved to Nelson, BC, shortly after and Dick began practicing his trade at Mann’s Pharmacy. An opportunity to start their own business 2 years later prompted the move to Cranbrook, BC, where they lived and raised their children until Dick’s passing in November, 2002. Sadly, Shirley’s daughter, Leslie, passed away a year later. In 2006, Shirley moved to Nelson to be close to her son, Rick, and her grandchildren. Throughout the years in Nelson, Shirley loved to go for walks, lunches and frequent outings on Rick’s boat.

our Com Y ng

She is survived by her son, Rick Lingard, of Nelson, BC; her two grandchildren; Hannah Rose Jarvis-Lingard and Graham Stewart Jarvis-Lingard, also of Nelson; and her brother Charles Ross McIntyre of Osoyoos, BC.

nity mu

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

Personals

email classifieds@dailytownsman.com

Cove ri

INDEX IN BRIEF

Drop off your photo and name(s) of subject at the Cranbrook Townsman or Kimberley Bulletin office or email your high-resolution jpeg to production@dailybulletin. ca. Photographs will appear in the order they are received.

She was preceded in death by her husband, Richard Cecil and her daughter, Leslie Maureen.

Funeral services will be held Monday, February 25 at 2:00 p.m. in the Thompson Funeral Home in Nelson, BC. There will also be a short service at the Kindersley, Saskatchewan Funeral home on Wednesday, February 27 at 11:00 after which Shirley will be laid to rest at the D’arcy cemetery in Saskatchewan.

In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to the Canadian Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, Okanagan/Kootenay Area delivered Office, 4-1551 Sutherland Get your news daily Ave, Kelowna, BC, V1Y9M9.

Ph: 250.426.6006 Fx: 250.426.6005 2104D 2nd Street S. Cranbrook, BC theflowerpot@shaw.ca

Eternally Remember Your Loved One

B

Headstones B Grave Markers B Urns B

We will help you create a special memorial including personalized engraving and installation. 2873 Cranbrook St., Cranbrook

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Have you considered a lasting legacy? Reasons people choose to give through community foundations.

3

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Your Gift is a Gift for Good and Forever. 250.426.1119 www.ourfoundation.ca cdcf@telus.net

- subscribe!

Arrangements are under the direction of Thompson Funeral Service Ltd. Online Condolences may be expressed at www.thompsonfs.ca

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


DAILY BULLETIN dailyTOWNSMAN/DAILY townsman / daily bulletin

PAGE 14 Monday, February Page 14 Monday, FEBRuary 25, 201325, 2013

Services

Rentals

Rentals

Transportation

Contractors

Apt/Condo for Rent

Apt/Condo for Rent

Auto Financing

(*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

Moving & Storage Williams Moving & Storage (Cranbook) LTD. Now offering winter moving special. Local moves within the East Kootenays Will receive 10% off hourly rate of $84.00 As well as airmiles on all Local and Long distance moves. Call 250-426-4271

Pets & Livestock

Pets Gone But Not

Forgotten

Keep the Memory of Your Pet Alive with a Custom Memorial and/or Urn.

2373 Cranbrook St., Cranbrook 250-426-6278 kootenaygranite.com

Merchandise for Sale

Heavy Duty Machinery A-STEEL SHIPPING DRY STORAGE CONTAINERS Used 20’40’45’53 in stock. SPECIAL 44’ x 40’ Container Shop w/steel trusses $13,800! Sets up in one day! Also Damaged 40’ $1950 Call Toll Free Also JD 544 & 644 wheel loaders JD 892D LC Excavator Ph. 1-866-528-7108 Free Delivery BC and AB www.rtccontainer.com

Misc. Wanted Local Coin Collector Buying Collections, Accumulations, Olympic Gold & Silver Coins + Coin Guy: 778-281-0030

2BDRM, 1 1/2 BATH apartment for rent, in Canal Flats. Great view, parking, F/S, D/W, microwave. $775 + utilities & D.D. Available immediately. Call (250)3495306 or (250)489-8389. 2BDRM APARTMENT in quiet neighbourhood in adult only building, walk to downtown. 5 appliances & heat included. No pets, parties or smoking. $800./mo. Responsible adults. References required. Phone 250-417-0646 or 250-4170127 BRIGHT, SPACIOUS, 1-bedroom suite on Kimberley Ski Hill. N/S. Includes F/S, W/D, gas fireplace, all utilities & cable. Ski in/ski out. $700./mo. 250-427-7043

Trucks & Vans 1998 DODGE Ram, reg. cab, shortbox, 4 x 4, 318, 5-speed, 6” lift, 35” tires, blue. $3000./obo. 250-421-7584.

Business/Office Service

Business/Office Service

Business/Office Service

SERVICES GUIDE Contact these business for all your service needs!

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.

BATEMAN’S Handyman Service 2 Guys, 2 Heads, 4 Experienced Hands. ~Home repairs and renovations. ~Snow removal. ~Senior discount.

250-422-9336

BEAR NECESSITIES

HOME WATCH SERVICE Planning Winter Vacation? ~We do: ~Home checks to validate insurance ~Snow removal ~Water Plants ~Cat care and more.

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.

WATKINS

www.dustayconstruction.com 250-489-6211

Watkins Associate Loretta-May 250-426-4632 www.watkinsonline.com/ lorettamaystewart or at Woodland Grocery.

R.BOCK ELECTRICAL

Lyndell Classon

Institute of Professional Bookkeepers of Canada

cell: 250-919-7244 email: lclasson@myflexi.net

www.superdaveconsulting.ca

TIP TOP CHIMNEY

LEIMAN

CUSTOM HOMES AND RENOVATIONS

DUSTAY CONSTRUCTION LTD

You dream it, we build it!

Keeping your business on track . Over 15 years experience.

Call SuperDave (250)421-4044

Certified Journeyman Carpenters

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BUSINESS SERVICES

SuperDave offers affordable, superior service & most importantly; Honesty. SuperDave works Saturdays & evenings too!

Established custom builder for over 30 years.

Canadian Home Builders Association

LYNDELL’S

~Full Cycle Bookkeeping ~Accounts Payables and Receivables ~Payroll ~Your office or pick up service available

Call Melanie 250-464-9900 www.thebearnecessities.ca

Available for your custom home and renovation needs.

Kosher Spices Personal Care Products Ointments/Linaments, etc **Since 1860**

CALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202

$449 CABO San Lucas, all inclusive Special! Stay 6 Days in a Luxury Beachfront Resort with Meals & Drinks! For $449! www.luxurycabo hotel.com 1-888-481-9660.

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.

Biodegradable Environmentally Friendly

WILL SELL WHAT YOU WANT SOLD!

KIMBERLEY Chapman Camp - 2 BR apartment Available March 1. Quiet location, backs onto bike path, covered parking, laundry on site, new flooring. Incl. heat. N/S, no pets. Bob 250-4275132

For Peace of Mind Home Vacancy.

PRODUCTS

CLASSIFIEDS Seasonal Acommodation

BONDED & INSURED

MARKET PLACE

Radium - 405 Top unit Pinewood West building. 2 bdrm, 2 bath, underground parking, fully furnished. All inclusive. Avail immediately. $1000/mth. Call Lina @ 403-264-2782 or 403277-7898 ask for Emilio

Reliable Quotes Member of the new home warranty program. www.leimanhomes.ca Kevin 250-421-0110 Krister 250-919-1777

SERVICES

“Sweeping the Kootenay’s Clean”

Chimney Sweeping Fireplace & Woodstove Servicing Visual Inspections and Installations Gutter Cleaning Available Call for Free Estimate from a W.E.T.T Certified Technician Richard Hedrich 250-919-3643 tiptopchimneys@gmail.com

Need help with current events?

Cranbrook Kimberley Creston Fernie Marysville Wardner Wasa…

1. Frequency: The online newspaper Web site user accesses the Internet almost twice as much as the general user. 2. Credibility: The credibility of the newspaper brand

Sell Your Home in the Classifieds. It Has Never Been Easier!

a photo of 1. Take your house.

2.

Use 25 words to describe it.

by or mail 3. Stop $40.00 + HST out your ad 4. Check in the newspaper and count all the calls coming in!!

$40.00 + HST includes 25 words, and photo. Extra words $1.00 each. Enclose photo. If you require your photo back, please include a self-addressed, stamped envelope. ALL ADS MUST BE PREPAID – Visa and Mastercard accepted. Your ad will run up to 2 weeks in the Cranbrook Daily Townsman (10 times), Kimberley Daily Bulletin (10 times), and the Valley (2 times). Ad can be cancelled at any time. Sorry, no refunds.

250-426-5201 ext 202

RESIDENTIAL

For reliable, quality electrical work *Licensed*Bonded*Insured* Residential, Commercial Service Work No Job Too Small! 250-421-0175

CLEANING SERVICES. *Trained Cleaning Professionals.*

Read the DAILY newspaper for local happenings!

*Flexible cleaning times.* *Fully Insured & WCB.* *Available Evenings & Weekends.*

250-421-8332

extends to the advertiser. Fifty-nine percent of Web users agree that online advertising is more believable from a trusted Web site. Online, newspaper Web sites are the dominant local media site in most markets.

3. Targeted: If you want to focus on a particular backyard, advertising in an online newspaper is more personal, and more relevant because it is local. Newspapers also publish a plethora of niche sites (youth, women, movie fans, seniors, are illustrative) for virtually any demographic advertisers could possibly hope to reach. 4. Purchasing power: Sixty-two percent of newspaper

Web site users purchase online compared with 49 percent of general users. Thirty-nine percent of online newspaper users have incomes higher than $75,000; 65 percent own their homes. Fifty percent of online newspaper users have spent more than $500 online in the last six months, and 63 percent of online newspaper users prefer to find out about new products through the Internet.

5. Content: After e-mail, the most preferred Web

content is news, sports, financial information, entertainment news, and shopping – in that order. Sixtytwo percent of Internet users visit online newspapers for local news, compared with 39 percent for the local TV station Web site and 23 percent for the local radio station site. Not even Yahoo! or AOL’s Digital City can top this.

6. Retailers prefer newspaper sites: Sixty-five percent of retailers report that newspaper sites are efficient in assisting them in meeting marketing needs compared with other sites.

7. High profile: Research.net reports that, among top executives (CEO, CIO, CFO or owner/partner), Internet advertising ranked above over all other media measured for: “Where I prefer to find our about new products,” “Where I prefer to receive information about companies,” and “Where modern, up-to-date brands advertise.” At the same time, these early adopters of technology also skew younger than the traditional newspaper audience. Forty percent of online newspaper users are aged 18-35. 8. Reinforcement: Seventy-six percent of online newspaper users also read the newspaper in the past seven days, and repetition increases awareness. The Internet Advertising Bureau found that, by increasing the number of online banners from one to two per week, branding results on three key metrics increased 42 percent making online a great, inexpensive way to increase the branding lift of traditional campaigns. 9. Quality: Seventy-five percent of advertisers generally said newspaper Web sites’ advertising was as good or better than other Internet sites.

10. Mix: A variety of recent studies have demonstrated the power of online, when included in a mix with traditional media, to elaborate the brand message. Newspaper print and online products combined have the highest penetration and most desirable audience of any other local medium. SOURCE: Newspaper Association of America

250-427-5333

250-426-5201 250-427-5333

Ten Reasons to Advertise on a Newspaper Website

Call today and start online advertising. 250-426-5201

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822 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook

dailytownsman.com

250-427-5333

335 Spokane St., Kimberley

dailybulletin.ca


daily townsman / daily bulletin

Community snapshot

Monday, FEBRuary 25, 2013

Page 15

Volleyball action at the College Tre vor Cr awley Sports Editor

The College of the Rockies was a hive of volleyball activity over the weekend as a dozen men’s and women’s teams descended on the gym for the Pacwest provincial championship. The men’s Capilano University Blues earned a 3-1 match victory over the Vancouver Island University Mariners to clinch the title, while the University of the Fraser Valley Cascades women’s team steamrolled to a 3-0 win over the Columbia Bible College Bearcats to earn the championship. In the bronze medal category, the Camosun College Chargers stunned the top-ranked Douglas College Royals and took the tiebreaker

in the fifth and final set. For the ladies, the VIU Mariners swept the Capilano University Blues in straight sets to capture third place honours. Both the men’s Capilano University Blues and the women’s UFV Cascades team have earned a berth in nationals—the men will travel to Niagara College in Ontario, while the women will travel to Lakeland College in Alberta. The host team, the Avalanche, ran into the eventual champions in the Blues in the quarterfinal match. Capilano barely managed to win the first set, but that took away the Av’s momentum, and the Blues went on to win 3-0. All photos taken by Trevor Crawley.


daily townsman / daily bulletin

Page 16 Monday, FEBRuary 25, 2013

HOICE AWA C ’S

Celebrating the people, places and businesses of our great area.

12 S 20 RD

READ ER

READERS’ CHOICE AWARDS – THE BEST OF OUR REGION

G OL D G OL D

Food

HOICE AWA C ’S

READ AER EEDR

2102 S 2012 DS RD

All Around Restaurant _________________________ Bakery_______________________________________ Breakfast ____________________________________ Buffet _______________________________________ Chinese Restaurant ____________________________ Chocolate Shop _______________________________ Coffee Shop __________________________________ Deli _________________________________________ Donut Shop __________________________________ Family Restaurant _____________________________ Ice Cream Shop _______________________________ Japanese Restaurant ___________________________ New Restaurant ______________________________ Pizza ________________________________________ Steak House __________________________________ Vegetarian Restaurant _________________________ Restaurant Service_____________________________ Server _______________________________________

HOICE AWA C ’S

12 S 20 RD

READ ER

S I LV E R

Retail

Appliance Store _______________________________ Bike Shop ____________________________________ Book Store ___________________________________ Bridal _______________________________________ Camera Shop _________________________________ Card Shop ___________________________________ Carpet/Flooring Store __________________________ Cellular Phone ________________________________ Children’s Wear _______________________________ Computer Retail ______________________________ Convenience Store_____________________________ Craft Shop ___________________________________ Department Store _____________________________ Dollar Store __________________________________ Fabric Store __________________________________ Floral Shop___________________________________ Formal Wear _________________________________ Furniture Store _______________________________ Gardening Centre _____________________________ Golf Store ____________________________________ Grocery Store_________________________________ Hardware Store _______________________________ Health Food __________________________________ Home Electronics _____________________________ Hot Tubs ____________________________________ Jewelery Store ________________________________ Lawn/Garden Equipment _______________________

B RON Z E

Tell us your favourites

Simply fill out the ballot and submit to Cranbrook Daily Townsman, Kimberley Daily Bulletin or Kootenay Advertiser. With the assistance of Taylor Adams Chartered Accountants, the ballots will be tallied and the winners announced in late February, 2013 in a special commemorative Reader’s Choice Supplement celebrating the best our communities have to offer. Lighting _____________________________________ Linen ________________________________________ Lingerie______________________________________ Liquor Store __________________________________ Maternity Wear _______________________________ Mattress ____________________________________ Men’s Wear __________________________________ Motorcycle Shop ______________________________ Music Store __________________________________ New Car Dealer ______________________________ New Home Builder ____________________________ Office Supply Store ____________________________ Optical ______________________________________ Paint Store ___________________________________ Pet Store _____________________________________ RV Dealer____________________________________ Shopping Centre/area __________________________ Ski/Snowboard Shop___________________________ Sporting Goods _______________________________ Teen Clothing ________________________________ Tire Store ____________________________________ Thrift Store __________________________________ Toy Store ____________________________________ Pre-owned Vehicle Dealer ______________________ Water Store __________________________________ Wine and Beer Making_________________________ Women’s Wear ________________________________

Entertainment Amusement Centre ____________________________ Art Gallery ___________________________________ Billiards _____________________________________ Bingo________________________________________ Casino_______________________________________ Dance Studio _________________________________ Driving Range ________________________________ Lounge or Pub ________________________________ Outdoor Patio ________________________________ Place for Live Music ___________________________ Place to Dance ________________________________ Sports Bar____________________________________

Places Fitness Centre ________________________________ Golf Course __________________________________ Neighbourhood to live in _______________________ Park_________________________________________ Place for a First Date __________________________

Place for Karaoke _____________________________ Place for Yoga ________________________________ Place to Get Pampered _________________________ Place for a Walk ______________________________ Place to Ride Your Bike ________________________ Place to Take Visitors __________________________ Place to Take Your Dog ________________________ Toboggan Hill ________________________________

People City Councilor ________________________________ Bartender ____________________________________ Corporate Citizen _____________________________ Local Athlete _________________________________ Local Radio Personality ________________________ Radio Station _________________________________ Local Columnist ______________________________ Friendliest Staff _______________________________ Most Beloved Citizen __________________________ Local Political ________________________________ Local Charity _________________________________ Photographer _________________________________

Services Auto Body ___________________________________ Auto Service __________________________________ Auto Rental __________________________________ Best Use of Tax Dollars ________________________ Carpet Cleaner _______________________________ Computer Repair _____________________________ Dry Cleaner __________________________________ Equipment Rental _____________________________ Financial Institution ___________________________ Gas Station___________________________________ Hair Salon ___________________________________ Home Security Provider ________________________ Hotel/Motel __________________________________ Insurance ____________________________________ Internet Service Provider _______________________ Oil/Lube Shop ________________________________ Muffler Shop _________________________________ Pharmacy ____________________________________ Real Estate Agent _____________________________ Real Estate Company __________________________ Storage Rental _______________________________ Tanning Salon ________________________________ Travel Agency ________________________________

Drop off your entry before February 28th to be entered to win one of two

Name: _____________________________ prizes! $250 cash, plus one night accommodation at Trickle Creek Lodge and City/Town:_________________________ a Montana’s gift certificate or 2 rounds of golf at Wildstone Golf Course! Phone: _____________________________ 1510-2nd St. N., Cranbrook, V1C 3L2 335 Spokane St., Kimberley, V1A 1Y9 Email: _____________________________ 822 Cranbrook St., Cranbrook, V1C 3R9


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