Cranbrook Daily Townsman, April 09, 2013

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TUESDAY

< Ladies off to a strong start

APRIL 9, 2013

MBSS Senior Girls soccer underway | Page 7

Range april 13

The passing of Thatcher >

CouRse

Gwynne Dyer on the late Prime Minister | Page 5

april 19

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Vol. 61, Issue 68

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Goats hoof it into the final two

The young local band is now one round of votes away from being named Canada’s best new artist SALLY MACDONALD Townsman Staff

They have almost done it! Cranbrook’s The Good Ol’ Goats is in the grand final of CBC Music’s nationwide Searchlight contest. The young folk-rock band is up against Cornerbrook, Newfoundland’s Sherman Downey and the Ambiguous Case for the title of Canada’s best new artist. The Goats were announced as being in the top two on Monday, April 8 by Q’s Jian Ghomeshi. Now, voters have until Thursday, April 11 at 10 p.m. to cast their votes in the final round at www.music.cbc. ca/#/Searchlight. If the Goats make it through this round, they will be crowned Canada’s best new artists and be paid to perform at the CBC Music Festival in Toronto, as

well as receiving a CBC Music video session, and $20,000 worth of musical equipment from Yamaha Canada. The Good Ol’ Goats, which formed in 2011, consists of Mount Baker Secondary School students Joelle Winkel on shaker and backing vocals, Nolan Ackert on lead vocals, banjo and guitar, Angus MacDonald on mandolin, backing vocals and fiddle, Theo Moore on standup bass and backing vocals, Julian Bueckert on drums and Angus Liedtke on guitar, dobro, banjo, harmonica and vocals. In this final round, The Goats face off against bluegrass-folkpop group Sherman Downey and the Ambiguous Case from Newfoundland. The five-piece band has performed at the Vancouver Olympics and the Juno Awards.

PHOTO COURTESY TWITTER

AW, SHUCKS! In this photo posted by CBC Music to Twitter on Monday morning, Cranbrook’s The Good Ol’ Goats react to the news that they are in the grand final of the Searchlight contest. Pictured, left to right: Angus Liedtke, Joelle Winkel, Angus MacDonald, Nolan Ackert, Theo Moore, Julian Bueckert.

IN COURT

Tammy Bouvette faces sentencing in May S A LLY MAC DON AL D Townsman Staff

A Cranbrook woman charged in connection with the May 2011 drowning death of a toddler will be

sentenced next month in Cranbrook Provincial Court. Tammy Bouvette has been charged with second-degree murder over

the incident. In Cranbrook Supreme Court on Monday, April 8, Bouvette’s counsel Jesse Gelber told Justice Lauri Ann Fenlon that a plea bar-

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brook girl. Bouvette was allegedly babysitting the child at the time of the drowning.

More court news , Page 3

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Off Leash

daily townsman / daily bulletin

Page 2 Tuesday, April 9, 2013

I could barely contain my excitement, but as humans place so much importance on emotional selfcontrol — especially by their companion animals — I restrained my urges. Well, for the most part. I admit my thumping tail seemed to have a mind of its own and once or twice an embarrassing whiney-whimpering sound escaped through my clenched canines, but other than that I was the epitome of self-restraint.

An unrestrained dogumentary.

Say Cheese: Boulder and Taylor pose impatiently for the obligatory trail head photo.

The excitement that was nearly overwhelming me was brought on by several facts. Firstly, Dog Taylor and I were riding in a motor powered vehicle (always cause for celebration).

The snow deepens as the pups make their way higher on the historical Sunken Creek trail.

Secondly, we were doing so at slow speed, over a rough road. Thirdly, our alpha human was grinning for no discernable reason (always cause for concern). Put these facts all together and any dog worth his milkbones would deduce that, oh joy of joys, we were going into the hills, for a hike. Outside the window I could see mountains — the Steeples. My person calls them — looming up directly in front of us. Once parked, Dog Taylor and I scrambled out and began our obligatory sniffing, only to be interrupted by the alpha human for his obligatory photo at the trailhead. We posed in front of a sign that read “Sunken Creek, B.C. Recreational Trail,” and when we heard the shutter’s click, Taylor and I were off. The route is one with no shortage of history. It starts off as a road, and then quickly becomes a track, then a trail, which heads south along the base of the mountains. Eventually it reaches a cascading stream that froths and tumbles down from the back side of the Steeples. There is a log foot bridge that spans Sunken Creek and from there the path turns to the east and heads steeply up into the mountains.

Found master piece: Sunken Creek makes art with water moving over stone and water frozen in place.

Dr. Seuss-like ice ornaments catch the light.

This trail was constructed nearly 840 dog years ago (120 human years) to provide access to a mine high in the sub alpine just below Dibble Glacier. Copper, lead, zinc, and of course gold were clawed out of the mountains then hauled down this very track by over burdened animals and world weary humans. Man, with his large brain and opposable thumbs, likes to think himself the superior species. He claims this lofty perch because in his view, he is the only animal with the ability for rational thought and logical reasoning. He is also the only species that will fritter away a lifetime looking for shiny rocks, which if you think about it, makes chasing your tail look down right reasonable. Our little pack followed the trail through the spring like forest, across Sunken Creek with its dazzling ice sculptures, and then climbed back into winter as we moved higher into the mountains. The deepening snow eventually became too much for Taylor who is older and my human who only has two legs, so we turned around and made our way back to the truck. I had just begun to doze on the ride home when my alpha human began to make strange, high-pitched vocalizations. At first I thought he was whimpering but then realized he was trying desperately to emulate the sounds made by the singer whose voice was streaming from the speakers of the truck. This is something my human does when his mood is high and he is overcome with feelings of contentment. With his emotional self-restraint now non-existent, he bobbed his head and continued to rent the air with his off-key keenings. I swear, if the man had had a tail he would have been wagging it.

Photos and word processing by Dan Mills

Polar Bear swim: Taylor gives a shiver and a shake while taking a dip in Sunken Creek.

Intricate ice sculptures dangle delicately over the creek.

Mackkes to t ra

New hiking boots and other summer footwear arriving daily! www.highcountry.ca • 250-489-4661 • 11 - 10th Ave. S, Cranbrook


daily townsman

Local NEWS

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

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Gearing up for Election 2013 This is the second installment in the Townsman’s weekly series from the two declared Kootenay East candidates for the upcoming provincial election — Bill Bennett of the B.C. Liberals and Norma Blissett of the BC NDP. The question of the week is: “What is the first tangible thing you will work on for this riding if elected?” If you have a question you would like to submit for consideration, email barry@dailytownsman.com. There is never just one tangible thing to do as MLA and often the priorities for the Elk Valley and Cranbrook are different. If I’m rehired, I will be working on projects like the $50 million Cranbrook high school replacement, defending the coal industry and finding more family physicians. However, the proposed Salvation Army Shelter is my first Cranbrook priority. I am already working hard on this project. Those of us who have a home, three square meals every day and a warm bed don’t always understand how many people in our community lack these basics. And if you don’t have the basics, imagine how hard it would be to get your life together, find a job, or look after your family. We can only call ourselves a “successful com-

Bill Bennett munity” if our community does not have people amongst us falling through the cracks. This project will meet the needs of people who are homeless or in danger of becoming homeless. Although I’ve found funding in the past for shelter operations for men and women, I committed to this larger

project many years ago because our region needs more than a space with cots and blankets. People are struggling with alcohol or drug addiction, mental illness and abuse of various kinds. Keeping them warm and safe at night is important, but does not address their health issues, or connect them up with opportunities for training or therapy or provide a stable life while they start a job. The Salvation Army provides a million beds a night globally. They’re the right group to provide housing and links to essential supports for single men, single women, couples and families here in Cranbrook. My commitment is to continue working with the Salvation Army and the Cranbrook Community Foundation to bring this project to life.

If elected, I will work on improvements to health care. The NDP have promised to improve access to quality health care by investing in homecare for seniors, improving community-based services and facilities and reducing the cost of prescription drugs. We know that there are capital spending needs in all regions of the province. As your representative in government, I will fight for the health care needs of Kootenay East. I will work with the Interior Health Authority and the East Kootenay Regional Hospital District to make improvements to the East Kootenay Regional Hospital facility both in terms of staffing and infrastructure. On the doorstep in the Elk Valley concerns about health care come up repeatedly. I will work for improvements to emergency, primary health

Alleged abductor granted bail Robert Barnett, charged in connection with a November 2012 abduction in Fernie, will have a trial by judge and jury in June

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

A man charged with abduction by a parent/guardian has been released on bail in Cranbrook Supreme Court. Robert Barnett will have a trial by judge and jury in Cranbrook Supreme Court starting June 18. In the meantime, Barnett has been released on a $10,000 recognizance, with his parents acting as sureties. He was ordered not to reside with his parents, but to advise a

bail supervisor of his residence. He cannot possess or consume drugs or alcohol. Barnett must abide by the terms of any family court order; he cannot attend his parents’ home while the child connected to the alleged abduction is present without Ministry of Children and Family Development approval; and he must surrender his passport to Cranbrook RCMP. Barnett is charged with abduction by a parent/guardian and theft over $5,000 in connection with the November 2012 al-

leged abduction of a three-yearold boy from Fernie. The incident last November sparked an Amber Alert, and the boy was found safe the next day in Whitefish, Montana. Barnett’s trial is set to start on June 18 with jury selection, and is expected to last four days in Supreme Court. At his last appearance in January, Barnett chose to represent himself. However, he has now selected counsel to represent him during the bail hearing and the upcoming trial.

Dangerous offender hearing delayed S a l ly M ac D o n a l d Townsman Staff

A dangerous offender hearing for admitted child abductor Randall Hopley has been delayed once more pending a psychiatric evaluation. In Cranbrook Supreme Court on Monday, April 8, defence counsel William Thorne asked Justice Lauri Ann Fenlon to adjourn the case until June 17. Thorne told Justice Fenlon that he is seeking a psychiatrist

to perform an expert evaluation of Randall Hopley prior to a dangerous offender hearing. During a sentencing hearing last July, Crown prosecutor Lynal Doerksen requested that Hopley be declared a dangerous offender. The Crown has retained a psychiatrist who has performed an expert evaluation of Hopley; however defence counsel is seeking a second expert opinion. Hopley has pleaded guilty to

abduction of a child under 14 and break and enter with intent to commit an indictable offence in connection to the September 7, 2011 abduction of three-yearold Kienan Hebert from the boy’s home in Sparwood. Kienan was returned to the home unharmed four days later. On September 13, a police sniffer dog tracked Hopley to a gravel pit in Crowsnest Lake, Alberta. Hopley has remained in custody ever since.

norma blissett care and operating room staffing and facilities. We must recruit and retain additional doctors and augment medical support services in this under-served part of the province. We also need more family physicians in Cranbrook. We will have to evaluate the success of existing rural recruitment strategies and proceed

accordingly. As taxpayers, we must keep in mind that our provincial government is in serious financial difficulty. After 12 years of Liberal government we now have the highest longterm debt in the history of British Columbia – $56 billion. It is also estimated the BC Liberal election budget hides a $790 million deficit. As a result, NDP candidates must be conservative in their election promises. Adrian Dix and the BC NDP are committed to making practical changes that will make a real difference in peoples’ lives. As your representative in government I will advocate for the needs of Kootenay East. I will be a strong, consistent and reliable representative in Victoria. Bringing change for the better to this part of the province — one practical step at a time.

Trial set for Jaffray criminal negligence case Sally MacDonald Townsman Staff

A Jaffray man facing a charge of criminal negligence causing death will have a trial by judge and jury in Cranbrook Supreme Court in one year’s time. As well as the criminal negligence charge, George L. Phillips has been charged with four counts each of careless use of a firearm, and storage of a firearm contrary to regulation. The charges were

POLL WEEK of the

laid in October 2011 in connection to the fatal accidental shooting of Fernie teen Michael Voss in Jaffray on June 16, 2011 by a 10-yearold child. In February 2012, Phillips elected a trial by

judge and jury. Yesterday, Monday, April 8, a two-week trial was scheduled to begin on April 8, 2014 in Cranbrook Supreme Court. A pre-trial conference is scheduled for January 22, 2014.

Not sure about the whole

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

“Should Cranbrook be seeking to conduct a “deer hazing” experiment, as Kimberley is trying to do: i.e., herding urban deer out of town with specially trained dogs?”

YEs: 72% NO: 28% ToTal voTes 42; Yes: 30 / No: 12

Next week’s poll: “Have you been voting for Cranbrook’s folk rock band The Good Ol’ Goats during their quest for the CBC Music Searchlight Competition title?”

Log on to www.dailytownsman.com to make your vote count. This web poll is informal. It reflects opinions of site visitors who voluntarily participate. Results may not represent the opinions of the public as a whole. Black Press is not responsible for the statistical accuracy of opinions expressed here.


Page 4 Tuesday, April 9, 2013

daily townsman

Local NEWS

Budget, priorities planned for 2013 Cranbrook city council is deciding how much money to spend and on what this year

Parents invited to learn about trades at COTR Courtesy Darryl Schmidt

Parents of students in grades 7 to 12 are invited to attend College of the Rockies’ Discover Trades workshop on Monday, April 15 at the Cranbrook Main Campus. The workshop is an opportunity for teachers, students and parents to network with each other as well as industry personnel and College of the Rockies instructors. The day will in-

clude an interactive panel discussion on the skilled trades and a presentation by Discover Trades BC personnel. Participants will receive an update on skilled trades training and apprenticeship options, learn more about trades education designed for grades four to nine and participate in an interactive tour of the Discover Trades BC website. Parents will also be given an opportunity to

build a project in the College shops and to enjoy a lunch prepared in part by students in College of the Rockies’ Culinary Arts program. “I encourage parents to learn more about the exciting and rewarding career opportunities that exist in trades,” College of the Rockies’ Recruitment Officer Hugh Moore said. “We will be exploring the entire trades training and apprenticeship

Help Wanted We have newspaper routes

available in the following locations: Cranbrook: 156 - 2 St S & 26,27 Ave S 172 - 2A & 2B St S 320 - Fountains Estates 325 - Southview

Kimberley: 234 - Townsite

S P ARES ALWAYS NEED ED!

School District No. 6 (Rocky Mountain)

Kimberley Zone

KINDERGARTEN REGISTRATION for September 2013 School District No. 6 (Rocky Mountain), Kimberley Zone, will be offering FULL DAY Kindergarten in September 2013. A child is eligible to enrol for Kindergarten for September, 2013 if his/her fifth birthday occurs before December 31, 2013. We will be accepting registrations for Kindergarten children at the following schools: Lindsay Park Elementary, Audrey Hunt 250-427-2255 Marysville Elementary, Donna Watson 250-427-2241 Learning@Home Program, Sue Pearson 250-427-5308 Registrations will be accepted at all the above schools during the week of April 9-12, 2013. For further information please call the school. Please note that registering at a particular school does not guarantee attendance at that school.

250-427-5333 www.dailybulletin.ca

A PARENt MuSt ENRoL A cHiLD iN PERSoN AND mUst present the chiLD’s birth certiFicAte AnD bc cArecArD At tHE tiME oF REgiStRAtioN.

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CALL NOW AND GET SOME MONEY IN YOUR POCKET 250-426-5201 www.dailytownsman.com

process so the day is sure to be filled with valuable information and fun.” Seats for the event are limited so those who are interested are encouraged to contact Hugh Moore at (250) 489-2751 ext. 3329 or hmoore@cotr.bc.ca for more information and to register. For more information on COTR’s Trades programs go to: www.cotr.bc.ca/trades

LE • REC YC

Trish Barnes photo

Better at Home: Last Thursday Cranbrook and Kimberley United Way hosted a public input session on the province-funded Better at Home program, which will provide seniors with non-medical home support services in more than 60 B.C. communities. The United Way designed the Better at Home program and will support local non-profit agencies in coordinating the delivery of such services as housekeeping, shopping and friendly visiting. From left to right: Pat Wray and Sandra Davis, Better at Home community developers; Bev Campbell, Cranbrook and Kimberley United Way board chair; Debbie Sharp, Better at Home Field Coordinator (United Way of the Lower Mainland); and Donna Brady Fields, Cranbrook United Way Executive Director. More info about Cranbrook’s Better at Home program will be released soon.

Cranbrook city council is laying plans for 2013 after approving a set of priorities and giving two readings to the 2013 budget at its Monday, April 8 meeting. After months of discussion and a public consultation process, city council is on the verge of approving its $54 million budget. The Five Year Financial Plan includes tax rate increases of 4.21 per cent in 2013, 5.87 per cent in 2014, 4.72 per cent in 2015, 7.38 per cent in 2016, and 4.49 per cent in 2017. This includes a one per cent dedicated road tax. This year, the property tax increase is equal to $27.65 per $100,000 of assessed value. On Monday, city council also endorsed a set of priorities for 2013, which city staff will then translate into a 2013 Business Plan. Those priorities include: • design specification for an electrical

upgrade of the airfield at Canadian Rockies International Airport • a revamp of the City of Cranbrook website • completing a new sign bylaw • completing an update of the city’s Official Community Plan • a joint management agreement for St. Mary’s River Park between the city and ?aq’am (St. Mary’s Band) • phase two of wastewater improvements • construction of three water monitoring wells within the spray irrigation fields • production of a new suite of promotional products including a comprehensive community profile, a Doing Business in Cranbrook information kit, and a business investment page on the city’s website • continuing to measure and report carbon emissions while working toward becoming carbon neutral • completing landscaping at the fire hall • completing the link between Rotary Way and the North Star Rails to Trails • replacing playground equipment at McKinnon Park • completing the bike park at Balment Park • developing a mobile technology gadget bar at Cranbrook Public Library • reconstruction and landscaping at Clocktower Square • landscaping at Cranbrook’s Elizabeth Lake entrance For more news from Monday’s city council meeting, see The Daily Townsman throughout this week.

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


daily townsman / daily bulletin

Opinion/Events Letters to the Editor

Cruel Arithmetic As residents of the Cranbrook area who care about the welfare of children, we would like to bring your attention to a book, just released, called “A Cruel Arithmetic: Inside the Case Against Polygamy,” by Craig Jones. When he was first appointed as Lead Counsel for the Attorney General, Jones felt that the crimes involved with polygamy such as child abuse would be prosecuted in our legal system. This book describes how the author’s own views evolved from skepticism to a committed belief in the campaign against polygamy once he met the witnesses who had been raised in Bountiful. The book’s review states: “This is a remarkable insider’s story of a unique piece of litigation: the first trialcourt ‘constitutional reference’ in Canadian history. Craig Jones, lead counsel for the Attorney-General of British Columbia, describes the argument he and his colleagues developed against polygamy, drawing from fields as diverse as anthropology, history, economics and evolutionary psychology. Yet it was ultimately the testimony of real people that showed how the theoretical harms of polygamy’s ‘cruel arithmetic’ played out

upon its victims.” Polygamy is still illegal in Canada, because on November 23, 2011, Chief Justice Robert Bauman of the B.C. Supreme Court ruled that S. 293 CC, prosecuting polygamy, is constitutional in that polygamy harms all society, and particularly contravenes the human rights of women and children. Audrey Vance Co-chair of Altering Destiny Through Education Creston

Selenium levels Neither Teck nor the B.C. government has denied the well documented facts reiterated by the recent selenium study quoted in Wildsight and its partners’ media release on the poisoning of the Elk River. B.C. Environment Minister Terry Lake reacted by the afternoon of our release stating that there would be no new coal mines approved in the Elk Valley until a valley-wide plan to manage the cumulative effects of selenium concentrations in the Elk River is developed. This is a welcome announcement. Though the selenium problem has been growing for decades, British Colum-

bia is still without legal limits to selenium pollution. Until a plan is in place, including enforceable obligations, it would be foolish to expand permitting and the poisoning of a world class river that runs through our communities. Unfortunately, some of the response from less informed sources suggested that the selenium levels in the river that far exceed water quality guidelines for fish and humans could be tied to “unknown” background levels of selenium. Nothing could be farther from the truth. The recent study looked at water quality both above the mines and in the Flathead River — both of which run through coal bearing landscapes. These pristine waters showed selenium levels consistently well below water quality guidelines. The challenge is to reverse the present trend of the increasing poisoning and put enforceable scientifically supported standards in place. The balance between industrial development and environmental health must be reestablished. This will not be achieved until Elk River water quality is again healthy for fish and appropriate environmental mitigation and compensation in place. John Bergenske Wildsight

The passing of Margaret Thatcher M

argaret Thatcher was the woman domestic politics, where she cian to grasp the fact that who began the shift to the right broke the welfare-state conwith the decline of the old that has affected almost all the sensus that had dominated all working class, it had become possible to win elections on countries of the West in the past three de- the major parties for the prea platform that simply igcades. She died in London on Monday, at vious thirty years. “It is our nored the wishes and needs the age of 87, 34 years after she became duty to look after ourselves,” of the poor. There weren’t as Britain’s first female prime minister and 23 she said, and the political ormany of them as there used years after she was driven from office. It is thodoxy trembled before her to be, and the poorest among an open question whether the crash of 2008 onslaught. An American diplomat in them usually failed to vote at and the ensuing prolonged recession have all. finally ended the reign of her ideas in West- London, in a confidential assessment of the new ConserThis insight was key to ern politics. the success of President “This woman is headstrong, obstinate vative leader in 1975, capRonald Reagan in the United and dangerously self-opinionated,” wrote tured the essence of ThatchStates in the 1980s, and to some minion in the personnel department er’s revolutionary politics. She the triumph of conservative of British chemical giant ICI, rejecting was, he wrote, the “genuine parties in many European young Margaret Roberts’s application for a voice of a beleaguered bourgeoisie, anxious countries in the same perijob as research chemist Margaret Thatcher: about its eroding od. It continues to be a major in 1948. She was fresh 1925-2013 economic power factor in the calculations of out of Oxford Universiand determined to arrest soci- parties both on the right and on the left ty, 23 years old, brimety’s seemingly inexorable down to the present day: you cannot count ming with self-confion the poor to win an election for you. dence, and absolutely Gwynne trend towards collectivism.” That was what carried her Margaret Thatcher was made a baronfull of opinions. She Dyer into office in the 1979 election, ess after she relinquished her seat in the probably frightened the and as prime minister, she House of Commons in 1992, and continjob interviewer half to acted on her convictions. After she had ued to sit in the House of Lords until ill death. But she landed a job with a plastics fought and won the Falklands War against health forced her to withdraw from public company in Colchester in 1949. She joined long odds in 1982 her popularity was unas- life entirely in 2002. In her last years she the Conservative Party and stood for par- sailable, and she used it to break the power suffered from dementia, and she finally liament in the 1950 election (she was the of the trade unions and privatize state- succumbed to a stroke on Monday. Her influence lives on, at least for the youngest candidate ever), and married owned industries. More than that, she businessman Denis Thatcher in 1951. made free-market ideology for all intents moment, but it may not last much longer. The powerful middle class on which she Margaret Thatcher, as she then became, and purposes the state religion. So it remained for thirty years, long founded her political strategy has been finally made it into parliament in the 1959 after her harsh and confrontational style hollowed out by the very success of the election. She entered the cabinet of Conservative had lost her the support even of her own free-market policies she promoted. Once Prime Minister Edward Heath in 1970 as party. She was ousted as Conservative you allow for the effects of inflation, averthe “statutory female” (as he gallantly put Party leader and prime minister by her age middle class income in the United it). But she had the last laugh in 1975, re- own colleagues in 1990, but the Labour States, for example, has not grown at all in placing Heath as party leader after the governments of 1997-2010 were also in the past three decades. The time may be coming when gaining Conservatives lost the 1974 election. She thrall to her ideas. Their influence abroad, took a very hard line from the start, both in particularly in the United States, was the votes of the poor, including the growing numbers of the “new poor”, will once domestic and in foreign politics. Her open equally great. Yet her greatest contribution to politics, again be essential to win elections. hostility to the Soviet Union led a Soviet newspaper in 1976 to dub her the “Iron and the foundation of the right’s political success over recent decades, was not ideoGwynne Dyer is an independent Lady”, a title in which she revelled. Her real impact, however, was in British logical but tactical. She was the first politijournalist based in London

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Page 5

What’s Up?

KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDAR

UPCOMING David & Patricia Stock present their 2012 travelogue “Lost Kingdoms of Nepal, Burma and Cambodia” Tuesday April 16 at 7 pm, College of the Rockies Lecture Theatre. Admission by donation, proceeds to Canadian Friends of Nepal support group. The Rocky Mtn Fly-Fishers invite you to our meeting April 9, 7:00 pm in the Superstore Community Room. Guest speaker: H. Lamson (Fish Biologist). 250-489-3013 or 778-517-3996 to reserve. April 10th. Kimberley Garden Club April Meeting program: Growing and Using Edible Herbs and Flowers. Selkirk High School Library 7-9 pm. New members welcome. Info: Nola 250-427-1948. BC Government Retired Employees Assoc., Rky Mtn Branch, will be holding their luncheon meeting at Bavarian Chalet, Cranbrook, April 10, 12:00 noon. Guest speaker from United Way. Info: Jack Selman, 250-489-5930. Home Grown Music Society presents the 30th Anniversary Celebration Coffee House on April 13 at Centre 64 at 7:30 pm. Tickets at the Snowdrift Cafe in Kimberley. “Walking the Camino de Santiago” Lorna and Suzanne invite you on a photographic journey of our 800 km pilgrimage from St Jean-Pied-de-Port in France across Spain to Santiago de Compostela. Sunday, April 14 at 7:30 pm. Kimberley United Church, 10 Boundary St. (corner of Boundary & Wallinger) Admission by donation. Proceeds to Kimberley United Church. Cranbrook Community Theatre wishes to transport you into spring with their upcoming production, Enchanted April. Directed by Terry Miller, Enchanted April runs for ten nights, April 12 & 13, 17-20 and 24-27, 2013 at the Studio/Stage Door, 11-11th Ave S, Cranbrook. Tickets available at Lotus Books. East Kootenay Historical Association Meeting, Sunday Apr. 14, Heritage Inn, 12 noon. Guest speaker: Angus Davis. Phone Marilyn 250-426-3070 or Skip 250-426-3679. The Cranbrook & District Restorative Justice Society is sponsoring a Workshop April 12, 13 & 14 on Mediation Skills Level I. This course is offered by The Justice Institute of BC. Contact Bill Barger for details and costs. Cranbrook & District Restorative Justice Society, 930 Baker St., Cranbrook 250-919-5533 cdrjsociety@gmail Everyone welcome. Fraternal Order of Eagles Ladies Auxiliary, Pancake Breakfast - Sunday, Apr 14, 8:30 - 11:00am. 711 Kootenay St. All proceeds to Cancer Society. Federal Superannuates meeting, Heritage Inn, April 16. Lunch: 12 noon. Guest speakers Don & Jeanie Davidson of the Cranbrook Hospice Society. FMI Skip Fennessy, 250-426-3679. 2013 FREE PUBLIC SWIM - SHUT DOWN - No swim April 17. Have Camera Will Travel.... Join Kaity Brown for her travelogue presentation “Exploring Ancient Temples and Ashrams in India” at Centre 64 on Tuesday, April 30 at 7:30 pm. Admission by donation. Proceeds to Kimberley Arts Council & Expansion Project. ONGOING KIMBERLEY North Star Quilters meet 2nd and 4th Monday of each month at 7pm downstairs Centennial Hall, 100 4th Avenue. Everyone welcome. Info: Carol at 250-427-7935 or Joan at 250-427-4046. Learn to Fish @ Kootenay Trout Hatchery! Come on out to the hatchery pond for this opportunity – great for all ages. Call now to book a session (250) 429-3214. Open now through the end of August! Tours also available. Tai Chi Moving Meditation every Wednesday 3-4 pm at Centre 64. Starts November 7th. Call Adele 250-427-1939. Special Olympics BC – Kimberley/Cranbrook now has an Active Start! Active Start is for children with intellectual disabilities ages 2-6, teaching basic motor skills through fun, positive experiences.Thursdays, 10-11am at Kimberley Aquatic Centre ** Transportation available. Call Julia 427.3324 or Cyra 250.919.0757 Registration for Cranbrook Minor Ball is available online at www.cranbrookminorball.net and at Player’s Bench until the end of March 2013. Cranbrook Senior Centre, Branch 11 holding their meetings every third Thursday a month. 1:30pm at the hall. We always welcome new members. Play and Learn Parenting/Literacy Program – 8 week registered program for parents with preschool children with a facilitated play and activity component for children. Kimberley Early Learning Centre Kim 250-427-4468. StrongStart BC - FREE family drop-in program for preschoolaged children accompanied by a parent. Kimberley Early Learning Centre. Monday 9 - 12, Tuesday 9 - 12, Thursday 9 – 12, Friday 9 - 12. Gina 250-427-5309. Treehouse—Families with children 5 & under are invited to come play. Free drop-in program in gym of Kimberley Early Learning Centre. Transportation avail. Tuesdays, 9:00 - 12:00. Diana 250-427-0716. Cranbrook’s Bibles for Missions Thrift Store thanks you for your support. 824 Kootenay St. N. Open 10-5, Tues-Sat. A great place to save or volunteer. 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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TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 2013

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It’s still easy being Green This is the first of a series of policy commentaries on the four main parties contesting the 2013 B.C. election. I’m starting with the B.C. Green Party, which has higher than usual hopes for the 2013 election. It was also the first to put out a substantial policy document, albeit one that is still being debated and altered. Green Book 2013 continues the Utopian positions that only a party with no chance of forming a government has the luxury to put forward. For example, they would double the area of parks in B.C., but take 100 years to do it. Immediately, they would almost double the carbon tax, taking it from seven to 12 cents on a litre of gasoline. Greens would extend this steeply increased carbon tax to industries such as natural gas and cement production. Leader Jane Sterk told me she expects cement producers and the like to adapt, rather than shut down as their competitive position erodes. And what about the extra billions in carbon tax revenues? Sterk says most should continue to go to income tax reductions, as is now the case, because the purpose is to change consumption patterns, not to increase overall tax revenue. Most, but not all.

“We think there is an argument to be made for putting, for a period of time, the increased revenue from the carbon tax into creating the infrastructure that allows people to benefit from a carbon tax,” Sterk said. That means transit, and potentially retrofits of homes and other buildings as well. BC VIEWS Tax increase aside, this is essentially the NDP position Tom too. Fletcher The Greens emphasize wind and geothermal power. Sterk faces the awkward task of arguing against hydroelectric expansion. A Green government would cancel the Site C dam project on the Peace River. Sterk says it would only serve as a subsidy to liquefied natural gas exports, which she doesn’t believe materialize as international competitors develop. The Greens’ star candidate, University of Victoria climate scientist Andrew Weaver, agrees. Both point to vast reserves of Russian gas that may well get to Asia more quickly and cheaply. Sterk said the 35,000 existing gas wells in northern B.C. “are not going to be shut down.” Actually, in the absence of LNG exports, that is exactly what would happen to many of them. The U.S. has its own shale gas supplies, and is B.C.’s only current export customer. Converting transport trucks

and BC Ferries to LNG fuel isn’t going to maintain the vast industry blooming in northern B.C. The official Green Party position is to place a moratorium on B.C. gas drilling while a comprehensive water use policy is developed. Current innovations such as reusing municipal wastewater are ignored. The Green platform also demands disclosure of chemicals used in hydraulic fracturing, which the B.C. Oil and Gas Commission has already done. If one were to design a self-fulfilling prophecy that B.C.’s LNG project is doomed to fail, the Green Party platform would be a good place to start. Reading through Green Book 2013, I’m left with the impression that much of it remains calculated as a soothing message for urban voters who have been convinced it’s courageous to drive their cars down to an anti-tanker protest. If Weaver, Sterk or any other Greens get elected, it will be surfing a wave of protest votes from people weary of the B.C. Liberals and the NDP. It will not be due to the practicality or even internal consistency of their polices. It’s still pretty easy being Green. Tom Fletcher is legislative reporter and columnist for Black Press and BCLocalnews.com tfletcher@blackpress.ca

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.


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Girls soccer team starts strong Senior girls squad reaches the final in season-opening tournament TRE VOR CR AWLEY Sports Editor

The Mount Baker senior girls soccer team reached the final of their season-opening tournament in Kelowna this past weekend, kicking off a successful start to their 2013 campaign. The team won their first three games over Friday and Saturday, but were beaten 3-0 by Mount Boucherie in the final game, which gave the Baker girls a silver medal. It was the first time the team had played in game situations, and head coach Jimmy Robinson was impressed by what he saw. “They played really, really well,” said Robinson. “What I noticed from this weekend is, we are very strong defensively, I know the 3-0 score doesn’t really show that, but that Mount Boucherie was beating other teams by 5-0, 6-0 and 7-0.” The Baker girls cruised through Similkameen Secondary School with a 2-1 win, and followed up with a 4-0 victory

against St. Ann’s Academy on Friday. The Wild rolled into Saturday with their undefeated record and downed their hosts, Immaculata Regional High School, by a score of 1-0 to put them into the final against Mount Boucherie.

“They’re a very, very strong school,” said Robinson, of their championship opponents. “Have been for years.” However, the Wild put on a good game, which was centred around their strong defensive corps. “They played really, really well,” said Robinson. “What I

noticed from this weekend is, we are very strong defensively, I know the 3-0 score doesn’t really show that, but that Mount Boucherie was beating other teams by 5-0, 6-0 and 7-0.” Robinson singles out the performance of his goaltender, Alex Juricic, as one of the keys to the team’s successful run over the weekend. “Our goalie, Alex Juricic, was absolutely outstanding,” said Robinson. “I had numerous referees and parents and coaches from other teams come up and say she did a very good job, and I couldn’t agree more. “…Alex really stood out on the defensive end, along with our sweeper, Erin White. “Offensively, Alyssa Rundberg [stood out]—she scored four of our total goals.” The senior girls team will stay home this weekend, as three squads from around the region will come to town on the weekend for some informal game experience at the Mount Baker school field.

Tears flow as hockey greats Messier, Henderson and King honoured in Ottawa STE VE RENNIE Canadian Press

OTTAWA - NHL Hall of Famer Mark Messier couldn’t stop the tears, or the lump from forming in his throat, as he and two other hockey greats were honoured Monday for their contributions to the game. The six-time Stanley Cup winner and perennial all-star broke down as he spoke of the national pride he felt as a young boy watching fellow Order of Hockey in Canada recipient Paul Henderson score the goal that sealed Canada’s hockey supremacy over the Soviet Union in the 1972 Summit Series. “As an 11-year-old boy who was playing hockey, to get that kind of opportunity to feel what real national pride is all about through the game of hockey, obviously inspired me, not only as a hockey player, but to one day wear that sweater,” Messier said. He had to pause for a moment to collect himself. “I almost got through it,” he joked. Messier, arguably the

greatest leader the sport has ever seen, had to pause again as he recalled his pep talk to the Canadian players he coached at the 2010 Spengler Cup in Switzerland, in which he described the pride and sense of responsibility that comes with wearing the Maple Leaf. “I didn’t cry when I was telling this story in the dressing room,” Messier said. Messier wasn’t the only one to shed tears during Monday’s twohour ceremony on Parliament Hill. Coaching legend Dave King, the

third recipient of the Hockey Canada honour, welled up as he spoke of fellow coach Wayne Fleming, who died recently of cancer. “Sorry for the emotion, but these are great people,” King said. “For a coach who never got very emotional, here I am, emotional.” Amid the tears there was also good news as former Team Canada star Henderson shared a positive development in his battle with cancer. The 69-year-old native of Kincardine, Ont., has been diagnosed with chronic lympho-

cytic leukemia. He told the audience that treatment he received as part of a clinical trial in the United States appears to have had a positive effect on his health. Henderson thanked his wife, Eleanor, for getting him into a clinic trial. Messier, Henderson and King join a select group of players and builders who have been awarded the Hockey Canada honour, including Jean Beliveau, Wayne Gretzky, Gordie Howe, Cassie Campbell-Pascall and Gord Renwick.

TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 2013

Sports News? Call Trevor 250-426-5201, ext. 212 trevor@dailytownsman.com

Sam Reinhart invited to national U-18 tryout camp TRE VOR CR AWLEY Sports Editor

Sam Reinhart is back in familiar territory, as Hockey Canada invited the Kootenay Ice captain to the national men’s U-18 selection camp this week in Toronto. Reinhart, 17, made the team last year and helped the Canadian squad towards a bronze medal finish at the IIHF World U18 Champion-

ships in the Czech Republic. The tryout camp features invitees from teams that are out of the CHL playoffs, and six other WHLers will join the Kootenay Ice sniper. Eight players are representing the QMJHL, while six skaters hail from the OHL. Don Hay, who mans the bench for the WHL’s Vancouver Giants, will

coach the national squad for the tournament, which is hosted in Sochi, Russia. Canada will play two pre-tournament games before the IIHF Ice Hockey U18 World Championship, on April 14 against the United States and April 16 against the Czech Republic. Canada will open the tournament on April 18 against Slovakia.

Injury keeps Ryan from boxing event TRE VOR CR AWLEY Sports Editor

A local boxer who was looking forward to participating in the upcoming B.C. Golden Gloves boxing tournament this weekend will not be participating due to an injury. Shannon Ryan, who

is undefeated in three previous boxing fights, broke her hand over the weekend, making her unable to compete at the event. The Cranbrook Eagles Boxing Club is fielding three local fighters alongside Ryan in Gage Duthie, Dacun Duthie

and Dylan Clark. The B.C. Glolden Gloves tournament begins this weekend, which will feature competitors from across Western Canada. Eagles Boxing coach Bill Watson is already halfway to his goal of attracting 75 entrants.

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Harper to Bettman: Let NHL stars play in Sochi Winter Olympics C ANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA - Prime Minister Stephen Harper is urging NHL commissioner Gary Bettman to let the league’s stars play in the 2014 Sochi Olympics. Harper says he speaks for all Canadians who want to see the country’s top players

don the Maple Leaf at the Winter Games. NHL players have been part of the Olympics since 1998 in Nagano, Japan. The league is mulling whether it is worth shutting down the NHL season for a few weeks to let its players take part in the 2014 Games.

The NHL, International Olympic Committee, International Ice Hockey Federation and NHL Players’ Association held meetings earlier this year to discuss the league letting its players go to Sochi. But so far no decision has been made on the NHLers’ participation.

PAGE 7

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ARIES (March 21-April 19) The unexpected marks your actions, yet you also could be reacting to a parent or boss. Opportunities come to you through conversations and from staying in contact with those in your immediate circle. Choose the right one for you. Tonight: As you like it. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Suddenly, you get it -- you understand what has been going on between you and someone else. You can change your perspective, but often you can’t control your knee-jerk reaction. That transformation will take time. Tonight: Make a small purchase on the way home. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You know what you want and where you are heading. The trick will be encouraging others not to interfere with your set course. Even better would be to gain their support. You will have your hands full convincing an associate of the rightness of your ways. Tonight: Make nice.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) You are capable of dealing with the unexpected. Your mood swings depending on the situation. Know that how you feel now might change within a short period of time. Be careful, as a partner or an associate could become controlling. Tonight: In the limelight. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Seek out information that might not be readily available. Figure out why a situation is happening, beyond the obvious. Step back and observe, as you will be able to see more easily. Know that a different approach is needed. Tonight: Join friends at a jam session. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Deal with others directly. People appreciate your time more than you realize. Pressure builds where you least expect it. Others have strong points of view that might not stand up to a creative idea. A boss gives you the authority you want. Tonight: Share your day with a pal. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) The unexpected occurs when

For Better or Worse

dealing with others. You could decide that you don’t want any drama, but that is what you will get with your present circle of friends. Why not take this as a sign to detach? You can be present without being involved. Tonight: Take a favorite person out. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You’ll want to play it low-key, no matter what goes on. Listen to others and what they are sharing. You have a strong sense of what is needed. Tune into one person and work together to achieve more of what you both want. Tonight: Make sure you get some exercise. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Allow your creativity to flow, and you will make it through a difficult situation. Your innate reaction draws strong results. Do not become involved in a power play or difficult situation. Others want to be around you, so let them. Tonight: Let the fun begin. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You might want to reassess a situation more carefully, especially as it can have quite an impact on your personal life. You might

be more controlling than you realize, and it will draw in only negative reactions. Take some time to clear your head. Tonight: At home. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Listen, but try not to overwhelm someone with questions. You could feel as if this person has pushed you beyond the call of duty. How you communicate that feeling will determine the nature of your bond in the long run. You do need to say something. Tonight: Kick up your heels. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You might want to rethink a question involving your funds and security. Your impulsiveness could have given someone the wrong impression. You could want to change the situation. You also might be too generous for your own good. Tonight: Your treat. BORN TODAY Fashion designer Marc Jacobs (1963), singer/songwriter Tom Lehrer (1928), actor Dennis Quaid (1954) ***

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Annie’s Mailbox by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Annie: I wanted to share a bit of what it’s like to be the family member of a person who drinks too much. I know. I had more than 40 years of experience by the time I finally sought answers. I studied brain- and addiction-related research to assess my loved one’s drinking patterns in order to protect myself from secondhand drinking. Secondhand drinking is a term to describe the impact on the person on the receiving end of another person’s drinking behaviors. These drinking patterns cause brain changes -- especially in the areas of the brain responsible for judgment, memory, coordination, pleasure/reward and reasoning. And we don’t fully understand the physical and emotional consequences to the health of a family member or friend who repeatedly deals with SHD. These include anxiety, depression, stomach ailments, skin problems, obesity, sleep problems, difficulties at work or in school, migraines and more. April 11, 2013, is National Alcohol Screening Day (NASD). This year, I urge people who love someone who drinks too much to conduct an anonymous screening of their loved one’s drinking patterns. Screening for Mental Health has created a fantastic website, www.HowDoYouScore.org, where anyone can anonymously evaluate their own or a loved one’s drinking patterns through an online assessment. The website also provides information on treatment options and suggestions for what it would take to cut down on or stop drinking. This kind of anonymous screening allows you to understand what you are really dealing with: a drinking pattern that is changing their loved one’s brain and causing hurtful drinking behaviors. -- Lisa Frederiksen, Author, Speaker, Consultant Dear Lisa: Thank you for sharing your story and emphasizing the importance of screening for alcoholism. Once again, those who wish to be screened can do so at howdoyouscore.org. Dear Annie: I have lupus and suffer terribly. Some days are better than others, but most include fatigue, pain or some other symptom. Yet, when friends greet me, they say, “How are you? You look good.” Rather than greet me this way, I would prefer they not ask about my illness, because I haven’t felt well in 17 years. Could you please tell readers in this position to simply say, “It is so good to see you”? That way, I don’t feel obligated to speak about my current condition. -- Sick and Tired of Being Sick and Tired Dear Sick: Your suggestion is a good one, and we hope people will keep it in mind. But we don’t believe these friends actually expect a rundown of your illness, nor are you obligated to talk about it. Greeting someone with, “How are you?” is generally rhetorical. You aren’t expected to respond other than to say, “Fine, thanks,” or some short variation. Because you haven’t truly been well for years, it stands to reason that you would take questions about your health more literally than intended. Dear Annie: Thank you for printing the letter from “Rocky Mount, Va.,” who thought dogs should be allowed at the funerals of masters who have died. To have a dog at a funeral privately, prior to the public gathering, is a good idea --probably for both humans and dogs. There is a famous painting by Sir Edwin Landseer (1802-1873) entitled “The Old Shepherd’s Chief Mourner,” depicting a pointer leaning against a casket with its head on top of the casket. It brings tears to my eyes anytime I even think of it. -- Watertown, Wis. 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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PROFESSIONAL TAX SERVICES • Convenient, Affordable & Accurate • Maximize Your Deductions! • Book Your Appointment ASAP * Basic individual tax returns start from $65 ** Basic are slip based only with a limited number of slips *** All tax returns are billed on a time basis

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

CALL 426-3272 OR VISIT

www.tribute.ca

for this week’s movie listings

Protect our earth.

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER

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

The Cranbrook Daily Townsman and the Kimberley Daily Bulletin promote recycling. We use vegetable-based inks, and our newsprint, tin and aluminum waste is recycled.


dailyTOWNSMAN/DAILY townsman / daily bulletin DAILY BULLETIN

Page 10 Tuesday, AprilApril 9, 20139, 2013 PAGE 10 Tuesday,

Your community. Your classifieds.

Share Your Smiles! 2][\Q[ _IV\[ 8IXIÂź[ team to win March Madness - Go Duke Blue Devils!

250.426.5201 ext 202

bcclassified.com fax 250.426.5003

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

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. 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. ON THE WEB:

ClassiďŹ eds Get Results!

email classifieds@dailytownsman.com

Announcements

Timeshare

Help Wanted

Information

CANCEL YOUR Timeshare. No risk program. Stop mortgage and maintenance payments today. 100% money back guarantee. Free Consultation. Call us now. We can help! 1-888-356-5248.

SMALL LANDSCAPING company is seeking part-time help. $15./hr. Call 250-426-8604

Vacation Spots

ALL CASH Vending route. Earn $72,000/year potential, 9 secured hi-traffic locations. Investment Required $3,600+ up. Safe quick return 1-888979-8363.

ANY SEAFOOD LOVERS IN ELK COUNTRY? Small hunting party from UCLUELET, West Coast Vancouver Island wants to provide a seafood feast for 12 people in exchange for some quality big game (ELK) hunting on private ranch. We are ethical hunters, all with our licenses, and hoping someone can put us onto some nice game. We are offering Wild Salmon, Halibut, Crab and tuna. We have a oyster farm as well, with amazing product. We are aiming for last week of September into 2nd week of October. The sooner we make arrangements, we can put in for LEH draws also for said area. Call Oyster Jim at 250-726-7565 or Dan at Fishfull Thinking at 250-726-3769

Personals 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, 20, Sweet, pretty, petite strawberry blonde. New - Dakota, 20, Hot busty red head. (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.

$399 CABO San Lucas, all inclusive special! Stay 6 days in a luxury beachfront resort with meals and drinks for $399! 888-481-9660. www.luxurycabohotel.com

Employment Career Service / Job Search GUARANTEED JOB placement: general laborers and tradesmen for oil & gas industry. Call 24hr free recorded message. For Information 1800-972-0209.

Health Products

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

2200 - 2nd Street South Cranbrook, BC V1C 1E1 250-426-3132

IN-HOME CONSULTATION OR VISIT OUR SHOWROOM

1885 Warren Avenue Kimberley, BC V1A 1R9 250-427-7221 www.mcphersonfh.com

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

www.kootenaymonument.ca

96*20,: 3(> J V Y W V Y H [ P V U PU HZZVJPH[PVU ^P[O :[LPKS 2HTILP[a 3H^ *VYWVYH[PVU

Haircare Professionals HAIR Stylist required for busy well established salon in Invermere BC. Excellent opportunity for motivated stylist. Easy to build clientele during busy summer months. Leave message 250-342-9863

Help Wanted

Legal

Lost & Found

Services

Obituaries

Sympathy & Understanding

MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION Rated #2 for work-at-home. Train with the top-rated accredited school in Canada. Financing and student loans available. Contact CanScribe today at 1-800-466-1535 www.canscribe.com TRAIN TO Be an Apartment/Condominium Manager at home! We have jobs across Canada. Thousands of graduates working. 32 years of success! Government certified. www.RMTI.ca or 1-800-6658339, 604-681-5456.

Legal

Cranbrook ~no rush~

Trades, Technical JOURNEYMAN Electrician required. Call 250-428-1416. Send resumes to: jane@graysorchard.com

Obituaries

>PSSZ ,Z[H[L 7SHUUPUN 7YVIH[L ,Z[H[L (KTPUPZ[YH[PVU

FOUND, PRESCRIPTION glasses, Sunday, March 31, on the Eager Hills trail. To claim, please call Kootenay Orchards School @ 250-4268551

250-421-6124

Income Opportunity

Obituaries

Education/Trade Schools

CONCRETE FINISHERS and Form Setters. Edmonton based company seeks experienced concrete finishers and form setters for work in Edmonton and Northern Alberta. Subsistence and accommodations provided for out of town work; Fax 780-444-9165. Jobs@RaidersConcrete.com ENSIGN INTERNATIONAL is looking for Drillers, Night Tour Pushes and Rig Managers. If you are interested in attending one of our information sessions to hear more about our global opportunities, call 1888-367-4460 to book into a session near you!

Amy

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.

*YHUIYVVR

End of Life? Bereaved? May We Help?

)HRLY :[YLL[ *YHUIYVVR )* ;LS!

2PTILYSL`

>HSSPUNLY (]LU\L 2PTILYSL` )* ;LS!

-LYUPL

:\P[L ;OPYK (]LU\L -LYUPL )* ;LS! PUMV'YVJRPLZSH^ JVT c ^^^ YVJRPLZSH^ JVT

Financial Services DROWNING IN Debt? Cut your debts in half & payback in half the time. Avoid bankruptcy! Free consultation. BBB rated A+. Toll Free 1 877-5563500 www.mydebtsolution.com

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

IF YOU own a home or real estate, Alpine Credits can lend you money: it’s that simple. Your credit/age/income is not an issue. 1-800-587-2161. moneyprovider.com. $500 Loan and more. No credit refused. Fast, easy, 100% secure. 1-877-776-1660.

Legal Services CRIMINAL RECORD? Don’t let it block employment, travel, education, professional, certification, adoption property rental opportunities. For peace of mind and a free consultation call 1-800-347-2540.

250-417-2019

Toll Free 1-855-417-2019

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

250-426-6278 kootenaygranite.com

Legal

NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS Notice is Hereby Given that Creditors and others, having claims against the Estate of Dale Andrew Davis, formerly of Skookumchuk, British Columbia, Deceased are hereby required to send the particulars thereof to the undersigned Executor, Pamela Broomfield, c/o Rella & Paolini, Second Floor, 6 - 10th Avenue South, Cranbrook, BC V1C 2M8 on or before April 30, 2013, after which date the estate’s assets will be distributed, having regard only to the claims that have been received. Pamela Broomfield, Executor.

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

8

#

We partner with professional advisors to create highly effective approaches to charitable giving.

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

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


DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN daily townsman / daily bulletin

Tuesday, 9, 2013 PAGE Tuesday, AprilApril 9, 2013 Page 11 11

Services

Merchandise for Sale

Rentals

Legal Services

Heavy Duty Machinery

Apt/Condo for Rent

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! 40’ Containers under $2500! 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. for Sale

.

Contractors

GIRO

t $POTUSVDUJPO t 3FOPWBUJPOT t 3PPĂŞOH t %SZXBMM MBSHF PS TNBMM t 4JEJOH t 4VOEFDL $POTUSVDUJPO t "MVNJOVN 3BJMJOHT 8F XFMDPNF BOZ SFTUPSBUJPOBM XPSL

Paving/Seal/ Coating

HOME PHONE Reconnect Toll Free 1-866-287-1348. Cell phone accessories. Catalogue. Everyone welcome to shop online at: www.homephonereconnect.ca SAWMILLS FROM only $3997. Make money and save money with your own bandmill. Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. Free Info DVD: 1-800-566-6899 Ext 400OT www.NorwoodSawmills.com/ 400OT STEEL BUILDINGS/Metal buildings 60% off! 20x28, 30x 40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x 150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206 www.crownsteelbuildings.ca

Local Coin Collector Buying Collections, Accumulations, Olympic Gold & Silver Coins + Coin Guy: 778-281-0030 WANTED: Industrial Sewing Machine for sewing 1/2 inch or thicker leather (prefer older Landis harness stitcher) also want harness leather & thread Glen (250) 489-0173

Tools TRI-MOUNTAIN SERVICE CENTRE

NO JOB TOO SMALL

Mechanical & Shop Liquidation

Driveways & Parking Lots 1-888-670-0066

Hoists, Snap-On alignment machine - c/w hoist. Smoke; power steering flush, brake flush, transmission flush, coolant flush and recycle machines. Brake lathe, hand tools (some never used), 2 customer vans, Snap-On Modis and Genisys scanners.

CALL

421-1482

FREE ESTIMATES!

Viewing by appointment. Call Ed:250-426-8167 or 250-417-9254.

CALL NOW!

Rentals

POWER PAVING

Apt/Condo for Rent 1 BDRM apartment available for rent. Hydro and heat included. $450./mo. + DD. Cranbrook. (250)417-5806

Business/OfďŹ ce Service

Business/OfďŹ ce Service

Business/OfďŹ ce Service

SERVICES GUIDE Contact these business for all your service needs!

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. STUDIO APARTMENT, downtown Kimberley, Perfect for 1 person. Renovated, quiet, culde-sac. Utilities included. N/S, N/P. $575./mo. 250-427-7411

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. ALL YOUR

FLOORING

Suites, Upper

CONSTRUCTION NEEDS

INSTALLATIONS.

FURNISHED KIMBERLEY Studio Suites. $495./mo. Utilities included. Basic cable & internet. Sorry, no pets. Call Peter (250)908-0045. Highland Property Management.

New or Renovation.

Wholesale Prices. Carpet ~ Lino Laminate ~ Hardwood.

Framing-Roofing-Siding, Decks-Interior finishing. Hardwood and Laminate Flooring

Transportation

Need a quote? Give me a call.

Cars - Domestic

Kevin. 250-421-6197

Misc. Wanted

NOTICE

BLACKTOP NOW!

1100 SQ. FT. condo in Kimberley available April 1/13. Steps to ski hill and Trickle Creek Golf Course. 2bdrm, 2 bath. Granite, stainless steel appliances, slate flooring, hot tub, fireplace. Main floor unit with green space off deck. No smokers. $1200./mo. Call 780-718-9083 or 780-218-7617.

Business/OfďŹ ce Service

stk#7218

1997 Plymouth Breeze

Very clean, fully serviced, only 153,274 km, auto trans.

2,29500

$

EK Transmission Ltd. DL#29679

1019 Kootenay St. N., $SBOCSPPL #$ t

2004 Pontiac Sunfire

Fully serviced, full tune-up, safety inspected, manual transmission.

3,49500

$

EK Transmission Ltd. DL#29679

1019 Kootenay St. N., $SBOCSPPL #$ t

*All work guaranteed.*

ROCKY MOUNTAIN ROOFING

AND RENOVATIONS

*Excellent rates on Asphalt Shingles, Metal Roofing & Standing Seam.

CUSTOM HOMES Established custom builder for over 30 years. Certified Journeyman Carpenters

DUSTAY CONSTRUCTION LTD

~Ask for Ben~

Reliable Quotes Member of the new home warranty program.

Canadian Home Builders Association

GRASS CUTTING

GLEN’S

www.leimanhomes.ca

De thatching (includes lawn vacuum) Aerating, Gutters, Grasscutting

Kevin 250-421-0110 Krister 250-919-1777

Award Winning Home Builder

Enquiries: 250-427-3037 or cell: 250-520-0188

Available for your custom home and renovation needs.

Residential/Commercial.

You dream it, we build it!

(250)426-8604

www.dustayconstruction.com 250-489-6211

Book Now

EAST KOOTENAY TREE SERVICE CERTIFIED ARBORIST ~Dangerous Tree Removal ~Stump Grinding ~Ornamental Tree Pruning ~Shaping and topping hedges, fruit trees. ~Free chips and delivery

stk#6185

Installations conducted by Certified Journeyman Installer. Certification available upon request.

LEIMAN

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.

Fully insured Free estimates Seniors discount

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

Roy Anderson 250-489-1900 1-877-219-2227

Call SuperDave (250)421-4044 www.superdaveconsulting.ca

WILL SELL WHAT YOU WANT SOLD!

CALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202

1-800-222-TIPS

*Cedar Shake Roofs & Repairs *Soffit & Fascia Installation *Siding Gutter Installation/Cleaning. *Vinyl & Hardieboard Siding ~Call Chad Sonley for a free estimate~

250-464-9393 www.rockymountainrooďŹ ng.ca TIP TOP CHIMNEY SERVICES

LYNDELL’S

“Sweeping the Kootenay’s Clean�

Keeping your business on track . Over 15 years experience.

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

BUSINESS SERVICES

Lyndell Classon

Institute of Professional Bookkeepers of Canada ~Full Cycle Bookkeeping ~Accounts Payables and Receivables ~Payroll ~Your office or pick up service available cell: 250-919-7244 email: lclasson@myflexi.net

TREE PRUNING Spring is here.

*Time to get your trees pruned.

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

TOM’S LAWNCARE SERVICES “The Lawn Man� Licensed Residential & Commercial Trimming, Dethatching & Aerating.

*For quotes, call Mike:

Clean up stuff to dump. Free estimates. Seniors discount Kimberley, Meadowbrook, Wycliffe only.

250-426-3418 or 250-919-1840.

Phone (250)427-5139 Leave Message

*Shade trees, fruit trees, and tree removal.

CLASSIFIEDS

*Torch-on Roofing

SERVING ALL THE KOOTENAYS Merchandise for Sale

Bicycles GREG LEMOND road bike 55 cm. (medium). Shimano Tiagra components. Black and red tires/neoprene tape. New: $1500. Asking: $750.Phone 250-426-6120

Eating disorders are the deadliest of all mental illnesses. Learn more at lookingglassbc.com

Furniture ELECTRONIC, adjustable single size bed, in good working order. 38� wide x 6’6� long. $225. Call 250-426-6853

Auto Services

Auto Services

Auto Services

Auto Services

Auto Services

Auto Services

Auto Services

9Whi ,01 )"00 _d A_cX[hb[o CHALET GM & MELODY MOTORS - Two Award Winning, Independent Dealerships Working Together to SAVE YOU MONEY!


daily townsman

Page 12 Tuesday, April 9, 2013

When you’re ready to advertise – talk with one of our experts; Dan Mills

Erica Morell

250-426-5201 ext 207 dan@dailytownsman.com

Nicole Koran

250-426-5201 ext 214 erica@dailytownsman.com

250-427-5333 advertising@dailybulletin.ca

Act Now!

Call for a FREE quote. We’ll cover all your print and media needs.

TV you’ll all love, for less.

Enjoy TELUS Satellite TV from only ®

15 /mo.

$

73

for 6 months in a bundle.

*

All your HD channels included at no additional charge Sign up for 3 years and get all the equipment you need to connect up to 3 TVs† Record shows and watch them on your time‡

Call 310-MYTV (6988), go to telus.com/gettv or visit your Telus store or Authorized dealer.

®

Telus sTORe OR AuThORized deAleR Cranbrook Tamarack Mall

invermere 101 Kootenay St. N

717 Industrial Rd. No. 2

1229 7th Ave.

Offer available until May 6, 2013, to residential customers, where line of sight permits, who have not subscribed to TELUS TV, Internet or home phone service in the past 90 days. Not available to residents of multi-dwelling units. Minimum system requirements apply. Final eligibility for the services will be determined by a TELUS representative at the point of installation. TELUS reserves the right to modify channel lineups and packaging, and regular pricing, without notice. HDTV input equipped television is required to receive HD. HD channels provided through the Bell TV satellite network. *Includes Basic Package. Regular bundled rate (currently $32.90/mo.) begins on month 7. Monthly rates include a $3 digital service fee, a $5 bundle discount and a fee required by the CRTC as a contribution to the Local Programming Improvement Fund (LPIF). See telus.com/satellitetv-lpif. Taxes extra. Not available with other promotions. †Current rental rates apply at the end of the service agreement. A cancellation fee applies to the early termination of a service agreement, and will be $10 multiplied by the number of months remaining in the term. ‡PVR capabilities subject to and limited by applicable laws. TELUS, TELUS Satellite TV, the TELUS logo and the future is friendly are trademarks of TELUS Corporation, used under licence. © 2013 TELUS.


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