Cranbrook Daily Townsman, October 02, 2013

Page 1

WEDNESDAY

Championship 18 Sept 30th - Oct 20th

< Rafting to school and other memories

OCTOBER 2, 2013

Lucy Sanderson’s childhood near the Arctic Circle | Page 5

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Includes green fee, power cart and range.

Mike Dyck will assist Ice during McGill’s absence | Page 8

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Vol. 61, Issue 192

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SALLY MACDONALD PHOTO

Sixty years ago, Sam and Harriatte Cross were married at the United Church in Cranbrook. On September 26, at 4 p.m. — the exact moment they tied the knot — the Crosses celebrated their 60th anniversary by walking down the very same aisle together once more, surrounded by their children, grandchildren and great grandchildren. When they were married, Harriatte was 18 and Sam was 21. Harriatte offered this marriage advice to other couples: “Work at it. You always have to work at it. You will have your ups and downs, but you’ll come along.”

Interior Health CEO applauds ICU project Dr. Robert Halpenny toured the site of the expansion to East Kootenay Regional Hospital in Cranbrook on Monday

S A L LY M AC D O N A L D Townsman Staff

Interior Health’s chief of staff was in Cranbrook this week inspecting the site of the new Intensive Care Unit (ICU) at East Kootenay Regional Hospi-

tal. Dr. Robert Halpenny, Chief Executive Officer for the Interior Health Authority, walked through the grassy area where the new, state of the art unit will be built.

The $20 million project will consist of a 6,500 square foot ICU with six beds, including equipment. The Kootenay East Regional Hospital District chipped in $8 million for the project, while the B.C. gov-

ernment will provide the remaining $12 million. About 50 per cent of the project cost will go to upgrading the hospital’s electrical system. On Monday, September 30, Dr. Halpen-

ny toured the site of the ICU, which will be built on two levels to the north of the hospital’s existing footprint. “It’s terrific. We’ve looked at the site out here. We are in the mock-up stage so that

the staff have input into what they are actually going to be working in. That’s exciting for them. We are as close as you can be to being on time,” said Dr. Halpenny. He said medical staff

have raised several concerns over the current ICU, but it was hard to envisage the problems until he saw the cramped unit himself.

See IH , Page 3

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daily townsman / daily bulletin

Page 2 Wednesday, OCTOBER 2, 2013

Upcoming Events at the Key City Theatre NEXT at the Key City Theatre

Ron Sexmith oct 7

R

on Sexsmith is a Canadian singer-songwriter who started his first band when he was 14 years old. By the age of 17 he was playing the bar circuit in his hometown of St. Catharines, Ontario, where he quickly gained a reputation as “the one-man jukebox”. When his son was born in 1985 Ron decided to start writing his own songs, and soon after released his first album on cassette “Out of the Duff ”. Over the years he has released a total of 13 albums, growing in popularity and acquiring a number of famous admirers. Elvis Costello, Elton John, Paul McCartney, Steve Earle, and Sheryl Crow have all praised the Canadian pop-folk artist. Additionally, Sexsmith co-wrote “Brandy Alexander” with Feist and his song “secret heart” has been covered by Rod Stewart, Fiest and Nick Lowe. In 2011 he won a JUNO for songwriter of the year for the song “whatever it takes” that was covered by Micheal Buble. Ron Sexsmith’s newest album Forever Endeavour has been met with high praise from critics. His new music has been described as “deftly poetic, gently affecting songs that perfectly distil the pitfalls of being human”. Ron is joined by special guest Jenn Grant a Canadian JUNO nominated pop singer and songwriter touring her new record The Beautiful Wild.

Connie Kaldor Oct 22

Premier Sponsor

Media Sponsor

Judy Collins Nov 6

Bergman Piano Nov 3

Community Concert Sponsors

Call for tickets: 250 426 7006 Like: facebook.com/keycitytheatre Follow: twitter.com/ApplaudArt

PASTA EXPRESS! FRIDAY NIGHTS

5-8 pm Skylight Cafe 803 Cranbrook St. N.

250-489-4301


daily townsman

Local NEWS

Wednesday, OCTOBER 2, 2013

Page 3

School boards knew of CUPE costs, minister says Tom Fletcher Black Press

Sally MacDonald photo

On the site of the new Intensive Care Unit at East Kootenay Regional Hospital – left to right: John Kettle, chair of the Kootenay East Regional Hospital District; Dr. Robert Halpenny, Interior Health Chief Executive Officer; Erica Phillips, Interior Health acute health services administrator; and Kootenay East MLA Bill Bennett.

IH CEO checks out ICU site Continued from page 1 “When we were getting the requests for the new ICU here, having not seen it, it was difficult to read the report. But then as soon as you came in and looked at the ICU, you said, ‘Now I see the issue,’” said Dr. Halpenny. “The biggest (concern) was the issue of size. It’s very small, very cramped. When people are in the ICU and

they are very sick, and for example if there is a trauma, there are a lot of people around an individual’s bed. That leads to the person in the next bed being compromised. So we will be looking at a much larger unit with appropriate separation. With that appropriate separation comes improved care specifically related to infec-

tions.” A request for proposals for the ICU is expected to go out in mid-December or early January. However, because the electrical work must be carefully scheduled, it will take 36 to 40 months to complete, meaning the new ICU ward should open in late 2016. Dr. Halpenny’s visit was not just to see the ICU; he

spent Monday in meetings with staff, physicians, elected officials and hospital foundations and auxiliaries. “There are a number of different reasons for visiting, but I think the biggest one is to meet with the staff and understand what their issues are,” he said. In 2012, Interior Health recruited more physicians than the rest of B.C.’s health

authorities, according to Dr. Halpenny. “So we are doing some good work in that field. But there is a worldwide shortage of primary care physicians specifically and a shortage of general internal medicine specialists as well,” he said, adding that ultrasound technicians are particularly difficult to recruit.

Garden workshops focus on perennials F o r t h e To w n s m a n

The fifth workshop in the One World Garden Series, The Magic of Perennials, is coming up Thursday, October 4, 10 a.m. to noon in Kimberley and 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. in Cranbrook. Those interested should note the change of timing to daytime, mid-week for this session. Organizers are advising that a hands-on experience is planned this month, so if English is not your most comfortable language, it will be easier to follow this workshop. “The Magic of Perennials” will focus on some of the food-producing perennials that grow in this region, and

the care required to prepare for bountiful harvests next year. As this time of year is a good time for transplanting — whether you’re moving things around in your garden or putting in new plants — some tricks to lessen the shock on plants will be revealed. The goal of the workshop series is to increase the local capacity for growing food by offering a place where immigrants or people new to gardening can learn more about growing food locally while gaining hands-on experience and exchanging skills with local members of the community. The Kimberley

workshop will be held from 10 a.m. to noon at Cominco Community Garden, located at Cominco Gardens in Townsite, and in Cranbrook from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. at the Public Produce Garden in Eric MacKinnon Park. This is the fifth workshop in a six-part series. As part of the Welcoming Communities project, Columbia Basin Alliance for Literacy, Cranbrook Food Action Committee and Wildsight Kimberley Cranbrook have teamed up to provide these gardening workshops for free. This project is made possible through funding from the Government of Canada and

Learn about food producing perennials at the next workshop. the Province of British Columbia. The workshops are free but require regis-

tration. To register, in Cranbrook: cranbrookfood@gmail. com or call 250-427-

Submitted

7981. In Kimberley: shannon@wildsight. ca or call 250-4272535 ext 223.

VICTORIA – Education Minister Peter Fassbender says boards protesting the cost of a 3.5 per cent raise for school support should have known it was coming, but some opted to wait and hope for an NDP government to take over. Fassbender said in an interview that school trustees have been working with the education ministry for months on “savings plans.” They knew the B.C. Liberal government would not increase budgets to cover a raise for workers who haven’t seen one in four years, and have been without a contract for more than a year. “I think there was some hope on the part of some [trustees] that we would, with our backs to the wall perhaps, come up with additional dollars,” Fasssbender said. “And the other reality, quite honestly, was that up until May 14 there was some anticipation that there was going to be a change of government.” Trustees around the province are grappling with added costs for contracts with 69 union locals representing education assistants, bus drivers, custodians and crossing guards. Union locals and boards of education must all vote to ratify the agreement by December for it to take effect. It includes a one per cent raise retroactive to July 1, another two per cent starting Feb. 1 and 0.5 per cent in May 2014. Districts calculate costs from the deal to be more than $2 million in Vancouver, $700,000 in Chilliwack and proportional amounts in other districts, most of which have already cut services due to declining enrolment. Fassbender said the support staff settlement meets the government’s “cooperative gains” mandate imposed on all public service unions, because CUPE chose to accept a smaller raise and protect its ability to bank sick days. School support staff and teachers are the last provincial government unions to accept a “cooperative gains” contract. Fassbender and Premier Christy Clark have offered to fund raises for teachers, if they will agree to a long-term settlement.


daily townsman

Page 4 Wednesday, OCTOBER 2, 2013

Weatoheurtlook Tonight 0

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Local NEWS Winston Blackmore appealing tax court ruling

POP 20%

Almanac Temperatures

C anadian Press

Polygamous community leader Winston Blackmore is appealing a decision by a Federal Tax Court that he underreported his income by $1.8 million. Documents filed in the Federal Court of Appeal say the trial judge

didn’t properly interpret a section of the Income Tax Act that relates to filing taxes as a congregation. In the original case, Blackmore argued his polygamous group should be able to use the same tax law that Hutterites use, spreading

High Low Normal ..........................15.3°.................1.7° Record......................24.8°/1992 .......-3.3°/1968 Yesterday......................12.3° ..................3° Precipitation Normal.................................................1mm Record.....................................9.7mm/1976 Yesterday ........................................1.2 mm This month to date...........................1.2 mm This year to date...........................1410 mm Tomorrows

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Across the Region Tomorro w Prince George 12/1 Jasper 10/-5

Edmonton 7/0

Banff 6/-3 Kamloops 17/4

Revelstoke 13/3

Kelowna 14/2 Vancouver 13/8

Canada

today

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

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The World

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

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Calgary 8/-1

YOU’RE INVITED Castlegar 14/3

Cranbrook 11/1

tomorrow

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rain/snow 6/4 showers 7/3 p.cloudy 13/8 p.cloudy 13/8 p.sunny 7/0 p.cloudy 8/0 p.cloudy 13/2 p.cloudy 15/5 cloudy 14/7 p.cloudy 19/11 showers 20/14 tstorms 24/18 m.sunny 21/11 m.sunny 20/12 sunny 19/9 sunny 20/8 tomorrow

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Blackmore claimed income from of $172,000 for the years 2000 to 2004 and 2006. He said his yearly income fluctuated between $20,000 and $40,000. But Canada Revenue Agency added hundreds of thousands of dollars a year of income and shareholder benefits from Blackmore’s company J.R. Blackmore & Sons Ltd. The brief notice of appeal filed said the judge didn’t properly apply a section of the Income Tax Act as “it accords with the Canadian

Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the values to which it gives expression.’’ In her earlier ruling, Campbell said Bountiful was too dispersed and fragmented to qualify as one of the specific types of communities that Parliament envisioned, such as Hutterite communities. Blackmore, who told the court he had 21 wives and 47 children, had his income reassessed and he was also hit with a penalty of nearly $150,000 in the August ruling.

At the Cranbrook Library

Precipitation totals include rain and snow

unrise 7 46 a.m. unset 7 16 p.m. oonrise 6 20 a.m. oonset 6 29 p.m.

earnings among members for tax purposes. But Judge Diane Campbell said in her ruling last August that Blackmore’s community in Bountiful, near Creston, didn’t meet any of the criteria for such a tax break. “The appellant ought to have known that ignoring the astronomical magnitude of the differences between the reported income/benefits and the amount of benefits assessed ... would attract some type of tax consequences,’’ Campbell said in her ruling.

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

28/16 20/11 23/17 23/13 29/23 29/27 6/2 18/15 19/15 30/24 24/15 23/13 30/27 18/16 26/22 28/18

The Weather Network 2013

Please join us at our Charity Yard and Bake Sale to benefit the FCC Drive Away Hunger campaign. Enter our raffle for a chance to win the 50/50 draw, enjoy complimentary coffee, and for $5 chili and a bun. All proceeds will go to the Cranbrook Food Bank. DATE: TIME: LOCATION:

Saturday, October 05, 2013 9:00 AM – 1:00 PM 35 10th Ave S, Cranbrook BC

First Saturday Oct 5th

kimberley celebrates october Fest bavarian theme! CALLING ALL KIDS!!

Kids parade - kimberley is a good place to be. ✓ Meet at Centre 64 at 11:00, Parade led by Happy Hans, 11:30 - 12:00 ✓ Pretzel toss 12:45 ✓ Creative Monkeys on stage at 2:00 ✓ Root Beer Garden at the Snowdrift Cafe ✓ Caricatures at the Spirit Rock Climbing Wall ✓ Face Painting at the Dollar Store ✓ Stories at the Library 2:00 and 3:00 ✓ Ping Pong Table We gratefully acknowledged the financial support of the Province of British Columbia

Mike Selby

ebecca Musser tells how she — as Rulon Jeff’s 19th wife — escaped his polygamous cult and eventually brought her abusers to justice in ‘The Witness Wore Red.’ Kurt Cyrus’ ‘Your Skeleton is Showing’ is a collection of humorous children’s poetry set in a wacky graveyard. Preschool Story Time this Wednesday at 11 a.m., 1:15 p.m., & 6:30 p.m, and will be all about Cows! Due to enthusiastic response, Toddler Story Time now has two sessions on Friday: one at 10 a.m., and one at 11 a.m. Please note this the 11 a.m. session is simply a repeat of the 10 session. The Fall Book Sale of the Friends of the Cranbrook Public Library and the Sunrise Rotary Club will be held in the Ktunaxa Gym (formerly Tembec Gym) from Oct. 2 to Oct. 6th. The sale opens daily at 9:30 a.m. and closes at 6:00 p.m. Wed, Friday and Saturday; and at 9:00 p.m. on Thursday. Wednesday (Oct. 2nd) is the “Members Only” sale. A $10 membership to the Friends can be purchased at the door and entitles you to have first pick of the items. All other days are for the general public. Sunday, Oct. 6, is the popular BAG SALE. The hours are 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Bring your Friends/Library bag and fill it for $4. Or for $5, purchase this bag at the sale and fill it. Only these bags can be used. This is a great opportunity to purchase books, videos, DVDs, CDs and books on tape at greatly reduced prices. Call Marilyn 250-489-6254 for further info. Please contact Deanne at 250-4264063 for more details. Adult Newly Acquired Shelf: The Artists Way for Parents – Julia Cameron Jump-Starting Boys – Pam Withers Dollars & Sex: How Economics Influences Sex & Love – Marina Adshade The Telling Room – Michael Paterniti New Works – Robert Bateman Skinnygirl Solutions – Bethenny Frankel The Smartest Kids in the World – Amanda Ripley The Witness Wore Red – Rebecca Musser Crash Dive: True Stories of Submarine Combat Gold Panning in British Columbia – Jim Lewis

Creative You – David B. Goldstein Complete Encyclopedia of Antique Weapons – A.E. Hartink Socialsklz:-) for Success – Faye De Muyshondt Back to Basics: 100 Simple Classic Recipes with A Twist Constitutional Law – Patrick Monahan Bank and Customer Law in Canada – M. H. Ogilvie The Journal of Best Practices: A Memoir of Marriage & Asperger’s Real Simple Dinner Tonight – Allie Lewis Company’s Coming Healthy Slow Cooker – Jean Pare Poison: An Illustrated History – Joel Levy Kananaskis Country Trail Guide Volume 3 – Gillean Daffern Flavours of Aleppo: Celebrating Syrian Cuisine – Dalal Kade-Badra Tampa – Alissa Nutting (fic) Traveling Light – Andrea Thalasinos (fic) Someone to Watch Over Me – Madeleine Reiss (fic) Countdown City – Ben H. Winters (fic) The Illusion of Separateness – Simon Van Booy (fic) Gone With The Win – Mary Daheim (mys) Crossbones Yard – Kate Rhodes (mys) Massacre Pond – Paul Doiron (mys) Baskerville – John O’Connell (mys) Death Angel – Linda Fairstein (mys) The Poisoned Pilgrim – Oliver Potzsch (mys) Poppet – Mo Hayder (mys) Montaro Caine – Sidney Poitier (sci fic) Magic Mike (DVD) The Greatest Story Ever Told (DVD) The Awful Truth (DVD) Khartoum (DVD)

Young Adult & Children’s: Sylo – D. J. MacHale (ya fic) The Apprentices – Meloy Maile (ya fic) Boy21 – Mathew Quick (ya fic) Sing Along & Learn – Ken Sheldon (j kit) The Gargoyle Overhead – Philippa Dowding (j fic) Your Skeleton Is Showing – Kurt Cyrus Hunting Deer – Hines Lambert Mike Selby is Reference Librarian at the Cranbrook Public Library


daily townsman

Local NEWS

Wednesday, OCTOBER 2, 2013

Page 5

Rafting to school and other Yukon memories

Arne Petryshen Townsman Staff

A

number of photographs sit on the floor at Cranbrook resident Lucy Sanderson’s house. The photos are black and white portraits of her family with sled pups and sled dogs. Another of the photos shows a group of kids on a raft preparing to make the journey 245 miles down the Yukon River to Dawson. The photo is from 83 years ago. “Alec on the end there,” she said pointing to the boy captaining the raft, “was 13 and he took them to Dawson, 245 miles. ” She said the boy is now 96, still hunting and trapping and doing everything he ever did. Every summer Lucy Sanderson makes her way back to the area she was born in to reunite with brothers and sisters in the Yukon. Growing up Sanderson, now 86, and her family lived the pioneer lifestyle in the North in a cabin near Pelly Crossing. Now most of her family have gone back up there. There are two boys and three girls left out of the 16 family members who once came to the gatherings. Back then the whole family trapped and lived off the land. “It was a good life,” Sanderson said. “We raised a huge garden. We worked all summer and took the winter off for just trapping. Of course, it was cold and snowing so you couldn’t do anything else other than hunting and trapping.” They’d put out big barrels of sauerkraut, rhubarb, and high bush cranberries in great big barrels of food. On the rafting down the river, she said it was her father’s idea. “My father said, ‘Well the river’s going that way anyway so why pay the fare on the steamboat?’” They would take the raft down in the fall to attend school and live at a hostel in Dawson for the winter, then make their way back in the spring. But the year before her turn to start school, a girl passed away from tuberculosis in the hostel and that put an end to sending kids down to school there.

Cranbrook’s Lucy Sanderson recalls her pioneer life near the Arctic Circle

Lucy Sanderson displays family photographs from her childhood growing up in the Yukon territory. Two of her sisters and four brothers went to the school. Sanderson was instead schooled by correspondence. In the winter there was a train that freighted from Whitehorse to Dawson and passed not quite a mile from their home. “We’d hear the cab coming and we’d all run

down to the mailbox and stand and watch the cab go by,” she said. “Later in years I wondered what the passengers thought, these little small kids all by the road in the wilderness.” At Christmas time they would harness up a dog team to go and fetch the mail in Fort Selkirk. “I left the Yukon in ‘48 and haven’t been

back there to live; it’s too cold, she said. “I was about 20, 21 when I left and went to Saskatoon.” There she took a nurses aid course, but decided it wasn’t something she wanted to do. So she left for Calgary, went to a business college and then worked in an office until she got married. After nine years in Calgary she and her

husband moved to Cranbrook in ‘57. She remembers the day she pulled into town; the seventh of May. “Coming through the Crowsnest, I thought: ‘If he pulls into one of these old dirty houses there’ll be a divorce right quick,” she said. “So when we came into town, the sun was shin-

Arne Petryshen photo

ing, the grass green. It was just beautiful. I decided to stay in Cranbrook. It’s more like the Yukon; the wilderness. I hunted here and killed moose and elk and lots of deer.” She says that she doesn’t care for wild meat so much anymore. “I don’t mind moose, but they’re a limited entry. I can’t eat a whole

moose so I quit hunting big game,” she said. She then started hunting grouse and enjoyed heading up into the hills and sitting in the open meadows watching wildlife pass by. Her dad told her stories of growing up in West Virginia and travelled with Daniel Boone and other pioneers who would go out and shoot a turkey for Thanksgiving. “I thought, ‘All I want to do is shoot one and hold it like they did,’” she said. So she did and that’s the first and last turkey she shot. “I don’t care to shoot anything anymore,” she said. It’s been three years since she had a fall on a ferry deck and hurt her shoulder. A couple years ago, she even took a trip to Antarctica, something she wanted to do before turning 80. She stays busy with activities everyday, including computer lessons at the college, dancing, lapidary, darts, painting and tea. And of course, brunch every Sunday. “I was always thinking I should just sit around and rest,” she said. “I thought when you got old you just sat in a chair and rested and just faded away.”


PAGE 6

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2013

OPINION

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T

The roads not taken

wo governments did bold, brave ders. With many of its former voters suffering things last week. One of them quit and called a new election from the dire state of the economy, Ennaheven though it had a viable ma- da will probably not win the next election jority in parliament. The other (which is to be organised by a caretaker arrested the leaders of a neo-fascist party on government). But Tunisia will still be a decharges of heading a criminal gang. And mocracy, Ennahda will still be a legal party, you can’t help wondering if things would and there will not be thousands killed by the army in the streets. Unhave turned out a lot better like Egypt. if a couple of other governYou can find some exments had had the courage cuses for why Egypt stumto do the same thing. bled back into a military Last Saturday, the Tunidictatorship last July. The sian government that has Gwynne Muslim Brotherhood overbeen in power since the Dyer played its hand and made country’s first free election secular Egyptians feel that in 2011 announced that it would resign. Ennahda, the leading party they were under attack. The army had in the ruling coalition, had not tried to im- been running the country for decades, and pose its Islamic values on the whole popu- wanted to protect its many privileges. But if lation, and it had brought non-Islamic President Mohammed Morsi had had the parties into the coalition, but the situation wisdom to do what Ennahda has done, in the country was starting to feel like even at the last moment, Egypt would still be a democracy today. Egypt. So Ennahda quit. And now to Greece, where the ruling Like any post-revolutionary government, Ennahda faced a huge economic coalition of centre-right and left-wing parchallenge, and its inevitable failure to cre- ties has taken decisive action against Euate enough jobs to meet the expectations rope’s most violent political movement, of the young had eaten into its popular the neo-fascist Golden Dawn Party, over support. But what really brought it into a the past two weeks. The sweep culminated confrontation with the secular majority of in an anti-terrorism operation early last the population was two assassinations of Saturday morning in which police stormed the homes of party leader Nikos Michalohigh-profile opposition leaders. Nobody thinks that Ennahda was in- liakos and five other Golden Dawn memvolved in the killings of Chokri Belaid last bers of parliament. Only three years ago Golden Dawn was February and Mohammed Brahmi in May (both with the same pistol). At worst, peo- a tiny fringe party that ranted about “subple think that the government was not se- human foreigners” stealing Greek jobs and vere enough in cracking down on the polluting the Greek gene pool, and got less Salafists, Islamist radicals who are widely than 1 percent of the vote in the 2010 elecsuspected of responsibility for the mur- tion. Then came the debt crisis that has

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

plunged Greece into poverty – and in last year’s election it got 7 percent of the vote. Waving Greek flags and the party’s logo (which looks quite like a swastika), Golden Dawn’s bully-boys took over the streets, attacking immigrants, gays and leftists. It had the support of some senior police officers, and its members were arming themselves for some final confrontation. But Prime Minister Antonis Samaras’s government moved first. Golden Dawn’s members openly admire Adolf Hitler, but the only reason they even know his name is that the German state failed to take similar action against his National Socialist (Nazi) party in the last years before Hitler took power in 1933. Like Golden Dawn, the Nazis’ share of the national vote jumped sevenfold after the onset of the economic crisis in 1929. but they were still a small minority in Germany, and their violence against their opponents and the Jews gave the state ample reason to act against them. It didn’t, and as Germany’s economic situation worsened the Nazis’ support grew further. In the 1933 election they got one-third of the vote, and Hitler was appointed Chancellor. That was the end of German democracy and much else besides. Greece is not a great power, so what happens there matters much less, but without this prompt action it could have ended up the same way. It’s a lot easier to be wise after the fact, but it is the job of politicians to be wise before the fact. Some pass the test; others do not. Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist based in London.

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. Only one letter per month from any particular letter writer will 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

Music and films on the menu Nature Park Hike - Friendly Fungus Frenzy

CAROLYN GRANT entertainment@ dailytownsman.com

Mmm, delicious newspaper. Yes, friends, I’m eating my words after promising last weekend’s weather would be balmy. The amount of snow in the Rockies does not bode well for continued outdoor activities. Luckily there is plenty to absorb entertainment-wise, indoors.

Cranbrook Farmers’ Market

As we head into the fall season and an abundance of locally grown produce, the Cranbrook Farmer’s Market will be operating every Saturday from now until Thanksgiving at the same downtown location, with the same great vendors, but with new fall hours of 10 am until 1 pm (September 7th through October 12th, 2013). www.cranbrookfarmersmarket. com

Floor Curling

55 plus floor curling will start September 25 at Centennial Centre, Kimberley starting at 1 p.m. If you would like to join you can contact Marg 250-427-7072 or Vera 250-427-2839.

Drop in Social

Drop in jam ~ social on Last Saturdays of the month, 1:30 to 4 p.m., at the Seniors Hall in Cranbrook on 2nd St. S. Everyone welcome! 250489-2720. Please note the October Jam has been moved up to 19th.

Toastmasters

A new season is starting for Toastmasters! Hone your speaking and leadership skills in a friendly, supportive setting. Cranbrook First Toastmasters invites you to join our group. We meet in Room 210 at the College of the Rockies from 7-9 p.m. For more info, e mail pamelaryan@telus.net

Thursday, Oct. 3 Art Exhibition Reception

Artist Marilyn Milley holds a solo exhibition in the CDAC gallery from Sept 28th – Oct 26th. The opening reception with artist in attendance, will be held between 7-9 p.m. on October 3 with complimentary refreshments and wine for purchase. Contact Helen 250-426-

Friday, October 4 Key City Theatre

On The Trail of Genghis Khan – October 4 at 7:00 PM – Tickets by donation

Wed. Oct. 2 to Sunday Oct. 6 Book Sale

Book Sale of the Friends of the Cranbrook Public Library and the Sunrise Rotary Club will be held in the Ktunaxa Gym. Wednesday is for members only and a membership can be purchased at the door for $10. The sale opens daily at 9:30 am to 6 pm Wed, Friday and Saturday. It closes at 9 pm Thursday for late evening shopping. The last day is Sunday, the Bag Sale, from 9:30 am to 1 pm. You can fill your Friends of the Library bag for $4 or buy a Friends bag and fill it for $5. Only these bags can be used. Donations of books (except encyclopedias), DVDs, CDs and videos would be greatly appreciated. Call Marilyn Forbes for info 250489-6254.

Saturday, Oct. 5 Oktoberfest

Dance to the Noteables big band at the Heritage Inn, Cranbrook, 7:30 p.m. Saturday, October 5. Tickets $20, available at Lotus Books.

Saturday, Oct. 5 First Saturday

It’s First Saturday in Kimberley, the last of the year and the theme is Bavarian. Many businesses will be taking part in Oktoberfest. There are a number of beer gardens, a kids root beer garden, Barmaid races, kids parade, entertainment and more. The last High Tea at the Chateau Kimberley for this season takes place from 12-3 pm with entertainment. Reservations required for large groups, call Ruth at 250-4272706.

Saturday, Oct. 5

Saturday, Oct. 5 Fall Harvest Roundup

The Kimberley Seniors Association will be hosting a Fall Harvest event at Centennial Centre, from noon to 4 pm. Admission is $5 per person. It’s called Fall Harvest Roundup — a country theme event with country singers and dancers. There will also be a pie baking contest, silent auction, harvest items for sale. Chili with corn bread, desserts, coffee and tea will be served.

Jaclyn Guillou plays the Jazz@Centre 64 series October 18.

Monday, Oct. 7 Key City Concert

Ron Sexsmith (Jenn Grant opening) – October 7 at 7:30 pm – tickets are $35

Oct. 11 and 12 The way we were

Enjoy the songs of Streisand with international recording artist Diane Pancel featuring Yanik Giroux on piano at Centre 64 in Kimberley. Tickets available at KPAC box office in Kimberley’s Platzl or call 250-4274060.

Saturday, Oct. 12 Into the Mind

Dirtbag Festival presents, a one-time showing of Into The Mind, the newest film by Sherpas Cinema at the Kimberley Conference Centre, October 12. Tickets only $15. Doors at 6 pm. Show at 7:30 pm. Come early for refreshments, and pizza.

Saturday, Oct. 12 Workshop

Acrylic Gels Mediums and Pastes Workshop with Linda Bullock. Back by popular demand, this four hour intensive workshop is great value, with supplies included for just $35. Linda teaches students all about acrylic additions to creative different effects and improve their understanding of the medium. Spaces fill up quickly so register before October 2nd to avoid disappointment. Saturday 12th October 10-2pm. CDAC 104 135 10th Ave S.

Page 7

What’s Up?

KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDAR

A guided tour of fungi in the Horse Barn Valley. Meet at the Matthew Creek turnoff at 9 am to arrange rides. Join leader Bill Olmsted 427-3627

4223 or cdac@shaw.ca

Wednesday, OCTOBER 2, 2013

Ron Sexsmith plays the Key City Theatre next Monday. Contact Helen 250-4264223 cdac@shaw.ca

Friday, Oct. 18 Jazz @ Centre 64

The series wraps up on Friday, October 18 with the captivating Canadian songstress Jaclyn Guillou. Tickets for Jazz @ Centre 64 are now available at Centre 64 and online at www.eventbrite.ca. All concerts begin at 8 PM. Individual concert tickets are $12-$20.

SatURDAY Oct. 19 Home Grown Home Grown Music Society presents the first Coffee House of this season on Saturday, Oct 19 at Centre 64 at 8:00 pm. Tickets $7 at the Snowdrift Cafe & Centre 64 in Kimberley.

Saturday, Oct. 19 Key City Theatre

Dora the Explorer – October 19 at 1 pm & 4 pm – tickets are $29

Saturday, Oct 19 Social

Dance to the music of Chapparal, 7 pm, at the Cranbrook Seniors Hall, 2 St. S. Refreshments

served. Check out the JAM ( Ice-cream Social) on Last Saturdays at 1:30 for a time of refreshment and fun. Oct. Jam moved up to 19th. 250-489-2720.

Sunday, Oct. 20 Symphony concert

The Symphony of the Kootenays performs its first concert of the 20132014 season in Cranbrook, with a matinée at the Key City Theatre. Concert starts at 2:00pm. Doors open at 1:00pm with free tea and scones to the first 100 arrivals. Music and Artistic Director Jeff Faragher makes his conducting debut with the Symphony, leading an exciting program of Copland’s Rodeo, Smetana’s lush Moldau and Mendelssohn’s Italian Symphony. Key City Theatre manager Gerard Gibbs also debuts with the Symphony, performing Albinoni’s Oboe Concerto #2. Tickets available at the Key City Theatre box office, or subscribe for the whole season with at www.sotk.ca

UPCOMING 2013 FREE PUBLIC SWIM Wednesday, October 2nd, 5:00-6:00 PM is sponsored by Rockies Law Corporation. October 4th and 5th: House of Hope Fall Conference “Kingdom Culture: Life in His Presence”. Speakers: Denny & Danette Taylor from Bethel Church in Redding California. 629 6th St NW Cranbrook (across from BC Hydro) Friday Oct. 4th at 7pm. Registration www. ihopecranbrook.ca. Info.Ph. 250-421-3784 Kimberley Nature Park Hike - Friendly Fungus Frenzy - Saturday, Oct. 5, A guided tour of fungi in the Horse Barn Valley. Meet at the Matthew Creek turnoff at 9:00 am to arrange rides. Join leader Bill Olmsted 427-3627 TAKE A KID MOUNTAIN BIKING DAY! This is a Fun, FREE, social family event put on by the Wild Horse Bike Club. For kids of all ages & abilities; striders to teens! Parents are encouraged to stay and ride with the group. Oct 5 - 2:00pm, Cranbrook Community Forest – College of the Rockies parking lot entrance. Kazuri Jewellery Dessert Party and sale, Kimberley Gogo Grannies. 6:30 to 9:00 pm, October 9th, 2013. Anglican Church Hall. Tickets available from Gail 250.427.5222 or Shelia 250.427.7137 or at the door. The mission of Kazuri is to provide and sustain employment opportunities for disadvantaged members of Kenyan Society. Thursday, Oct 10 Cranbrook First Toastmasters begins its 41st Season in Room 210 at COTR from 7-9 PM. Are you looking for a friendly, supportive setting in which to learn, build confidence, become a better speaker and a leader? E mail pamelaryan@telus. net for more info or phone 250-489-4464 (days) Acrylic Gels, Mediums and Pastes Workshop with Linda Bullock Saturday 12th October, 10-2pm. CDAC Workshop Space, 135 10th Avenue South, Cranbrook. Back by popular demand. For $35 all materials included Linda Bullock will help you create a swatch of acrylic alchemy! Pre-registration required. Helen 250-426-4223 2013 FREE FAMILY SWIM Wednesday, Oct. 16th, 6:00-7:00 PM is sponsored by Kimberley Health-Care Auxiliary. Children 18 years & under must be accompanied by an adult. OCTOBER 19, to the music of Chapparal, 7 pm, at the Cranbrook Seniors HALL, 2 St. S. Refreshments served. Check out the JAM ( Ice-cream Social) on Last Saturdays at 1:30 for a time of refreshment and fun. *Oct. Jam moved up to 19th. 250.489.2720 ONGOING ICBL-Duplicate Bridge–Senior Center in Cranbrook. Mon & Wed 7pm, Thurs & Fri 1pm at Scout Hall, Marysville. Info: Maggie 250-417-2868. Cranbrook Phoenix Toastmasters meet every Thursday, noon - 1:00 Heritage Inn. Toastmasters teaches communication & leadership skills. Roberta 250-489-0174. 1911.toastmastersclubs.org. Dog Lovers! We have a pet section at Bibles For Missions Thrift Store. We’d love you to join us running our store. Flexible hours, short shifts to suit you. Come meet new friends! Open Tues-Sat, 10am-5pm. 824 Kootenay St. N., Cranbrook. 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. 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. Help Big Brothers Big Sisters of Cranbrook: One way you can help is by donating to our “Blue Bin” located outside to the left of WalMart by the propane tanks. This bin is there for any clothing items or soft items you have laying around in your house. (250) 4893111 or email us at bigscran@bigbrothersbigsisters.ca TENNIS ANYONE? Cranbrook Community Tennis Club at new Mount Baker High Courts. No Fees, No Dues, Just Tennis! 6:30-8:30pm, Wed & Sun nights. Info: Bev 250-4217736 or Neil 250-489-8107. Cranbrook Branch of the Stroke Recovery Association of BC. Meetings are from 10:00am-1:00pm the 2nd and 4th Wed. in the lower level of the Senior Citizen’s Hall, 125-17th St. S. Bring bag lunch. Tootie Gripich, 426-3994. The GoGo Grannies meet the last Monday of each month at 7:00 at The College of the Rockies. Join us as we raise awareness & funds for Grandmothers raising their Grandchildren in countries devastated by Aids. Norma at 250-426-6111. The Cranbrook Kimberley Hospice Society seeks volunteers to help us provide services to persons at the end of life and their families. Training is provided. Call 250-417-2019, Toll Free 1-855-417-2019 if interested. 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. Introduction to Pottery with Sonya Rokosh - Wednesday evenings for eight weeks, Sept. 11th-Oct. 30th, 6-8pm each Wed. CDAC Workshop Space, 135 10th Ave S, Cranbrook. A great course for budding potters. Pre-registration required. 250-426-4223 / cdac@shaw.ca 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.

CRANBROOK TOWNSMAN & KIMBERLEY BULLETIN COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Drop off: 822 Cranbrook St. N. • Drop off: 335 Spokane Street Fax: 250-426-5003 • Fax: 250-427-5336 E-mail: production@dailybulletin.ca


PAGE 8

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2013

Arthur’s SportS Bar & Grill In The Days Inn Check Out Our Great Daily Menu Specials open 3 – 10 pM Daily

MLB Standings East Division

W x-Boston 97 y-Tampa Bay 92 Baltimore 85 New York 85 Toronto 74 Central Division W x-Detroit 93 y-Cleveland 92 Kansas City 86 Minnesota 66 Chicago 63 West Division W x-Oakland 96 Texas 91 Los Angeles 78 Seattle 71 Houston 51 East Division

W x-Atlanta 96 Washington 86 New York 74 Philadelphia 73 Miami 62 Central Division W x-St. Louis 97 y-Pittsburgh 94 y-Cincinnati 90 Milwaukee 74 Chicago 66 West Division W x-Los Angeles 92 Arizona 81 San Diego 76 San Francisco 76 Colorado 74

SPORTS

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

KOOTENAY ICE

American League L 65 71 77 77 88

Pct .599 .564 .525 .525 .457

L 69 70 76 96 99

Pct .574 .568 .531 .407 .389

L 66 72 84 91 111

Pct .593 .558 .481 .438 .315

National League L Pct 66 .593 76 .531 88 .457 89 .451 100 .383 L 65 68 72 88 96

Pct .599 .580 .556 .457 .407

L 70 81 86 86 88

Pct .568 .500 .469 .469 .457

SAM@CRANBROOKPHOT.COM REPRINTS AVAILABLE AT: WWW.CRANBROOKPHOTO.COM

Mike Dyck (right) joined Ryan McGill (centre) and Jay Henderson (left) on the bench over the weekend as the Ice hosted the Lethbridge Hurricanes and the Regina Pats.

Coach relishes WHL opportunity TRE VOR CR AWLEY Sports Editor

Kimberley Curling Club

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Annual General Meeting will take place on Thursday, October 3rd Curling Club – upstairs lounge at 7:00 p.m. sharp.

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If you noticed a new face on the bench with the Kootenay Ice this weekend, that’s because there was one. Joining head coach Ryan McGill and his assistant, Jay Henderson, was Mike Dyck, who will lend his support to the franchise when McGill takes off with Team Canada for the World Juniors at Christmas. Dyck, a former WHL coach with the Lethbridge Hurricanes and Vancouver Giants, has been out of the league since 2009, but jumped at the chance to join the Ice and help out. Dyck, a native of Lethbridge, will make the trip down to Cranbrook

once a month leading up to Christmas, where he will be around fulltime during McGill’s absence. He was present during Ice training camp and had a chance to check out the talent on the roster. “I think, coming in, I knew that the team obviously had a strong second half last year with a young team, and I was impressed with how close everybody is, the character of the group,” said Dyck. “We got a real good group of guys here and obviously, it’s easy to come in when you have solid leadership at the top. It’s an easy situation to come into.” Dyck was an assis-

tant coach in Lethbridge for four years, before taking on the same role with the Vancouver Giants for another three. He returned to the Hurricanes in 2005 to lead as head coach for three seasons, taking his squad to the WHL finals in 2008. Dyck and McGill began talking in the summer, when the latter found out he was part of Team Canada’s coach-

ing staff. “It really wasn’t that difficult a decision for me,” Dyck said. “I had to clear it with my family, but it’s a great opportunity for me to get back into the Western Hockey League again, and at the same time, I don’t have to move my family or sacrifice what I’ve got in Lethbridge right now.” McGill and Dyck have history, playing against each other in major-junior in the 1980s and later coaching against each other, when Dyck was an assistant in Lethbridge and McGill was coaching the Ice in Edmonton and Cranbrook in his first tenure. “We’ve got some his-

tory together, got some similar values and similar ways to play the game so I think this weekend was a real good indication of how all three of us are going to work as a staff and I’m really happy with how it went,” McGill said, after Kootenay wrapped up training camp at the beginning of September. Dyck has remained in Lethbridge while raising a family, but has kept his foot in the game at the minor hockey and elite levels. He coached Sam Reinhart and Jaedon Descheneau at the 2012 World U-17 Hockey Challenge and will helm Team Alberta for the 2015 Canada Winter Games.

Yankees want manager Joe Girardi back RONALD BLUM Associated Press

NEW YORK - If anything, the Yankees like Joe Girardi even more now than when they hired him to manage the team six years ago. General manager Brian Cashman praised Girardi’s handling of the team during a disappointing season and is about to offer him a new contract. “He knows we’d like to have him stay and continue as manager of the New York Yankees as we move forward,” Cashman

said Tuesday. “I feel we hired a good one. He’s been a world champion player for us. He’s been a coach, a broadcaster and obviously a world champion manager. So we’ve benefited from having him and we’d like to do that going forward, but we’ll have to speak with him and see how it plays out.” Girardi has led the Yankees to a 564-408 record and a World Series title. Crippled by injuries, New York had its poorest season since 1992, missing the playoffs for the second time in 19 years and finishing tied for

third in the AL East at 85-77. Cashman met Girardi for coffee on Monday, a day after New York’s season ended, and plans to have lunch Wednesday in New York with Girardi’s agent, Steve Mandell. “We’re entering the sensitive conversations that will either lead to a deal or lead us to the understanding that there won’t be a deal,” Cashman said. Girardi won out over Don Mattingly to replace Joe Torre after the 2007 season and was given a $7.8 million, three-year contract. He is completing a $9

million, three-year deal. The Chicago Cubs may be interested in Girardi after firing manager Dale Sveum. Girardi grew up in Illinois, went to Northwestern and played for the Cubs. But Girardi is under contract through October, and Cashman wouldn’t say whether he would give the Cubs permission to speak with the manager. “I think he likes it here,” Cashman said. “We’re going to give him a real good reason to stay, and he’s earned that through his six years with us so far.”


daily townsman / daily bulletin

Kootenay Ice Report ICE CHIPS: The KOOTENAY ICE enter this week’s action with a 2-2-0-0 record (2-1-0-0 at home, 0-1-0-0 on the road, 0-0 in overtime, 1-0 in shootouts) and tied for third place in the CENTRAL DIVISION...The ICE will play four of their next five games against the CENTRAL DIVISION. SEASON TICKETS: Season Tickets are still available to purchase until Friday, October 4th…The ICE Office currently has many great seats available…Individual game tickets for the remainder of the 2013-2014 regular season will go on sale to the general public on Monday, October 7th. SUPER SEVEN FLEX PAKS: SUPER SEVEN FLEX PAKS are now available to purchase at the ICE Office…You get seven game certificates to use at your convenience – total flexibility...The first 100 FLEX PAKS purchased will include a golf voucher for WILDSTONE GOLF COURSE to be used during the 2014 golf season…SUPER SEVEN FLEX PAKS are available in Adult, Senior, Student and Youth packages...Adults are $133.00, Seniors $105.00, Students $91.00 and Youth $70.00. PEPSI KIDS CLUB: Registration for the PEPSI KIDS CLUB is underway…Kids from five to 12 can sign up to be part of the KIDS CLUB and receive a punch card to attend eight games for only $5.00…The events this year will include skating, tobogganing and a movie…Cost for each kid is $17.00 and forms are available at the Kootenay ICE Office…Registration deadline is Friday, November 15. ROSTER UPDATE: The ICE have 23 players on their roster, including two goalies, seven defensemen and 14 forwards…Of those players, there are two 1993 born players, five 1994 born

Wednesday, OCTOBER 2, 2013

Sports players, nine 1995 born players, five 1996 born players and two 1997 born players...KOOTENAY has 16 returning players from last year. DID YOU KNOW: JAEDON DESCHENEAU, who recorded his second WHL career hat trick against REGINA on September 28, recorded his 100th WHL career point on September 28 against the PATS...LANDON PEEL recorded his first WHL career goal on September 27 against LETHBRIDGE...RYAN CHYNOWETH recorded his first point with the ICE against REGINA on September 28. SCORING STREAKS: SAM REINHART (3-7-10), JAEDON DESCHENEAU (3-5-8) have each recorded a point in all four games this season. TRANSACTIONS: The ICE reassigned 16-year-old Defenseman DYLAN OVERDYK to the ST. ALBERT RAIDERS of the AMHL on September 28...KOOTENAY acquired 18-year-old Forward RYAN CHYNOWETH from the TRI-CITY AMERICANS in exchange for a fifth round draft pick in either the 2014 or 2015 WHL BANTAM DRAFT on September 25....The ICE reassigned JORDYN BOYD to the PORTAGE TERRIERS of the MJHL on September 24. ONE YEAR AGO: After three games of the 2012-2013 season the ICE were 1-2-0-0, after four games were 1-3-0-0 and after five games were 1-4-0-0. DRAFTED PLAYER: MACKENZIE SKAPSKI – New York Rangers (6th Round, 2013 NHL Draft). UPCOMING WEEK: Tuesday October 1 Practice 3:45 – 5:45 pm Western Financial Place Wednesday October 2 Practice 3:45 – 5:45 pm Western Financial Place Thursday October 3 Practice 3:45 – 5:45 pm Western Financial Place Friday October 4 ICE @Calgary 7:00 pm (102.9 FM – The Drive)

Page 9

Saturday October 5 ICE vs. Calgary 7:00 pm (102.9 FM – The Drive) Sunday October 6 ICE vs. Seattle 6:00 pm (102.9 FM – The Drive) WEEK IN REVIEW: Friday, September 27 – Kootenay 4 vs Lethbridge 3 - SO – Record 1-2-0-0 – Attendance: 2,105 Goals: 1 - Peel (1) from Reinhart and Descheneau 2 - Reinhart (3) from Descheneau and Cable 3 - Cable (1) from Descheneau and Reinhart Goalie: Mackenzie Skapski (29 Saves, 3 GA) Saturday, September 28 – Kootenay 3 vs Regina 1 – Record 2-2-0-0 – Attendance: 2,148 Goal: 1 – Descheneau (1) from Chynoweth and Reinhart 2 - Descheneau (2) from Reinhart and Cable 3 - Descheneau (3) from Reinhart and Philp Goalie: Wyatt Hoflin (32 Saves, 1 GA)

Kessel, Leafs agree to eightyear extension worth $64M

TORONTO - The Toronto Maple Leafs are locking up star forward Phil Kessel to a long-term contract extension. A source tells The Canadian Press that the two sides have agreed to terms on an eight-year extension worth US$64 million. Kessel had 20 goals and 32 assists for the Maple Leafs over last season’s 48-game schedule. He has 379 points (185-194) in 504 regular-season games over seven seasons with Toronto and Boston. The 26-year-old right-winger was drafted by the Bruins with the fifth overall pick in the 2006 NHL Entry Draft. Canadian Press

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daily townsman / daily bulletin

Page 10 Wednesday, OCTOBER 2, 2013

In support of those facing breast cancer, the Dynamiter team will wear pink for the month of October. We will auction off the pink jerseys to raise funds for research. October Home Games: 9th, 12th, 19th. Come and join us. “Hoping for a Cure”

In loving memory of Geneva Atwood myunexpectedpath. blogspot.ca

Nicole Kinsman, RMT 2100 16th Street South, Cranbrook, B.C. V1C 0B5 (250) 919-1150 • nkinsmanrmt@gmail.com

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How you can lower your risk of breast cancer Breast cancer is the second most common cancer among women, second only to lung cancer. One in eight women is expected to develop breast cancer in her lifetime, and a recent survey by the Society for Women’s Health Research found that 22 percent of women named breast cancer as the disease they fear most. The specter of breast cancer makes it no surprise that women are eager to seek various ways to reduce their risks of developing this potentially deadly disease. Though cancer treatments continue to evolve, there remains no cure for breast cancer or any other types of cancer. However, there are steps men and women can take to reduce their risks of developing breast cancer. In fact, the National Cancer Institute says avoiding breast cancer risk factors is the best path to prevention. * Avoid exposure to radiation. Repeated exposure to radiation therapy used to treat illnesses like Hodgkin’s disease can increase a person’s risk of breast cancer, particularly if treatments begin at an early age. * Keep a healthy weight. Obesity increases the risk of breast cancer, particularlyYOU

a low-fat diet.

in postmenopausal women. Healthy eating and exercise can help women control their weight while reducing their risks of developing breast cancer and a number of other diseases. Scientists at The Mayo Clinic believe there is a link between estrogen production in fatty breast tissue and breast cancer. * Get your exercise. Exercising four or more hours a week can lower breast cancer risk. Exercise need not be heavy lifting at the gym. Any moderate physical activity, from cycling to walking, can be effective. Exercise decreases hormone levels in the body that can impact breast cancer risk. Some studies indicate simply walking briskly for one to three hours per week can reduce a woman’s breast cancer risk by 18 percent.

* Reduce alcohol consumption. Various studies have indicated that women who drink alcoholic beverages may develop cancer at a higher rate. Women who consume two to five drinks daily have a greater risk of developing breast cancer than those who abstain from alcohol. * Weigh the risks of hormone replacement therapy. There are mixed reviews on hormone replacement therapy, or HRT, for postmenopausal women. There may be a link between longterm HRT and breast cancer, particularly when estrogen and progesterone are used in combination. Some doctors advise estrogenonly hormone therapy for women who have had a hysterectomy. * Use of SERMs and aromatase inhibitors. Selective estrogen receptor modulators, or SERMs, are drugs that act like estrogen on some bodily tissues but block the effect of estrogen on other tissues. Aromatase inhibitors decrease the amount of estrogen made by the body. Women with a high risk of breast cancer may benefit from taking a SERM or aromatase inhibitor.

* Eat a low-fat diet. The Women’s Intervention Nutrition Study from the National Cancer Institute found that the highest after breast surgery rate of breast cancer reduction was among a group of women whoTO ate WEAR DIDN’T WANT

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Friday Afternoon/Evening

October 4

4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30

Cbk. Kim.

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER 102 102 105 105

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CALL 426-3272 OR VISIT

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for this week’s movie listings Something’s been puzzling me. Q. How can I get advertising for my business so it’s covered in both newspaper and online media for one great price? A. If you live in Cranbrook area, call 250-426-5201, then press ext. 214 and speak with Erica.

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Page 11

NEW FALL ARRIVALS

Cove ri

Thursday Afternoon/Evening Cbk. Kim.

Wednesday, OCTOBER 2, 2013

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Page 12 Wednesday, OCTOBER 2, 2013

COMICS Eighthl Annua

“The Magic of Autumn”

Door Prizes!

Artisan Market

Friday, October 18 3pm - 8pm

Saturday, October 19 9am - 4pm

at Bootleg Gap Golf Course Clubhouse, Kimberley. An amazing collection of

Handcrafted Creations

Entrance fee $2.00 – donated to the Kimberley Food Bank. Soup & Sandwich Buffet: Saturday 11am - 2pm Wheelchair accessible

OVER THE LAST 7 YEARS WE HAVE DONATED $8,200.00 TO THE KIMBERLEY FOOD BANK!

ADVERTISING OPPORTUNITY A powerful tool when you want to reach your potential customers – the Daily Townsman and Daily Bulletin are invited into over 6,900 homes every day, Monday to Friday.

To advertise or subscribe in Cranbrook, 250-426-5201, ext 0

To advertise or subscribe in Kimberley 250-427-5333 • 10:00-4:30

A business without advertising gets you no customers.

Horoscopes by Jacqueline Bigar

ARIES (March 21-April 19) You might not be comfortable with everything you need to do. You know that the only way to get it all done is to dive right in and get going. You will be delighted at how quickly your to-do list dissolves. A discussion with a boss might be necessary. Tonight: Join a friend for fun. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You’ll observe as someone continues to encounter obstacles -- one right after the other. Trying to pitch in and/or make a suggestion might be helpful to this person. Use your creativity in order to make your day easier. Tonight: Remain responsive to a loved one at a distance. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You’ll want to see a situation with more insight and understanding; however, you might be stuck watching the same mental reruns over and over again. Open up to a new way of thinking; you will get a better grasp on what is motivating someone else. Tonight: Easy works.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) You have a chance to open up to new people and new attitudes. Be willing to turn a situation around and see it differently. Your input could be most helpful to a close associate or loved one, as it could helping this person see what has been hidden. Tonight: Relax. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You might be wondering when you should say that enough is enough. Someone close to you keeps taking advantage of your generosity. Be prepared for this person to have a surprised reaction when you finally decide to say “no.” Maintain a sense of humor. Tonight: Order in. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You will be in your element, and you might feel as if you are able to make a difference. Your creativity spins a new solution for a child or friend. Resist trying to control a situation. A call or interaction with a neighbor or close associate could be touchy. Tonight: Just be yourself. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Recognize what is happening

Tundra

behind the scenes with a friend or loved one. Sometimes the most supportive action is not acknowledging what is happening, but rather letting this person handle the issue on his or her own. Use care with your funds. Tonight: Get some extra R and R. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) If you feel the impulse to take the lead, and you know full well that you have the support of the majority, do. You need to carry this issue or situation to completion. Recognize what is possible. A discussion will draw in positive results. Tonight: Ask, and you shall receive. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You have a way of helping others that allows them to see a controversial idea in a manner in which they can accept it. You could be in a position to make a big change, as long as you get the right support. If you’re feeling insecure, pull back. Tonight: Could go to the wee hours. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Detach before deciding whether you can go along with a group decision. You’ll want to zero in

on the most efficient and functional way to proceed. You can decide to convince others that you might have a better path to the same end. Tonight: Opt for something different. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Listen carefully to news that seems out of the norm. Perhaps the person who is delivering the message might not be emphasizing the right points. Reach out to the original source in order to find the truth. Ask questions, if need be. Tonight: Visit with a favorite person. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Defer to others, and make a difference that counts. You might be stopped by someone who cares about the same cause, but he or she might not have the same vision as you. A meeting easily could transform into a fun get-together. Let it happen. Tonight: Go where the action is. BORN TODAY Musician Sting (1951), spiritual and political leader Mohandas Gandhi (1861), fashion designer Donna Karan (1948) ***

By Chad Carpenter

Get advertising for your business so it’s covered in both newspaper and online media for one great price. Call 250-426-5201, then press ext. 207 and speak with Dan.

250-426-5201 www.dailytownsman.com

250-427-5333 www.dailybulletin.ca

Garfield

By Jim Davis

Having a meeting or a conference? We at the Days Inn have Meeting Rooms from 10 – 300 people, so if it’s a Small Focus Group or a Conference we have you covered.

Catering is available for all occasions, Weddings, Family Reunions, AGM’s Business Meetings and Conferences. We also offer outside catering. Please call the Cranbrook Days Inn 250-426-6630 To discuss your requirements

L, THINK LOCA BUY LOCAL

BE LOCAL.

Hagar the Horrible

Baby Blues

By Dick Browne

By Kirkman and Scott

become cal businesses Don’t let our lo ! st pa a thing of the

Why You Should Care: • Increased support for local events and causes • Local competition means better prices • Job opportunities for local residents including your people • Friendly service and support before, during and after your purchase

Rhymes with Orange

Love your community.

Shop at home.

By Hillary B. Price

Annie’s Mailbox by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Annie: I recently became engaged to my boyfriend of four years. Immediately after he proposed, I phoned my parents, who always gave the impression that they liked my boyfriend and enjoyed spending time with him. I thought they’d be happy for us. I was very wrong. My mom was really angry and said that I am “way too young” to be getting married. Annie, I’m in graduate school. My dad said that my boyfriend “isn’t good enough” and that I should “seriously reconsider this guy.” (This guy! Like he doesn’t have a name.) I am still in school, so perhaps this is their way of expressing their worry that if I get married I won’t finish my graduate program, but regardless, I’m really hurt by their reaction. I’ve tried reassuring them, but they keep brushing me aside, insisting I’m marrying too young and to the wrong man. I cannot figure out their problem. We are in our late 20s, which doesn’t strike me as “too young.” And if they truly believe my fiance isn’t the right person, why didn’t they say so in the intervening four years? Why won’t they give me any concrete reasons for their objections? Sometimes I think what they’re really objecting to is the presence of another person in our small, close-knit family. But it seems selfish of them to place the current family dynamic over my future marriage and happiness. Kids grow up. They get married. I never in my wildest nightmares thought my engagement would be such a source of anger. What do you think about this? -- Sad Bride-To-Be Dear Sad: It does seem as though your parents suddenly realized that you are leaving the nest and they are panic stricken. Since they refuse to discuss their reasons with you, please ask a trusted friend or family member to intercede on your behalf and try to ascertain whether their objections have any justification. But ultimately, the decision about marriage belongs to you. We hope your parents will welcome your groom into the family instead of pushing you both away. Dear Annie: I am 84 and have five children, 10 grandchildren and 18 great-grandchildren. I am twice widowed, and one of my boyfriends also died. I now have a new boyfriend. He is upset with two of my daughters-in-law and a sonin-law because when they see me they say, “Hello, Mother-in-Law!” He says they are being disrespectful for not using my name. He says they should call me “Grandma” or “Mom” or my given name. This has caused a problem between us. What do you think? -- J.G. Dear J.G.: Your boyfriend has no business issuing orders about how your children or their spouses address you. If it doesn’t bother you, it shouldn’t bother him. He sounds bossy and controlling. Tell him to back off. Dear Annie: “Phone Me,” the 28-year-old who did not find out about her high school reunion because she isn’t on social media, needs to be proactive. Don’t blame others because you didn’t seek out the information. If you know it is the 10th year of your graduation, contact the school or ex-classmates and find out whether anything is planned. I have been on every reunion committee since I graduated in 1979. We do the best we can to contact people. However, it gets expensive sending out invitations by regular mail. Word of mouth and seeking out the information is key. So perhaps in anticipation of the next reunion, “Phone Me” could make the effort to find out instead of being “left out.” -- Mary in Ventura, 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


daily 14 townsman / daily bulletin PAGE Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Wednesday, OCTOBER 2, 2013 BULLETIN Page 13 DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY

Share Your Smiles!

Your community. Your classifieds.

Brielle is smiling at her Mom !

250.426.5201 ext 202

bcclassified.com

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:

fax 250.426.5003 Announcements Help Wanted

Personals KOOTENAY’S BEST ESCORTS *For your safety and comfort call the best. *Quality and V.I.P Service Guarantee *Licensed studio Calendar Girls *new* Scarlett- 21, Strawberry blonde, sweet treat Lily -25, Sandy-blonde, blue-eyed bombshell Cougar Stacy - pretty, petite blonde 42 NEW - Dakota - 20, busty, curvy, raven-haired beauty. ~Air conditioned~ “Spice up your life� (250)417-2800 in/out calls daily Hiring

PLAYFUL, SEXY,

sweet, seductive 24 year old. In-calls and out calls

<> Diamond

(778)870-1600

Tickets 2 ROUND trip tickets to Victoria. One night hotel stay and 2-day car rental. Valid until Sept. 2014. $800./obo 250-427-5080

Employment Help Wanted

Qualified P/T Youth Worker Lee Spark Youth Society / Centre t )VNBO 4FSWJDF $FSUJýDBUF SFRVJSFE t 3FDSFBUJPOBM -FBEFSTIJQ GVO TVQQPSUJWF DPPLJOH DMFBOJOH TLJMMT t 3FTQPOTJCMF SFMJBCMF ÞFYJCMF FOUIVTJBTUJD t 1MBOOJOH PSHBOJ[JOH GPMMPX UISPVHI t 1PTJUJPO 5VFTEBZ 'SJEBZ Q N NBZ JODSFBTF

t 1PTJUJPO XJMM CF SFTQPOTJCMF GPS :PVUI %SPQ *O BHFT BT XFMM BT 0VUEPPS "DUJWJUJFT t 4UBSU EBUF 0DUPCFS 3FTVN� BOE DPWFS MFUUFS SFRVJSFE BOE DPQZ PG DFSUJýDBUF 0OMZ TVDDFTTGVM BQQMJDBOUT XJMM CF DPOUBDUFE /P QIPOF DBMMT QMFBTF %FBEMJOF 'SJEBZ 0DU CFW!MJWF DPN An Alberta Oilfield Company is hiring dozer and excavator operators. Lodging and meals provided. Drug testing required. Call (780)723-5051 Edson, Alta. RECEPTIONIST REQUIRED for 3 shifts per week @ 12am to 8am, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. Must have knowledge of the East Kootenay highways, be able to multitask and is bondable. Call 250-426-2201 between 8am & 4pm., Monday to Friday.

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.

email classifieds@dailytownsman.com Trades, Technical Obituaries

FREEDOM Quest Regional Youth Services is looking for a dynamic and professional person to fill the combined position of facilitator for both the Youth Drug and Alcohol Intensive Day Treatment Program (RADD)and the Community Drug and Alcohol Prevention Program. 35 hrs fulltime with complete benefits. Posting Closes: Wednesday, October 7th,@ 4:00 p.m. Email Teresa Winter, Executive Director at teresafq@shaw.ca with cover letter and resume.

KOOTENAY KNIT & APPAREL has an immediate opening for an

OfďŹ ce Administrative Assistant in our Cranbrook office.

This is a full time position and the successful candidate must:

-have excellent typing and office-related skills -have excellent customer service skills -be proficient with Word, Excel and Outlook. -have an ability to prioritize and work in a fast paced environment Bookkeeping skills would be an asset, but are not required. An interest in fashion and design would also be an asset. Submit cover letter and resume to:

accounting@kootenay knitting.com Only those whose applications are being considered will be contacted. No phone calls please. SEARS IN CRANBROOK is looking for a part time sales associate to work on our appliance sales floor as well as our catalogue counter. Must be available to work most weekends. Please bring in resume to Sears in the Baker St. Mall, next to Safeway. Attn: Brenda

ELECTRICIAN Tolko Industries Ltd. is currently seeking a CertiďŹ ed Electrician to join our team at our Lavington Planer Division in the Okanagan Region of BC. POSITION OVERVIEW: Reporting to the operation’s Maintenance Supervisor and working with tradesman, and other team members, the candidate will carry out maintenance programs and projects at the division. This is a challenging position and an opportunity to work in an innovative environment. QUALIFICATIONS: •Good working knowledge of WorkSafe BC & OH&S Regulations •Valid Elec. Interprovincial Journeyman ticket •3-5yrs. industrial maint. exp •PLC exp. a definite asset •Superior trouble shooting and communication skills •Must be willing to work any shift and be a team player

MILLWRIGHT Tolko Industries Ltd. currently seeks Certified Millwright to join our teams located in the Okanagan region of BC.

QUALIFICATIONS: •Certified Millwright with a Planerman endorsement •Forestry Industry exp. an asset •Superior Troubleshooting Skills •Exc. Organizational Skills •Hydraulic and Welding experience an asset •Strong safety background •Desire to work in a team environment BUILD YOUR CAREER WITH US!

500 1500 Cranbrook St. N. fax:250-417-0660

“We provide a dynamic environment w/ competitive compensation where people succeed as our most valuable resource.�

1875 Cranbrook St. N. fax:250-417-0061

Food Counter Attendant Full-time, shift work, nights, overnight’s, early mornings & weekends. $10.25/hr. + beneďŹ ts. Apply at store.

Medical/Dental CERTIFIED Dental Assistant Part Time position available (3 days a week). May increase to full time. MUST BE personable, good communicator, caring, and .... easy going. Please apply in confidence to PO Box 272 Cranbrook BC V1C 4H8.

Become a GREEN SHOPPER!

www.pitch-in.ca

Obituaries

Sympathy & Understanding 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

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250-417-2019

Toll Free 1-855-417-2019

POSITION OVERVIEW: Responsible for the preventive maintenance repair, installation and modification of equipment.

TIM HORTONS, CRANBROOK, BC

Obituaries

READY TO APPLY YOURSELF? If you are interested in exploring this opportunity and being part of our community, please visit our website at:

www.tolko.com

Ph: 250.426.6006 Fx: 250.426.6005 2104D 2nd Street S. Cranbrook, BC theowerpot@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

250-426-6278 kootenaygranite.com

submit your resume by October 6, 2013.

PLUMBERS / GAS FITTERS: M and K Plumbing and Heating is the largest Mechanical Contracting and Service firm in the East Kootenay region. Established more than two decades ago, our reputation of customer service and quality product has allowed us to grow consistently every year, expanding our markets, and taking on larger and more challenging projects. We are currently in need of CONSTRUCTION AND SERVICE PLUMBERS AND GAS FITTERS - BOTH JOURNEYMEN AND APPRENTICES - to provide expertise and technical skill to our service customers, and assist in the successful completion of our construction projects. Additional experience in refrigeration, sheet metal, fire sprinkler installation, or furnace repair would be an asset, as well as any additional gas or electrical tickets. WEBSITE: www.mkplumbing.ca EMAIL:info@mkplumbing.ca

Honour your loved one with a lasting legacy Reasons people choose to give through the CDCF We build endowment funds that benefit the community forever and help create personal legacies.

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

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


DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN Page 14 Wednesday, OCTOBER 2, 2013

Career Opportunities

Wednesday, October 2,/ 2013 PAGE 15 daily townsman daily bulletin

Career Opportunities

Career Opportunities

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Cranbrook Physiotherapy Clinic is looking for a caring and proficient individual to join our reception and administrative team in our Cranbrook Clinic.

GROW WITH US Canfor is one of the world’s largest producers of sustainable woodbuilding solutions, and we’ve built our reputation on top quality products and superior customer service. A global leader in dimension lumber, Canfor is not only meeting, but driving demand for green building products and serving markets in every corner of the world.

CertiďŹ ed Heavy Duty Mechanic A full-time position with our maintenance team An energetic team player, you will maintain and repair all aspects of mobile equipment at our facility, in order to optimize uptime, quality and production. You’re a certiďŹ ed journeyperson accustomed to working safely and efďŹ ciently both independently and on a team. Capable of operating mobile equipment for testing purposes, you also bring hydraulics and welding experience, superior troubleshooting skills, strong communication/interpersonal skills and ideally, a solid woods production plant background and knowledge of Cat equipment. WHMIS and First Aid training would also be an asset.

This is a permanent part time afternoon position, requiring the applicant from noon to 6pm Monday thru Friday. Applicants must have excellent oral and written communication skills, computer skills, excellent organizational and interpersonal skills and the ability to work in a fast paced wellness environment. Fax resumes to 250 426-5501 or email cbk@cranbrookphysio.com. No phone calls please.

TO LEARN WHAT’S ON SALE?

YOUR NEWSPAPER:

The link to your community Business/OfďŹ ce Service

Business/OfďŹ ce Service

Employment

WHERE DO YOU TURN

Business/OfďŹ ce Service

SERVICES GUIDE Contact these business for all your service needs!

To apply, please submit a rĂŠsumĂŠ, in conďŹ dence, by October 15, 2013 to: Nancy Oscienny, HR Manager Fax: 250.347.9630 Email: nancy.oscienny@canfor.com

Trades, Technical

www.smsequip.com We are looking for the following people to help grow our team:

¡ Journeyman Heavy Equipment Technicians ¡ Journeyman Electricians ¡ Journeyman Welders ¡ General Foreman SMS Equipment in Elkford, BC has moved into their brand new facility and is now hiring supervisors and tradespeople!!! We offer a wide variety of shifts to accommodate employees who want to achieve work life balance or the opportunity to work overtime. We also offer temporary staff housing while you ďŹ nd your own accommodation in the beautiful Elk Valley. We are one of the largest Komatsu dealers in the world and believe our continued growth is a result of our highly skilled and engaged employees who deliver excellence in the workplace.

We Offer A Very Competitive Compensation Package.

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.

Canadian Forest Products Ltd. Radium

check out the new WWW.CANFOR.COM

Classical/Contemporary Voice,

Songwriting/Theory,

•

Foundation Cracks

Space is limited.

•

Damp Proofing

250.427.5767

•

Drainage Systems

•

Foundation Restoration

Call: Fraser Armstrong.

Make a bold move to an organization where your safety philosophy is valued and your career goals are supported. Join us on Vancouver Island, where a balanced lifestyle comes naturally. As western North America's largest producer of mechanical printing paper and a recognized leader in sustainable business practices, Catalyst Paper manufactures a broad range of high quality products ideally suited to our times. Our Port Alberni operation is looking for a seasoned:

Maintenance Manager A self-motivated team player, you will lead a team of planners, supervisors and engineers responsible for crews of mixed trades. As you set clear personal standards, and expectations for high quality work from others, you will work closely with maintenance and operating teams to promote world-class safety, maximize availability and efďŹ ciencies and optimize technological advancements. You have over 5 years' experience in a unionized, industrial, maintenance environment supervising workers with diverse trade backgrounds. Ideally, you have a bachelor’s degree in engineering and are registered, or eligible to register, as a professional engineer with APEGBC. A combination of education, related work experience, knowledge and training in industrial facility maintenance would also be considered. If you would like to join us for a strong future together, and you have the skills we're looking for, please apply without delay at catalystpaper.com/careers.

LEAKY BASEMENT

Beginner/Intermediate Guitar,

or email cranium@telus.net

HANDYMAN to the

SENIOR STARS.

37 years of experience in Construction & Plumbing Trades, Reno’s & Repairs, and Installations.

~Steve~

250-421-6830 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.

Residential / Commercial Free estimates

250-919-1777

PLAN DESIGN New construction, Additions, Renovations, Electrical, Landscape Start with a good set of plans and be assured your investment will FEEL, FUNCTION and LOOK GREAT!

TREES, SHRUB & STONE TREE SPECIALIST: Prune out dead, dying & diseased Trim for shape & health Stump grind Tree planting AMATEUR STONE MASON: natural Stone / Xeriscape gardens: Create, Install & repair --------------------WEILER PROPERTY SERVICES David J. Weiler-Forest technologist Kimberly Hartling-Forest technologist (horticulture & arborcultuer consultants) INSURED WITH 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE weilerhart@shaw.ca

250-427-4417

Services

Financial Services

GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com Need Cash? Own A Vehicle? Borrow Up To $25,000 Snapcarcash.com

1-855-653-5450

TRIPLE J

WINDOW CLEANING

~Residential~

Jody ~ 250-919-1575

www.CHARLTONHOMES.CA

TOM’S LAWN CARE SERVICES General Fall Clean-up

For a brighter outlook, call Jim Detta

250-349-7546

Contractors

**ask about our gutter cleaning service**

GIRO

*Cutting, Trimming, Raking. *Haul stuff to dump.

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

Kimberley, Marysville, Meadowbrook only

Call SuperDave (250)421-4044

Phone 250-427-5139

www.superdaveconsulting.ca

Small Ads work!

Place a classiďŹ ed word ad and...

www.catalystpaper.com

If you are interested in working for a very dynamic company where your input, your ideas and your participation is valued, apply today at bcjobs@smsequip.com or fax your resume to: 1-250-865-2644

IT WILL GO ON LINE!

• Construction • Renovations • Roofing • Drywall-large or small • Siding • Sundeck Construction • Aluminum Railings We welcome any restorational work!

(250) 426-8504

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

Home Improvements FLOORING SALE Over 300 Choices Lowest Prices Guaranteed! Laminates - $0.59/sq ft Engineered - $1.99 sq ft Hardwood - $2.79 sq ft

Overnight Delivery in most of BC!

www.kingofoors.com

1.877.835.6670


PAGE Wednesday, October 2, 2013 daily 16 townsman / daily bulletin

Services

Merchandise for Sale

Rentals

Paving/Seal/ Coating

Misc. Wanted

Homes for Rent

NOTICE

BLACKTOP NOW! NO JOB TOO SMALL

Driveways & Parking Lots 1-888-670-0066 CALL

421-1482

FREE ESTIMATES!

Genuine Coin Collector Buyer Collections, Olympic Gold & Silver Coins etc 778-281-0030

Real Estate Apt/Condos for Sale

)HWFK D 'RJ )URP WKH 6KHOWHU

For Sale: FOREST PARK 2 bedroom, newer appliances, good condition.

$152,000. Negotiable.

Ph: 250-426-6625

For Sale By Owner

4HE "#30#! CARES FOR THOUSANDS OF ORPHANED ABAN DONED AND ABUSED DOGS EACH YEAR )F YOU CAN GIVE A HOMELESS DOG A SECOND CHANCE AT HAPPINESS PLEASE VISIT YOUR LOCAL SHELTER TODAY

BEAUTIFUL SOUTH VIEW

HOME FOR SALE

CALL NOW!

POWER PAVING

SERVING ALL THE KOOTENAYS Vacuums

Autumn Cleaning

Sonny’s Vacuum Service has a good stock of like new Electrolux vacuums. Sales have been a little slow with the hot summer. Phone 250489-2733 for an in home demonstration. Also Chris Nomland does repairs on all types of vacuums. Pick up and delivery in Cranbrook & Kimberley.

HOUSE FOR RENT in Cranbrook. 2+ bedroom, 2 bath, 2400 sq. ft. Close to all amenities, schools and parks. No dogs, no smoking. $1200./mo plus utilities. DD & references required. 250-426-2000

"#30#!

3200 square ft of finished living space. Large fenced back yard, summer kitchen in lower area of the home. New Roof - new hardwood throughout - air conditioning, underground sprinkler. Large deck off back, large garage area and work bench. Owners are downsizing and wish to sell to a family who can appreciate this very nice home.

WWW SPCA BC CA

Shared Accommodation ROOM FOR RENT in apartment. Private bath and sitting area. Mature woman. No smoking/parties/pets. 250-919-5697

$424,900

Transportation

See all pics on We-List.com.

Call for appointment

250-417-1990

Trucks & Vans

Rentals

1999 DODGE Power Ram 1500 SLT pickup. 4 x 4 Auto. Great shape, 250,000 km. Lots of recent work done. $4,500./obo. Phone 250-427-7046 or 1-250-908-0443

Apt/Condo for Rent

Merchandise for Sale

1100 SQ. FT. condo in Kimberley available immediately. 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. $1000./mo. Call 780-718-9083 or 780-218-7617. FRESH and light 2 bedroom suite in Kimberley. Clean and bright, freshly painted. New carpets and flooring. 2 generous bedrooms with built-in wardrobes. Newer washer/dryer, lockup garage, lots of storage. Great location close to town, backs directly onto trail network. No smokers, no cats. $675 per month + utilities. Available October 1. Call 250520-0030. LIONS MANOR, Kimberley. Seniors living, 55+. Two, 1bdrm apartments: $350./mo plus utilities & DD. N/S, No pets, no parties. Available Oct.1/13 (250)427-2970

Free Items

Misc for Rent

TO GIVE AWAY!!! 32� Hitachi TV. Excellent condition.

250-417-3201

2 BEDROOM main floor house. W/D, F/S, DD. $900./mo. plus utilities. 250-489-1324

820 Kootenay St. N. Cranbrook • 250-426-4271

Firewood/Fuel

Open Houses

Open Houses

(250)

489-2733 Pets & Livestock

Pets EXCEPTIONAL Bull Terrier puppies. Vet checked & 1rst shots. $1000. Serious inquiries only. 250.489.2242

Wanted: 1/2 cord of dry, split birch, delivered to Kimberley. 250-489-9773.

Heavy Duty Machinery

EAST KOOTENAY REALTY

Legal Notices Under the Warehouseman’s Lien Act

The following lots of goods will be sold at public auction in Lethbridge, AB

MCHEEVER, MARC MOVING & STORAGE (CRANBROOK) LTD.

820 Kootenay St. N. Cranbrook • 250-426-4271

Under the Warehouseman’s Lien Act

The following lots of goods will be sold at public auction in Lethbridge, AB

KLANJSCEK, SHERRY

Tree planters endured slave-like conditions, lawyers tells rights body Vivian Luk Canadian Press

VANCOUVER — A group of tree planters originally from Africa found living in deplorable conditions in a Golden, B.C., camp endured slave-like conditions because their employers discriminated against black people, a B.C. Human Rights Tribunal heard. Lawyer Sarah Khan told the tribunal on Monday that the workplace, operated by Khaira Enterprises Ltd., was divided along racial lines. Black workers were forced to work on harder terrain than non-black employees, and the latter were given differential treatment, she said. Khan is representing 50 tree planters, many of whom were immigrants or refugees, and who she said were subjected to “extreme racial harassment,’’ including racial slurs, verbal abuse, and mockery that were “consistent with slavery and anti-black racial segregation.’’ Khan also alleged that the workers lived in squalid conditions. They were given under cooked or expired food to eat, and were forced to drink untreated water from nearby streams and rivers. At night, they slept on dirty mattresses in a cramped storage container with no ventilation and inadequate showers, she said. They were also expected to work with few breaks in between, and were given little or no pay, Khan said. “It made the workers realize their experiences as refugees are not over,’’ she told Norman Trerise, who is presiding over the tribunal hearing. “They also felt unwelcomed in Canada, and they were not valued for their work or as human beings.’’ The camp in Golden, in southeast B.C., was shut down by B.C.’s Ministry of Forests in July 2010, when ministry staff discovered the tree planters, and were told that they had not had anything to

eat for two days, the tribunal heard. After the camp was disbanded, many of the workers suffered financial difficulties because of the lack of wages, said Khan. “Some became homeless for a period of time, many did not have enough money to purchase food and basic necessities of life,’’ she said. “Some weren’t able to support their wives and children.’’ Several investigations of Khaira, which does reforestation as well as other silviculture work, were launched by various agencies. The province’s Employment Standards Branch ordered the company to repay $260,000 in wages in 2011, but Khan said that not all of the wages have been paid. The tribunal, scheduled for five weeks, is expected to hear testimony from several of the tree planters. Moka Balikama, who filed the human rights complaint on behalf of all the black workers, told the tribunal on Monday that he came from the Congo to Canada as a refugee in 2008, and worked for Khaira in Revelstoke and Golden from June to July in 2010. He had become a permanent resident by then, and he decided to move from Winnipeg to B.C. because he had heard that tree planting was a fast way to make more money — something he needed to help his sick father in Africa, he said. The 38-year-old, who now lives in Calgary, said through a Swahili translator that he worked 10 to 12 hours, seven days a week that summer. He also lived with other tree planters in what he believed was a “cargo container’’ attached to his boss’s truck. He also said he was never paid on time, and that the cost of food and accommodations were deducted from his paycheques even though that issue was never discussed with him before.

According to documents that Khan submitted as evidence, the Employment Standards Branch found that the deductions were not authorized, and Khaira owed Balikama several thousand dollars more than what the company paid him. Khalid Bajwa and Hardilpreet Sidhu, the firm’s owners, have denied the allegations of mistreatment and discrimination. Bajwa told the tribunal that Khaira has hired seasonal tree planters for years, and many of the workers found in the camp had worked for him in previous seasons. The company has never had complaints from workers, and its camps have always passed inspections from WorkSafeBC, he said. In 2010, as in previous years, his tree planters were hired to work in various areas of B.C., including Texada Island, Powell River, Kamloops, Revelstoke and Golden, said Bajwa. He said the majority of workers were of African origin, but there were also South Asian and white workers, and everyone was treated well. “We are very friendly, they work very good with me, we never had any problems,’’ he said. “Whenever I need more workers, I ask them, ‘So can you bring some more guys?’, and they bring more guys to work in the company.’’ Bajwa said he has promoted several black workers to managerial positions before, and he questions how he could be perceived as a boss who degrades and racially discriminates against his workers if many happily come back to work for him every year. Sidhu, who also spoke at Monday’s hearing, said he has been very hurt by the allegations because he treated the workers like his friends. Allegations of sexual harassment against one female worker were also presented on Monday.

MOVING & STORAGE (CRANBROOK) LTD.

Group of Canadian women campaign Open Houses for gender-neutral O Canada lyrics

$SBOCSPPL t 5IVSTEBZ 0DUPCFS

5:00-6:00 1329 17th Street South $369,900 (SFBU IPNF 4QFDUBDVMBS WJFX X IFBUFE XJSFE HBSBHF +BNJ +PZ

A-STEEL SHIPPING DRY STORAGE CONTAINERS Used 20’40’45’53’ in stock. SPECIAL 44’X40’ 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 Delivery BC and AB www.rtccontainer.com

6:15-7:15 124 18th Street South $424,900 0OF PG B LJOE DVTUPN CVJMU IPNF &OKPZ WJFXT PG UIF NPVOUBJOT +BNJ +PZ

Misc. for Sale Progression Trainer $800./obo. Great condition. Mid 80’s Chevy shortbox, 4spd, 2wd. $1,000./obo 250-427-2398

Legal

NEWS

Wednesday, OCTOBER 2, 2013 BULLETIN Page 15 DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY

Cranbrook: 250-426-8211

t XXX FLSFBMUZ DPN

EAST KOOTENAY REALTY

UI "WFOVF 4PVUI

C anadian Press

TORONTO — A group of notable Canadian women is launching a campaign for gender-neutral language in the English lyrics of O Canada. The group says the change would restore Canada’s English national anthem to its original gender-neutral intentions. The group — which includes author Margaret Atwood and former prime minister Kim Campbell — has set up a website to promote the idea. It is calling on Canadians to join the campaign and encourage

Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s government to change the line “in all thy sons command’’ to “in all of us command.’’ RestoreOurAnthem.ca is being launched on the 100th anniversary of the change made to Judge Robert Stanley Weir’s original English lyrics. The coalition says for no documented reason the lyrics were revised in 1913 from “thou dost in us command’’ to “in all thy sons command’’ and that it is time to make a change to reflect the inclusive intentions of the original lyrics.

Other members of the group include Senator Nancy Ruth, retired senator, author and fashion designer Vivienne Poy and Sally Goddard, mother of Nichola Goddard, the first female Canadian soldier killed in combat. “The words ‘All thy sons command’ in the English national anthem suggests that only male loyalty is being invoked,’’ said Atwood. “Restoring these lyrics to gender-neutral is not only an easy fix to make our anthem inclusive for all Canadians, but it’s also long overdue.’’


daily townsman / daily bulletin

Page 16 Wednesday, OCTOBER 2, 2013

Spend $250 and

receive a

FREE 25 $

Spend $250 and receive

FREE

u

u

one time use cash card

king crab legs frozen, 680 g up to $24.98 value

With this coupon and a purchase of $250 or more before applicable taxes at any Real Canadian Superstore location (excludes purchase of tobacco, alcohol products, prescriptions, gift cards, phone cards, lottery tickets, all third party operations (post office, gas bars, dry cleaners, etc.) and any other products which are provincially regulated) and we will give you a one time use $25 Real Canadian Superstore cash card. Cash card is not a gift card and can only be redeemed at Real Canadian Superstore within the specified effective dates. See cash card for complete redemption details. Limit one coupon per family and/or customer account. No cash value. No copies. Coupon must be presented to the cashier at time of purchase. Cannot be combined with any other coupons or promotional offers. Coupon valid from Friday, September 27th until closing Thursday, October 3rd, 2013. 924433 u

4

SUPER SPECIAL

.97

ea

33

ea

Bakeshop crusty French bread or Italian bread unsliced, 450 g 227060 46038347442

Huggies club size plus diapers size N-6, 100-216’s 579226 3600036484

56

our gas bar and earn

Or, get

bone in ham portions shank or butt portions 445561 1702

Nestle confectionary frozen dessert selected varieties, 1.5 L 156998 5500040360

LIMIT 4

AFTER LIMIT

44.99

7 3.5

Fuel up at

10000 03864

¢

per litre**

Lysol No Touch 1’s 408403 1920000785

per litre**

2

Spend $250 or more before applicable taxes at any Real Canadian Superstore location and receive free king crab legs 680 g. Excludes purchase se of tobacco, alcohol products, prescriptions, gift cards, phone cards, lottery tickets, all third party operations (post office, gas bars, dry cleaners, etc.) and any other products which hi h are provincially i i ll regulated. l The retail value of up to $24.98 will be deducted from the total amount of your purchase before sales taxes are applied. Limit one coupon per family and/or customer account. No cash value. No copies. Coupon must be presented to the cashier at time of purchase. Valid from Friday, October 4th until closing Thursday, October 10th, 2013. Cannot be combined with any other coupons or promotional offers. No substitutions, refunds or exchanges on free item. 10000 04101 7 907480 4 u

Valid until Thur. Oct. 3

1

98

/lb

4.37 /kg

142-170 g

3

99

7

ea

LIMIT 4

AFTER LIMIT

6.97

97

ea

LIMIT 4

AFTER LIMIT

14.99

â€

ÂŽ

Redeem Superbucks towards purchases made in-store.**

in Superbucks value using any other purchase method ÂŽ

Atlantic lonster tail 847858 13906

in SuperbucksÂŽ value when you pay with your

¢

Starting4 Fri. Oct.

**Redeem your earned SuperbucksÂŽ value towards the purchase of Merchandise at participating stores (excluding tobacco, alcohol, lottery tickets, gas and prescriptions). With each fuel purchase when you use your President’s Choice FinancialÂŽ MasterCardÂŽ or President’s Choice FinancialÂŽ debit card as payment, you will receive 7 cents per litre in SuperbucksÂŽ value. When you use any other method of payment, you will receive 3.5 cents per litre in SuperbucksÂŽ value. SuperbucksÂŽ value expires 60 days after date of issue. SuperbucksÂŽ value are not redeemable at third party businesses within participating stores, the gas bar, or on the purchase of tobacco, alcohol, lottery tickets and prescriptions. SuperbucksÂŽ value has no cash value and no cash will be returned for any unused portion. Identification may be required at the time of redemption. See SuperbucksÂŽ receipt for more details. ÂŽ Trademarks of Loblaws Inc. and others. Š2013. †MasterCard is a registered trademark of MasterCard International Incorporated. President’s Choice Bank a licensee of the mark. President’s Choice Financial MasterCard is provided by President’s Choice Bank. President’s Choice Financial personal banking products are provided by the direct banking division of CIBC.

Prices are in effect until Sunday, October 6, 2013 or while stock lasts. Quantities and/or selection of items may be limited and may not be available in all stores. No rainchecks. No substitutions on clearance items or where quantities are advertised as limited. Advertised pricing and product selection (flavour, colour, patterns, style) may vary by store location. We reserve the right to limit quantities to reasonable family requirements. We are not obligated to sell items based on errors or misprints in typography or photography. Coupons must be presented and redeemed at time of purchase. Applicable taxes, deposits, or environmental surcharges are extra. No sales to retail outlets. Some items may have “plus deposit and environmental chargeâ€? where applicable. ÂŽ/™ The trademarks, service marks and logos displayed in this flyer are trademarks of Loblaws Inc. and others. All rights reserved. Š 2013 Loblaws Inc. * we match prices! Applies only to our major supermarket competitors’ flyer items. Major supermarket competitors are determined solely by us based on a number of factors which can vary by store location. We will match the competitor’s advertised price only during the effective date of the competitor’s flyer advertisement. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES (note that our major supermarket competitors may not). Due to the fact that product is ordered prior to the time of our Ad Match checks, quantities may be limited. We match identical items (defined as same brand, size, and attributes) and in the case of fresh produce, meat, seafood and bakery, we match a comparable item (as determined solely by us). We will not match competitors’ “multi-buysâ€? (eg. 2 for $4), “spend x get xâ€?, “Freeâ€?, “clearanceâ€?, discounts obtained through loyalty programs, or offers related to our third party operations (post office, gas bars, dry cleaners etc.). We reserve the right to cancel or change the terms of this program at any time. Customer Relations: 1-866-999-9890.

superstore.ca

no name club packÂŽ flour selected varieties, 10 kg 408722 6038301376

Pyrex glass storage set 10 pc 321916 7116006115

5

98

6

14

Agropur Anco Gouda cheese

ea

LIMIT 6

AFTER LIMIT

10.99

00

ea

LIMIT 2

AFTER LIMIT

7.97

97

ea

LIMIT 3

AFTER LIMIT

29.99

Made with pasteurized milk, Gouda Anco is a lactose-free, firm, cooked and pressed cheese. It has a creamy yellow colour and is dotted with small holes.

3

96

5 lb BOX seedless Mandarin oranges product of China 716013 1770

Kraft Cracker Barrel natural cheese bar selected varieties, 400-500 g 748466 6810003171

assorted 232542 5870316771

your choice

When you purchase Anco gouda cheese, assorted varieties, 200 g

ea

LIMIT 4

AFTER LIMIT

8.99

4

00

Everyday Essentials™ metal bakeware

ea

1

save $

see in-store for more deli cheese coupon starting Oct. 4, 2013

5

97

ea

00

Save $1 when you purchase Anco gouda cheese 200 g, assorted varieties, at Real Canadian SuperstoreÂŽ where products are sold. $1 will be deducted from the total purchase amount before sales taxes are applied. Limit one coupon per family and/or customer account. No cash value. No copies. Coupon must be presented to the cashier at time of purchase. Valid from October 4 until closing October 17, 2013. Cannot be combined with any other coupons or promotional offers. 605928


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