TUESDAY
< Loving the literate life
OCTOBER 8, 2013
Reach a Reader reaches out Thursday | Page 6
Soccer Olympians in the EK > Herdman, LeBlanc hold clinic in Fernie | Page 9
1
Like Us
$ 10
TownsmanBulletin
INCLUDES G.S.T.
Follow Us @crantownsman
Proudly serving Cranbrook and area since 1951
Vol. 61, Issue 196
www.dailytownsman.com
TREVOR CRAWLEY PHOTO
Gord McArthur of Cranbrook signs a few autographs following his presentation to students at Mount Baker Secondary School Monday morning. McArthur is Cranbrook’s latest Olympian, and will be heading off to Sochi, Russia, in a few months to represent Canada in the demonstration sport of Ice Climbing.
The mists Hopley given pass for mother’s funeral of time Dangerous offender hearing set for this week stood down Monday afternoon Highlands PAC seeking info on school time capsule, starting with location ARNE PETRYSHEN Townsman Staff
Somewhere beneath the Highlands Elementary schoolyard is a time capsule buried 31 years ago by Grade 7 students. The exact whereabouts of the capsule, however, are no longer known. Lori Harris, who was a student in that class, said there was once a map, but it was misplaced or lost at some point. She is hopeful that this year the capsule can be unearthed. “Everything that we did that year we put it in that time capsule,”
she said. “I don’t remember what I put in, but I guess everybody in the class put something in.” She hopes that they might be able to find someone who owns a metal detector and is interested in doing a sweep of the likely area. Otherwise, Harris plans to get a group of her classmates together to pinpoint the location. Then it would be a matter of seeing whether anyone with a backhoe would be willing to dig it up.
See TIME, Page 3
SALLY MACDONALD Townsman Staff
Randall Hopley was given a break from his dangerous offender hearing in Cranbrook on Monday so he could attend his mother’s funeral. Hopley, 48, faces sentencing this week for the September 2011 kidnapping of three-yearold Kienan Hebert from his home in Sparwood. Crown prosecutor Lynal Doerksen is seeking dangerous offender status for Hopley, which sets apart offenders of violent or sexual crimes who are deemed likely to reoffend and whose release is considered a threat to society. If Justice Heather Holmes decides Hopley is a dangerous offender, he would receive an automatic sentence of imprisonment for an indeterminate period, with
BARRY COULTER PHOTO
Randall Hopley is escorted into Cranbrook’s courthoouse on Monday, Oct. 7. no chance of parole for seven years. An hour into the hearing on Monday, October 7, defense counsel William Thorne asked Justice Holmes to consider allowing Hopley to attend his mother’s fu-
neral in Fernie that afternoon. Thorne told the court that Hopley’s mother, Margaret Fink, passed away last week, just days before she was planning to visit her son in custody in Cranbrook.
Justice Holmes agreed Hopley could attend the funeral Monday afternoon, under the guard of sheriffs, returning to Cranbrook Monday evening. The sentencing hearing was stood down to
allow Hopley to travel to Fernie, and will reconvene Tuesday morning. It is scheduled to carry on through the week, concluding on Friday, October 11.
See HOPLEY , Page 4
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Page 2 Tuesday, OCTOBER 8, 2013
Fire Prevention Week
October 6 - 12, 2013
Cranbrook Fire Department Discover the ways to fireproof a home A house fire can engulf and destroy a home in a matter of minutes. Even with the fast-acting response of firefighters, a home that has caught fire may be irreparably damaged by flames, soot and water. The Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention state that although death and injuries caused by residential fires have declined gradually during the past several decades, fire-related deaths continue to pose a significant health hazard. Most fires are largely preventable.
The following are a few fireproofing measures for safety-conscious homeowners. * Install smoke detectors and check the batteries regularly. Smoke inhalation causes many firerelated deaths. A smoke detector should be
Canadian Tire Locally Owned & Operated by Richard Reinders
Garrison Garrison Battery Dry Chemical General Purpose
Smoke
Fire
Extinguisher 2 lbs #46-0057-8 Reg.
29
$
99
SALE
with Hush Button #46-0081 Reg.
1499
$
SALE
22
$
Alarm
49
7
19
99
SALE
Fire & Water Restoration Insurance Claims 24 Hour Service Emergency Service Insurance Claim Specialists 1201 Industrial Rd. #3, Cranbrook, BC Ph: 250-426-5057
We Take Safety Seriously.
Smoke Alarm with Emergency Light $
keep one wherever fire is used regularly, such as a kitchen or by a fireplace. Ensure the fire extinguisher is charged and that you understand how to operate it. * Remove combustible materials. Do not allow old clothing, rags, newspapers, or cardboard boxes to accumulate around the house. Discard newspapers and magazines as quickly as possible and be careful to avoid storing anything
Fire Prevention
$ 49
Garrison Reg.
installed outside of every bedroom and on every level of the house. Don’t install a smoke detector near a window, door or forced-air register, where drafts could interfere with the detector’s operation. Be sure to routinely check that every smoke detector is working properly. * Have a fire extinguisher in an easily accessible location. Ideally, there should be a fire extinguisher in every room of the home, but at the least
We’re here to please… SATISFACTION GUARANTEED 110 Victoria Ave. N., Cranbrook, BC
250-489-3300 (Service 250-489-5563)
extinguishing a candle. * Keep the chimney clean. Inspect the chimney flue regularly and have it cleaned to prevent an abundance of residual burnt material from accumulating. This creosote can catch fire itself. * Use a fire-resistant roofing material. A roof should be made from metal, clay or asphalt tiles. Trim any overhanging branches or vegetation to reduce the amount of combustible material nearby. * Have a fire-safe wall behind wood heaters. A brick wall or another fireproof material should be used on any walls that house a wood- or gas-burning appliance for added safety. * Verify electrical safety. Extension cords and power strips should be kept to a minimum, and the outlets should not be overloaded. By making a few tweaks in and around the house, a homeowner can decrease the likelihood of a fire.
• Chimney Sweeping & Cleaning • Inspections & Technical Services
#46-0083
1499
$
For all your safety products:
too close to heaters, furnaces or electrical equipment. * Adhere to the recommended wattage in lamps and lighting fixtures. Do not exceed the recommended bulb wattage for lights around the house. There may be overheating or shorting that can lead to fire. * Look for fireproof interior decor items. Nowadays, carpeting and furniture can be coated with fireproof chemicals. The added investment may be worth it in the long run. * Do not leave candles unattended. Many people like the look and aroma that candles provide. Candles also provide emergency illumination in the event of a power outage. Candles can be easily knocked over and start a fire. In fact, candles are one of the top causes of house fires. Never leave a candle unattended, even for a short amount of time. And certainly never go to sleep without
• Gutter Cleaning • Vinyl Siding Repair
As Always Free Estimates Safety & Industrial Products www.guillevinsafety.com
FLECK BROS.
716 Ind. Rd. #1 Cranbrook 250-426-2267
Tip Top Chimney Service “Sweeping the Kootenays Clean” T - 250-919-3643
E - tiptopchimneys@gmail.com
daily townsman
Local NEWS
Tuesday, OCTOBER 8, 2013
Page 3
return to the deeps
The search for the new Sullivan goes on C A R O LYN G R A N T
A couple of familiar names have returned to the local mineral exploration scene. Scott Broughton and geologist Paul Ransom, whom many will remember from the Sullivan Deeps Project several years ago, are now involved in a project to drill a deep test hole to explore a “large gravity anomaly” near Fort Steele. Broughton was recently apointed CEO of a company called Santa Fe Minerals which now has an option to acquire all the issued and outstanding shares of Gravitas, a private British Columbia company, which holds the target property. Broughton holds 1.2 million shares of Gravitas and abstained from the Santa Fe board vote. In order for Gravitas to earn its 80 per cent interest in the Sully property, Gravitas must incur a total of $3 million in exploration expenditures by Oct. 21, 2015, and issue $1.41 million in cash or shares to the underlying property vendors by Oct. 21, 2016. The Sully property, 1, 375 hectares located 27 kilome-
Submitted
Paul Ransom, project manager and former Sullivan geologist from Kimberley (left) and Brian Kostiuk, property vendor, are pictured by an old cabin located on the Sully property. tres east of Kimberley near Fort Steele, has been drilled before, most recently by Omineca Mining and Metals, a junior company managed by the Eagle Plains team. “Omineca drilled a hole in 2012 that deviated wildly
from the Sully target it was trying to hit, and then they lost their enthusiasm for spending more money on it,” Broughton said. “It has taken me many presentations and conversations to get it back to being active again, this time under op-
McKim students set to present Willy Wonka Jr For the Townsman
The show has been cast, the kids have been practicing, and rehearsals are well underway for the McKim Middle School production of Roald Dahl’s Willy Wonka Jr. With a cast of nearly 40 talented kids from McKim Middle School, Marysville Elementary, and Lindsay Park Elementary, this production will be a sight to see. Willy Wonka Jr surrounds Willy Wonka, the greatest candy maker of all time, as she stages a contest in which five golden tickets are hidden in five candy bars. The finders of these tickets are to win a tour of Wonka’s factory and a lifetime supply of Wonka chocolate. To Charlie Bucket and his grandpa, winning this contest would be a dream come true. However, after only a couple days merely one ticket remains. Through the power of positive thinking, can all of Charlie’s chocolate dreams come true? And if so, will he be able to withstand all of the temptation within the walls of Wonka’s factory? This production will star Gwen Davies as Willy Wonka, Declan Armstrong as Charlie Bucket, Trenan McMillan as Grandpa Joe, Emery Hoko as Violet Beauregarde, Kayla Giguere as Veruca Salt, Clayton Serediuk as Augustus Gloop, Dryden Dhami as
Mike Teavee, and many more. Willy Wonka Jr is also the very first student-directed musical in Kimberley, and is being directed and choreographed by Clara MacLeod. “This production as a whole is going to be very student-oriented,” said MacLeod. “We are filling as many positions as possible both on and off the stage with School District 6 students.” Thea de Paoli, who plays Phineous Trout, is also the Junior Dance Captain for the production. In addition to that, rehearsals are a group effort; MacLeod said, “I’ll go into rehearsals with an idea of how I want the scene to look, and the cast always contributes their own visions as well. I think it’s very beneficial to have more than one perspective, and their suggestions are very constructive to the overall product. This entire production, even thus far, has been very empowering to all the students involved; everyone is working extremely hard and it’s really coming through in their rehearsals.” Willy Wonka Jr is set to perform at McKim Theatre on December 11, 12, and 13, 2013 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $5 for children (under 12) and $8 for adults and will be available soon.
tion to a company called Santa Fe Metals. “The 2012 drill hole completely missed the target because it deviated significantly (drill holes can be like spaghetti with surprising trajectories through the rock mass), and this time we will
use the knowledge of how drill holes preferentially deviate at this site to ‘aim’ the new hole to the target. Kind of like aiming a rifle to account for cross-winds etc.” The Sully property contains a large gravity anomaly (meaning thousands of
measurement of the gravitational influence in the area have been modelled), new geological mapping, and other geophysical interpretations suggest that something very large and heavy (like lead-rich massive sulphides) is buried at around a 1,000m depth, he says. “There is no way to know positively or accurately what exactly it is that has created this gravity anomaly, just that it is difficult to discount and that one of the best-fit interpretations is to consider something the size and mass of a Sullivan-type deposit causing the change in the gravity readings measured there. “So, like our past experiences in this kind of ‘blind’ exploration, we need to complete drill tests to recover core to ascertain exactly what it is — there might well be something that has no or limited economic significance or there might be another large-scale lead-zincsilver deposit, and we are in the neighbourhood for that!” Drilling is scheduled to begin this week.
Time capsule’s location a mystery, 31 years later Continued from page 1 The capsule was supposed to have been dug up six years ago on the 25th anniversary, but the class didn’t hear from their Grade 7 teacher on the matter. Three years ago, Harris managed to contact her teacher and enquire about the capsule. “At that time Mr. Tomicki said that Highlands School’s PAC (parent advisory council) was not interested in finding the capsule,” she said, since they didn’t have funding for it. “There are people in our class now that I Facebook and they said they would definitely come back to Cranbrook for that,” she said of the unearthing.
The problem with pinpointing the location is that the schoolyard has changed over the years. For instance, there were more trees back then. Harris wasn’t exactly sure anymore what was in the capsule. “One person told me that I put in pictures of
POLL WEEK of the
diamonds,” she laughed. Tomicki added pens and other items in case they weren’t around in the next century, and the capsule, made from a garbage container, was sealed and buried. Highland Elementary was K-7 back then. “We were the class
that was at Highlands the year it opened,” she said. “We were in Grade 4 and we moved up to Grade 7. It was supposed to be for our 25th anniversary and now we’re at 31.” To get into contact with Harris about the time capsule, email magic123brodie@hotmail.com.
“Are you feeling more confident about the Canadian and local economies?”
YEs: 42% NO: 58%
This week’s poll: “Are you in favour of a maximum security prison to be built near Kimberley?” Log on to www.dailytownsman.com to make your vote count. This web poll is informal. It reflects opinions of site visitors who voluntarily participate. Results may not represent the opinions of the public as a whole. Black Press is not responsible for the statistical accuracy of opinions expressed here.
Page 4 Tuesday, OCTOBER 8, 2013
Weatoheurtlook Tonight 1
POP 20%
Friday 1
Local NEWS
Tomorrow 10 2
Thursday 1
POP 20%
Saturday
10
0
MLA Eby addresses Kootenay East NDP 9
POP 40%
Sunday
9
2
POP 40%
POP 40%
9
POP 30%
Almanac Temperatures
High Low Normal ..........................14.5° ..................1° Record......................24.2°/1984 .......-8.2°/1985 Yesterday......................16.3° ................-0.8° Precipitation Normal..............................................0.3mm Record.....................................7.2mm/1999 Yesterday ........................................2.2 mm This month to date...........................3.4 mm This year to date........................1412.2 mm Precipitation totals include rain and snow
Tomorrows
unrise 7 55 a.m. unset 7 03 p.m. oonrise 1 18 p.m. oonset 10 21 p.m.
Oct 11
Oct 26
Oct 18
Nov 3
Submit ted
David Eby, Advanced Education Critic for the BC NDP, told the Kootenay East New Democrats that the provincial government has lost track of what post-secondary education is all about. He said B.C. residents are being forgotten as attention is focused on international students. The result, he said, is that B.C. residents are unable to fill skilled jobs, which are then taken by foreign workers. While in Cranbrook, Eby also visited College of the Rockies on his tour of the post-secondary institutions in B.C.
Da n Wa lto n Columbia Valley Pioneer
Prince George 8/2 Jasper 9/-2
Edmonton 10/3
Banff 8/-1 Revelstoke 11/5
Kelowna 12/2 Vancouver 13/9
Canada
Local riding association also chooses new executive
Castlegar 13/6
today
Yellowknife Whitehorse Vancouver Victoria Saskatoon Regina Brandon Winnipeg Thunder Bay S. Ste. Marie Toronto Windsor Ottawa Montreal Quebec City Fredericton
p.cloudy showers p.cloudy m.sunny showers sunny sunny p.cloudy sunny sunny m.sunny sunny sunny m.sunny showers showers
The World
today
tlanta Buenos ires etroit eneva avana ong ong iev ondon os ngeles Miami Paris Rome Singapore Sydney Tokyo Washington
cloudy p.cloudy p.cloudy p.sunny tshowers p.cloudy p.cloudy showers sunny tstorms p.cloudy tshowers tstorms showers p.cloudy p.cloudy
Eby was formerly an adjunct professor of law at UBC and executive director of the BC Civil Liberties Association. The Kootenay East NDP also chose a new executive Sunday. Troy Cook of Fernie is president; Norma Blissett, Pam Catsirelis and Matt Cook of Cranbrook are the vice-president, secretary and treasurer, respectively. Other executive members include Randal Macnair, Steve Kallies and Alex Hansen of Fernie; and Laura Wilson, Gary Werk, Chris Johns, Elizabeth Frost and Edna Werk of Cranbrook.
Past NDP candidate Norma Blissett (right) and former NDP MLA Anne Edwards welcome David Eby, newly elected MLA for Vancouver-Point Grey, to the annual general meeting of the Kootenay East NDP in Cranbrook on Sunday. Eby spoke and answered questions about how he defeated Christy Clark in the May election and what he is doing as the NDP’s Critic for Advanced Education.
Jumbo checkpoint breaks during investigation
Across the Region Tomorro w
Kamloops 13/4
After the Citizens for Jumbo Wild spent the summer months observing the activities of Jumbo Glacier Resort
from their roadside checkpoint on the Farnham Creek road, they’ve indefinitely packed it in. Until the Environmental Assessment Of-
fice of B.C. finishes investigating whether the use of an excavator by Glacier Resorts Ltd. is in violation of its own legally-binding environmental commit-
Calgary 12/1
camped on the road, per se, but volunteers continue to keep an eye on the road and any activities that are going on there. We continue to have a presence but not an overnight presence anymore.”
Continued from page 1 Cranbrook 10/2
p.cloudy 5/2 rain/snow 7/-2 p.cloudy 13/9 p.cloudy 13/8 p.cloudy 9/4 m.sunny 12/3 m.sunny 14/3 sunny 17/6 p.cloudy 20/8 sunny 19/8 sunny 17/8 sunny 19/10 sunny 18/3 sunny 17/6 sunny 16/3 sunny 15/5 tomorrow
18/13 24/14 18/8 17/11 30/22 30/26 13/6 18/14 19/14 31/23 18/12 21/13 30/27 19/15 26/22 22/13
ments, the Citizens for Jumbo Wild won’t be stationed on site, said K. Linda Kivi with Citizens for Jumbo Wild. “We are continuing to monitor and observe GRL’s activities,” she said. “We’re no longer
Hopley hearing
tomorrow
4/0 5/2 14/8 15/7 15/4 16/2 18/3 23/7 18/11 16/10 16/8 18/9 14/2 13/5 11/2 16/3
daily townsman
cloudy 19/12 tstorms 26/16 sunny 19/8 p.cloudy 17/11 tshowers 30/22 showers 30/26 p.cloudy 15/7 p.cloudy 15/9 showers 19/12 tstorms 31/23 showers 17/13 showers 21/12 tstorms 30/27 sunny 25/14 p.cloudy 26/23 showers 20/14
The Weather Network 2013
Natural gas. Good for easy warmth. With a simple flick of a switch, you can enjoy easy warmth and ambience with a natural gas fireplace. And save yourself the hassle of hauling firewood or cleaning ashes. Rebates are available. Discover the benefits and cost savings of a natural gas fireplace at fortisbc.com/naturalgasfireplace.
FortisBC uses the FortisBC name and logo under license from Fortis Inc. (13-342.15 08/13)
During the hearing on Monday morning, Doerksen presented several psychiatric reports on Hopley, dating back to 1982 and 1983. At that time, Hopley was 17 years old. There had been a series of sexual assaults on three pre-pubescent children in his foster home. In the reports, medical experts stated that Hopley had a lack of empathy for his victims and didn’t appreciate why people were so upset by what he had done. Hopley was likely to reoffend without treatment, the reports stated. Two retired RCMP officers also testified Monday about a sexual assault Hopley committed against a five-yearold child in Hosmer in 1985. The dangerous offender hearing is a continuation of Hopley’s sentencing. On September 7, 2011, Kienan Hebert’s family reported him missing after they woke up and released the three-year-old son was
not in his bed. An amber alert was issued and emergency responders from all over the East Kootenay rushed to Sparwood to take part in an extensive search for the little boy, who was wearing nothing but Scooby Doo boxer shorts when he disappeared. Four days later, an anonymous 911 caller reported that Kienan had been returned to his home. In the middle of the night, the little boy was found curled up on a couch inside the house. On September 13, 2011, a police sniffer dog tracked Randall Hopley to a gravel pit in Crowsnest Lake, Alberta, near the abandoned cabin where he had kept Kienan for four days. During Hopley’s sentencing hearing, the court heard that Hopley chose the Hebert home for his abduction plan because he noticed toys in the yard and found the front door unlocked. Hopley also said he returned the boy because he asked to go home.
daily townsman
Tuesday, OCTOBER 8, 2013
Page 5
Local NEWS Chinese group considers Kootenay opportunities A Chinese company visited Cranbrook last month to tour lumber facilities and look at export opportunities in the region
Arne Petryshen Townsman Staff
The first potential rewards for sending a delegation of the region’s representatives to Korea and China may be on the horizon as a Chinese delegation visited Cranbrook last month to tour lumber facilities. Mayor Wayne Stetski and city staff arranged for the delegation from Taicang, China to meet with representatives from Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations, Galloway Lumber and Canfor September 24 and 25.
The Jiangsu Wuyang Group was primarily interested in looking at opportunities to export wood products to Taicang from the region. Jiangsu Wuyang Group is a large diversified Chinese company that has been dealing with domestic and foreign trade, import and export, real estate development, finance and investment and industrial manufacturing. Kevin Weaver, the city’s business and economic development manager, was enthusiastic about the opportunity. “Jiangsu Wuyang
Group is a fascinating and progressive company,” Weaver said. “Although their visit to Cranbrook was short, I look forward to working with Chairman Yang’s team as we explore the opportunities further.” The group toured the Galloway Lumber mill, Canfor’s Elko mill and the Tembec finger-jointing plant in Cranbrook. The Chinese delegation was especially concerned with how the wood products from the East Kootenay would make their way to the west coast ship-
Photo courtesy of the City of Cranbrook
Mr. Zhongzhi Yang, Board Chairman of Jiangsu Wuyang Group Co. Ltd. (third from left, front) and several members of the Taicang based company’s delegation met with City of Cranbrook Mayor Wayne Stetski and Councillors Sharon Cross, Bob Whetham and Gerry Warner during a tour of the area on Tuesday September 24, 2013. ping yards. City staff is currently working with Vancouver-based advisors from Jiangsu Wuyang Group to find out more information. Weaver, along with Mayor Wayne Stetski, were part of a regional
delegation that toured Taicang and Wonju, Korea in June. Stetski noted that the group was not the political representatives they had met, but was spurred on by the relationship that Cranbrook
is building with the Chinese city. “Jiangsu Wuyang Group’s visit is a direct result of the city-to-city friendly relationship Cranbrook established in February 2012 with the port city of Taicang,
China,” Stetski said. “More work will be needed to see if this new potential opportunity can become a reality for our local wood suppliers but this is a positive first step.”
BDC SMALL BUSINESS WEEK
TM
October 20–26, 2013 SUCCESS AHEAD!
MAP YOUR FUTURE GROWTH Learn, network, celebrate!
Photo submitted
BEAR UNAWARE: Invermere conservation officer Greg Kruger pauses for a snapshot with with the unconscious female grizzly bear trapped last Friday, and subsequently relocated to the Brewer Creek drainage.
FOLLOW US @bdc_news #sbw2013 BDC Entrepreneur bdc.ca/sbw
Fairmont hot springs
Golf course grizzly moved S t e v e Hubrecht Columbia Valley Pioneer
Local conservation officers relocated a female grizzly bear last weekend after the large omnivore had been hanging around Columere Park and Fairmont Hot Springs in recent weeks. The young bear had been living in the lower part of the valley for most of late summer and into the fall and in the two weeks before the bear was moved, she had been spending a lot of time in close proximity to people in those communities, said Invermere conser-
vation officer Greg Kruger. “She was acting like a normal bear; there was never any aggressive behaviour. We decided to move her before any human-bear conflict occurred,” said Mr. Kruger. “It was too big of a public safety risk.” The bear had been eating fruit and Kokanee salmon near Coy’s Par Three Golf Course and at the Riverside Golf Course at Fairmont Hot Springs Resort. Conservation officers set a bear trap in the middle of last week, caught the bear on Fri-
day, September 27th and moved her up into the higher parts of the Brewer Creek drainage on Saturday, September 28th. They put a telemetry radio collar and ear tags on the bear before releasing her. “We hope she hibernates up in the drainage and that when she wakes up in the spring she picks a high (elevation) habitat next year,” said Mr. Kruger. If the bear does come back into the lower parts of the valley, conservation officers will be able to track her movements using the radio collar, he added.
MARION WITZ Elizabeth Grant International
PAGE 6
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2013
OPINION
DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN
www.dailytownsman.com 822 Cranbrook Street North Cranbrook, B.C. • V1C 3R9
Ph: 250-426-5201
Fax: 250-426-5003 editor@dailytownsman.com
www.dailybulletin.ca 335 Spokane Street Kimberley, B.C. • VIA 1Y9
Ph: 250-427-5333 Fax: 250-427-5336 editor@dailybulletin.ca
Published by Black Press Monday to Friday, except statutory holidays
Karen Johnston
Jenny Leiman
PUBLISHER
OFFICE MANAGER
Barry Coulter
Carolyn Grant
TOWNSMAN EDITOR
BULLETIN EDITOR
Nicole Koran BULLETIN ADVERTISING MANAGER
CRANBROOK DAILY TOWNSMAN Dial 250-426-5201
PUBLISHER: Karen Johnston, ext. 204 kjohnston@dailytownsman.com CIRCULATION: Karrie Hall, ext. 208 circulation@dailytownsman.com ACCOUNTING: Jenny Leiman, ext. 218 accounting@dailytownsman.com CLASSIFIEDS: Marion Quennell, ext. 202 classifieds@dailytownsman.com EDITOR: Barry Coulter, ext. 210 barry@dailytownsman.com SPORTS: Trevor Crawley, ext. 212 trevor@dailytownsman.com NEWS: Sally MacDonald, ext. 219 sally@dailytownsman.com Arne Petryshen, ext. 206 arne@dailytownsman.com ADVERTISING REPS: Dan Mills, ext. 207 dan@dailytownsman.com Erica Morell, ext. 214 erica@dailytownsman.com
KIMBERLEY DAILY BULLETIN Dial 250-427-5333
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Nicole Koran, ext. 206 advertising@dailybulletin.ca EDITOR: Carolyn Grant editor@dailybulletin.ca IF UNSURE OF THE EXTENSION, DIAL 0. All rights reserved. Contents copyright by The Cranbrook Daily Townsman and The Kimberley Daily Bulletin. Any reproduction of material contained in this publication in whole or in part is forbidden without the expressed written consent of the Publisher. It is agreed that The Cranbrook Daily Townsman and The Kimberley Daily Bulletin will not be responsible for errors or omissions and is not liable for any amount exceeding the cost of the space used and then only such portion where the errors actually appeared. We reserve the right to edit or reject any submission or advertisement that is contrary to our Publishing guidelines.
LOVE LITERACY
Let us all live the literate life Join our Reach a Reader campaign to promote literacy in our region
R
eaders, use your special powers to find out what’s going on Thursday, as Black Press and the Columbia Basin Alliance for Literacy team up in the annual Kootenay-wide Reach a Reader campaign to promote literacy in the region. A team of volunteers are out in force Thursday in Cranbrook and Kimberley. One of the many aims this year is to knock the City of Nelson off its fundraising pedestal. Another is to make sure local realtor Jason Wheeldon, who will be dressed in his 1980s paper carrier garb, gets as much exposure as possible (so keep your eyes peeled for Wheeldon, dressed in rags and a cloth cap — or will that be a mullet? — shouting “extra, extra, read all about it!”). It will be a busy Thursday in Cranbrook. From 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. City Councillor Gerry Warner will be holding court at the Gelato Bean Cafe in the Prestige Inn, manning a donation box and selling newspapers — the proceeds from which will go to CBAL. Gelato’s is also graciously donating a portion of all coffee sales to the cause. At the same time, 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., Councillor Sharon Cross will be raising funds at Baker’s Beanery, by Save-On Foods. Baker’s Beanery is also donating a portion of coffee sales.
From 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., members of the Kootenay Ice will be at Arby’s on the strip, selling papers and encouraging donations. CBAL volunteers will also be at the Tamarack Centre from 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., and at the Cranbrook Public Library from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Councillor Diana J. Scott will be at Max’s Place downtown, selling papers and taking donations. And Max’s as well is graciously donating a portion of coffee sales to CBAL. And the aforementioned Jason Wheeldon will be pounding the pavement from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Remember, Jason grew up in the tough, hard world of the 1980s newspaper carrier, so if he asks you for a donation, better not say no! In Kimberley on Thursday, Mayor Ron McRae will be joining Kim Roberts from Kimberley CBAL and Bulletin Editor Carolyn Grant to speak to kids and parents about literacy at the StrongStart program at the former Blarchmont School and also visit the CBAL ESL class. Copies of the Daily Bulletin will also be available at the Kimberley Public Library for a small donation to literacy programs. And the Kimberley Dynamiters will support literacy with a road hockey game with kids right after school on Thursday. Come down to
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
the Civic Centre parking lot with your stick, make a donation for literacy and play with the local hockey team. The Columbia Basin Alliance for Literacy (CBAL) is the Columbia Basin and Boundary region not-for-profit literacy organization. CBAL programs support seniors, adults, families, youth and children of all ages improve English, reading, writing, numeracy, computer and workplace skills. Key programs include StrongStart Centres at Amy Woodland Elementary School and Steeples Elementary School and the former Blarchmont School in Kimberley, the Young Parents Education Program (YPEP), a number of adult literacy programs, and Seniors and Adult computer lessons. New programs this year include autobiographical writing for seniors, a series of poetry workshops and financial literacy programs for youth and for the general public. They provide one-to-one literacy tutoring for adults. CBAL also provides English as Another Language instruction and literacy or essential skills tutoring. Cranbrook and Kimberley are challenging all other Kootenay cities and towns to best us. And remember, all funds raised on Thursday stay in our communities.
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
Tuesday, OCTOBER 8, 2013
Page 7
Pot referendum misguided What’s Up? I won’t be signing the “Sensible B.C.” petition to demand a provincewide referendum on marijuana enforcement. You shouldn’t either, and here are a few reasons why. Let me start by saying I’ve been calling for legalization and regulation of pot for 20 years, to conserve police resources and reduce violent crime. Our war on drugs is a failure even for heroin and cocaine, and marijuana is obviously much easier to produce. But the current effort led by Dana Larsen, B.C.’s clown prince of pot, is not only misguided, it’s dangerous. The petition does not propose legalization. It seeks to impose a provincial law that would stop B.C. police from using any resources for simple possession charges. This would create a loophole in the federal drug law. So what would that do? It would protect otherwise innocent customers of the current illegal marijuana trade, while leaving the criminal distribution business in place. For a closer look at that, I recommend reports from the Surrey Six murder trial now underway, or the upcoming case against three accused assassins of Red Scorpion gangster Jonathan Bacon in Kelowna. Larsen’s loony law would tie police hands when they are trying to hold some-
one on a lesser charge while they search for evidence of something nastier. This is a source of many simple possession charges today. Police chiefs have a different idea, asking for the option of treating simple possession as a ticket offence to keep the court time to a minimum. Both of these notions have the same obvious flaws. They don’t deal with sales to minors and they BC Views divert no revenue to government, leaving most of that in Tom the hands of criminal dealFletcher ers who buy cocaine, guns and fancy cars. Colorado and Washington have gone the legalization route, so far without interference from their federal government. These states need money, and they don’t need more crime or ill-considered hippy gesture politics. Meanwhile in Ottawa, Health Canada is trying to convert a poorly regulated mess of small-scale medical marijuana licences to a free-market system of commercial producers. Local politicians tore a strip off Health Canada officials at their recent convention, after years of warnings that federal licences were scattered at unknown locations, often used as fronts for larger growops. Mission Coun. Dave Hensman predicted that when a grower gets a let-
ter cancelling his licence, he’s more likely to roll up a big joint with it than to shut down. Burnaby Coun. Nick Volkow suggested the response would echo an old Cheech and Chong routine: “Dave’s not here, man.” Here’s another reason not to support Larsen: the conduct of his organizers. One fellow set up a petition table at, of all places, the Terry Fox Hometown Run in Port Coquitlam. After scrawling “pot cures cancer” on the table, he proceeded to interrupt speeches by cancer survivors and the run itself by yelling the same false slogan. You can imagine how people with terminal cancer and their loved ones would react. Some would know that marijuana may alleviate side effects of chemotherapy, just as it can ease suffering for some multiple sclerosis patients. But the suggestion of a cure is as cruel as it is moronic. Larsen’s “cannibus” has been rolling around B.C., reaping uncritical media coverage. It even blundered into the recent Walk for Reconciliation in Vancouver, an event to mark the end of federal hearings into the effects of residential schools on aboriginal children. I wouldn’t support the Larsen bunch for anything, unless it involved them looking for jobs. Just say no. Tom Fletcher is legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press and BCLocalNews.com
US government is not broke A salient feature of American “exceptionalism” is the belief that the United States can never be ordinary. If it is not the best, then it must be the worst. If it is not destined to dominate the world forever, then it is doomed to decline and decay. This kind of thinking explains why much of the commentary in the United States about the recent “shut-down” of the US government, and also about the impending default on the national debt (due on 17 October), has started at hysterical and quickly geared up to apocalyptic. We Americans have lost the mandate of Heaven, and it will soon be raining frogs and blood. So everybody take your tranquilizer of choice (mine’s a double scotch), and let’s consider what is actually going on here. The United States is the world’s oldest democratic country, with an 18th-century constitution that is bound to be an awkward fit for 21st-century politics. But that hasn’t stopped the United States from becoming the world’s biggest economy and its greatest power. Has something now gone fundamentally wrong? The problem lies in Congress, specifically in the House of Representatives, where the Republican majority is refusing to pass the budget, and threatening not to raise the official debt ceiling either, unless President Barack Obama postpones the implementation of his bill extending medical care to all Americans. The Affordable Care Act was passed by both houses of Congress and signed into law by Obama almost four years ago. Last year it passed scrutiny by the Supreme
Court, and was subsequently welcomed by a majority of the voters in the presidential election, so Obama is understandably refusing to yield to blackmail. But the House Republicans seem mysteriously unworried by the fact that the public blames them for the impending train wreck. Why? Because 80 per cent of the Republicans in the House of Representatives don’t have to worry about what the general public Gwynne thinks. They represent Congressional districts Dyer that have been so shamelessly gerrymandered by state legislatures that it is almost impossible for anybody who is a Republican to lose an election there. National public opinion is no threat to them, whereas the views of their extremist Tea Party colleagues are a potentially lethal danger. You can’t gerrymander the Senate; every senator’s “district” is the entire state he or she represents. State legislatures controlled by the Democrats also gerrymander congressional districts to create safe seats for their own party, but there is no organised extremist group in the Democratic Party that will try to destroy elected members of their own party who do not toe the ideological line. Whereas in the Republican Party, there is. Republicans seeking reelection to the House of Representatives may not have to worry about their Democratic opponents, but they certainly have to fear the Tea Party. If it decides to mount a challenge to an incumbent in the Republican primary elections, the far-right challenger will be lavishly funded by the Tea Party’s wealthy supporters, and that may
mark the end of the incumbent’s political career. So the Republicans in the House of Representatives, even those generally open to compromise, are keeping their heads down for fear of angering the Tea Party. That means it is possible (though not probable) that the October 17th deadline will be missed, and the US government will be forced to default on its debt. How bad would that be? Very bad, according to a US Treasury spokesperson. “Credit markets could freeze, the value of the dollar could plummet, US interest rates could skyrocket, the negative spillovers could reverberate around the world.” And it might rain frogs and blood. Or maybe not. There would certainly be turmoil in the markets: many people would lose money, and some would gain. But it would not be a repeat of the crash of 2009, when it was suddenly understood that huge amounts of the mortgage debt held by banks could never be repaid. The US government can still pay its debts; it just has to get Congress’s permission first. And the markets, while prone to panic, are not completely stupid. It wouldn’t hurt to put some controls on election spending as well, so that rich ideologues had less influence over the political process. But that is merely desirable; ending the gerrymandering is absolutely essential. It will take time, but this is a problem that can be fixed. And in the meantime, the US government is not really going broke. Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries.
KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDAR
UPCOMING 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. October 9th. Kimberley Garden Club October program: Planting Spring and Summer-Blooming Bulbs. Selkirk High School Library 7-9 pm. New members welcome. Info: Nola 250-427-1948. Wednesday, October 9th the GoGo Granny’s present their first travelogue of the season. Join John Mandryk and friends as they take us on a visual and musical tour to Scotland and Ireland and enjoy the scenery and distilleries. 7:00 at the College of the Rockies Lecture Theatre. Norma at 250-426-6111. 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. ESL volunteer tutor training with CBAL begins Oct 18 & 19th. Help others to speak and read English. Pre-registration required – Katherine 250-417-2896 or khough@cbal.org 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 Home Grown Music Society presents the first Coffee House of this season on Saturday, Oct 19 at Centre 64 at 8:00 pm. Tickets at the Snowdrift Cafe & Centre 64 in Kimberley. 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 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 Country music and two stepping every Thursday night from 8pm to 11pm. Everyone welcome. At the Eagles Nest (upstairs), Fraternal Order Of Eagles Hall, 715 Kootenay St N, Cranbrook. (250) 426-5614 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
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2013
DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN
SPORTS
Arthur’s SportS Bar & Grill In The Days Inn Check Out Our Great Daily Menu Specials open 3 – 10 pM Daily
Sports News? Call Trevor 250-426-5201, ext. 212 trevor@dailytownsman.com
Rugby Canada adds high-performance facility to centre of excellence C ANADIAN PRESS
LANGFORD, B.C. Rugby Canada has begun work on a new high performance facility at the Canadian Rugby Centre of Excellence. The current rugby centre in suburban Victoria is just 18 months old but Rugby Canada has already outgrown some of the facilities. For example, the gym isn’t big enough to accommodate the men’s and women’s teams at the same time. Both national sevens squads are centralized at Langford, as well as other Canadian teams.
The new two-storey building, across the road from the existing centre, will cover 18,000 square feet. Costs are estimated at $3.5 million to $4 million. “It’s a one-stop shop,” said Mike Chu, Rugby Canada’s general manager in charge of rugby operations and performance. “An athlete can come here in the morning, train. It’s got a big kitchen area, dining area so they can eat. Study room so they can study. (Video) analysis rooms. All in one facility.” “We’ve just outgrown our current facil-
ities very quickly,” he added. Chu, who spent seven years with the New Zealand Rugby Union before coming to Canada, said the new performance facility will be world-class. M o n d a y ’ s ground-breaking ceremony will be followed by 12 to 18 months construction. Rugby Canada, which has partnered with the City of Langford on both the original centre and the expansion, is launching a $2.5-million fundraising campaign to help meet the capital costs.
Canadian tennis star Raonic falls to Del Potro in Japan Open final C ANADIAN PRESS
TOKYO - Juan Martin del Potro defeated Canada’s Milos Raonic 7-6 (5), 7-5 for the Japan Open title on Sunday. The loss drops the Thornhill, Ont., product to 41-18 on the year, but Raonic is currently in 10th position in the battle for the eight-player season-ending Barclays ATP World Tour finals in London next month. Raonic is now 5-5 in title matches, having won his fifth ATP title at the Thailand Open in Bangkok last week. The first set lasted 54 minutes and included a
rally by del Potro that bounced him back from a 0-2 deficit in the tiebreak. Though Raonic put pressure on the Argentine throughout the set, he could not capitalize. Tied at 5-5 in the second set, del Potro locked in and broke Raonic to go up 6-5, then held serve to secure the 7-5 victory. After the match, Raonic congratulated his opponent and thanked the fans for showing their support throughout the tournament. Nobuo Kuroyanagi, the President of the Japan
Tennis Association, then presented del Potro with the 16th tour-level trophy of his career. The 22-year-old Raonic is no stranger to the Japan Open final. He was the runner-up to Kei Nishikori in Tokyo last year. Del Potro, the 2009 U.S. Open champion, was a late addition to the tournament after Andy Murray withdrew due to a back injury. The Japan Open marks his third title of the year, adding to wins in Rotterdam and Washington.
Kimberley Curling Club • • Registration • • For All Leagues October 9 & 10 at the Curling Club, 7:00 - 9:00 pm Come throw some roCks and register for League PLay!
League pLay wiLL commence the week of october 14, 2013. Evening Leagues (7:00-9:00pm) Monday Novice League Tuesday Open Wednesday Mixed Thursday Men Friday Junior Tuesday and Thursday Daytime Seniors (10:00-12:00)
open bonSpieL: noVember 1-3, 2013
TREVOR CRAWLEY PHOTO
X MARKS THE SPOT: Brittany Johnson, Adam Pitney and Darby Dean are heading to Asia to represent Canada at the World Archery Youth Championships in Wuxi, China this week. Johnson, Pitney and Dean are members of the local archery club who were handpicked by Archery Canada to represent the country in the junior compound bow category. All three, plus a few other local members, also competed on the national stage over the summer at the Canadian National Archery Championships earlier in August.
Schneider in Vancouver with new team JOHN KOROBANIK Canadian Press
EDMONTON - New Jersey Devils goaltender Cory Schneider doesn’t plan to get emotional about his return to Vancouver on Tuesday night when he’ll share the spotlight with former teammate Roberto Luongo. “We’re there less than 24 hours. Gotta play a game, gotta win a game. I’m not going to
get all nostalgic,” Schneider said Monday. He’ll get the start against the Canucks since teammate Martin Brodeur was tabbed to start for New Jersey on Monday night against the Oilers. Schneider took the Vancouver starting job from Luongo last season. When the Canucks found they couldn’t trade Luongo they
turned around and sent Schneider to the Devils last June for the 10th pick in the 2013 draft. Now the two will go head to head at Rogers Arena. While players usually like to insist it’s team versus team, Schneider admits he’ll be trying to outplay Luongo. “Sure I am,” he said before Monday night’s game in Edmonton. “It’s not me versus him,
Wednesday Oct. 9th at 7pm
Nitros
vs
Columbia Valley Rockets at Kimberley Civic Centre
DYNAMITER HOCKEY!
but generally you want to be better than the other guy.” Schneider posted a 17-9-4 record last season with five shutouts and a 2.11 goals-against average. He looked like the Canucks’ future goaltender while the team tried all season to trade the veteran Luongo. “It’s something we were forced to deal with,” said Schneider, who dropped a 3-0 decision to Pittsburgh in his first game as a Devil. “It’s not that we wanted to or chose to, that’s just life playing hockey in Canadian cities. “I hope that I’ve learned something from playing there. I do think it was a good experience growing up, kind of learning to play the game there.”
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Sports
Tuesday, OCTOBER 8, 2013
Cardinals edge Pirates 2-1 to send NLDS to decisive Game 5 Will Gr aves Associated Press
PITTSBURGH Rookie Michael Wacha took a no-hit bid into the eighth inning and the St. Louis Cardinals showed off their October poise, edging the Pittsburgh Pirates 2-1 Monday and setting up a winner-take-all Game 5 in the NL division series. The Cardinals tied this playoff matchup and improved to 7-1
Nick Nault photo/Canadian Olympic Committee
National women’s team coach John Herdman and goalkeeper Karina LeBlanc demonstrate a drill at the Sparwood recreation soccer field on on Saturday.
Olympians visit Fernie for soccer clinic Tamar a Hynd Fernie Free Press
Excitement kept kids warm this morning at the Sparwood recreation soccer field until the fun began at a soccer clinic led by John Herdman, head coach of Canada’s women’s national soccer team and London 2012 Olympic bronze medalist Karina LeBlanc, goalkeeper for the Canadian women’s soccer team. Sixty-four children attended the free skills clinic along with local volunteer soccer coaches. LeBlanc is an ambassador for Teck and was
happy to have an opportunity to share her skills with kids in a small community. “The biggest thing is to try,” said LeBlanc. “With lots of practice, they can accomplish anything.” Morgan McDonald is an 11 year old from Sparwood who took part in the soccer clinic. “They taught us how to control the ball while dribbling the ball and going around the defender,” said McDonald. “We also threw the ball in the air with our hands and practiced catching it with the back of our
neck.” “The clinic was fun based as there is a big range in skills,” said Herdman. “We worked on tricks and skills to get them out passing and moving. We practiced more creative attacking moves. We just had fun really.” The kids all got a chance to kick the ball at the net while LeBlanc played goalkeeper and some goals were scored. Looking back at the women’s team bronze medal performance at the 2012 Olympics Herdman commented, “The
team came together culturally. They were the most connected team. There was a team spirit that no matter what tribulations were thrown at them, they were able to rise above. They were great Canadians no matter what was thrown at them. They had a vision that was greater than themselves. When a group has a collective vision, nothing can stop them.” The soccer clinic, sponsored by Teck, is aimed to encourage active living, skill development and teamwork.
Head coach Laviolette fired from Flyers Dan Gelston Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA - Despite a preseason vote of confidence from ownership, the Philadelphia Flyers fired coach Peter Laviolette Monday after an 0-3 start. The Flyers made the announcement at a morning news conference, less than a day after Philadelphia dropped a 2-1 decision to the Carolina Hurricanes. Assistant Craig Berube, in his seventh season with the organization, will take over as coach. He is the Flyers’ 18th coach in team history. Laviolette dealt with rumours of his firing last season, a year in which the Flyers missed the playoffs after the lockout shortened the campaign. It was the only season in which he failed to make the post-season in Philadelphia. He was hired early in the 2009 season after John Stevens was fired, and led the Flyers on an improbable run to the 2010 Stanley Cup finals, where they lost to the Chicago Blackhawks in six games. Laviolette won the Stanley Cup coaching the Carolina Hurricanes in 2006 and previously
coached the New York Islanders. He received a vote of confidence from Flyers chairman Ed Snider shortly before the season started. “As far as Peter is concerned, last year was an anomaly,” he said. “He’s been a very good coach for us, he’s been a good coach in this league.” Laviolette signed a two-year extension last season that was set to take him through 2014-15. He’s just the second coach in Flyers history to coach parts of five sea-
sons. He’s set to serve as an assistant coach under Pittsburgh’s Dan Bylsma for the United States in the 2014 Olympics in Sochi, and has coaching experience with USA Hockey. Laviolette led the Flyers to three straight playoff appearances before they stumbled last season. The Flyers went 23-22-3 and were 10th in the Eastern Conference with 49 points last year, and couldn’t recover from a slow start.
NFL to enter talks on team name change Howard Fendrich Associated Press
WASHINGTON - The NFL is prepared to meet with an Indian tribe pushing for the Washington Redskins to drop the team’s nickname. Just not this week. As league owners gathered Monday in the nation’s capital for their fall meetings, the Oneida Indian Nation held a symposium across town to promote their “Change the Mascot” campaign. Oneida representative Ray Halbritter said the NFL was invited to attend.
Instead, NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said, a meeting has been scheduled for next month and could happen sooner. “We respect that people have differing views,” McCarthy said. “It is important that we listen to all perspectives.” He said the Redskins name is not on the agenda for the owners’ meetings. Redskins owner Dan Snyder has vowed to keep the name, and an AP-GfK poll conducted in April found that nearly 4 in 5 Americans don’t think the team should change its name.
Page 9
over the last three years when facing elimination in the post-season. Pedro Alvarez hit his third home run of the series, connecting with one out in the eighth for Pittsburgh’s only hit in Game 4. Wacha, who came within an out of a no-hitter in his final start of the regular season, and the St. Louis bullpen made Matt Holliday’s two-run homer in the sixth stand up.
Trevor Rosenthal worked around a twoout walk in the ninth, retiring Andrew McCutchen on a popup for his first post-season save. Game 5 will be Wednesday in St. Louis, with ace Adam Wainwright starting for the NL Central champion Cardinals and rookie Gerrit Cole going for the wild-card Pirates. Both pitchers won last week in the NLDS.
Home runs lead A’s over Tigers 6-3 for 2-1 AL division series lead Noah Trister Associated Press
DETROIT - The Oakland Athletics have beaten Detroit with both pitching and power. And that’s left the Tigers on the brink of elimination - and simmering with frustration. Brandon Moss, Josh Reddick and Seth Smith homered for the Athletics, who chased Anibal Sanchez in the fifth in-
ning Monday and defeated the Tigers 6-3 for a 2-1 AL division series lead. Moss broke a 3-all tie in the fifth with a solo shot, and Smith’s tworun drive later in the inning ended Sanchez’s day. It was an impressive offensive show after the teams split two taut, low-scoring games in Oakland. Sanchez, the Ameri-
can League’s ERA leader, allowed six runs - five earned - and eight hits in 4 1-3 innings. Smith has homered off Sanchez more than any other player, having now done it twice in the regular season and twice in the playoffs. Jarrod Parker gave up three runs in five innings for Oakland, and the Tigers couldn’t rally against the bullpen.
Shop for your home
in your home WITH A
C O M P L I M E N TA R Y C O N S U L TAT I O N
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Page 10 Tuesday, OCTOBER 8, 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 know that you must participate and be willing to work with an associate, yet you have so many other thoughts going on in your mind. You would be well advised to follow through on one of your many ideas later in the day. Tonight: Look to the future for pursuing a goal. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Do you feel bullied? That feeling is quite possible with today’s chaotic energy. You will choose to be kind and decide to view any issues that arise as a reflection of the present confusion. A partner could want your time. Listen. Tonight: Make time for a favorite person. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Dive into a project quickly. You can accomplish a lot -- and efficiently at that. You suddenly could be distracted by a fun event later in the day. Feel free to join in! You’ll be able to get past a hassle, as long as you do not brood on it. Tonight: Dream, then make it happen.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Listen to news carefully and reconsider your choices. What feels correct at this juncture might change again. Your creativity might be stifled right now. Be willing to go for what you want, as long as you’re 100 percent sure you want it. Tonight: Take a brisk walk after dinner. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You could make an important decision involving real-estate. You will gain confidence as a result, and you’ll also be willing to be less uptight about a domestic matter. Allow more creativity and fun into your life on a regular basis. Tonight: Time for some fun with friends. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Use the daytime hours to pursue an interest, but know that it could involve starting a difficult conversation. The other party might seem closed down, but the recent distance is a reflection of your attitude. A partner will change his or her tune. Tonight: Quiet time at home. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Tundra
Work with someone directly, and know that you might have to say “no” to him or her. You could find this person to be difficult to co-exist with. Communication will excel by late afternoon. A partner could surprise you with a reversal. Tonight: Have an important discussion. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You have the ability to open up a conversation, but it is crucial that you drop your defenses. If you want to discuss a change, you too must be willing to make more of an effort. Your nerves could be fried by an unexpected development. Just handle it. Tonight: Your treat. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You have the ability to move past a problem. You also see someone more clearly than he or she sees him- or herself. Do not put yourself in the position of having to make a decision. Unexpected developments could force you back to square one. Tonight: Let your hair down. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Use the morning to the max, when you feel as if you could
conqueror your immediate domain, if not the world. True to form, you will hit an obstacle or two that will force your hand. By the afternoon, you will need a break. Tonight: Take some much-needed personal time. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) The pressure is on, and you’ll deal remarkably well with a sudden change. In fact, you might enjoy it more than others realize. You can be very tenacious when you need to be, especially as others seem to head in a different direction. Tonight: Go with the flow. PISCES (Feb.19-March 20) Use your vision and knowledge when the unexpected occurs. If you keep your wits about you when others get a bit crazy, you not only will make the right choices, but you also will gain favor with a higher-up. Observers will be impressed as well. Tonight: Work late, if need be. BORN TODAY Civil-rights leader Jesse Jackson (1941), actor Matt Damon (1970), comedian Chevy Chase (1943)
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: When our daughter was a child, she had emotional issues and extensive anger management problems. With tremendous concern and love, we got her professional support and therapy, and ultimately, our daughter learned the skills to control herself. What we did not do was tell extended family members of these private problems. We had seen their extreme intolerance for any kind of mental health issues and did not want our daughter to suffer prejudice from her own family. In college, the troubling incidents started again. Because of our daughter’s refusal to let us have access to her medical information, we had no real idea of what was happening. The next few years included troubling breakups with both friends and boyfriends, extreme weight loss and talk of suicide. Our daughter is now 32 and recently married. She suddenly and inexplicably has cut us off. When we try to communicate with her, she becomes hysterical with rage. We have learned she has been saying horrible things about us to the same extended family members we tried to protect her from in childhood. We are devastated. One relative actually told my husband that we must have done something terrible to our daughter for her to treat us this way. These family members now have a special, almost frenzied new importance to our daughter. They judge us constantly. To be accused of such mistreatment is insulting and painful. Please print this so these family members will stop jumping to conclusions. -- Reading This Can Help Dear Reading: Most likely, the only thing that will change their perspective is to be on the receiving end of your daughter’s erratic behavior. Despite all the therapy she had when younger, her problems haven’t disappeared. She has simply chosen to deal with them in her own way, which currently precludes a loving relationship with you. We hope that will change. While you cannot control what the relatives think, please take comfort in knowing you handled your daughter’s issues in a way that protected and helped her. That is what good parents do. Dear Annie: Like many people, I suffer from the effects of multiple sclerosis. To look at us, you wouldn’t know anything is wrong. But the pain I suffer from daily is sometimes unbearable. How should I reply to inconsiderate people who make comments like, “Come on, hurry up” or “What is wrong with you?” I wish people would think before they open their mouths. They do not know the struggles I face. There is treatment for MS, but no cure. I maintain my regimen of daily injections, but most of the time I cannot control its rampage. Maybe this letter will bring awareness to people not to judge on outward appearances. -- Suffering in Michigan Dear Suffering: We hope so, but unless you are willing to tell these impatient people what the problem is, they will continue to behave rudely toward you. Please, folks, the people around you may be coping with terrible difficulties that are not visible. Be kind. Dear Annie: I loved the letter from the “Lady Doctor,” who was so thrilled with her MD degree that she wanted everyone to address her mail to “Dr. Jane Doe and Mr. John Doe.” My wife and I met in grad school. She went on to get a Ph.D. Her mother is so proud that she addresses all of my wife’s letters to Dr. Jane Doe. However, she is also a traditionalist, so when she writes to both of us, she addresses her letters to Mr. and Mrs. John Doe. My wife will quickly tell anyone who asks that she is at least as proud of her Mrs. degree as she is of her Ph.D. -- Mr. John Doe 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 ≠ ≠ Ø Ø ∂ ∂ 102 102 105 105
Maury bulletin Two Middle News News Two KTLA Cunningham/ daily townsman WGN-A EA1 VISN MM SRC
Funny Videos Hebrew Hmmr Road-Avonlea Top 10 Terre Terre
Funny Videos (4:55) Big Daddy Murder, She... Trial Trial Entrée prin
Funny Videos Funny Videos Past Perfect Eas Fools The Stork Derby Simp Cleve Top 10 Mange Union TJ C.-B.
Family The Originals Supernatural KTLA 5 News News at Nine Mother Rules Rules Parks Parks Rock Village of the Damned (:40) Mars Attacks! Doom Enigma All That Heaven Allows Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Conan Prince Prince Simp Cleve 30 vies La fac Unité 9 Mémoires TJ Nou
Wednesday Afternoon/Evening Cbk. Kim.
# $ % & _ ( ) + , ` 1 3 4 6 7 8 9 : < = ? @ A B C D E F G H I K L M N O P W ¨ ≠ Ø ∂
# $ % & _ ( ) + , ` M O 6 . / 0 1 2 4 5 9 : ; < = > ? @ A B C E F G H I J W ¨ ≠ Ø ∂
Tuesday, OCTOBER 8, 2013
Arsenio Hall Rock Sunny
PUZZLES Fools Popoff Tosh.0 South TJ C.-B.
October 9
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
Peg Wild Word News Busi PBS NewsHour Earthflight-Nat NOVA Secrets Life-Cold Charlie Rose KSPS-PBS Sid News News CTV News Tom People CSI: Cri. Scene Arrow Criminal Minds News News Daily J. Fal CFCN Ellen Show The Doctors News ABC News News Ent Insider Middle Back Mod Super Nashville KXLY Kim KXLY-ABC Rachael Ray Dr. Oz Show News CBS News Inside Ac Survivor Criminal Minds CSI: Cri. Scene News Late KREM-CBS Dr. Phil Judge Judge News News News Million. J’pard Wheel Revolution Law & Order Ironside News Jay KHQ-NBC Ellen Show Hocke NHL NHL Hockey SportsCentre Hocke Motor SportsCentre SportsCentre TSN SportsCentre Sports MLB Baseball Sports Sportsnet Con. Sportsnet Con. FOX Football NET (3:00) MLB Baseball The Young News News News Hour Ent ET Survivor Sean Fox Ironside News GLOBAL BC Queen Latifah Frontiers of Waterfront End of Empire Gala From Berlin 2009 Waterfront KNOW Clifford Ceorge Maya Arthur Martha Wild Ste Dragons’ Den News News News Mercer Georg Cor Dragons’ Den Republic-Doyle The National News Georg CBUT Reci News News News News ET Ent Ironside Survivor Sean Fox News Hour Fi ET The CICT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent Ironside Survivor Sean Fox News Hour ET The CIVT The Young Par Spong Sam & Victo iCarly iCarly Wipeout Funny Videos Middle Young Boys Spla YTV Squir T.U.F. Spong Mon Bethenny Simp Two Theory Mod Two Theory The X Factor News Mod Arsenio Hall KAYU-FOX Steve Harvey Cooper 360 Piers Morgan AC 360 Later E. B. OutFront Piers Morgan Cooper 360 E. B. OutFront CNN Situa Cross E. B. OutFront Ways Ways Ways Ways Criss Angel Ways Ways Ways Ways Ways Tattoo Tattoo SPIKE Pitch Black Holmes Makes Hunt Hunt Live Live Million LA Hunt Hunt Live Live Million LA Outrageous HGTV Holmes Duck Duck Duck Dynasty Duck Duck Duck Bad Bad Bad Duck Dynasty Duck Duck Duck Bad A&E The First 48 Deal Deal Rules Rules Funny Videos Fear Factor Rules Rules Funny Videos Fear Factor CMT Gags Gags Undercover Hidden Crimes Undercover Property Bro Love It-List It Cand Love Love It-List It Love It Property Bro Cand My W Lost Girl Merlin and the Book of Beasts Covert Affairs NCIS NCIS: LA Covert Affairs NCIS SHOW NCIS Daily Planet Moonshiners Rednecks Tickle Auc Highway Thru Moonshiners Rednecks Tickle Auc DISC Mighty Planes ExFriend Friend Prin Prin Their Baby My Big Fat Prin Prin Friend Friend My Big Fat Their Baby SLICE ExToddler-Tiara Toddler-Tiara Cheer Perfec Alaskan Toddler-Tiara Cheer Perfec Alaskan Toddler-Tiara TLC Toddler-Tiara Flashpoint Blue Bloods Played Boss The Listener Criminal Minds Criminal Minds (12:15) Played BRAVO The Listener ReGenesis (:35) Dance Me Outside Munich (:45) Ned Kelly EA2 (2:55) Mandela The Babe Ruth Story Groj. Johnny Johnny Adven Gum Drag Johnny Deten Adven Ftur Family Amer. Robot Archer Fugget TOON Scoob Loone Jim Win Really Good Jessie Wiz Prin FAM Jessie Austin Shake Shake Jessie Jessie Austin Austin Shake Good Good ANT Theory Theory Brown Payne Brown Payne Mod Sein Family Family Amer. Double Jeopardy Envy WPCH Middle Mod Sein Gas Com Parks Theory Match Gas Just/Laughs Gags Match Bounty Com Theory Parks Daily Colbert COM Sein Love and Death Murder by Death Support Your Local Sheriff! This Is Spinal Tap Where TCM Dead It Should-You Stor Stor Stor Stor Dog and Beth Stor Stor Stor Dog and Beth Stor Ghost Hunters OUT Mantracker Mountain Men MASH MASH Mountain Men Pawn Pawn Amer Amer Truckers Hat Hat Yukon Gold HIST Outlaw Bikers Stargate SG-1 Paranormal Wi. Ghost Mine Inner Castle Star Trek: Voy. Paranormal Wi. Ghost SPACE Inner Planet Castle Walking Dead Walking Dead Walking Dead Walking Dead Walking Dead King Kong AMC (3:15) Smilla’s Sense of Snow UFC Fight Night From Barueru, Brazil. Ultimate Fight FOX Sports FOX Football FOX Sports FOX Sports FS1 Fight Night Pitch Pitch RIDE. RIDE. Burger Burger Bizarre Foods DTOUR Eat St. Eat St. World’ World’ RIDE. RIDE. Burger Burger Bizarre Foods Secret Liaison The Whistleblower Oz the Great and Powerful (:45) John Carter MC1 Guard Jesus Henry Christ Maury Two Middle News News Two Family Arrow Tom People KTLA 5 News Arsenio Hall KTLA Cunningham Funny Videos Rules Rules Rules Rules News at Nine Mother Rules Rules Parks Parks Rock Rock Sunny WGN-A Funny Videos (:35) Mo’ Money (:05) Bingo The Invasion (:40) The Fifth Element Timecop EA1 To Murder, She... Eas F’wlty The Midwife Prisoners Enigma Downstairs Downstairs Super Popoff VISN Road-Avonlea Trial Trial Simp Cleve Top 10 South South Conan Prince Prince Simp Cleve Tosh.0 South 102 102 MM Top 10 Mange Union TJ C.-B. 30 vies Épi Enfants de télé Pê Par TJ Nou TJ C.-B. 105 105 SRC Terre Terre Entrée prin
Page 11
NEW FALL ARRIVALS Flannel P.J.’s, Nighties, Robes, Isotoner Slippers, Bras & Briefs, Scarves
CALL 426-3272 OR VISIT
www.tribute.ca
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.
Baker St. Mall 250.489.8464
Exciting New Fashions!
She has all the pieces to your puzzle! 250-426-5201 www.dailytownsman.com
250-427-5333 www.dailybulletin.ca
Cost of PROMOTING a little more than you planned for?
Try us! TRENDS N’ TREASURES 1109a Baker St. Cranbrook
1109a Baker Street, Cranbrook 250-489-2611 trendsntreasures@shaw.ca
We have something the competition doesn’t – daily coverage!
Need help?
Call and speak to one of our ad representatives... ✓ Cranbrook Daily Townsman (250) 426-5201 ✓ Kimberley Daily Bulletin (250) 427-5333
Cove ri PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
Fill in the grid so that every row (nine cells wide), every column (nine cells tall) and every box (three cells by three cells) contain the digits 1 through 9 in any order. There is only one solution for each puzzle.
nity mu
Your Com g n
Get your news delivered daily - subscribe!
dailyTOWNSMAN/DAILY townsman / daily bulletin DAILY BULLETIN
Page 12 Tuesday, OCTOBER 8, 2013 8, 2013 PAGE 12 Tuesday, October
Share Your Smiles!
Your community. Your classifieds.
Ava is all smiles at the park!!
250.426.5201 ext 202
bcclassified.com fax 250.426.5003
INDEX IN BRIEF FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS TRAVEL CHILDREN EMPLOYMENT BUSINESS SERVICES PETS & LIVESTOCK MERCHANDISE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE RENTALS AUTOMOTIVE ADULT ENTERTAINMENT LEGAL NOTICES
AGREEMENT It is agreed by any display or Classified Advertiser requesting space that the liability of the paper in the event of failure to publish an advertisement shall be limited to the amount paid by the advertiser for that portion of the advertising space occupied by the incorrect item only, and that there shall be no liability in any event beyond the amount paid for such advertisement. The publisher shall not be liable for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement. bcclassified.com cannot be responsible for errors after the first day of publication of any advertisement. Notice of errors on the first day should immediately be called to the attention of the Classified Department to be corrected for the following edition. bcclassified.com reserves the right to revised, edit, classify or reject any advertisement and to retain any answers directed to the bcclassified.com Box Reply Service and to repay the customer the sum paid for the advertisement and box rental. DISCRIMINATORY LEGISLATION Advertisers are reminded that Provincial legislation forbids the publication of any advertisement which discriminates against any person because of race, religion, sex, color, nationality, ancestry or place of origin, or age, unless the condition is justified by a bona fide requirement for the work involved. COPYRIGHT Copyright and/or properties subsist in all advertisements and in all other material appearing in this edition of bcclassified. com. Permission to reproduce wholly or in part and in any form whatsoever, particularly by a photographic or offset process in a publication must be obtained in writing from the publisher. Any unauthorized reproduction will be subject to recourse in law. ON THE WEB:
Obituaries
email classifieds@dailytownsman.com
Announcements
Announcements
Coming Events
Personals
GROW MARIJUANA commercially. Canadian Commercial Production Licensing Convention October 26th & 27th. Toronto Airport, Marriott Hotel. www.greenlineacademy.com. Tickets 1-855-860-8611 or 250-870-1882.
KOOTENAYâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S BEST ESCORTS
Calendar Girls
March 11 1967 Sept 29 2013 It is with the deepest sadness that the family of Kim Ratcliffe announces her passing. On Sept 29 she was taken suddenly by a heart attack while at her home in Marysville. She is survived by her Children Jacob, Kaileigh, Kevin, Justin (Chelsea) and Chris. Parents Jim and Lil, in-laws Marge and Ron. Siblings Colin (Jen), Karen, and Mike (Julie) and numerous aunts uncles and cousins. A Celebration of Life to be held at Kimberley United Church, Friday October 11th, 1:00pm. In Lieu of flowers please make a donation to the ALS Society.
Scarlett - 21, Strawberry blonde, sweet treat
Personals
Lily - 25, Sandy-blonde, blue-eyed bombshell
*~Enchanted Companion~*
Cougar Stacy - pretty, petite blonde 42
Beautiful host to entertain you.
Dakota - 20, busty, curvy, raven-haired beauty.
Private, personal, real sweet. Amy, 38
New - Danielle - 25, French seductress, slim, athletic
in/out (specials)
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Spice up your lifeâ&#x20AC;?
250-421-6084
(250)417-2800 in/out calls daily Hiring
PLAYFUL, SEXY,
Lost & Found
sweet, seductive 24 year old.
(778)870-1600
FOUND: KEYS at 1st St. and 14th Ave. Please call to identify. 250-426-3497 POCKET KNIFE found at 4th Ave & Cranbrook St., Kimberley. Contact 250-427-4300
Obituaries
Obituaries
In-calls and out calls
<> Diamond
Obituaries
Obituaries
DAISY H. WOCKNITZ August 27, 1923 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; September 30, 2013
It is with profound sadness we announce the passing of our beloved Daisy, with her granddaughter Roni beside her as she leĹ&#x152; us on Donday, ^epteĹľber ĎŻĎŹ, ĎŽĎŹĎĎŻ at the iĹľpressive age of ϾϏ years in Vernon, B.C. Daisy was a feisty, English bird who dedicated her life to her faĹľily. ^he was born in traysbury, England, the eldest of Ď° sistersÍ&#x2014; Vera, :eaneĆŠe, and Dorothy. ^he Ĺľet and Ĺľarried her husband, <en, a Canadian soldier and celebrated the birth of their eldest daughter in England. dhey Ĺľoved to <iĹľberley and celebrated the birth of their youngest daughter Ď´ years later. Daisy resided in <iĹľberley unĆ&#x;l she Ĺľoved to live with her eldest granddaughter aĹ&#x152;er the birth of her great grandsons. ^he loved to ĹŹnit and baĹŹe for her granddaughters. ^he enĹŠoyed her brief sĆ&#x;nt as a Í&#x17E;,oĹľeĹľaĹŹerÍ&#x; in <iĹľberley. ,er pasĆ&#x;Ĺľes includedÍ&#x2014; ^,KWWIE', playing cards with faĹľily, dancing to Ĺľusic, Í&#x17E;whažžyͲingÍ&#x; whoever played against the CanucĹŹs ÍžwaiĆ&#x;ng for theĹľ to win the CupÍż and listening to her great grandsons play the piano for her. ^he was predeceased byÍ&#x2014; her husband, <en Íž pril ĎϾϾώͿÍ&#x2013; daughter, Debbie Íž^epteĹľber ĎϾϾϾͿÍ&#x2013; sister :eaneĆŠe in EnglandÍ&#x2013; as well as sonͲinͲlaw :ohn :onĹŹer. Daisy will be deeply Ĺľourned byÍ&#x2014; her sisters Vera ÍžVernonÍż and Dorothy ÍžEnglandÍżÍ&#x2013; her daughter Brenda Beauchene ÍžByronÍżÍ&#x2013; granddaughter Roni ÍžDarĹŹ Van tyĹŹÍżÍ&#x2013; great grandsons >iaĹľ and dhÄ oÍ&#x2013; granddaughter DariĹŠĹŹe :onĹŹerÍ&#x2013; nuĹľerous nieces and nephewsÍ&#x2013; stepͲ faĹľily and inͲlawsÍ&#x2013; as well as all those whose lives she touched.
Obituaries
Sympathy & Understanding
*For your safety and comfort call the best. *Quality and V.I.P Service Guarantee *Licensed studio ~New Location~
Kim Diane Ratcliffe
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.
Kootenay Monument Installations Granite & Bronze Memorials, Dedication Plaques, Benches, Memorial Walls, Gravesite Restorations, Sales & Installations
2200 - 2nd Street South Cranbrook, BC V1C 1E1 250-426-3132
IN-HOME CONSULTATION OR VISIT OUR SHOWROOM
1885 Warren Avenue Kimberley, BC V1A 1R9 250-427-7221 www.mcphersonfh.com
6379 HIGHWAY 95A TA TA CREEK, B.C. 1-800-477-9996
www.kootenaymonument.ca
96*20,: 3(> J V Y W V Y H [ P V U >PSSZ ,Z[H[L 7SHUUPUN 7YVIH[L ,Z[H[L (KTPUPZ[YH[PVU
*YHUIYVVR
End of Life? Bereaved? May We Help?
PU HZZVJPH[PVU ^P[O :[LPKS 2HTILP[a 3H^ *VYWVYH[PVU
)HRLY :[YLL[ *YHUIYVVR )* ;LS!
2PTILYSL`
>HSSPUNLY (]LU\L 2PTILYSL` )* ;LS!
-LYUPL
:\P[L ;OPYK (]LU\L -LYUPL )* ;LS! PUMV'YVJRPLZSH^ JVT c ^^^ YVJRPLZSH^ JVT
250-417-2019
Toll Free 1-855-417-2019
Ph: 250.426.6006 Fx: 250.426.6005 2104D 2nd Street S. Cranbrook, BC theďŹ&#x201A;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
Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s the foundation of our community.
s reĆ&#x2039;uested by Daisy, there will not be a funeral service. ^he will be laid to rest beside her husband and daughter during a private faĹľily gathering at the <iĹľberley CeĹľetery. ^he will live forever in our hearts. We love you and will celebrate you with each â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;cuppaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;. rrangeĹľents have been entrusted to Wleasant Valley &uneral ,oĹľe. Condolences Ĺľay be oÄŤered at www.pleasantvalleyÄŹ.coĹľ
Stay tuned for our new look. In times of grief, these caring professionals are here to serve and comfort your family.
DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN daily townsman / daily bulletin
Tuesday, OCTOBER 8, 2013 PAGE Tuesday, October 8, 2013 Page 13 13
Announcements
Employment
Employment
Employment
Services
Services
Real Estate
Tickets
Business Opportunities
Help Wanted
Trades, Technical
Psychics
Home Improvements
Apt/Condos for Sale
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.
AUTOMATED TANK Manufacturing Inc. is looking for experienced welders. Competitive wages, profit sharing bonus plus manufacturing bonus incentive. Full insurance package 100% paid by company. Good working environment. Keep your feet on the ground in a safe welding environment through in hole manufacturing process. No scaffolding or elevated work platform. Call Cindy for an appointment or send resume to: cindy@autotanks.ca. Call 780846-2231 (Office); 780-8462241 (Fax). EDMONTON BASED Company seeks qualified & experienced Buncher Operator and Processor Operator. Fort McMurray, camp work, 21/7 rotation, flight in/out provided, safety tickets and drivers abstract required. Fax 780-4883002 or send and email to; jobs@commandequipment. com EDMONTON BASED Company seeks qualified & experienced (or experienced) Mulcher Operator. Fort McMurray, camp work, 21/7 rotation, flight in/out provided, safety tickets and drivers abstract required. Fax 780-488-3002 or email to; jobs@commandequipment. com JOURNEYMAN AUTOMOTIVE Service Technician(s) in Hanna Alberta. Hanna Chrysler Ltd. offers competitive wages from $30/hour, negotiable depending on experience. Bright, modern shop. Full-time permanent with benefits. Friendly town just 2 hours from major urban centres. More info online at: www.hannachrylser.ca. Fax 403-854-2845; or Email: chrysler@telusplanet.net.
PSYCHIC MIRACLES by Luna.com. Call and get a free reading by phone. Love money job family, restores broken relationships, solves all problems permanently. 1-866-2295072.
2 ROUND trip tickets to Victoria. One night hotel stay and 2-day car rental. Valid until Sept. 2014. $800./obo 250-427-5080
Travel
Timeshare CANCEL YOUR Timeshare. No risk program. Stop mortgage and maintenance Payments today. 100% money back guarantee. Free consultation. Call us now. We can help! 1-888-356-5248.
Travel CENTURY PLAZA HOTEL Best Rates. 1.800.663.1818 century-plaza.com
ALL CASH drink/snack vending business route. Complete training. Small invest. req’d. 1888-979-VEND (8363). www.healthydrinkvending.co CANADIAN TAXPAYERS Federation (taxpayer.com) has an opening in its Sales Division. Aggressive Commission Scale. Door to Door experience an asset. Email: national. manager@taxpayer.com or 1800-667-7933 Ext 111.
Career Opportunities TRAIN TO be an Apartment/Condominium Manager online! Graduates get access to all jobs posted with us. 33 years of success! Government certified. www.RMTI.ca or 1800-665-8339, 604-681-5456.
Help Wanted An Alberta Oilfield Company is hiring dozer and excavator operators. Lodging and meals provided. Drug testing required. Call (780)723-5051 Edson, Alta.
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
TIM HORTONS, CRANBROOK, BC
500 1500 Cranbrook St. N. fax:250-417-0660 1875 Cranbrook St. N. fax:250-417-0061
Food Counter Attendant
Join the family at Frank’s Steak and Schnitzel Haus. Line cooks required. Experience is an asset. Apply in person with resume ask for Bob.
Full-time, shift work, nights, overnight’s, early mornings & weekends. $10.25/hr. + benefits. Apply at store.
Business/Office Service
Business/Office Service
Business/Office Service
SERVICES GUIDE Contact these business for all your service needs!
Financial Services DROWNING IN debt? Cut debts more than 50% & debt free in half the time! Avoid bankruptcy! Free Consultation. www.mydebtsolution.com or Toll Free 1-877-556-3500 BBB Rated A+ 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 IF YOU own a home or real estate, Alpine Credits can lend you money: It’s That Simple. Your Credit / Age / Income is not an issue. 1.800.587.2161. Need Cash? Own A Vehicle? Borrow Up To $25,000 Snapcarcash.com
1-855-653-5450
Legal Services CRIMINAL RECORD? Don’t let it block employment, travel, education, professional, certification, adoption property rental opportunities. For peace of mind & a free consultation call 1-800-347-2540.
Contractors
GIRO
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.
LEAKY BASEMENT
Beginner/Intermediate Guitar, Classical/Contemporary Voice,
Songwriting/Theory, Call:
•
Foundation Cracks
Space is limited.
•
Damp Proofing
250.427.5767
•
Drainage Systems
•
Foundation Restoration
Fraser Armstrong.
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!
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
TRIPLE J
WINDOW CLEANING
~Residential~
Jody ~ 250-919-1575
www.CHARLTONHOMES.CA
TOM’S LAWN CARE SERVICES General Fall Clean-up *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
TREES, SHRUB & STONE
For a brighter outlook, call Jim Detta
250-349-7546 **ask about our gutter cleaning service**
I<>@JK<I KF;8P 7D: H;9;?L;
=H;7J :;7BI ED IJK<< JE :E" FB79;I JE ;7J 7D: J>?D=I JE I;; Register Online at www.bcdailydeals.com
BCDaily
• Construction • Renovations • Roofing • Drywall-large or small • Siding • Sundeck Construction • Aluminum Railings We welcome any restorational work!
(250) 426-8504
Classifieds Get Results!
FLOORING SALE Over 300 Choices Lowest Prices Guaranteed!
Laminates - $0.69/sq ft Engineered - $1.99/sq ft Hardwood - $2.79/sq ft Overnight Delivery in most of BC!
www.kingoffloors.com
1.877.835.6670
Merchandise for Sale
For Sale: FOREST PARK 2 bedroom, newer appliances, good condition.
$152,000. Negotiable.
Ph: 250-426-6625
Farm Equipment For sale:
MASSEY HARRIS PONY Runs very well.
$3,000. 250-346-3282
Heavy Duty Machinery 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
Misc. for Sale Progression Trainer $800./obo. Great condition. Mid 80’s Chevy shortbox, 4spd, 2wd. $1,000./obo 250-427-2398 STEEL BUILDINGS/Metal buildings 60% off! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-4572206 or visit online: www.crownsteelbuildings.ca STEEL BUILDING - The great super sale! 20x20 $4,070. 25x26 $4,879. 30x32 $6,695. 32x40 $8,374. 35x38 $9,540. 40x50 $12,900. One end wall included. Call Pioneer Steel 1800-668-5422. or online: www.pioneersteel.ca
Misc. Wanted
For Sale By Owner BEAUTIFUL SOUTH VIEW
HOME FOR SALE
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.
$424,900
See all pics on We-List.com.
Call for appointment
250-417-1990 Transportation
Trucks & Vans
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
REDUCE REUSE RECYCLE Genuine Coin Collector Buyer Collections, Olympic Gold & Silver Coins etc 778-281-0030
Page 14 Tuesday, OCTOBER 8, 2013
NEWS/features
daily townsman / daily bulletin
So many questions Hi Wendy: I have been renovating my house over the past year. Do you see any other issues coming that will cost me money in the way of repairs to my house or my car? I am having a few problems with my car. Will I need to buy another vehicle? Will there be any other large expenditures I need to be aware of? Do you see me selling my house and moving away from the city I am living? If so, where do you see me moving to and when? Are there any other fixes I need to do to my house to help me sell it? Will I meet a man that will be good for me in all aspects of my life? If so, when and where will I meet him and what does he look like? Thank you for your help in past readings. In a Flurry Dear In A Flurry: Well, you’ve had quite the year, haven’t you. Will you be glad when it’s over, like I will?
You will not really have any major repairs to your car in 2013 but you will have major repairs in 2014. You will probably have to buy another vehicle in 2014; the choice is really up to you. My guide says it would be wise to buy another car because the repairs after the major one will just continue. There are other fixes that you need to do that will help you sell your home. The area where we see needs some repairs and a good painting is the back entrance of your home. In November and December you will have to do some minor repairs to your home. However, no major repairs to your home in 2014. We do not see you selling your home or moving away from the area you are now living until 2015. You will be moving in the direction northwest of the town you are currently living in. If you had any specific locations we could tell
CORRECTION!
Annual General Meeting
AGM for the Key City Theatre Society will be held on Monday, October 21, 2013 at 7:00 pm. Board Member elections are on the agenda. All Members welcome and refreshments will be served.
ed the “spec” process, as I like to call it. This means when you ASK WENDY meet a man, give me his first and last name Wendy and we will do a Evano “spec” on him for you. This means you do you whether you will be not stop going out with moving there or not. him if we find negative Don’t forget: broad qualities about him. questions, broad anYou keep living in the swers. This means the truth and awareness more specific the ques- while you are dating tion, the more specific him and try to prove us the answer we can give wrong in our analysis of you. him. This does not If you wish, you can mean you try and justify email us back again with his negative qualities this information and we because you want imwill be happy to help mediate gratification you. and live in fairytale land. We do see you meetIt also does not mean ing a man in 2016 who that you become intimay be compatible with mate with any man until your lifestyle. The year you see who and what 2016 is too far away to he is made of, if you tell you where you will know what I mean. Intimeet him. macy in a relationship Is it really important should be earned on where you will meet this both sides and is someman? I really don’t like thing precious two peotelling people where ple share. they will meet their Giving away your mate because they get white light is not a good all caught up in the thing; as Martha Stewart drama and delay the would say. The only events of the meeting. thing that came to me For example, if I told you rather quickly is he has that you will meet a man brown hair, not very tall, at the theatre then you about five feet five or six would be going to the inches. He is a hard theatre more often than worker but there may be usual and you would be alcohol issues there; searching and wonder- hence the “spec.” ing and living in anticiIn conclusion, hold pation. your breath for the rest What this does is it of this year like I am delays the energy of doing; we will get meeting whom you through it. Everyone were suppose to meet at does have these type of that time. years; it’s just our turn What is important is this year. The year 2014 this person you are to will be a better year for meet is a good man. you. That is why I have creatBe careful with the men you go out with. Take your time and when in doubt send us an email and we will do a “spec” for you. Wendy
Carriers Needed! ROUTES IN CRANBROOK:
176 - 1st - 4th Ave, 22 St. S. 181 - 10th & 11th Ave, 12-14 St. 325 - Southview Dr. 170 - 4th - 6th St, 3rd - 5th Ave 114 - Vanhorne St - 4th St, 5th Ave S (avail Oct. 1st) 113 - Vanhorne St - 4th St, 3rd & 4th Ave S (avail Oct. 1st) 134 - 9th - 11th St S, 2nd - 5th Ave S
For personal and over the phone consultations, contact Wendy Evano at 250-426-2127. Need some questions about the paranormal answered or of your personal life? Email Wendy at wevano@shaw.ca.
ROUTES IN KIMBERLEY:
250-427-5333
250-426-5201 ext 208
LE • REC YC
LE • REC YC
• No Collecting • Paycheck Direct Deposit • Work Experience
LE • REC YC
LE • REC YC
201 - Marysville, 303rd & 304th Ave. 240 - DeWolfe 239 - Creekside Trailer Park
Accepting funds from The Build It Forward Foundation are (left to right): Mike Calder (EKFH Treasurer), Steve Pommier (Cranbrook Alliance Church), Christine Shumka (Interior Health Services Director) and Laird Siemens (Chaplain, EKRH Spiritual Care Program).
Build It Forward, Alliance give $1,000 for Spiritual Care Fund Submit ted
It just wasn’t the wonders of hearing the amazing songs of country music star Paul Brandt when he played a concert last May at the Cranbrook Alliance Church but it is the wonder of his generosity that is now touching the community. The Calgary-born Brandt decided to thank the Cranbrook Alliance Church for hosting the concert by sending a gift of $1,000 from The Build It Forward Foundation, formed by Paul and his wife Elizabeth Peterson, to the East Kootenay Foundation for Health. “We were absolutely blessed to learn of this wonderful gift coming from Paul and his foundation,” said Steve Pommier, representative for the Alliance Church. “We were also equally moved when it was the foundation who suggested that the gift be earmarked for use by the regional hospital’s Spiritual Care Committee. This is something we think Paul (a former pediatric nurse) and his family will really be pleased with.” The East Kootenay Regional Hospital Spiritual Care Program operates 52 weeks per year with chaplains
available Monday, Wednesday and Friday afternoons. The program complements the job done by the hospital’s many dedicated and skilled staff to meet the patients’ physical needs by adding spiritual care to the equation. “The Spiritual Care Program is donor-driven – all donations come from the community, so a donation like this is very welcome indeed,” said Laird Siemens, EKRH Chaplain. “Like manna from heaven!” The East Kootenay Foundation for Health assists the Spiritual Care Program by stewardship of its donations and working closely with the program’s committee on a variety of different projects. The Build It Forward Foundation has done just that … build it forward to highlight the spiritual care program for patients and their families at the regional hospital. To learn more about the philanthropic work of Paul and his family visit www. builditforward.ca. To make your own gift in support of the Spiritual Care Program at EKRH contact Donna Grainger at East Kootenay Foundation for Health, 1-877-489-6481.
House fire in Fernie injures three people Tamar a Hynd Fernie Free Press
Two people are in serious condition with burns and smoke inhalation after a house fire on Mt. Trinity Avenue in Fernie last night. Fernie Fire Rescue (FFR) received a call at 11:04 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 6 of a house fire at 22 Mt. Trinity Avenue in Fernie. The upper storey of the two-storey house was engulfed when firefighters arrived on scene. Three fire trucks and 10 firefighters responded and had the fire contained by 11:48 p.m. Elk Valley RCMP and BC Ambulance were also on scene. Four renters, thought to be in their twenties, occupied the home with two guests when the fire start-
ed. A man in his twenties had a pot of cooking oil heating on the stovetop. He left the kitchen for a minute then he heard a pop come from the kitchen. The man attempted to extinguish the fire on the stove without success. The man sustained burns to his face and suffered from smoke inhalation. He was kept at the Elk Valley Hospital overnight. Witnesses have reported that one woman jumped from the second storey and was caught by a neighbour before she hit the ground. Two individuals are in serious condition from burns and smoke inhalation. They were transported to Calgary by STARS helicopter.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Tuesday, OCTOBER 8, 2013
Fire Prevention Week Al Collinson
Page 15
Kimberley Fire Department
Fire Chief
Assistant Fire Chief
Jack Paterson
Richard Prasad
Ian Biddlecombe
John Adolphe
Grant Parnall
Chad Koran
Douglas Dickson
Dave Oscarson
Kevin Valin
Sam Lancaster
Jeremy Green
Dave Dresser
Dave Chorneyko
Colton Mayer
Jeff Busey
Ryan Berry
Jamie Davies
Calvin Dickson
Juho Pelkonen
Andy Britner
Scott Davis
Tim Greiner
Noah Wesche
Scott Rear
Firefighter
Firefighter
Antoine Cuvele Firefighter
Firefighter
Firefighter
Jamie Roche Firefighter
Assistant Fire Chief
Firefighter
Firefighter
Ron Milligan Firefighter
Captain
Lieutenant
Firefighter
Firefighter
Firefighter
Firefighter
Firefighter
Firefighter
Lieutenant
Firefighter
Firefighter
Firefighter
Lieutenant
Firefighter
Firefighter
Firefighter
Kimberley Fire Department
Open House & BBQ Bill Blackwell Firefighter
Angus Beaton Firefighter
• Demo’s • Auto Extraction • Sparky the Fire Dog • Ladder 7 Aerial
In Front Thursday Oct 10th of the 5:30-7:30pm Fire Hall!
YOU CAN HELP PREVENT FIRES E N S U R E Y O U R FA M I LY H A S A FIRE ESCAPE PLAN
OCTOBER 6 to 12, 2013 is Fire Prevention Week
“PREVENT KITCHEN FIRES”
335 Ross Street Kimberley BC 250-427-4444 Open 7 Days 8-8
1525 Warren Avenue, KIMBERLEY 250.427.2313 OPEN 7 DAYS, 8AM - 9PM • New winter hours start Oct 14: 8-8
Don’t play with matches. Fire safety starts with You. 290 Wallinger Avenue, Kimberley, BC Tel: (250) 427-0111 Fax: (250) 427-0555 www.rockieslaw.com
Continuing a Tradition of Service Since 1897
Saluting Our Bravest SUPPORT FIRE PREVENTION WEEK... be sure your smoke detectors are working!
Kimberley Building Supplies 250.427.2400 • Jennings Ave.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Page 16 Tuesday, OCTOBER 8, 2013
Fire Prevention Week
October 6 - 12, 2013
Kimberley Fire Department
Young Students a Key Ingredient to ‘Recipe for Fire Safety’ Campaign Highlights Fire Prevention Week October 6-12 October 4, 2013 – Kimberley kids are a key ingredient in ‘A Recipe for Fire Safety,’ this year’s national safety campaign supporting Fire Prevention Week from October 6-12. Local fire service and area educators and the Canadian Association of Fire Chiefs (CAFC), to help teach children and their families on how to prevent cooking fires– the leading cause of home fires. ‘Prevent Kitchen Fires’ is this year’s official Fire Prevention Week theme. “Through ‘A Recipe for Fire Safety’ campaign, the fire service and teachers will be
able to work together to make our children more informed about fire safety at home,” says Stephen Gamble, President, Canadian Association of Fire Chiefs. “What we need parents and guardians to do is to continue the learning at home, to teach children how to create and practise a home fire escape plan, and, to check every smoke alarm in their home to ensure they are working and that they are less than 10 years old.” “We all have a role to play in preventing fires in our homes. As Thanksgiving approaches, get young-
sters to share what they have learned through the campaign. We should all exercise more caution in the kitchen with family and any house guests,” adds Gamble. Teachers of JK to Grade 3 have been provided a curriculum of five fire safety lesson plans and homework kits from CAFC. Participating classes also have the chance to win prizes. A different lesson has been developed for each day of Fire Prevention Week, as well as a simplified ‘Recipe for Fire Safety’ checklist families can use at home. Lessons include:
– “A Recipe for Kitchen Fire Safety”: students will learn basic fire safety practices in the kitchen. – “What’s Hot What’s Not?”: students will identify things that get hot and be shown how to stay safe. – “Smoke Alarms Take Tests Too!”: students will be taught to understand the importance of testing smoke alarms. – “When Your Smoke Alarm Turns 10!”: students will learn that all smoke alarms must be replaced every 10 years. – “Home Escape Plans”: students will be taught the importance
Freedom. Comfort. Peace of mind. Home
Travel
Automotive
Fire/Smoke
Commercial
No one wants to go through the tragedy of a home loss
Flood/Water Theft
At Falkins Insurance Group we know how much your dream home means to you. No one wants to go through the tragedy of a home or property loss— but in the unfortunate event that you do, you need to have the best coverage to suit your unique needs. Falkins Insurance Group is here to provide that quality coverage, and the peace of mind that comes with it. Falkins is your most trusted insurance group for over 100 years.
Automotive
Home
www.falkins.com
Travel
A PARTNER OF
1.866.426.2205
Commercial
of home escape plans and be encouraged to create and practise one at home with their parents. Carol Heller, a home safety expert with campaign partner Kidde Canada says, “The CAFC have done great work with the curriculum to help educators address some of the key behaviours that can improve fire safety in our homes. Start-
ing those lessons early contributes to a generation of fire-safe families. A great example is the lesson -When Your Smoke Alarm Turns 10 - designed to teach youngsters and their parents to always check their smoke alarms to see if they’ve reached their 10-year lifespan and need to be replaced.” After 10 years smoke alarms should be
replaced, whether they run on batteries or are hardwired. The latest smoke alarm technology offers advantages for protection from fires in the kitchen and other rooms such as intelligent photoelectric sensors to differentiate between real fires and false alarms, and 10-year sealed lithium batteries which never need to be replaced.
The City of Kimberley is a proud supporter of Fire Prevention Week.
On November 3rd, 2013 when you change your clock – change the batteries in your smoke detectors.
FIRE PREVENTION WEEK OCT. 6-12, 2013
PREVENT KITCHEN FIRES GO TO FPW.ORG AND GET COOKIN’ WITH FIRE SAFETY!