TUESDAY
DECEMBER 10, 2013
< Niedermayer honoured Dec. 27 City of Cranbrook unveiling plaque for NHL great | Page 3
Grant Lawrence in Cranbrook> Author, CBC personality at Library tonight | Page 3
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Vol. 61, Issue 239
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CHAD ST. PIERRE PHOTO
STAR TRAILS AND AURORA BOREALIS: Cranbrook photographer Chad St. Pierre travelled to Fernie late Saturday night to meet up with fellow photographers at Hosmer, just outside of Fernie. As St. Pierre reports: “It took us a few tries to finally find a good location. With -33 degree weather, you don’t realize what kind of challenge it is to photograph for over an hour in conditions like this. Typically battery life lasts me a full day’s worth of shooting, but in these conditions I was only able to get an hours worth. An hour later, 112 frames snapped, numb fingers and a gimped tripod whos legs froze solid I was able to capture my very first star trail image. On the bottom right side you can see the Aurora Borealis common in high latitudes.
Get your votes in for the next great hockey song ARNE PETRYSHEN AND CAROLYN GRANT
Two local music groups have submitted their songs into a cross-Canada contest to find the next great hockey song. Both the Bison Broth-
ers, featuring Tim Ross from Wycliffe, and The Pursuits, featuring the Armstong family from Kimberley, put in entries for the CBC Music and Hockey Night in Canada contest.
“ I want to know more about mutual funds.”
Ross said he received a note the other day saying his entry, If Yer Playin’ Hockey, was a couple hundred votes out of the top 50, out of the thousand songs submitted. He said even being in the top
group is an honour. “The neatest thing is, even if I don’t make this fairly high cut, it’s been really an honour how many people have let me know they listened to the song and voted for me.”
Ross plays old timers hockey and said the guys there have been really supportive, as well as people in the music community. “If nothing else that’s a real honour,” he said.
Ross said he had the song from years ago. It’s about a day in the life of an old timer or B-league hockey player going to play the game.
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Page 2 Tuesday, DECEMBER 10, 2013
daily townsman / daily bulletin
community snapshot
Another fine evening at Homegrown John Allen
Another wonderful Homegrown Music Evening took place in the Centre 64 theatre Saturday, Nov. 28. Included were a variety of music types, musicians’ ages and instruments. Craig Hillman. MC, began by demonstrating one-armed guitar playing. Well done, considering, but
Segovia did not feel threatened. He also shared a number of awful jokes, which the audience dutifully laughed and groaned through. Gold Creek, with Layton Parsons and Conner Foote singing and playing their guitars, shared the stage with an intriguing percussion plywood box, the Cajone (originally from Peru),
which the musician sits on, new to Kimberley and played very well by Zack Silver. Darin Welch sang a number of his own fine compositions; then he was joined by Clayton Parsons on guitar. The group “Leisa and Pat O’Sullivan” — Leisa, Pat, their two sons Liam and Tomas and friend Bernie
Leisa and Pat O’Sullivan, their two sons Liam and Tomas and friend Bernie Evans,
Darin Welch
Sharla Smith
Evans — were the highlight of the evening. They came from Invermere and played a variety of their Celtic based music. This included a well done demonstration of the English squeeze box by Bernie. Sharla Smith added some very fine classical music selections (You know, Bach and those guys.) on
winner of the ‘Best Singer of the East Kootenay’ finished the evening with a number of very fine C&W tunes. Another fine event at Centre 64. Many thanks to Dave and Carol for all their good work arranging for the performers. The next Homegrown evening will be January 25.
Gold Creek
Mac Ramsay
Old Spice
Dave Carlson
Centre 64’s beat up but beautiful sounding piano. Dave Carlson braved it on his own, without Carol on her bass, and sang some very fine tunes, ending with a sad (not really) song “They’re Hanging Me Tomorrow, so I can’t go with you in your dressup blue stripes to the prison ball.” Trena Spears, recent
Trena Spears
Craig Hillman
daily townsman
Local NEWS
Tuesday, DECEMBER 10, 2013
Page 3
Grant Lawrence tour ‘books’ into Cranbrook Ferdy Bell and
“This is by far the harshest winter I’ve ever toured through,” says Grant Lawrence. “I was in Bruno, Saskatchewan the other day — 47 degrees below zero! I’m just happy that’s it sunny. A very Canadian experience, to be sure! But despite all the cold weather, there’s more than enough warm-hearted people attending the events to make up for the frost and the snow.” Grant Lawrence has enjoyed a 30-year career as a self-propelled independently-driven Canadian artist. Cutting his teeth as an underground concert promoter (providing early Vancouver shows for luminaries such as Nirvana, Fugazi, Green Day, and Bad Religion, among many others) before fronting the Smugglers, an energetic and enjoyable retro-garage-rock bunch, Lawrence was a co-svengali at the renowned indie label Mint Records (the fledgling home of Neko Case, the New Pornographers, etc.) until signing
Author and CBC personality Grant Lawrence’s book tour arrives in Cranbrook today. up with the CBC in 1998, where he remains a nationally-popular fixture. His writing career took off with the 2010 release of Adventures in Solitude (detailing his lifelong love/hate relationship with his hometown of Desolation Sound), and continues with the recent release (and current author tour) of The Lonely End of the Rink: Confessions of a Reluctant Goalie (detailing his lifelong love/hate rela-
tionship with the goalie’s role in hockey). And Lawrence’s current author’s tour will bring him to the Manual Training School adjunct of the Cranbrook Public Library on the evening of Tuesday, Dec.10. “It wasn’t a chore to obtain time off from the CBC to flog the book — I’m on paternity leave!” Lawrence and his wife, singer Jill Barber, celebrated the birth of their first son in
mid-August. “Jill usually comes with me on the road, but she stayed home on this leg — which probably wasn’t a bad idea, if only for the brutal temperatures!” “I try to make the events as fun as possible,” Lawrence says. “I spend time talking back and forth about both books. I’ll give the people a slide show, I’ll screen an accompanying movie, and keep everything as light as
File
possible.” Lawrence’s current author tour will see him host over 30 events over three months, spanning the breadth of Canada. “Most of these shows occur in libraries, so you never know what the turnout’s going to be. In Bruno, Saskatchwan, there were 12 people; at the Toronto Public Library there were 250. Regardless, I give the same fun show every night; quality
versus quantity, y’know!” “One of the more memorable moments of the tour was hosting the Saskatoon author-event at Amigo’s,” Lawrence says. “I’d played there many, many times with the Smugglers, and it was a very cool feeling to return there as an author, and not as a touring musician.’ As a born-and-bred British Columbian, Lawrence is eager for the tour’s return swing west. “Some of my best author events are at libraries in the Kootenays, and I had a great time the last time I was in Cranbrook. And as of late I’ve got to be friends with the Good Ol’ Goats through their achievements with CBC Radio. I’m looking forward to returning to the Key City!”
Grant Lawrence presents his new book “The Lonely End of the Rink” Tuesday, Dec. 10, at the Manual Training School adjunct of the Cranbrook Public Library (1212 2nd St. North., Cranbrook); showtime 7 p.m.
Scott Niedermayer to be honoured at WFP Dec. 27 Submit ted
Hockey Hall of Fame inductee and Cranbrook native Scott Niedermayer will be in Cranbrook at Western Financial Place on Friday, Dec. 27, 2013. as the City of Cranbrook honours the NHL great with the unveiling of a bronze
plaque commemorating his illustrious hockey career. The plaque will be unveiled at ice level ahead of the Kootenay Ice home game against the visiting Spokane Chiefs starting at 7 p.m. Scott Niedermayer is expected to participate in a
ceremonial puck drop at centre ice. In the spring of 2013, Mayor Wayne Stetski and members of Council commissioned a bronze plaque which will be permanently mounted inside Western Financial Place along the con-
course. “Scott and Rob Niedermayer are two of Cranbrook’s best known and most respected citizens,” said Cranbrook Mayor Wayne Stetski, Mayor of the City of Cranbrook. “While both are incredible athletes,
Scott is the only player in hockey history to win every North American and international championship available to a Canadian player, including the Stanley Cup, the World Championship, an Olympic gold medal, the World Junior
Championship and the World Cup of Hockey — truly an amazing legacy!” For tickets to the game, please call the Kootenay Ice office at 250-417-0322. Office hours are 8:30 a.m. to 12 p.m. and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Lions getting set for tour of Cranbrook’s festive lights A r n e P e t rys h e n Townsman Staff
Once again this year the Cranbrook Lions Club will be putting on the annual Christmas Light Up tour. The tour gives seniors a chance
to hop on a special transit bus and see the light displays that homes all over the city have put up. For the past thirty years the City of Cranbrook has donated the
use of its transit buses and drivers have donated their time for the event, and this year is no different. The city approved the use of the transportation during the November 27 coun-
cil meeting. The mayor and some of council will be helping out at the event as well. This year the event is taking place on Sunday, December 15. The start time for seniors pick-
Arena concourse available for walking when the weather is inclement Submit ted
Walking outside might be frightful, but the Western Financial Place Concourse is delightful … With this current cold blast of winter and some slick sections of sidewalk around the City, residents are encouraged to go for a walk on the Western Financial Place concourse. Research continues to support
walking as an excellent form of exercise with a variety of personal benefits. These benefits include lowering blood pressure, reducing the risk of coronary heart disease and stroke and increasing bone density. Health benefits can be realized with as little as 30 minutes a day of brisk walking. The concourse is available from 5:30 am–10:00 pm daily, closed at 4:00 pm on Kootenay
ICE game days and closed all day during Special Events. Please note, to access the concourse, you will be required to purchase a one-time security card for $5, available at the Leisure Services front desk. The card system was implemented in 2009 to ensure better security for the facility and its patrons. For more information, contact Leisure Services at 250-489-0220.
ups will be 6 p.m. Al Manjak, Cranbrook Lions Club member, said the club greatly appreciates the city’s continued support of the event. Manjak said they expect between 150-250 seniors to participate in
POLL WEEK of the
the tour this year. One year they even had 300 people. The event has been well received in past years. Manjak said the buses will pick up seniors and then follow a route around the city to see the best displays the
community has to offer. Then after the tour they will all go back to the Eagle’s Hall for snacks and other festivities. “The wives of Lions members supply sandwiches and baking for the event,” Manjak said.
“When the snow falls as heavily at it did this week, is it best to shovel every couple of hours rather than wait and do it all at once?”
YEs: 90% NO: 10%
This week’s poll: “Is -25˚ too cold for skiing?” 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, DECEMBER 10, 2013
Weatoheurtlook Tonight -20
POP 20%
Friday -7
Local NEWS
Tomorrow -12 -13
Thursday -6 -9
Saturday
Sunday
POP 30%
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daily townsman
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Almanac Temperatures
High Low Normal...........................-2.3° ...............-10.2° Record.......................7.2°/1975 .......-28.9°/1972 Yesterday .....................-14.7° ..............-23.8° Precipitation Normal..............................................2.5mm Record...................................16.6mm/1995 Yesterday ......................................0.04 mm This month to date.........................23.6 mm This year to date........................1488.8 mm
Locals compete for next great hockey song Continued from page 1 “Really it’s a song about all of us,” he said. He thought what if Stomping Tom got together with Bob Dylan and a “beer league hacker like myself” and wrote a hockey song. The song features Neil Gorrie from Cranbrook on drums, Ferdy Belland from Cranbrook on bass, Ross on guitar and lead vocal, and Fraser Armstrong
from Kimberley sang harmony. The song was produced by Ray Gareau from Kimberley and Ross. “I would like to thank everybody that voted for us,” Ross said. The Pursuits is made up of the Armstrong family out of Kimberley, and Frazer Armstrong is also featured in Ross’s band, as well as playing
on the same hockey club. Armstrong said that he and Ross have a lighthearted rivalry going on. “I told him his song sucks but it has one positive — the backup vocals,” Armstrong joked. The Pursuits song is called All Directions and Armstrong even made an accompanying video available for view-
Precipitation totals include rain and snow
Tomorrows
unrise 8 30 a.m. unset 16 42 p.m. oonset 2 30 a.m. oonrise 1 42 p.m.
ec 17
an 1
ec 25
an 7
Across the Region Tomorro w Prince George -2/-6 Jasper -3/-10
Edmonton -12/-20
day e h t is y with a e d o n T onli paper o g I ews on. n my cripti subs
Banff -5/-11 Kamloops -5/-6
Revelstoke -3/-5
Kelowna -7/-9 Vancouver 3/1
Canada
today
Yellowknife Whitehorse Vancouver Victoria Saskatoon Regina Brandon Winnipeg Thunder Bay S. Ste. Marie Toronto Windsor Ottawa Montreal Quebec City Fredericton
p.cloudy flurries flurries flurries p.cloudy p.cloudy p.cloudy p.sunny p.cloudy flurries p.cloudy p.cloudy p.cloudy p.cloudy flurries p.cloudy
The World
today
tlanta Buenos ires etroit eneva avana ong ong iev ondon os ngeles Miami Paris Rome Singapore Sydney Tokyo Washington
Castlegar -5/-7
Calgary -2/-16
Cranbrook -12/-13
tomorrow
-29/-32 -9/-16 0/-2 1/-1 -22/-35 -20/-31 -21/-30 -20/-28 -15/-25 -9/-13 -6/-9 -5/-11 -5/-15 -3/-13 -4/-16 0/-10
p.cloudy-30/-39 snow -10/-19 rain/snow 3/1 showers 3/1 flurries -18/-25 flurries -16/-21 m.sunny-23/-27 sunny -22/-27 p.cloudy-17/-22 flurries -10/-13 p.cloudy -5/-9 flurries -5/-12 flurries -7/-19 p.cloudy -6/-17 p.cloudy -8/-23 p.cloudy -4/-17 tomorrow
showers 9/-1 p.cloudy 12/-1 sunny 24/15 sunny 28/16 windy -4/-8 flurries -3/-14 sunny 6/1 sunny 8/2 sunny 29/19 p.cloudy 29/20 p.cloudy 22/17 p.cloudy 22/18 cloudy -8/-15 flurries -3/-16 p.cloudy 10/5 p.cloudy 9/4 sunny 17/6 p.cloudy 19/8 p.cloudy 28/21 showers 28/20 sunny 6/0 m.sunny 5/0 sunny 14/4 sunny 14/3 tstorms 30/26 tstorms 30/26 sunny 27/19 showers 24/19 showers 16/7 p.cloudy 12/7 rain/snow 2/-4 sunny 2/-5 The Weather Network 2013
250-426-5201 www.dailytownsman.com
250-427-5333 www.dailybulletin.ca
ing on Youtube. The contest ends Wednesday, Dec. 11 at midnight. You can vote daily right up until that time. The website also
Pot referendum petition fizzles J e f f N ag e l Black Press
The Sensible BC campaign to spark the decriminalization of marijuana in B.C. is officially up in smoke after falling short of its goal. Pot activists got 210,000 signatures or about two-thirds of the 300,000 needed — 10 per cent of voters in all 85 B.C. ridings — for their initiative petition to potentially trigger a referendum. They had aimed for a target of 450,000 to provide a buffer against disqualified signatures. “It’s a pretty remarkable accomplishment,” Sensible BC head Dana Larsen. “We’ve definitely demonstrated a high level of organization and support for this cause. Had we been op-
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counts the number of times the song is played. To vote go to music. cbc.ca/#/HockeyNight-in-Canada-SongQuest.
erating under the rules of pretty much any other referendum system in the world, we would have qualified to be on the ballot.” He said the 4,500 registered petitioners — triple the number at the start of the 90-day campaign — reached the threshold required by Elections BC in 19 electoral districts and got at least eight per cent in five more. Successful local campaigns happened on much of Vancouver Island, the Kootenays and other parts of the Interior. But in the vote-rich Lower Mainland that holds the most districts, marijuana advocates came up short. They reached the 10 per cent threshold in just Vancouver-West End and Vancouver-Mount Pleasant, with no other local wins in the rest of Metro Vancouver or the Fraser Valley. They came closest in the three North Shore ridings with eight per cent plus. Sensible BC aimed to compel the province to pass legislation banning police from expending any time and resources on simple marijuana possession. The outcome is nowhere near the 700,000 signatures gathered by Fight HST forces en route to their winning referendum. But Larsen argues the province must now look “very seriously” at the marijuana issue, particularly as states such as Washington and Colorado move to full pot legalization. He says history shows even failed campaigns can have impact. A prior initiative in 2002 pushing proportional representation got 98,000 signatures but led to a citizens assembly on electoral reform and ultimately two referendum questions on the issue.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Opinion/Events
Ottawa puts on pipeline push
T
he federal government stepped up its sales pitch for new pipelines to the B.C. coast last week, as it prepares for the imminent release of the federal review panel’s report on the feasibility of the Enbridge Northern Gateway project. Transport Minister Lisa Raitt and Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver arrived in Vancouver to release an expert panel’s report on the current state of tanker safety on the West Coast. It was the first of two reports that tell the Stephen Harper government in blunt terms how steep a hill it must climb to enable energy exports to Asia. Oliver gave a speech to the Vancouver Board of Trade the following morning, where he vowed to implement one of the panel’s key recommendations. Legislation is coming to ensure that polluters, not taxpayers, must pay for any environmental damage from resource development and transport.
The panel was chaired by Gordon Houston, a former Prince Rupert harbourmaster and CEO of Port Metro Vancouver. Its report details the little-noticed fact that coastal waters around Victoria and Vancouver are already congested with shipping traffic, including Alaska oil tankers, and are at “very high risk” of an incident. BC Views Of course that Tom “very high risk” should be seen in Fletcher the B.C. context, where there has never been a serious oil spill at sea in a century of continuous petroleum shipping. The report calls for potential polluters to show they are prepared for a “worst case” discharge like the 1989 Exxon Valdez grounding in Alaska. It tells Ottawa the Canadian Coast Guard must be properly funded to serve as incident command. Oliver recounted efforts made so far, including annual tanker inspections, increased aerial surveillance and marine markers. And he reminded his audience that Canada’s only
energy export customer, the U.S., is about to surpass Saudi Arabia as the world’s largest petroleum producer. The second federal report was from Doug Eyford, a lawyer who has been meeting for months with aboriginal communities in northern B.C. and Alberta. He found, as Enbridge has reported, that many aboriginal communities are working with energy producers to get the economic activity they so desperately need. (Most urban people likely don’t believe this, because the conflict-addicted media report mostly protests.) Eyford’s report is no whitewash either. It reminds Ottawa that B.C.’s unresolved aboriginal title and a general lack of trust of both the energy industry and the federal government are key obstacles to the largest economic opportunity in the world today, the rise of Asia. Eyford was dealing with the profusion of gas pipeline projects that are set to cross northern B.C., as well as the Enbridge and Kinder Morgan Canada oil proposals. The entrenched opposition is against oil, particu-
larly heavy oil in tankers. Politics and protesters aside, these are the facts for B.C. The prosperous provinces in Canada today are Alberta, Saskatchewan and Newfoundland, based mainly on energy development. The rest are struggling. B.C. continues to lose skilled workers to Alberta, where oil sands development continues to expand despite the continuing chorus of U.S.-financed misrepresentation of its environmental impact. It’s a key moment in Canadian history. This is where we see if we can go beyond our status as a client state of the U.S. This year’s B.C. election, where pandering to urban protest backfired on the NDP, suggests a new seriousness in the public mood. More people understand today that our comfortable modern society with free-access health care is a fragile thing. We have it better than most of the world, for now. Tom Fletcher is B.C. legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press.
Genocide forestalled in the CAR
T
he Central African Republic (CAR) is one of the poorest and most inaccessible countries in the world. It’s the size of France, but it only has four and a half million people. It is a serious contender for the title of Worst Governed Country in Africa, and it is now teetering on the brink of a genocide. Something has to be done, and only France was able and willing to do it. France moves fast. There are already 600 French troops in the capital, Bangui, and another thousand will be moving out into country areas by the end of the week. (There are already 2,500 African peace-keeping troops in the CAR, but they lack transport and don’t have orders to shoot.) It has all happened so fast that France hasn’t even decided yet if it supports the man who currently claims to be the president of the CAR. Asked last Saturday if Michel Djotodia, who seized power last March, should stay as “interim president”, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said: “I don’t think we need (to create) more difficulties by adding the departure of the president.” On Sunday, however, President Francois Hollande said exactly the opposite: “We cannot leave in place a president who was not able to do anything, or even worse, has let (some very bad) things happen.” Fabius and Hollande may simply not have had time yet to talk to each other about Djotodia’s future — and besides, it doesn’t much matter: he controls virtually nothing. The CAR has had eight coups since it got its independence from France in 1960, and got eight bad leaders out of it. The worst was Jean-Bedel Bokassa, who proclaimed himself emperor of the “Central African Empire” and used his “Imperial Guard” to murder people, including schoolchildren, who defied his rule, but even he had little
Tuesday, DECEMBER 10, 2013
impact on life outside Bangui, the capital. The vast majority of people in the CAR are herdsmen or subsistence farmers who have little or no contact with the institutions of the state: the coup leaders and “presidents” came and went almost unnoticed. Until this time, because Michel Djotodia is the first Muslim president in a mostly Christian country, and he was brought to power by Muslim fighters many of whom don’t come from the CAR. Gwynne evenDjotodia has been trying to seize the presidenDyer cy for eight years. Coming from the Muslim northeast of the country, he recruited some fighters from that area – but up to 80 percent of the soldiers in his Seleka (alliance) militia were Muslim mercenaries whom he hired from Chad and Sudan. Except that he didn’t actually have the money to pay them; he just tacitly offered them the chance to loot if they won. So when he ordered Seleka to disband last March, having fought his way into power in Bangui, they did nothing of the sort. They hadn’t come all this way just to steal a few things and go home again. Like Djotodia, the mercenaries are in the game to get rich, but while he can now do his thieving from the presidential palace, they still have to do it in the traditional way. So the majority of Seleka’s fighters have broken up into bands of marauders who plunder, rape and burn their way around the country. Many of the country’s villages now lie abandoned, while their former inhabitants hide from the bandits in the fields or the woods. Tens of thousands may have already died in the more remote parts of the CAR, and at least four hundred were killed right in Bangui last week. Worse may follow: there is now a serious risk of genocide.
The Christian majority and the Muslim minority in the CAR have generally lived alongside each other in peace. However, the ex-Seleka mercenaries, being Muslims, tend to spare Muslim communities and target Christian ones. In self-defence, the Christians have begun banding together in vigilante groups — and there are a lot more Christians than Muslims. Inevitably, they suspect the local Muslims of helping the ex-Seleka killers, so they are starting to see them as enemies as well. In the circumstances of extreme deprivation and fear that now prevail in country areas — at least a million people are living in severe hunger or actual famine — this could quickly slide into a genocidal level of killing. That’s why France moved so fast. It got the approval of the United Nations Security Council and the African Union for the intervention last Thursday, and by Saturday it had troops on the ground in Bangui. Djotodia, who could not be found last week, has also belatedly endorsed the intervention. The need for speed is still paramount, and French Defence Minister Jean-Yves le Drian said that the job of disarming the ex-Seleka fighters got underway on Monday: “First we’ll ask nicely and if they don’t react, we’ll do it by force.” This is the second time this year that French troops have been sent in to stop an African state from collapsing into slaughter and anarchy. (The French intervention in Mali in January saved that country from conquest by jihadis.) It is deeply embarrassing for the African Union to admit that its own peace-keeping force cannot do the job in time, but it hasn’t let its pride get in the way of preventing a genocide in the CAR. Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist based in London.
Page 5
What’s Up?
KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDAR UPCOMING
British Columbia Government Retired Employees Association, Rky Mtn Br., hold their Christmas luncheon meeting at Days Inn, Sam Steele Rm, Cranbrook on Dec 11th at 12 noon. Info: Jack Hogan 250-426-2335. Marysville Community Church: Ladies Christmas Tea - Wear your favourite hat! Share your Christmas traditions. Wednesday, Dec. 11, 12-2pm. Everyone welcome. 730 - 302 Street, Marysville. Kootenay Christian Academy Christmas Band Concert, Dec. 12, 7:00 pm. Kootenay Christian Academy Preschool campus – 629 6th St. NW. Everyone is invited to attend. Info: Call Alissa @ 250426-0166 or kcacademy.ca CBAL - A Book Under Every Tree – donate gift-quality books (children, teen & adult) before Dec 13th for distribution with Christmas hampers & Angel Tree. Volunteers needed to sort and bag books; Anna 250-581-2112 or mail: wccranbrook@gmail. com The company dancers at Stages School of Dance will be holding a free dance workshop on a drop-of basis on Saturday, Dec. 14, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Dance Studio at #42-6th Avenue South, Cranbrook, for children six-16 years of age. The Stages Dance Parents Group will be selling baked goods to raise money for the company dancers. Live Outdoor Nativity with live donkey, sheep, youth actors and music from the Mormon Tabernacle Choir - Monday, Dec 16 and Tuesday Dec17 at Cranbrook LDS Chapel, 2210-2nd St. N., Cranbrook, 7:00pm. Hot chocolate and Christmas goodies will be served! Kootenay Christian Academy Elementary drama production is entitled Miracle at Midnight, Dec. 18 at 7:00 pm. Everyone is invited to attend. Kootenay Christian Academy, 1200 Kootenay St N. Monetary donations accepted at the door for Christmas dinner hampers. Info: Alissa @ 250- 426-0166 or kcacademy.ca A Cuba Christmas; Sunday, Dec. 29, Wildhorse Theatre, Fort Steele, 12 noon. Bring a non-perishable item for the Food Bank. DUE TO TECHNICAL DIFFICULTIES: events submitted may have been lost. If your event is not shown above, please resend to: production@dailybulletin.ca
ONGOING Dance/Practice: every Saturday. Practice from 7 to 8 PM, dancing until 11 PM. Dance With Me Cranbrook Studio, 206-14 A 13th Street, South, behind Safeway. Volunteers are needed to assist staff with childminding while parents attend programs at the Kimberley Early Learning Center. Come play!! Weekly or monthly for 2 hours. Diana 250427-0716 Royal Canadian Legion Branch 24; Friday Meat Draw: 4:30- 6:30, Saturday Meat Draw: 3:30-5:30. Bibles For Missions Thrift Store is changing seasons. Fall clothing, hoodies, costumes, snow suits & boots. Shop early for Christmas. Surprise sales. Open Tues-Sat, 10am-5pm, 824 Kootenay St. N., Cranbrook. “Loving Our Kids On Purpose” DVD Series by Danny Silk. Wednesdays 7-9pm Oct 16 to Nov 27. Location: House of Hope629 6th St. N.W. Cost: includes manual. Registration: www. ihopecranbrook.ca/loving-our-kids.html Info: 250-421-3784 CRANBROOK QUILTERS’ GUILD hold their meetings every 2nd & 4th Tuesday of each month at 7:15pm upstairs in the Seniors’ Hall, 125-17th Ave. S. Everyone welcome. Info: Donna at 250426-7136. School Days Art Exhibition, CDAC Office and Gallery 135 10th Ave S.,Tues – Fri 11-5pm Saturday 10-2pm, 250-426-4223, cdac@shaw.ca, www.cranbrookanddistrictartscouncil.com The Cranbrook Skating Club is celebrating their 60th Anniversary with an Ice Show on March 1st, 2014 at Western Financial Place. We are looking to research the Club’s history and also locate previous skaters, coaches and judges. Contact Debbie Mandryk @ 250-489-2318 or debbiemandryk@msn.com. Want to be in the 43rd annual Cranbrook Santa Claus Parade? Friday Nov. 29th. All net proceeds go to the Cranbrook Food Bank. Email santaclausparade@jcikootenay.com for registration form or call 250-409-4363. East Kootenay Women Executives & Entrepreneurs (EKWEE) meet the first Monday of every month at the Heritage Inn, Dining Room Annex, 7:00PM. Join us for of the menu dinner 5:307:00. Pay your own tab. Networking, share accomplishments, education. Bev Campbell 778-481-4883 COME SKATE WITH US. Ongoing registration available for Precan, Canskate, StarSkate, Adult & Powerskate programs. Check us out at www.cranbrookskating.com Canadian Cancer Society- if you have spare time and would like to volunteer, interested applicants can call 250-426-8916, drop by our office at #19-9th Avenue S, Cranbrook or go to www. fightwithus.ca and register as a volunteer. Place your notice in your “What’s Up?” Community Calendar FREE of charge. This column is intended for the use of clubs and non-profit organizations to publicize their coming events — provided the following requirements are met: • Notices will be accepted two weeks prior to the event. • All notices must be emailed, faxed or dropped off in person. No telephone calls please. • NOTICES SHOULD NOT EXCEED 30 WORDS. • Only one notice per week from any one club or organization. • All notices must be received by the Thursday prior to publication • There is no guarantee of publication. Notices will run subject to space limitations.
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An appointment with fear “I have nothing to say, and I’ll only say it once.” Floyd Smith, hockey coach
H
onestly, I am not one of these folk who check medical sites on Google then complain that they seem to suffer from every known disease except, maybe, house-maid’s knee. In fact, if I am told that I have a medical problem, I feel insulted. I am therefore anxious about visiting doctors. In a doctor’s ‘surgery’ you’ll inevitably encounter some acquaintance or other and you’ll ask, “How’s it going?” and be assured that things are all right. But then, when you find a seat and wait and pick up all sorts of ancient magazines plus an assortment of other people’s ailments, you think “If he’s okay, what’s he doing here?” then, “What am I doing here?” Local doctors have been good, diligent, patient and extremely kind to me and my family but, I’m sure, they’re not aware that they’re becoming a danger to my mental health. A week or so ago, I visited my doctor. It’s the duty of the elderly to visit doctors because, if we didn’t totter into their offices occasionally, they’d get bored. My doctor gave me a thorough going-over and said that, for my age, I was
doing all right. However, she said, “Your blood pressure is a little high.” I naturally believed that this was the case because I was in (a) a doctor’s office (b) the doctor was an attractive female, and so dismissed my concerns. The doctor then informed me that she would not need to treat me for this high pressure but that I should, on occasion, stick my arm in one of those infernal blood-pressure machines that lurk in drugstores. I ignored this instruction mainly because, fortunately, I seldom have need to visit a drugstore but, one day, I opted to Peter have a go. I read the inWarland structions carefully, ripped off my jacket and plunged my arm in. I pressed the start button and awaited the tidings. When I read the results and compared them with the “normal” figures on the machine, I almost passed out. I was, I reckoned, just a few short steps from death. Sweating all over, I went home to die. The next day I forced myself into yet another drugstore and tried again. And again I got the scary results. I scarcely slept a wink that night, fearing I might wake up deceased. Amazingly, I survived the weekend but, on Monday morning, I phoned the doctor’s office, was informed that my doctor would not be available for a week or
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
so and then, when I begged (on my knees) for another doctor, got myself an appointment. The new doctor informed me that my blood pressure was all right except for the supposedly low–diastolic- end. I sighed audibly. Then she suggested that there was a bit of a skip in my heart beat and that I should go and have an E.C.G. I did know what that was and so did as I was told. Later, I was shown a huge graph with my poor old heart skipping beats, the way it must have done when I first saw the girl who was to become my wife. The new doctor gave me a prescription, cancelled one my own doctor had prescribed then told me to come in a week later. The following week, I was in such a panic that I dragged my old body up several mountains without any malfunction of my aged heart, and began to relax. Coming in one day, I noticed that someone at “Regional Health” had phoned me. My heart skipped several beats in a row, so I sat down and made myself some tea, wondering if it were to be my final “cuppa” on this earth. Eventually, I called the number back, explaining who I was and what might be the problem might be, but nobody at the far end had any clues as to what it was all about. I sat down at my computer and started work on my own obituary, wondering if I had time to finish it.
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.
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SPORTS BRIEFS Toronto trades Rudy Gay, Aaron Gray and Quincy Acy to Sacramento Kings TORONTO, Ontario - Rudy Gay’s brief time with the Toronto Raptors has come to an end. The Raptors confirmed Monday that the 27-yearold small forward, along with centre Aaron Gray and forward Quincy Acy, has been traded to the Sacramento Kings. The Raptors receive guards John Salmons and Greivis Vasquez, forward Patrick Patterson and centre Chuck Hayes in return. Gay averaged 19.4 points per game, 7.4 rebounds and 2.2 assists for the Raptors this season. The move will free up significant cap space for the Raptors. The six-foot-eight, 230-pound Gay was the Raptors’ highest paid player with a contract that pays him US$17.8 million this season with a $19.3-million player option for next season. Canadian Press
SUBMITTED PHOTO
Gord McArthur, bottom right, heads up a climbing structure during a World Cup event last year. McArthur will soon be entering another season of competition, which includes the Olympic Games in Sochi, Russia.
Local climber preparing for Olympics Gord McArthur is fundraising to support his passion of competing in World Cup and Sochi Games TRE VOR CR AWLEY Sports Editor
The Olympics are just a few months away, and Cranbrook will be represented as local athlete Gord McArthur will be competing for Canada in sport climbing. McArthur got the nod to represent Canada earlier this year, and has been busy training for both the Sochi Games and the UIAA World Cup circuit. However, there are significant expenses that come with competing at the highest level of any sport in the world, and climbing is no different, as the World Cup circuit takes McAr-
thur across the world from South Korea to Russia and countries in Europe. With a budget of $23,000, the Cranbrook athlete has raised a large chunk of what he needs already, and is inviting the community to help support him towards his climbing passion. “This town has already been so amazing,” said McArthur. “So many people have already stepped up which is really great.” Donations can be made at the East Kootenay Community Credit Union or by visiting McArthur’s website at: machavokadventure.com/donations.
Most of McArthur’s financial support has come from local individuals and businesses, without help from the Canadian Olympic Committee or Own the Podium, an umbrella sports funding program that supports Olympic athletes. “So much of the town has already come together,” said McArthur. He will take off for the World Cup circuit in January, hitting a few events on the tour before representing Canada at the Sochi Games. Funds raised will go to the basics that come with competing in professional sports— things such as flights, food, ho-
tels and rental cars. Though McArthur has been competing in the World Cup for the last few years, he’s stepped up his training in the summer with the help of a sports psychologist to prepare for the mental pressure of competing against the world’s best. “It came quick,” said McArthur. “It came really quick, faster than I expected. But I’m ready. Everything is in place, for the most part.” He’s already done some overseas training in South Korea on competition-specific structures and will take off for close to two months at the beginning of January.
Stamps RB Cornish wins 2013 Lou Marsh award C ANADIAN PRESS
TORONTO - No one was more surprised by Jon Cornish capturing the 2013 Lou Marsh award as Canada’s top athlete than the Calgary Stampeders running back himself. Cornish narrowly defeated Milos Raonic, the first Canadian men’s singles tennis player to achieve a top-10 world ranking, and Kaillie Humphries, who dominated the women’s bobsled circuit this season,
for the honour. “I really didn’t know anything was going on, I was just getting ready to go for a day of work,” said Cornish, employed as a bank rep in Calgary during the off-season. “My phone is always on silent so my iPad was getting most of my notifications and it started making a lot of noise and so I was wondering but I was playing video games so I wasn’t really too worried about checking my iPad.
“But then (Stampeders communications director) Jean Lefebvre called and informed me that I had been selected . . . this was a nice little addition to my day.” And in a truly CFL moment, the 29-year-old Cornish spoke to reporters during a conference call while on a break at the bank Monday. Cornish became just the third Canadian to win the CFL’s outstanding player award after rushing for a league-high
1,813 yards. That broke his own record for the most rushing yards in a season by a Canadian. The native of New Westminster, B.C., also led the league with 2,157 yards from scrimmage and 14 TDs en route to being named the CFL’s top Canadian for a second straight season. He’s the first Canadian to win the CFL’s top player award since Ottawa Rough Riders tight end Tony Gabriel in 1978 and the first CFL player
to claim the Lou Marsh award since legendary Ottawa quarterback Russ Jackson did so in 1969. Damian Warner, figure skater Patrick Chan and Chicago Blackhawks captain Jonathan Toews were the other award finalists. The trophy is awarded annually to Canada’s top athlete as selected by representatives of Canada’s leading news organizations. It’s named after a former Toronto Star sports editor.
NHL board of governors approves $5.2-billion, 12-year Rogers TV deal
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. - The NHL board of governors has approved the $5.2-billion, 12-year Canadian television rights deal with Rogers Communications Inc. It came as no surprise that the deal, which begins next season and runs through 2025-26, passed as it will be a major windfall around the league. Commissioner Gary Bettman was set to announce next year’s projected salary cap during Monday’s meeting at the Inn at Spanish Bay. An increase of roughly 10 per cent from this year’s upper limit of US$64.3 million was expected. That would represent a major bounce-back for the league less than year removed from the end of a contentious lockout. Teams were allowed to spend up to US$70.2 million during the lockout-shortened 2013 season as part of a transition year before the cap went down in accordance with the 50/50 split of hockey-related revenue that was agreed to as part of the new collective bargaining agreement. Canadian Press
Roy Halladay signs one-day contract so he can retire as a Toronto Blue Jay
TORONTO, Ontario - Roy Halladay is retiring as a Toronto Blue Jay. The Blue Jays announced Monday they’ve signed the veteran pitcher to a deal that will allow the righthander to retire in Toronto colours. Halladay was Toronto’s first-round selection in the 1995 major league draft and pitched 12 seasons with the Blue Jays, winning the 2003 Cy Young award. Halladay spent his final four major-league seasons with the Philadelphia Phillies, winning a second Cy Young award in 2010. “Roy is one of the most professional and dominant pitchers of his generation and the Toronto Blue Jays are very proud and honoured he will retire as a member of our organization,” Jays president and CEO Paul Beeston said in a statement. “His talent and determination led our club for many years on the field and his work ethic provided an example for all to follow.” Halladay amassed a career record of 203-105 in 416 games, 390 being starts. The eight-time all-star also has an earned-run average of 3.38. Canadian Press
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HOROSCOPES by Jacqueline Bigar
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Look at an issue that could have created fireworks. Others appreciate your passion, as long as it is not directed at them. A reversal on your part could shake up the status quo. Remember, for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. Tonight: A long-overdue chat. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You might be taken aback by everything that is going on around you. Experience your feelings rather than act on them; otherwise, you might just be adding fuel to the fire. Once you reach a realization, a conversation becomes far more plausible. Tonight: Not to be found. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Honor a change involving a friend. You can’t take back words you’ve said. Though you could have a strong reaction, try discussing your feelings without inflaming a situation. Working as a group proves far more effective than being independent. Tonight: Where you want to be.
Cleaning
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CANCER (June 21-July 22) Take a stand, move forward and handle a problem. Your sensitivity mixes well with your practical nature. Together, these assets will help you wade through muddy waters and come out sparkling clean. Know that you have what it takes, and trust yourself. Tonight: In the limelight. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Read between the lines as you walk into a situation where people have strong opinions. Understand the underlying issue. Help others see what they have in common as opposed to what is different. Communication allows greater give-and-take. Tonight: Return calls, then decide. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A partner could be somewhat difficult. You might have a strong reaction as a result. Resist going off on a spending spree in this mood. A discussion is necessary. You understand the importance of timing; just wait. Tonight: Spend time with your best friend. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Tundra
Defer to others. You could have a difficult time maintaining your authority. Walk in the other direction, and refuse to be a part of this situation. The other parties might be floored, but they will look at their actions as a result. Tonight: Entertain suggestions, but do what you want. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Listen to what is being offered, even if you don’t like what you hear at first. Pace yourself and accomplish what you must before following someone’s chosen path. You have the drive to get a lot done. Stay focused. Tonight: You deserve to take it easy. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Your playfulness might not be in tune with others’ moods. Someone you care about could be on the warpath. This person’s actions and words might surprise you. Be a good listener, and look for solutions. Your willingness to help will come through. Tonight: Time for fun. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Stay centered, and know where you are coming from. Avoid testing out ideas on others right
now. An unexpected insight tumbles into your lap and forces you to regroup. You can’t avoid a personal matter and/or an issue involving real estate. Tonight: Have an important discussion. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You are coming from a good place, but suddenly you might find yourself feeling angry. Focus on how you can change the outcome of the situation. Do not rely on the tried and true. Have an important discussion when you feel more settled. Tonight: Hang out at a favorite haunt. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Be aware of your spending. No matter what you do, you seem to make choices that could cause a problem. Perhaps you need more information and feedback, as you have yet to see the clear path. You will be given time and openness. Tonight: Pay your bills first. BORN TODAY Poet Emily Dickinson (1830), TV newscaster Chet Huntley (1911), actor/singer Raven-Symone (1985)
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ANNIE’S MAILBOX by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Annie: I’ve been employed for two months at a large retail outlet and have gotten to know many of the people who work there. “Amanda” is in the food section, and I am in the clothing department. I’m a straight woman, and she is bisexual. Two weeks ago, the two of us went out to dinner for her birthday. Since then, I have developed strong feelings for her. I asked Amanda to dinner the other night, and she turned me down, saying she had plans. Yesterday, another co-worker told me she saw Amanda having lunch with a woman who works in the automotive section. The co-worker said the two of them were very touchy. This made me really jealous and sad. Should I tell Amanda I have feelings for her? If so, how do I do that? -- Confused and Maybe in Love Dear Confused: There are different types of jealousy. Amanda seems to be a popular girl. If you consider yourself to be straight, you should examine whether your jealousy is romantic in nature or whether it’s the type that female friends develop when one of them picks a different “best friend.” If you want a romantic relationship, let Amanda know by asking her again to lunch, dinner, a movie or other entertainment outside of work. If she is repeatedly “busy,” it means she is not interested. Dear Annie: Seven years ago, my closest cousin died. His wife wanted me to have his wardrobe, which included a tuxedo. This cousin’s daughter is going to be married soon, and the wedding is black tie. Would it be proper to wear that tux? I don’t intend to broadcast the fact that it belonged to her late father, but it seems wearing it would allow a part of him to watch his only child marry. What do you think? - DressedUp Cousin Dear Cousin: We think it’s a lovely idea. No one will know that you are wearing this particular tuxedo, except perhaps your cousin’s widow. If she mentions it, please tell her what you told us -- that you thought it would allow a small part of him to be there in spirit. We hope she will find it as touching as we do. Dear Annie: I hope it’s not too late to comment on the letter from “Can’t Believe Adults Act This Way,” whose daughter, a teacher, was being bullied by her co-workers. This happened to me when I was younger. One day, one member of that group gave me some advice. She said, “Play dumb and pretend you don’t know they are talking about you. Always be pleasant, say ‘hello’ and ‘good morning’ to everyone, even when they do not respond. Join them in the lounge. Make a pleasant general comment, and then turn to your magazine or whatever you have to do. Always have something to occupy your time. If you have to ask anyone a question about work, ask it in the lounge in the presence of everyone. If they make a nasty comment, just brush it off and pretend that you didn’t realize it was nasty. When you really need a breather, occasionally go off on your own, but don’t make it obvious.” And I also made it a point to look fabulous every day. This may not appeal to everyone in such a position, but it worked for me. It was terribly hard for the first few months, and then it became a routine. Eventually, the ringleader asked me where I was when I didn’t come into the lounge the day before. After that, I was completely accepted by the group. I have lived by that rule ever since and have passed it on to my children. One cannot fight with someone who will not fight. You keep your dignity and, above all, gain their respect. It works in school, at the workplace and even with your own family. -- Yvonne from Montreal Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. To find out more about Annie’s Mailbox and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2013 CREATORS.COM
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Peg Wild Word News Busi PBS NewsHour Nature NOVA Extreme Israel: Future 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 The Sing-Off Kelly Clarkson News Jay KHQ-NBC Ellen Show Hocke NHL Hockey SportsCentre Hocke 24 CH Motor SportsCentre SportsCentre TSN SportsCentre Party Poker Prime Time Sportsnet Con. Rodeo From Las Vegas. Oil Change Sportsnet Con. Hocke Hocke NET UEFA Soccer The Young News News News Hour Ent ET Survivor Parenthood Kelly Clarkson News GLOBAL BC Queen Latifah Frontiers of Waterfront Kimono The King’s Brass 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 Kelly Clarkson Survivor Parenthood News Hour Fi ET The CICT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent Kelly Clarkson Survivor Parenthood News Hour ET The CIVT The Young Par Spong C. Dog/Christmas CBro Wipeout Funny Videos Middle Young Boys Spla YTV Squir T.U.F. Spong Mon Bethenny Simp Two Two Mod Theory Theory The X Factor News Mod Arsenio Hall KAYU-FOX Steve Harvey Cooper 360 Piers Morgan AC 360 Later 11th ICYMI Piers Morgan Cooper 360 AC 360 Later CNN Situa Cross E. B. OutFront Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Jail Jail Jail Jail Jail Jail Jail SPIKE Cops Jail An HGTV Beach Houses Holmes Makes Hunt Hunt Hawaii Hawaii Hawaii Hawaii Hunt Hunt Hawaii Hawaii Hawaii Hawaii An Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Rodeo Girls Duck Duck Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty A&E The First 48 Deal Deal Cheerleaders Cheerleaders Reba Reba Cheerleaders Cheerleaders Reba Reba CMT Gags Gags Undercover Snowglobe Chr Undercover All She Wants for Christmas On Strike for Christmas Cedar Cove Cedar Cove Will You Merry W Christmas Lodge Covert Affairs NCIS: LA NCIS Covert Affairs NCIS: LA SHOW Christmas Lodge Daily Planet Punkin Chunkin 2013 Porter Porter Mighty Planes Punkin Chunkin 2013 Porter Porter DISC Mighty Planes ExNightmares Prin Prin Matchmaker Matchmaker Prin Prin Friend Friend Matchmaker Matchmaker SLICE ExHalf-Ton Killer Transformed Behind Bars Behind Bars Behind Bars Behind Bars Transformed Half-Ton Killer TLC Toddler-Tiara Flashpoint Blue Bloods Mob City The Listener Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Mob City BRAVO The Listener ReGenesis The End of Silence United 93 Air Force One EA2 Char Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle Groj. Johnny Johnny Regu Gum Drag Johnny Deten Adven Ftur Family Amer. Robot Archer Fugget TOON Scoob Loone Jim Dog Phi Phi ANT Austin Star New Year Good Luck Austin Next Good Jessie Wiz Prin FAM Jessie Lego Dog Theory Theory Brown Payne Brown Payne Mod Sein Family Family Amer. Planet 51 Broth WPCH Middle Mod Sein Gas Theory Parks Theory Match Match Just/Laughs Gags Gas Theory Com Theory Key Daily Colbert COM Sein You’ll Never Get Rich (:45) You Were Never Lovelier The Band Wagon Silk Stockings TCM Trouble Along the Way Stor Stor Stor Stor Dog and Beth Stor Stor Stor Stor Dog and Beth Stor Stor Repo Whis OUT Mantracker Mountain Men MASH MASH Mountain Men Pawn Pawn Amer Amer Cajun Cajun Ice Pilots NWT Yukon Gold HIST Outlaw Bikers Stargate SG-1 Highway Killer Contact Inner Castle Star Trek: Voy. Highway Killer SPACE Inner Planet Castle Home Alone 2: Lost in New York Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (:01) Home Alone 4 AMC Home Alone 4 UFC Tonight UFC Reloaded FOX Sports FOX Football FOX Sports FOX Sports FS1 FOX Football Moves Pitch Pitch Goldfinger Moves DTOUR Eat St. Eat St. Christmas Extr. Goldfinger (:40) Hunting Season (:15) Cowboys & Aliens The Host (:40) Pitch Perfect MC1 (3:45) Albert Nobbs Maury Family Family News News Two Two 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 (:45) Rails & Ties Love That Boy Steel Magnolias Mary Reilly The Shining EA1 Mur Murder, She... Eas F’wlty The Midwife Downton A. Christmas-Willow Creek Child’s Xmas Super Popoff VISN Road-Avonlea Trial Trial Top 10 Simp Cleve South South Chil Chil Conan Simp Cleve South South 102 102 MM VideoFlow Mange Union TJ C.-B. 30 vies Épi Les enfants de la télé TJ Nou TJ C.-B. 105 105 SRC Terre Terre Entrée prin
His and Hers Lingerie by Shalimar
- Robes - Lounger Pants - Nighties - Boxers - Bras & Briefs
ToTTen’s
Fresh
Christmas
Trees
PAGE 9
IT’S NEVER TOO EARLY TO START
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Key City Answering Service Communication Center for the Kootenays! Talk to a Real Person 24/7. • Work Alone Check-In Service • Emergency Service • Basic Answering Service • Dispatch Service • Pager Rental / Service 218-B 1525 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook, BC V1C 3S7
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Help Wanted YRB YELLOWHEAD
Thank You!
ROAD & BRIDGE Yellowhead Road & Bridge (Kootenay) Ltd. is looking for Mechanics for our New Denver & Creston facilities. Applicants will need to hold a valid TQ for Heavy Duty or Commercial Transport, class three drivers licence and Motor Vehicle Inspection licence would be an asset. Resumes can be faxed to
250-352-2172 or e-mailed to
kootenay@yrb.ca
ADVERTISE in the LARGEST OUTDOOR PUBLICATION IN BC The 2014-2016 BC Hunting Regulations Synopsis
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Lost & Found Lost: 1yr old, male cat, grey with white spot on nose. Dec. 1st, Wallinger Ave area, near Fas Gas, Kimberley. Please call Megan - 250-427-0821 LOST: CANON camera, in blue case, Monday, Nov. 25th. Inside Heritage Inn or in the parking lot. Small reward offered. Please call 250-426-0673 LOST IN Cranbrook on Dec. 3rd, menâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s brown leather wallet. If found, please call collect to 1-250-428-4750
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To our family and friends for an entertaining and memorable 50th Anniversary. A Special â&#x20AC;&#x153;Thank Youâ&#x20AC;? to our dear friend, Judy Cave for organizing the evening. B.A & Gerry
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Help Wanted FARM LABOURER wanted
by HyTech Production Ltd., in the Kimberley BC area. April 2014 to Sept. 2014. Outdoor labour, lifting and working with hand tools. $12.00 to $13.00/hr. Apply in writing to Box 1454, Lethbridge AB, T1J 4K2 or fax 403-345-3489, Attn: BC labourer.
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to carry out field work from April to Oct., 2014 in Cranbrook area (approx. 31 weeks) for Monsanto Canada Inc, 710 Industrial Road #3, Cranbrook. Valid BC Drivers License an asset; Farming background an asset; $13.00/hr, approx. 8 hrs./day and 5 days/week, plus 4% vacation pay. Please fax application to 250-426-4215.
Home Care/Support DEAFBLIND Services Society is looking for a caregiver for a young deaf blind man in Cranbrook, BC. This is a casual union position of up to 16 hrs per week and starting at $15.93/hr. A unique opportunity to support a young man who is deafblind in his home and in the community. He has person/family centered program. On site training around deafblindness. The successful candidate is motivated, energetic and a team player. Requires a valid driverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s license/abstract, First Aid Certificate, Criminal Record Check Preferred training or experience: Experience with augmentative communication, experience with supporting individuals with developmental disabilities in family or group home settings, can work independently or with a team, has good computer and communication skills Please email resume to cpearce48@hotmail.com
Kootenay Monument Installations 2200 - 2nd Street South Cranbrook, BC V1C 1E1 250-426-3132 1885 Warren Avenue Kimberley, BC V1A 1R9 250-427-7221 www.mcphersonfh.com
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End of Life? Bereaved? May We Help?
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Trades, Technical GPRC, FAIRVIEW Campus, Alberta needs Power Engineering Instructors. No teaching experience, no problem. Please contact Brian Carreau at 780-835-6631 and/or visit our website: www.gprc.ab.ca JOURNEYMAN AUTOMOTIVE Service Technician(s) in Hanna Alberta. Hanna Chrysler Ltd. offers competitive wages from $32/hour, negotiable depending on experience. Bright, modern shop. Full-time permanent with benefits. Friendly town just 2 hours from major urban centres. Website: hannachrysler.ca. Fax 403-854-2845; Email: chrysler@telusplanet.net.
Ph: 250.426.6006 Fx: 250.426.6005 2104D 2nd Street S. Cranbrook, BC theďŹ&#x201A;owerpot@shaw.ca
N
ewspapers are not a medium but media available for everyone whenever they want it. They are growing and evolving to meet the consumerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s interests and lifestyles and incorporating the latest technological developments. This is certainly great for readers and advertisers. SOURCE: NADBANK JOURNAL SEPT/08
Cost of PROMOTING a little more than you planned for?
1/6 20 We have something the competition doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t â&#x20AC;&#x201C; daily coverage!
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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.
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Your community foundation.
We build endowment funds that benefit the community forever and help create personal legacies Investing in community for good and forever. 250.426.1119 www.cranbrookcf.ca
In times of grief, these caring professionals are here to serve and comfort your family.
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DECEMBER 10, 2013 PAGE Tuesday,TUESDAY, December 10, 2013 PAGE 11 11
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I Love You Baby! Welcome Home Daniel P – YOU are the best gift we could ever hope for. Love, Mom & Dad For all the folks at NAME BUSINESS – I couldn’t ask for a bunch of better co-workers than you. Merry Christmas & thanks! For Charlene – Together we will have the best Christmas! Daniel Jonathan and “Spot”!
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(250) 426-8504
Merchandise for Sale
Misc. for Sale 5 PERSON Hot Tub. Good running condition.$1000./obo. 250-427-6683
2006 Dodge Caravan
Full tune-up, new brakes (front), safety inspected. NOW ONLY
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4,99500
EK Transmission Ltd.
EK Transmission Ltd.
1019 Kootenay St. N., Cranbrook, BC • 426-4157
1019 Kootenay St. N., Cranbrook, BC • 426-4157
DL#29679
Read the DAILY newspaper for local happenings!
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1998 TOYOTA 4RUNNER SR5
V6, 4Dr, 4X4. PS/PB/power windows, cruise. Excellent condition with 330,000Km. Trailer hitch, winter rated tires
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Community Newspapers
MARKET PLACE To advertise using our “MARKET PLACE” in the Cranbrook Daily Townsman, Kimberley Daily Bulletin and The Valley, call us at 250-426-5201, ext. 202.
We’re at the heart of things™
-VOICE LESSONS Kimberley and Cranbrook. Teacher Chuck Bisset. Over 20 years teaching experience plus 15 years professional singer. Call 250-919-0073
Business/Office Service
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STEEL BUILDING. “The big year end clear out!” 20x22 $4,259. 25x24 $4,684. 30x34 $6,895. 35x36 $9,190. 40x48 $12,526. 47x70 $17,200. One end wall included. Pioneer Steel 1-800-668-5422 or online: www.pioneersteel.ca
Misc. Wanted
Apt/Condo for Rent 3BDRM
APARTMENT.
$950./mo. Includes heat, basic cable, internet, parking and shared laundry, on-site. Call Peter @ East Kootenay Realty. 250-908-0045. Sorry, not pets. References required. KIMBERLEY TOWNSITE. 2bdrm apartment. $685./mo. + utilities and D.D. 306-716-0913
Homes for Rent CRAWFORD Bay House Rental, 3.5 bdrm, dbl garage, new appliances, $1200 + utilities (rent negot. for upkeep) 250365-1005
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SERVICES GUIDE
Just $10 for 25 words!!
KIMBERLEY, FURNISHED studio suite. $495./mo. Includes basic cable, internet, heat, laundry available on-site. Call Peter @ East Kootenay Realty. 250-908-0045 or email peter@ekrealty.com. Sorry, no pets. References required.
Want to Rent PROFESSIONAL, LOOKING for bachelor or 1bdrm apt./suite for long term. Beginning February, 2014 or sooner. N/S, N/P. 250-505-3453
1. Frequency: The online newspaper Web site user accesses the Internet almost twice as much as the general user. 2. Credibility: The credibility of the newspaper brand
extends to the advertiser. Fifty-nine percent of Web users agree that online advertising is more believable from a trusted Web site. Online, newspaper Web sites are the dominant local media site in most markets.
3. Targeted: If you want to focus on a particular backyard, advertising in an online newspaper is more personal, and more relevant because it is local. Newspapers also publish a plethora of niche sites (youth, women, movie fans, seniors, are illustrative) for virtually any demographic advertisers could possibly hope to reach. Web site users purchase online compared with 49 percent of general users. Thirty-nine percent of online newspaper users have incomes higher than $75,000; 65 percent own their homes. Fifty percent of online newspaper users have spent more than $500 online in the last six months, and 63 percent of online newspaper users prefer to find out about new products through the Internet.
5. Content: After e-mail, the most preferred Web
Contact these business for all your service needs!
content is news, sports, financial information, entertainment news, and shopping – in that order. Sixtytwo percent of Internet users visit online newspapers for local news, compared with 39 percent for the local TV station Web site and 23 percent for the local radio station site. Not even Yahoo! or AOL’s Digital City can top this.
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.
6. Retailers prefer newspaper sites: Sixty-five percent
BEAR NECESSITIES
KOOTENAY BOOKKEEPING & PAYROLL SERVICES
HOME WATCH SERVICE Planning a winter holiday and need your home checked for insurance? • Snow removal• mail p/u• plants• cat care & more.
Providing all accounting and tax services for small business in the Cranbrook and Kimberley area.
BONDED & INSURED
Email Joanne Fraser at
kootenaybooks@gmail.com
For Peace of Mind Travel call 250-464-9900 www.thebearnecessities.ca
LEAKY BASEMENT
HANDY B8MAN *Residential Snow Blowing *Home Improvement projects, * Odd jobs and dump runs.
Call Reeve at 250-422-9336 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. SuperDave offers affordable, superior service & most importantly; Honesty. SuperDave works Saturdays & evenings too! Call SuperDave (250)421-4044 www.superdaveconsulting.ca
•
Foundation Cracks
•
Damp Proofing
•
Drainage Systems
•
Foundation Restoration
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!
Jody ~ 250-919-1575
www.CHARLTONHOMES.CA
TIP TOP CHIMNEY SERVICES
“Sweeping the Kootenay’s Clean”
Chimney Sweeping Fireplace & Woodstove Servicing Visual Inspections and Installations Gutter Cleaning Available Call for Free Estimate from a W.E.T.T Certified Technician Richard Hedrich 250-919-3643 tiptopchimneys@gmail.com
TRIPLE J
WINDOW CLEANING
~Residential~ For a brighter outlook, call Jim Detta
250-349-7546 «Winter Special» 10% off until end of December Outside only
LE • REC YC
E • RE C YCL
and
Ten Reasons to Advertise on a Newspaper Website
4. Purchasing power: Sixty-two percent of newspaper
STEEL BUILDINGS/metal buildings 60% off! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-4572206 or visit us online at: www.crownsteelbuildings.ca
Suites, Upper
Email to: classifieds@ dailytownsman.com or drop to; 822 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook and 335 Spokane St. Kimberley.
5,49500
GIRO
Rentals
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$
250 430-7446
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Contractors • Construction • Renovations • Roofing • Drywall-large or small • Siding • Sundeck Construction • Aluminum Railings We welcome any restorational work!
stk#1360
2006 Chevy Uplander
LE • REC YC
Merry Christmas to the Gardeners! Wish we could be there with you. With love and warm wishes, Steve & Louise
stk#8441
Full tune-up, new front brakes, fully serviced (engine & transmission)
D!
UCE
RED
LE • REC YC
For my one and only Marsha – Wishing you a Christmas that’s as special as you are. Love, John
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Need help with current events?
of retailers report that newspaper sites are efficient in assisting them in meeting marketing needs compared with other sites.
7. High profile: Research.net reports that, among top executives (CEO, CIO, CFO or owner/partner), Internet advertising ranked above over all other media measured for: “Where I prefer to find our about new products,” “Where I prefer to receive information about companies,” and “Where modern, up-to-date brands advertise.” At the same time, these early adopters of technology also skew younger than the traditional newspaper audience. Forty percent of online newspaper users are aged 18-35. 8. Reinforcement: Seventy-six percent of online newspaper users also read the newspaper in the past seven days, and repetition increases awareness. The Internet Advertising Bureau found that, by increasing the number of online banners from one to two per week, branding results on three key metrics increased 42 percent making online a great, inexpensive way to increase the branding lift of traditional campaigns. 9. Quality: Seventy-five percent of advertisers generally said newspaper Web sites’ advertising was as good or better than other Internet sites.
10. Mix: A variety of recent studies have demonstrated the power of online, when included in a mix with traditional media, to elaborate the brand message. Newspaper print and online products combined have the highest penetration and most desirable audience of any other local medium. SOURCE: Newspaper Association of America
Call today and start online advertising. 250-426-5201
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dailytownsman.com
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Off Leash
DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN
PAGE 12 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2013
Don’t get me wrong; for the most part I like snow. As a matter of fact, the first thing I do every morning when I am let out of doors is to roll rigorously in its fresh whiteness. I find making these canine snow angels invigorating, refreshing, and fur cleansing. However there is always the possibility of having too much of a good thing.
An unrestrained dogumentary. One good turn deserves another: Boulder’s veterinarian, Jamie Levine, showing off how hominids have used their ingenuity to get around in winter.
You see, for many of us dogs, once snow reaches a certain depth it greatly limits our ability to move in, on and through it. Oh yes. you humans have invented all manner of contrivance to circumvent this predicament — snowshoes, skis, snowmobiles and who could forget K-Tel’s Super Slider Snow Skates) — but what of we four- leggers? On the occasions that we do accompany our people out into wilds to play in the powder, it is not just the depth of the stuff that makes things problematic. Being of the golden retriever persuasion, Dog Taylor and I have long blonde coats that are, if I do say so myself, handsomely stylish. In the snow however, they are not completely functional. The longer, feathery guard hairs that adorn our flanks, chest, and the ruff of our necks, have the unfortunate habit of allowing snow to stick to them. These dingle-ball-like adhesions would be of little consequence except for the fact that they continue to grow in size and number until we find ourselves virtually incapacitated by their weight and bulk.
Another retriever trait that has proven maladaptive when it comes to winter wandering is our webbed feet. That skin between our toes makes us powerful swimmers but poor snowshoers. I can barely go a kilometre before I have to stop and try to chew off the ice that has accumulated between my toes. This oral manipulation is our only recourse since the powers that be saw fit not to bless us with opposable thumbs. This has unfortunate consequences, since during this de-icing process a goodly amount of saliva is deposited between said toes, causing a redoubling of snow and ice accumulation. To my human’s credit he has attempted to rectify the situation by providing us with cute little doggy booties. They were — now how do I put this delicately — a total waste of #&$=# time. Truth be told, these tribulations that winter presents to Goldens and other longer haired canines would be endured without comment or complaint if it meant we could continue to be outside with our humans during this frozen season. Unfortunately, humans being the overly compassionate and empathetic species that they are, see our discomfort and feel compelled to intervene. In short, they decide to leave us at home, with its central heating, so that we don’t have to suffer the wading through drifts, iced toes and dingle-ball syndrome.
The human heart may well be in the right place but please heed this advice gentle reader. The next time you go skiing, or snowshoeing, or tobogganing and leave your dog at home, please take him on an extra long walk later, or at least spend some quality time scratching his belly, so as to ease his concerns over being abandoned by the pack. And if you can’t do that, maybe take those fancy Italian shoes you are so fond of and put them some place safe. Just sayin’. Photos and word processing by Dan Mills
Dogless in the Mountains: Boulder’s person in his natural state of affairs; going down hill fast. Dingle-ball Syndrome: Taylor gladly bares her icy burden if it means she can spend a winter’s day in the mountains with her Mike. Taylor demonstrates to her Mike that it can be done with out snowshoes.
Dog Gabby starts the day off right by exuberantly making snow angels. Deep enough for ya? Boulder wades the drifts without complaint.
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