Cranbrook Daily Townsman, April 03, 2014

Page 1

THURSDAY

< Whitecaps looking to boost presence in Cranbrook

APRIL 3, 2014

Regional soccer coach brings pro club’s mandate to develop young players | Page 8

Inside Walmar t

2100 Willowbrook Cranbrook

250 - 489 - 0909

Drive,

1

$ 10

INCLUDES G.S.T.

Vol. 63, Issue 64

Proudly serving Cranbrook and area since 1951

www.dailytownsman.com

BARRY COULTER PHOTO

Renowned journalist Wendy Mesley arrived at the Canadian Rockies International Airport Wednesday morning for a Kootenay sojourn. Mesley is keynote speaker for the Kootenay Women’s Show, taking place tonight at St. Eugene Resort Pavilion. The event starts at 5:30 p.m. Some tickets are still available at the door, $30 each.

What’s next for Danielle Cardozo? Cranbrook’s MasterChef contestant is moving on in her food journey after her elimination SALLY MACDONALD Townsman Staff

LORRAINE HARVEY PHOTO

Cranbrook Community Theatre’s comedy “The Foreigner” opens tonight, Thursday, April 3, at the Studio Stage Door in Cranbrook. See Page 2 for Sandra Albers’ review. Pictured above: Cast members Jerrod Bondy, Sean Swinwood, Harrison Ford, Mitchell Graw, Sean Cloarec, Barry Coulter, Jennifer Inglis, Jeff Cooper and Marge Kemp.

MasterChef Canada contestant Danielle Cardozo may have been eliminated on March 24, but her culinary career is just beginning. Back in Cranbrook after her elimination visit to radio programs and talk shows in Toronto, Danielle sat down with the Townsman to talk about how she is leveraging her appearance on the reality cook-off series to spark a career in the culinary world.

GOLF SEASON PASS EARLY BIRD SALE Unlimited Golf 7 Days a Week (subject to availability) •Includes 7 day advance tee time booking, complimentary driving range privileges and more! On Sale until May 31st 2014.

GOLF MORE CARD $74.95 + tax One Free round of golf (including golf cart) anytime between course opening and July 18, 2014. Save up to $49 on incremental rounds. Some conditions apply.

See CARDOZO , Page 3

CHAD ST. PIERRE PHOTO

Danielle Cardozo

LIVE MUSIC by YUKON BLONDE, The Good Ol' Goats and Hollers!

SATURDAY, APRIL 5

Spring Splash & Snow Volleyball Tournament

SUNDAY, APRIL 6 Dummy Downhill


Page 2 Thursday, APRIL 3, 2014

arts/entertainment

daily townsman / daily bulletin

Fishing lodge follies of ‘The Foreigner’

Cranbrook Community Theatre comedy examining intolerance, transformation and the power of role-playing opens April 3 SANDRA ALBERS Special to the Townsman

The Cranbrook Community Theatre production of The Foreigner, on stage this month at the Studio Stage Door, is a revival for David Stock, who first directed the play by Larry Shue in 1989. Mind you, if my math skills aren’t too rusty, that was 25 years ago (my, how time flies on the local theatre scene), and all I can say is, it’s about time. It’s great that this play is on the boards again because (a) it’s a brilliantly written comedy and (b) the current cast of The Foreigner brings it so beautifully to life. Jeff Cooper plays the titular foreigner, Charlie Baker, a pathologically shy nerd of a man, who is taking a short vacation at a rural fishing lodge in Georgia, USA. His army buddy, Froggy Lesueur (Jerrod Bondy), has talked him into it, and has also concocted a rather ridiculous scheme to save Charlie from

play is warm and engaging, and comes with a message about tolerance and understanding that is as relevant in 2014 as it was when the play having to make conversation was first produced. If we’re with the other guests. Charlie honest, we all need to overis passed off as a man who come our fears of the other, doesn’t speak English, and whatever shape or form that then the fun begins. other might take. Marge Kemp plays Betty The entire production Meeks, the lodge owner and zips along nicely, but I have quintessential American with to mention two especially rea heart of gold who figures markable scenes. The first that if you just talk LOUD takes place at the breakfast enough, the person you’re table, when Ellard and Cleatalking to will figure out what tus start teaching Charlie the you mean, language barrier rudiments of the English lannotwithstanding. guage. I won’t say any more Barry Coulter photo Sean Swinwood and Jen- Betty Meeks (Marge Kemp) is astounded at the worldly (no spoiler alerts in this renifer Inglis play lodge guests novelties shown to her by her globe-trotting friend Froggy view), except that it had the the Rev. David Marshall Lee LeSueur (Jerrod Bondy). Cranbrook Community Theatre audience, especially the and his fiancee, Catherine presents “The Foreigner,” opening tonight at the Studio younger kids, in stitches. Sims, who are dealing with, Anyone who’s ever enjoyed a Stage Door. shall we say, a few relationgame of copycat will relate to ship problems. Ellard Sims (Catherine’s to enjoy playing mind games this scene. Then there’s Barry Coulter younger brother) and Clea- with his fellow guests. The The other scene I loved as property inspector Owen tus Wiggins, Ellard’s buddy guests, meanwhile, find has Jeff Cooper at his most Musser, a proper good ol’ boy who comes complete with themselves spilling all kinds brilliant, telling a story in his whose neck, I swear, gets red- coonskin cap. of secrets in their mistaken own (supposedly) native lander and redder as the play Rounding out the cast are belief that Charlie can’t un- guage. It might be gibberish, progresses. Sean Cloarec and Patrick derstand what they’re saying but it’s amazing how far body Mount Baker Grade 11 Bondy as a couple of anony- anyway. language can take you. students Mitchell Graw and mous townspeople. I should mention that This is one of the funniest Harrison Ford more than there are one or two scenes plays I’ve ever seen, but the Charlie, at first reluctant 0426 RPGP RN Individualized Program Ad - Jan Zacharias - Size 10.33in Wide x 7in High hold their own with the rest Press play along with Froggy’s humour isn’t of the cheap in the second act of The ForCMYK - 02 to Ready PDF of the cast as, respectively, silly scheme, gradually starts laughs variety. Rather, the eigner that are quite chilling,

all the more effective given that the play is primarily a comedy. The Foreigner is also a play about transformation. A dull man discovers that he isn’t so dull after all; a possibly slow-witted boy discovers that he’s smarter than he thinks; an older woman finds her somewhat prosaic life enlivened by the stranger in her midst; and a young woman discovers that the people who speak your language aren’t always the ones who listen best. A final word about the set, designed by David Stock and Kirsten Taylor; it adds a wonderful ambience to the play, complete with faux wood panelling, plaid wallpaper and duck decoys. The Foreigner plays April 3 to 5, April 9 to 12 and April 16 to 19, 7:30 p.m. nightly at the Studio Stage Door. Don’t be a stranger.

In her day job at Koocanusa Publications, Sandra Albers has something in common with The Foreigner; they both toil as proofreaders. But she doesn’t find the job dull. Honestly.


daily townsman

Thursday, APRIL 3, 2014

Local NEWS

Page 3

Cardozo plans next culinary adventure Continued from page 1

Chad St. Pierre photo

Following her MasterChef Canada experience, Danielle Cardozo of Cranbrook has been tasting the life of all things gastronomical.

More than 300 will take to the stage at East Kootenay Performing Arts Festival Barry Coulter

Music will fill the air this month, with the return to Cranbrook of the East Kootenay Performing Arts Festival. More than 300 young people are set to take to the stages around town, performing in the categories of Speech Arts, Strings, Voice and Piano. Lorraine Butler, one of the festival organizers, says the performers really need people in the seats to react to and present their talents to. All the programs start in the morning at 9 a.m. and run most of the day. Programs can be bought at the door for $4. “The Strings will be our first presentation at the Knox Presbyterian

Church on April 10 and 11,” Butler said. “This is the first time in many years that we have had this genre.” On April 15, the Speech Arts category will be presented at the First Baptist Church. The Piano class will once again be held in the Lecture Room at the College of the Rockies, April 22 – 24. And the voice program will start at the Knox Presbyterian Church April 23, from 9.30 a.m. – 5 p.m, April 24 at 9 a.m. and then 6.30 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the First Baptist Church. April 25 will again be at the Knox Church. The Festival organizers wish to thank all the sponsors and volunteers who help to make this Festival a success.

end five-course meal for 67 guests in Sparwood. The Elk Valley event was held at Danielle’s

father’s restaurant, Funky’s Pizzeria. And it was a family affair: she served the meal – in-

tions to put the website together. “I am extremely dedicated to supporting the local economy. If I can buy something in Cranbrook, I will,” she said. “It was amazing to me how they all worked together so collaboratively. And I wouldn’t have been able to do that if they weren’t all local. “All I had to do was show up. And the result — it was exactly what I wanted.” The website launches Danielle’s new brand, Taste Life. “Taste Life is about learning and loving food and life. It’s a place where home cooks like myself can learn about ingredients and cooking techniques. The blog will have a variety of categories for multilevelled cooks. As a mom of three I can appreciate quick, affordable, yet delicious meals. As a business woman, I like to have recipes that impress my dinner party guests. As an aspiring culinary entrepreneur, I want to learn about techniques that go beyond your everyday kitchen. Taste Life will provide recipes, lessons, and resources that address all of those areas.” You can find Taste Life at www.daniellecardozo.ca.

PUBLIC NOTICE BC • CANADA BC • www.Kimberley.ca

MARK CREEK WATER LEVEL WARNING Be advised that water levels can change rapidly, and are especially high during spring run-off. Flows are extremely fast when water levels are high and present an extreme danger to anyone falling in the creek.

PLEASE STAY CLEAR OF THE CREEK DURING PERIODS OF HIGH FLOW Operations & Environment Services 250-427-9660 / operations@kimberley.ca

15

She followed up that experience one week later with a much larger event – serving a high-

TICKETS $ adult $ 15 student

last year. “I went on a restaurant tour one weekend – I went to Calgary and checked out about seven different restaurants. My friend Dan said, you definitely have to check out Market,” said Danielle. “So I went and introduced myself as one of Dan’s friends. “At that time I couldn’t tell (Bohati) I was on the show. I just said I was really interested in learning about the culinary industry. We started chatting and kept in touch. He said I was welcome to ask him questions. It just evolved from there.” It led to a collaboration dinner on March 23 where Bohati and Danielle together worked out a menu, and served it to guests at Market. It was a small dinner, but gave Bohati the time to demonstrate techniques to Danielle. “Dave was really wonderful. I knew if he was going to be my mentor, it would have to be someone I trust and who trusts in me,” she said. She even served a dessert that was a take on the baked Alaska that saw Danielle sent home in MasterChef’s 10th episode. “Cake, ice cream, meringue. We did not bake the ice cream,” she said. “It was for my own satisfaction.”

$ 20

When she finished filming MasterChef last October, the first thing Danielle did was approach Heidi Romich at the Heid Out about a part-time sous chef position at the restaurant. In November, she began working two nights a week “on the line”. Cardozo has a “day job” at ?aq’am (St. Mary’s Band). “I noticed online that she was hiring an executive chef. I said, I can’t take that role because it’s a full-time commitment, but I’d definitely do sous and dish design,” said Danielle. “It’s been an amazing opportunity for me, and has really helped to share my experience with MasterChef Canada. Heidi has been instrumental in supporting my ambitions.” It was at the Heid Out that Danielle hosted viewing parties for MasterChef Canada each week, where the kitchen served up a version of the dish Danielle could be seen cooking on the show. “It was neat how excited people got about it, especially when it was my cheesecake or the salmon Wellington, because those were the winning dishes,” she said. Danielle also approached Chef Dave Bohati at Market Calgary during a visit there

cluding courses such as beef tartare with parsnip crisps and crostini – with the help of her sister, brother, father and stepmother. “I got pretty teary at the end of the night. All five of us walked out going, man, I can’t wait to do that again.” Now Danielle is excited to head to Israel in two weeks’ time to train under acclaimed chef Alexander Lachnish in his kitchen, Lab 2.0. “It’s not a restaurant; it’s a food lab where he experiments with different types of food.” Chef Lachnish will spend two weeks with Danielle, demonstrating new techniques in molecular gastronomy – such as spherification, where solids are turned to liquids and then transformed to resemble a different food. “It’s pretty much the science behind food, things you wouldn’t typically do at home,” she said. Lachnish will work with Danielle to create 10 lessons on molecular gastronomy that Danielle will post on her new blog. The website was launched the day after Danielle was eliminated. She worked with local professionals Genex Marketing, Chad St. Pierre Photography, Velvet Moss and Ginjer Jar and HM Produc-

HOSTED

Lotus Books Cranbrook Clawhammer Press Fernie Selkirk TV Invermere Black Bear Books Creston BY

THE

BISSET

SINGERS


Page 4 Thursday, APRIL 3, 2014

daily townsman

Local NEWS

Group prepares for anti-fluoridation campaign Arne Petryshen Townsman Staff

Cranbrook residents Brad Brehm and Brian Kostiuk started the process of looking at Cranbrook’s fluoridation of the water supply two years ago. They went in front of city council and requested a review of the fluoridation of Cranbrook’s water supply. “We did request, based on the scientific evidence that we presented them, that they discontinue the fluoridation of Cranbrook’s water supply,” Brehm said. A year after that they met Kevin Millership who brought a lawsuit against the city for damages for dental fluorosis caused by fluoride in the water supply, which

“I’m very certain about the dangers of fluoridation. I’m not talking about when you go to the dentist. I’m not talking about it in your toothpaste. I’m merely talking about it being added to the municipal water supply.” Brad Brehm

lead to a settlement, the terms of which the City has not commented on. Brehm said at the time they met with council there was interest in the subject, but it

didn’t seem to lead anywhere. “So we’re pleased we did end up connecting with Kevin,” he said. At that time they were the We Are Change Cranbrook group, which focused on other issues as well as fluoridation. After the meeting they created the current group called Fluoride Free Cranbrook. The group’s Facebook page includes 50 members. They expect that there will be a lot more people joining the movement over the next few months. In September, the group will be bringing in Dr. James Beck, MD to do a presentation on the medical and scientific facts about the dangers of fluoridation.

CARRIERS WANTED Monday-Friday

• Your pay is automatically deposited • No collecting • Get work experience • Deliver Newspapers Monday through Friday • Spares are always needed!

Dr. Beck, an expert on fluoride, co-authored the book The Case Against Fluoride: How Hazardous Waste Ended Up in Our Drinking Water and the Bad Science and Powerful Politics that Keep it There. Brehm said he got the feeling that council felt that since its current members didn’t put in the fluoride measures in the first place, it shouldn’t be on them to remove it. Brehm said he’d per-

sonally researched this issue for six years or so before bringing it in front of council. “I’m very certain about the dangers of fluoridation,” he said. “I’m not talking about when you go to the dentist. I’m not talking about it in your toothpaste. I’m merely talking about it being added to the municipal water supply.” He said he is not against fluoride in general, but rather against it being added to the

250-426-5201 ext 208

ROUTES IN KIMBERLEY: #201 - Marysville #221 - Downtown by FasGas 250-427-5333

CALL TODAY & START DELIVERING TOMORROW! 250-426-5201 ext 208

250-427-5333

that if the average person has the information, most people will recognize that there are too many dangers; there’s not enough of a safety factor to continue doing it,” he said. At the meeting two years ago, Coun. Sharon Cross also noted the city spends $30,000 a year to fluoridate the water. In March, Millership, who lives in Slocan, launched a class action lawsuit against the City of Prince George.

Building Canada Fund could benefit municipalities, MP says Arne Pe tryshen Townsman Staff

A federal initiative that is meant to allow municipal governments and other institutions to apply for infrastructure funding is ahead of schedule, according to the federal government. The New Building Canada Fund is a $14 billion part of the 10year New Building Canada Plan. Kootenay Columbia MP David Wilks said the fund will benefit the communities of the region. “The Build Canada

Fund will benefit municipalities, post-secondary institutions, notfor-profit and for-profit groups,” said Wilks. “I encourage everyone to examine the opportunities available.” The Plan is divided into three components, the $4 billion National Infrastructure Component, the $9 billion Provincial-Territorial Infrastructure Component and the $1 billion Small Communities Fund. They will be run over a 10-year term. The National Infrastructure Component is

ROUTES IN CRANBROOK: 113 - 2nd -4th St S, 3rd & 4th Ave S 114 - 1st - 4th St S, 5th Ave S 117 - Baker St - 5th St S, 8 Ave S 118 - Baker St - 4th St S, 9th Ave S 124 - 5th St S, 22nd Ave S 134 - 9th -10th St S, 3rd Ave S 141 - 9th - 10th St S, 9 Ave S 152 - 7th - 9th St S, 5th - 7th Ave S 158 - 12th St S - Larch Dr, 4th Ave S 176 - 22nd St S, 1st - 4th Ave S 177 - Brookview Cresent 181 - 12th & 13th St S, 11 Ave S 193 - 7th - 9th St S, 29th - 30th Ave S 196 - 3rd - 7th ST S, 29th Ave S 300- 3rd - 7th ST S, 29th Ave S 325 - 20th St S- Southview Court, 14th Ave S

water without his consent. “Because it does not give me or my family the choice of whether or not I’m consuming that chemical,” he said. Cranbrook is one of only six municipalities in B.C. that still fluoridates its water supply. The others are Fort St. John, Prince George, Prince Rupert, Sparwood and Terrace. Brehm said he hopes they can get the information to people. “I honestly believe

PUBLIC NOTICE BC • CANADA BC • www.Kimberley.ca

CALL FOR QUOTATIONS

David Wilks meant for national, regional and local projects and is open for applications from provincial, territorial and municipal applicants. The Provincial-Territorial Infrastructure Component will be dedicated to provincial, territorial and municipal infrastructure projects with a significant national or regional impact.

The Small Communities Fund will be negotiated with each province and territory through Infrastructure Canada. Minister Denis Lebel, responsible for Infrastructure Communities and Intergovernmental Affairs, said that the entire New Building Canada Plan is now “open for business.” Lebel said the fund, a key element of the $53 billion New Building Canada Plan, supports infrastructure projects of national, regional and local significance that promote job creation, economic growth and productivity. He said provinces, territories and municipalities may now apply for funding.

Invasive Plant Control within City Limits The City of Kimberley is seeking quotations for “2014 Invasive Plant Control within City limits”. Interested parties may obtain details from; 1. City’s website: http://www.kimberley.ca under “What’s New “ 2. Operations Desk: 2nd Floor, Kimberley City Hall Quotations will be received at the Information Counter, Main Floor, Kimberley City Hall, in a sealed envelope addressed to Kimberley Invasive Plant Control (CONFIDENTIAL) 340 Spokane Street, Kimberley B.C., V1A 2E8, until 4:00 pm local time on Wednesday April 30, 2014. The City of Kimberley reserves the right to reject any or all proposals or to accept the proposal deemed most favorable to the interests of the City of Kimberley. For inquiries, please contact: Tom Sprado, Manager – Parks, Recreation & Facilities, City of Kimberley @ 250 - 427-9671 Email: tsprado@kimberley.ca

PUBLIC NOTICE BC • CANADA BC • www.Kimberley.ca

POTHOLES & STREET REPAIR What should you do if you notice an unsafe pothole on your street? Simply email the Operations & Environment Services Department at operations@kimberley.ca or call their hotline at (250) 427-9660. Provide the nearest address, as well as the names of cross-streets for the problem area. If emailing, do not include attachments. Potholes in the City are caused by a variety of factors, such as temperature fluctuations, melting conditions, traffic etc. In addition to other maintenance work, Operations crews are currently patching potholes. However, due to the volume of these potholes, it may take some time to address all of the areas. The City of Kimberley would like to thank you for your patience and understanding.


daily townsman

Local NEWS

Thursday, APRIL 3, 2014

Page 5

Texting is the new drunk driving To m F l e tc h e r Black Press

VICTORIA – More people are dying from distracted driving than drinking and driving, and that has caused Attorney General Suzanne Anton to reconsider whether B.C.’s penalties for using smart phones behind the wheel are tough enough. Anton said the latest statistics from 2012 show 81 deaths from

distracted driving in the year, compared to 55 related to impaired driving. “People seem to know that they must not drink and drive, but distracted driving, people don’t seem to have the same level of awareness,” Anton said Wednesday. B.C.’s Motor Vehicle Act currently sets a $167 fine for talking on a hand-held mobile phone, and $167 plus

three demerit points for emailing or texting while driving. Ontario recently raised its fine from $155 to $280, with a maximum of $500 for those who contest the fine and are convicted. A few weeks ago Anton wasn’t convinced higher penalties would help change driver behaviour, but she said Wednesday she was disturbed to discover that B.C. has more distracted driving deaths than On-

tario, which has three times the population. “Should there be points attached to holding the handheld device and talking? Probably,” Anton said. “Should the fines be higher? Probably, so I’m having a look at both of those.” Another statistic that caught Anton’s attention was the 51,000 distracted driving tickets handed out in B.C. in 2013. She said that’s a

Dr. Martin Brokenleg to speak to teachers Submitted

Over 550 staff from Southeast Kootenay School District 5 and Rocky Mountain School District 6 will be attending the annual Regional Specialist Association (RSA) Day in Cranbrook with our keynote speaker Dr. Martin Brokenleg. Dr. Martin Brokenleg, co-founder of “The Circle of Courage”, consults worldwide for Reclaiming Youth International. The Circle of Courage is a model of positive youth development that offers concrete strategies for creating environments in which all young people can grow and flourish. Dr. Brokenleg holds a doctorate in psychology and is a graduate of the Episcopal Divinity School. He has consulted and led training programs throughout North America, New Zealand, and South Africa. He is the father of three children and an enrolled member of the Rosebud Sioux Tribe practicing the culture of his Lakota people. For a complete biography and more information about Dr. Brokenleg please visit https:// www.reclaiming.com/ content/brokenleg. At the urging of teachers, five days were

LE • REC YC

LE • REC YC

LE • REC YC

added to the school calendar for professional development in 1972. RSA Day is planned by local teachers, with an emphasis placed on workshops led by local teachers and education partners who have particular interests and specialties to share with their colleagues. In addition to Dr. Brokenleg’s keynote, 29 workshops are being offered at the 2014 RSA Day. This conference is being hosted at Mount Baker Secondary School. Mark April 7 on your calendar and ask a teacher what they will be doing on RSA Day.

Dr. Martin Brokenleg

Shelby, Kyra & Breanna would like to congratulate our Dad

Rick Bay

Retiring after 37 yrs. with CP Rail. On March 28th, 2014 our Dad made his last trip as a Locomotive Engineer. He was hired on as a trainman in Revelstoke B.C. in 1977. The 3 amigo sisters are looking forward to spending more time with you and do we hear the word fishing??!!

We would like to invite his working family and friends for a get-together at

Dewey’s Pub on April 5th from 2:00 pm to 5:30 pm.

“huge number” that suggests the message of distracted driving is not getting through, and a reminder that seatbelt

use and impaired driving also took time to impress on the public. The Superintendent of Motor Vehicles is an-

alyzing B.C. driving habits and will report to Anton, who is considering changing penalties later this year.

Josh Dueck to be honoured Submitted

The City of Kimberley, the Kimberley Alpine Resort and the Disabled Skiers Association are invited the public to join them in honouring Josh Dueck this weekend. Dueck, who recently received a gold medal in the Super G and a silver medal in downhill at the Sochi Winter Paralympics games, will be at the resort for

Spring Splash on Saturday, starting at 2 p.m. The City and the Resort will be presenting Dueck with a token of the community’s appreciation for his achievements on and off the slopes. “People will have an opportunity to listen and share stories with Josh, in addition to viewing the Paralympic medals,” said Ted Funston, General Manager

of the Kimberley Alpine Resort. Dueck was born and raised in Kimberley, learning to ski at the age of 13. In 2004, he was paralyzed from the waist down following a ski accident while coaching. Just two years later, Josh returned to his creativity on the slopes and began ski racing, becoming a professional skier in 2007.

LE • REC YC


PAGE 6

THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 2014

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.

How green was my back

T

his may seem like chump change to you, but it wasn’t to me. Recently, for the first time I held an American hundred dollar bill in my hands (in fact, I was holding two. So much the better). Of course, I’ve held American money in my hands before, but never the hundred. I’m not a big cross-border shopper. But holding that big, burly greenback in my hand (it’s actually kind of blue), I saw, finally, what all the fuss was about. I stared at the big bill, and Benjamin Franklin stared back at me. He also seemed to wink. “So this is the money that makes the world go ‘round,” I said to myself. “So this is the money around which the world goes.” I’ve held Canadian hundred dollar bills, sometimes piles of them. I’ve held English pound notes, which is a big classy money in its own right. I’ve picked my teeth with paper currency from around the world. But nothing compares to the C-note. It was almost like a minor religious experience — if there is such a thing as a minor religious experience — except it wasn’t religious at all. Quite the opposite, if you think about it. A fascinating amoral experience. I felt an electric shiver up my spine, as

if all moral obligations, all ideologies, were slipping out my body through the top of my head. It was the most liberating feeling I’ve had in a long time. Benjamin Franklin grinned at me. “Dude,” I said. “I feel like drilling for oil. Doesn’t matter where.” “Money,” I said to myself. “ Mmmmm m - m o n e y. Mmmake Mmmoney. Mmmmore mmmoney.” I began humming to myself in this pleasant Barry way.“Wouldn’t it be great,” Coulter I thought, “to have many more of these U.S. hundred dollar bills? Just to have them. Just to use this strange electricity to power my house.” Now, I’ve often thought it would be great to have many more Canadian hundred dollar bills. But my thinking here is along the lines of: “Wouldn’t it be great to have more Canadian hundred dollar bills so I could pay down my credit card?” In this case it was more like: “Wouldn’t it be great to have more American hundred dollar bills so I could make a big mattress with them and lie on it?” Whether you like the United States and the role it plays in the world or not, no one says no to the greenback. The most unrepentant detractor of the “Great Satan” and its irresistible dance music would happily stuff his or her pockets with American

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

hundred bills if he or she had the opportunity, and not for the purpose of furthering any plot, either, oh no, but just to have that warm feeling of having pockets filled with American money, that great money that makes the world go round, that filthy lucre, that delicious root of all evil. Benjamin Franklin was openly chuckling at me now. “Mr. Franklin,” I said to the hundred dollar bill. “I have the same hairline as you. I’m going to grow a mullet just like yours, then perhaps I will become a famous polymath, author, printer, political theorist, politician, postmaster, scientist, inventor, civic activist, statesman, and diplomat, just like you.” This is how badly I was being hypnotized by the money. But that was many days ago, and now those big bills are gone. I did not invest in dot com booms, unbacked paper, housing bubbles, buy up other people’s credit card debt, or other tested financial strategies to make my hundred dollar bills multiply and multiply. Instead, I am left with a pocketful of Canadian coins and rumpled fives. If I can screw up enough of those to make $110 Canadian and change, I can head down to the bank and exchange it for another C-note, and carry on that most excellent conversation with Benjamin Franklin. Barry Coulter, the Editor of the Cranbrook Daily Townsman, just needs enough to get by.

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/features

The possibility of splitting Libya

T

he Red Wadi (Wadi al Ahmar) only six million) in an attempt to make lies a bit to the west of the old them servants of the state, but they don’t Roman border between Tripoli- feel obliged to obey government orders. tania and Cyrenaica, but if Libya And the army that obeys Tripoli is too splits in two it will serve quite small and weak to take on a powerful warwell as the new frontier. The deadline for lord like Jathran. Months of stalemate followed, while the fighting to resume there was last Thursday (27 March), but neither side is very the country’s oil exports, which account good at organising a battle and we will have for 95 percent of government revenues, plunged from 1.5 million to wait for a bit. It will probbarrels/day to only 200,000 ably happen in the end, barrels. (The Zintan militia though. in western Libya was also Libya has been a chaos cutting pipelines and occuof rival militias holding pying oilfields from the down local fiefdoms ever Gwynne western oilfields from time since the overthrow of Dyer to time.) But matters came Muammar Gaddafi’s 42to a head when Jathran’s year dictatorship in 2011, but in the past month the disintegration militia started trying to export oil itself has accelerated. A formal division of the from the eastern oil terminals in early country into two successor states is now a March. If he could sell Cyrenaica’s oil with imreal possibility, but it’s unlikely to happen punity that would be the end of a united without some further fighting. There has been some already. Much of Libya, so Prime Minister Ali Zeidan threatthe eastern half of the country, Cyrenaica, ened to sink a rogue tanker, the North Kohas been under the control of a coalition of rean-flagged Morning Glory, that arrived tribal militias led by Ibrahim Jathran since at one of the terminals controlled by Jathlast year. He seized control of the terminals ran to load oil valued at $30 million. Libya’s on the coast through which two-thirds of navy had been sunk by NATO planes and Libya’s oil production is exported, and set its air force was near mutiny, however, so up the “Cyrenaica Political Bureau”, which all Zeidan had to stop it was a tugboat juis acting as a proto-government in the east. ry-rigged with Grad rockets. Morning Glory managed to get away, The central government in Tripoli, which was led by Prime Minister Ali and the Islamist-dominated Congress that Zeidan, was powerless to stop him. The passes for a final authority in Libya fired government has been paying $1,000 per Zeidan for his failure. Morning Glory was month to about 160,000 members of vari- stopped later in the week by a US Navy ous militias (out of a total population of warship and handed over to the govern-

ment in Tripoli, but it was too late for Zeidan, who fled the country fearing assassination. Congress then ordered the most powerful militia in the west of the country, the Libyan Shield, to seize the rebel-held ports in the east, but after some clashes they were stopped east of Sirte. Since then the two sides have glared at each other across the Red Wadi, waiting for the deadline set by the speaker of Congress and de facto president, Nuri Abu Sahmain, to expire. Now it has expired, and nothing has happened yet, but neither has there been any sign that the two sides are talking. Besides, it is misleading to talk of “two sides”: the country has become a jumble of militia-run city-states with rapidly shifting alliances. But the east-west split is real, and it is getting worse. The Cyrenaica Political Bureau says it is a “federalist” organisation that wants only the decentralisation of the country and a bigger share of the oil revenues for the east, but in fact it is already halfway out the door – and the army units and air bases in the east support the rebels. “We are assembling a large force to protect the ports,” said Senussi al-Meghrabi. “If they are attacked, it will be civil war.” But not a long civil war, probably, for there is virtually no chance that forces from Tripolitania could conquer Cyrenaica – especially when they are facing their own revolt back home from the powerful Zintan militia, allies of the exiled ex-prime minister Ali Zeidan. And they control the oil of Tripolitania.

It happened this week in Cranbrook

Week March 30 – April 5 Dave Humphrey

Items compiled from the archived newspapers held at the Cranbrook Museum and Archives. 1898 New Dairy … J. H. Sibbald is contemplating establishing a dairy near Cranbrook, and is hesitating only on account of lack of cows. Sib says that with the large quantity and fine quality of spring waters in Cranbrook he wouldn’t need many, two or three would easily give a barrel. Cranbrook Stables ... Bill Daniels and John Conway-everyone on the road knows “Billy and John”-are the proprietors of the large and commodious livery stable at this place. It is safe to say that none better and few as good are to be found in Southeast Kootenay; and that stock entrusted to their care receives always the best of attention. Mounted Police ... Inspector Sanders, of the mounted police, passed through here Saturday on his regular trip of inspection. In conversation with The Herald reporter he said that the reports of lawlessness along the line of the C.P.R. right of way are grossly exaggerated. As a rule the disturbances are few, far between and seldom serious; considerable illicit whiskey selling, however, has been indulged in, and many arrests made therefore. The inspector also stated that there was some smuggling going on at points west of here, the Bonner’s Ferry route, from the location of the custom house being especially favourable to that class of lawbreaking. Joshing John ... John I. Booge, elsewhere referred to in connection with an important mining deal, has been so long away from

Thursday, APRIL 3, 2014

places where fashion and strict rules of etiquette prevail that, so some of his Cranbrook friends say, he has forgotten many of the rules and usages of society. This being the case, it is not to wondered at that, when John sat down to the dinner table in the Hotel Cranbrook, last Thursday and noticed two knives and forks at his plate-dinner and dessert-he accosted the waiter, saying: “Here, take this knife and fork away; you needn’t think, although you are crowded, that you are going to feed someone else from the same plate with me.” 1899 Murdered By Mistake … A few minutes after 12 o ’clock last Monday night, Edward Ryan, a labourer on the Crows Nest Pass road, was shot and instantly killed on the track near the freight shed. From the evidence secured last night from V. and D. Alfons, two Italians, it seems now there is no doubt but that the murder was committed by an Italian named Paste, who was in company with another named Messico, and that the shot was fired with the idea that the victim was a young man named Mansfield, with whom both men had quarreled a short time before. Both men acknowledged their crime to the Alfons and left that night for Elko with the idea of escaping to the States. Between 11 and 12 o’clock three Italians had visited several houses of ill fame and finally engaged in a controversy with Jennie Howard the keeper of one of the places near the freight shed. The Italians seemed to have been drinking and were very abusive. W. A. Matheson and William Mansfield, better known as “The Kid,” two hangers-on at the Howard place, went out of the house to drive the Italians away, but were chased back, Mansfield losing his hat in the rush.

Mansfield secured an iron poker and both men again went out and attacked the Italians, and after Matheson had struck one with his fist and Mansfield had dealt another a blow across the face with the poker, both men sought refuge in the house again. Soon after this one of the Italians was heard cursing some one near the freight shed, and telling him to come on. The man in question replied that he was coming, two or three times. Then a shot was fired, and after a moment’s silence, another shot. John Scanlan, a switchman, came down the track and found the body of a man which proved to be that of Edward Ryan, an inoffensive, good natured young man. The bullet, a 38-calibre, had entered his right chest, reaching the heart, and death had followed instantly. 1900 Happy Cranbrook … This place was christened “Beautiful Cranbrook” by Fred Simpson when there was a most expansive and beautiful bit of scenery here, viewed from a somewhat smaller meadow the site of Cranbrook. It was very good, fitted the purpose at that time, and fits the town today. The Herald, however, believes the time has arrived for rechristening and will hereafter claim it “Happy Cranbrook” for nowhere else can be found a place where every man, woman and child look, act, and are as happy as the day is long, with the days constantly lengthening. A Good Turn? …Norman McConnell was playfully rubbing the back of a cayuse last Tuesday; the animal, thinking one good turn deserved another, grabbed a good mouthful of Frank’s leg, just below the thigh; fortunately he let go before separating it and Frank, but left severe contusions.

Page 7

What’s Up?

KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDAR

UPCOMING

Kimberley Gogo Grannies present: African Dinner. Proceeds to the Stephen Lewis Foundation–African Grandmothers Campaign. Saturday April 5th, Doors open at 5:30, Dinner at 6:30 pm, at The Old Baurenhaus. 4 course African Dinner incl. coffee & tea. No host bar. Door Prizes, Silent Auction. Tickets & info available from: Kimberley Gogo Grannies, Ruth Ratzclaff 250.427.2706, Old Baurenhaus April 9. Kimberley Garden Club April program: Basic Garden Design. Selkirk High School Library 7-9 pm. New members welcome. For more info: Nola: 250-427-0527. “Ignited Joy Spring Conference” House of Hope 629-6th ST. NW, April 11-12 Friday 7pm and Saturday 9:30am, 2pm, 7pm. Speakers: Steve and Wendy Backlund and Team from Redding California. Register online at www.ihopecranbrook.ca. Contact Info: 250-4213784 or cranbrookhouseofhope@gmail.com Bigfoot Running Club Annual Pass the Chili Run! Sunday April 13, 2014. Knox Presbyterian Church 2100 3rd st south. Registration opens at 3:00pm. Race start: 3:30pm. Distance: 8 km. Come enjoy a run and dinner! Fee includes race and dinner. For more info www. bigfootrunning.ca The Cranbrook Health Care Auxiliary will be holding their General Meeting on 14 April 2014 at 2:30 pm in the Hospital Cafeteria. All members are invited to attend. Federal Superannuates Meeting, Tuesday April 15th, 12:00 noon at Heritage Inn, Cranbrook. Please phone Skip 426-3679 2014 FREE FAMILY SWIM Wednesday, April 16th, 6:00-7:00pm is sponsored by Kimberley Healthcare Auxiliary. Persons 18 years & younger must be accompanied by an adult. Have Camera Will Travel.... Join Jim Webster & Ian McKinlay travelogue “Wet & Dry” - Hiking Across Scotland at Centre 64 on Tuesday, April 22 at 7:30 pm. Admission by donation. Proceeds to Kimberley Arts Council & Expansion Project. East Kootenay Historical Assoc Meeting Sunday, April 27th, 12:00 noon at Heritage Inn. Guest Speaker: Joe Pierre. Dues $10.00. Please phone Marilyn 426-3070 or Skip 426-3679.

ONGOING 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 Royal Canadian Legion Branch 24; Friday Meat Draw: 4:30- 6:30, Saturday Meat Draw: 3:30-5:30. Mark Creek Lions meet 1st and 3rd Wednesday at the Kimbrook. Meet & Greet from 6:00-6:30pm, supper 6:30-7:00, meeting 7:00-8:00pm. Contact 250-427-5612 or 250-427-7496. New members welcome - men and ladies! Seniors Autobiographical Writing for those aged 60 or wiser at the Kimberley Library. No writing experience necessary. It’s free. Tuesdays 10:00 - Noon. Register: Kim Roberts CBAL Coordinator 250-427-4468 or kroberts@cbal.org The Cellar Thrift Store Open Mon. to Sat., noon to 4:30 p.m. Our revenues support local programs and outreach programs of Cranbrook United Church. Baker Lane Entry at 2 – 12th Ave. S. Cranbrook, B. C. Donations of new or gently used items welcome. Creating a bridge between Cranbrook’s Art scene and Sport scene, The Cranbrook and District Arts Council is holding an Art Exhibition for the month of March titled “Slapshot – Sport in Art”. Local artists submitted their “Sport Themed” work to the Gallery; on display to Friday Mar 28th. 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. Do you have the desire to stop eating compulsively? Overeaters Anonymous (a 12-Step Program) meets Wednesdays from 7-8pm at Cranbrook United Church, 2-12th St. S., downstairs. Contact: cranbrookoa@hotmail.com ICBL-Duplicate Bridge–Senior Center in Cranbrook. Mon & Wed 7pm, Thurs & Fri 1pm at Scout Hall, Marysville. Info: Maggie 250-417-2868. Mark Creek Lions meet 1st and 3rd Wednesdays at the Kimbrook. Meet & Greet from 6:00-6:30pm, supper 6:30-7:00, meeting 7:00-8:00pm. Contact 250-427-5612 or 250-427-7496. New members welcome – men and ladies! Funtastic Singers Drop-In Singing group; free to attend-just for fun! No experience necessary! CDAC Office&Gallery 135 10th Ave S, Tuesdays; 6.45-8.15pm 250-426-4223 / cdac@shaw.ca / www. cranbrookanddistrictartscouncil.com 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. Cranbrook Phoenix Toastmasters meet every Thursday, noon -1:00 Heritage Inn. Toastmasters teaches communication & leadership skills. Roberta 250-489-0174. 1911.toastmastersclubs.org. 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 E-mail: production@dailybulletin.ca • Fax: 250-426-5003


PAGE 8

THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 2014

Y ACANC

V

SPORTS

ADVERTISE HERE! CALL TO BOOK YOUR AD NOW!

250.426.5201

250.427.5333

DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

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

Whitecaps growing soccer programs in East Kootenay TRE VOR CR AWLEY Sports Editor

North America’s professional soccer league has established a presence in the Kootenays and are looking to further expand into the region—specifically in Cranbrook. Brett Adams, the regional head coach for Vancouver Whitecaps FC Kootenay Academy Centre—based in Nelson—is working on expanding his club’s profile and programs. As it currently stands, the Whitecaps FC have the Kootenay East skills academy in Cranbrook, which runs sessions in the fall, winter and spring, and Adams is continuing to build on programs to grow soccer in the area. “We are looking in the next few months, to make this into a prospect area, because we’ve been impressed with the talent that we’ve come across. So we’re looking out to make this more of an elite area as well,” Adams said. Within the Whitecaps FC organization, Nelson is the only pros-

pect area in the Kootenay region, which features a program that is invite-only for elite soccer players in the East and West Kootenays. Selected players receive professional training from Whitecaps FC coaches and have opportunities to get into residency programs. The ultimate goal is to get another Whitecaps FC staff member into the region to add further coaching expertise and turn Cranbrook into a prospect area like Nelson. “We are looking in the next few months, to make this into a prospect area, because we’ve been impressed with the talent that we’ve come across. So we’re looking out to make this more of an elite area as well,” said Adams. “As we progress the program forward, we are currently in the process of adding to our staff. “…We are looking to potentially put somebody in this area, parttime, potentially full time. Again, they will be a highly qualified coach

that we’re looking to do that with.” Adams made it clear that the Whitecaps FC programs aren’t in conflict with Kootenay East Youth Soccer Association (KEYSA), the regional rep program. “The Whitecaps and KEYSA are definitely working together. We’ve formed a great partnership and we’re doing sessions that don’t coincide with their sessions,” said Adams. “We’re not going into competition. We’re here to work together and we’re here to give them some guidance and support as well as encouraging their players to come do our programs as well.” Adams identified some local youth talent such as Kru Huska and Peter Black who were recently selected to participate in a showcase tournament down in Vancouver. He also added two boys from the West Kootenays were chosen to participate in the Whitecaps FC pre-residency training combine. Establishing Cran-

SUBMITTED PHOTO

Vancouver Whitecaps FC starting fullback Jordan Harvey signs autographs for a group of kids—including some from the Kootenays—while Brett Adams supervises. brook as a prospects centre will help develop the talent that Adams sees in the area. “Now, we’re just looking to grow the numbers, trying to pick out the best players, give them an opportunity to go to Vancouver and sample what it’s like to do the pre-resi-

Regional District of East Kootenay RDEK Fort Steele - Bull River Planning Process Introductory Meeting Join us for an information meeting on the Fort Steele and Bull River planning process. There will be an introduction to official community plans and zoning bylaws, an overview of the expected planning process, and a discussion of the intended outcomes. Meeting attendees will be asked to share their initial thoughts on the process and identify important topics that should be addressed in the plan. Monday, April 7th, 2014 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm Regional District of East Kootenay 19 - 24th Avenue S, Cranbrook BC This process is intended to result in an Official Community Plan and Zoning Bylaw for the plan area. For further information, please contact Michele Bates, Planner, at 250-489-2791 or toll free at 1-888-478-7335 or mbates@rdek.bc.ca.

19 - 24th Avenue South, Cranbrook BC V1C 3H8 Phone: 250-489-2791 Toll Free: 1-888-478-7335 Email: info@rdek.bc.ca Website: www.rdek.bc.ca

dency and residency squads,” he said. He also adds that if players don’t advance within the Whitecaps FC organization, there are opportunities to pursue scholarships at the college or university level. Right now, Adams is primarily concerned with numbers and registration for the skills academy spring session from April to July is

open to boys and girls between U8 to U17. “In this area right now, it’s an open registration, but as we look to progress the program on into potentially the next phase, we’re looking at making it a prospects [area], so it will be a tryout and invite-only,” Adams said. “Right now, we want as many players to come sample our programs as possible, so if

anybody wants to sign up, all they have to do is visit the website, and they can sign up via the website.” More information on the Whitecaps FC Kootenay East skills academy can be found at: www.whitecapsfc.com/ youth/programs/academy/kootenayeast. Adams can also answer further questions via email at: badams@ whitecapsfc.com

B.C. Lions sign running back Harris to contract extension C ANADIAN PRESS

Andrew Harris is staying put. The B.C. Lions have signed their Canadian running back to a contract extension through the 2015 season. The Winnipeg native is entering his fifth sea-

son with B.C. and has yet to miss a game in his CFL career. The five-foot-11 213pound Harris, who became the Lions’ starting running back midway through the 2011 season, has rushed for 2,568 yards on 481 ca-

888-471-3914

11102 W. Westbow Blvd. Spokane, WA

Directions: 7 Miles West of Downtown at Exit 272 Off I-90 • Free Deluxe Continental Breakfast • Indoor Pool & Hot Tub - Noon - Midnight • Workout/Fitness Room • Shuttle Service To/From Airport 5am-11pm • $20 per Airport Parking

reer carries (5.3-yard average) with 15 TDs. Harris ran for 998 yards last season but led all CFL running backs with 61 catches for 513 yards en route to being named B.C.’s nominee as top Canadian for the second straight year.

59

1-2 People / 1 Queen Bed

$

90

Valid until 4/15/14 Add $5 Fri & Sat.

With coupon at check-in. Based on availability. Not valid with other discounts, during holidays or special events

WA2773082


daily townsman / daily bulletin

Thursday, APRIL 3, 2014

Sports

Koe has work to do at world curling championship C anadian Press

BEIJING - Canada’s Kevin Koe is on the playoff bubble at the world men’s curling championship after splitting his games Wednesday at Capital Gymnasium. The veteran skip and his Calgary-based team beat Switzerland’s Peter de Cruz 8-4 before dropping a 6-2 decision to Sweden’s Oskar Eriksson in the evening draw. “It’s disappointing, that was a big game for us and we couldn’t pull (it) out,” said Koe. “That’s a tough one. Just one of those games where we would build a big end and he’d come up with a good shot and I couldn’t answer. “I had a few chances. I missed a triple for three (in the sixth end) and kind of miscalled the line again. Just one of those games - off by a

couple inches.” Canada was tied with Switzerland at 6-3 after 14 draws of play. Norway’s Thomas Ulsrud was in first place at 8-1 and Japan’s Yusuke Morozumi was next at 7-2. Round-robin play wraps up Thursday with Canada set to play Germany’s Johnny Jahr and Scotland’s Ewan MacDonald. The top four teams will make the playoffs. Canada still has a chance to qualify for the 1-2 Page Playoff game Friday. The winner of that game advances straight to the gold-medal game and the loser will play in Saturday’s semifinal against the winner of the 3-4 Page Playoff game. The 3-4 loser and semifinal loser will play for the bronze medal Sunday before the

gold-medal game. Sweden scored six single points in the win over Canada, including steals in the second, fifth and sixth ends. Eriksson moved into a fifth-place tie with China’s Rui Liu at 5-4. “That win was huge,” Eriksson said. “We lost to Switzerland this morning so we had to win this to stay in the race. We made some big shots. I made an important double in the second end to stay alive or else we would lose four. We played really good after that. “Our goal is to get into the playoffs and finish off with a medal.” Norway locked up a playoff spot with an 11-2 rout of Russia’s Evgeny Arkhipov (1-8). Japan, meanwhile, scored a deuce in the 10th end for an 8-7 win over Ger-

Ben Rutledge included in 2014 Olympic Hall of Fame class Donna Spencer Canadian Press

CALGARY - Kyle Shewfelt’s Olympic gold medal in gymnastics shines bright a decade later because it is the first and only of its kind in Canada. Unlike the Olympic champion who has a teammate or hero to follow or emulate, Shewfelt blazed his own trail to win the floor routine in 2004. He is the only Canadian to win an Olympic medal of any colour in gymnastics. The Calgarian is among the athletes, builders and coaches who will be inducted into the Canadian Olympic Hall of Fame in June. He’ll join speedskater Cindy Klassen, the victorious men’s eight rowing team of 2008, speedskat-

ing coach Marcel Lacroix, hockey coach Pat Quinn and the late, former Alberta premier Ralph Klein among the 2014 inductees. Sports journalist Richard Garneau, who covered 23 Olympic Games, will receive the Canadian Olympic Order posthumously. The Canadian Olympic Hall of Fame was established in 1949. It is housed in the Frank King Olympic Visitor’s Centre at Calgary’s Canada Olympic Park about a kilometre from Canada’s Sports Hall of Fame. Previous inductees into the Olympic Hall of Fame include wrestler Daniel Igali, swimmer Mark Tewksbury, synchronized swimmer Caroline Waldo and sprinter Donovan Bailey.

The class of 2014 was revealed Wednesday in downtown Calgary along with the announcement that the city will host a three-day celebration June 4-6 of Canada’s performance at the Sochi Games. Shewfelt and Lacroix, who coached Christine Nesbitt and the men’s pursuit team to Olympic gold in 2010, attended the news conference. Quinn and members of the men’s eight participated in a conference call. The men’s eight of coxswain Brian Price, Andrew Byrnes, Ben Rutledge, Dominic Seiterle, Kyle Hamilton, Malcolm Howard, Jake Wetzel, Adam Kreek and Kevin Light led the final from start to finish to win gold in Beijing.

many. Koe won gold at his only previous appearance at the 2010 world championship in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy. “Our backs are against the wall and we just have to worry about making the playoffs,” he said. “I don’t know what

all the scenarios are but if we can get to 8-and-3, we know we’ll be in the playoffs. We’ve come through the long way in the playoffs a lot of times. “Just get us in there, give us a chance and we like our chances.”

3

Page 9

PAID ADVERTISEMENT

FACTS You Need to Know About…

ABOUT CHANGE TO AGRICULTURE LAND COMMISSION...

What is Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)? In honour of IBS awareness month I have chosen to answer a question with regards to this widespread ailment. IBS is the most common gastrointestinal disorder seen in general practice, representing 30% to 50% of all referrals to gastroenterologists. Irritable bowel syndrome is a disorder of the large intestine with no evidence of accompanying structural defect making it a diagnosis of exclusion or, in other words, it cannot be explained by routine tests and everything else has been ruled out. Symptoms of IBS often include: • Abdominal pain • Altered bowel function, constipation, and/or diarrhea • Hypersecretion of colonic mucus • Dyspeptic symptoms (flatulence, nausea, anorexia) • Anxiety or depression • Heartburn The digestive tract is quite complex and IBS can be linked to many different causes making it difficult to pinpoint the exact triggers of the symptoms. Also, each individual case of IBS differs greatly from the next so it is important to consider and test for each cause. Some of the most likely sources leading to IBS are stress, food sensitivities and imbalance of gut bacteria. Of utmost importance is a detailed health history which helps determine the best course of action with regards to treatment and further testing. Lab tests that can be useful to determine the cause of IBS include: • IgG Food Sensitivity Test • Comprehensive Digestion and Stool Analysis • Small Intestine Bacterial Overgrowth Breath Test • Betaine HCl Challenge • Adrenal Profile • Genetic Test – MTHFR • Nutritional Profile Once the cause of IBS has been determined treatment typically involves lifestyle changes to diet and exercise, nutritional supplements and herbs used to remove any harmful bacteria or yeast in the gut and heal the lining of the large and small intestines. Gastrointestinal disorders are commonplace in our practice and we have had great success with helping to alleviate the causes and symptoms of these disorders. If you have any questions at all please do not hesitate to contact us. Please send any health questions that you would like answered in Dr. Ford’s monthly article to drford@rootsto-health.com

With

MLA,

Bill Bennett

1

The Agriculture Land Reserve & Commission were created 40 years ago to ensure good agricultural land was protected for agriculture. Changes made by my Core Review Committee maintain that protection but will now take into account the farm family & helping farmers & ranchers stay on the land.

2

The ALR will be divided into two zones. Zone 1 (lower mainland, Island, Okanagan) will be business as usual; Zone 2 (Kootenays, Cariboo & North) ALC decisions will now consider (in addition to agriculture land protection) economic, social & local government perspectives.

3

ALC decisions will be made by people from the region. The six existing regional panels will be established in law and must have minimum of two members. maximum of 3, all from that region. ALC will now have an obligation to report to Minister on service levels to the public.

Chicago Blackhawks say captain Jonathan Toews out until playoffs Associated Press

CHICAGO - Blackhawks captain Jonathan Toews will miss the rest of the regular season with an upper-body injury. The team said Wednesday that coach Joel Quenneville expects Toews to be “100 per cent” for the playoffs. Toews was injured after a hit by Penguins defenceman Brooks Orpik on Sunday night. Toews got up slowly and was seen holding his left arm on the bench before heading to the lock-

er room. The Blackhawks, who have clinched a playoff berth, are already without star forward Patrick Kane, who is out for the rest of the regular season with a lower-body injury. Toews has 28 goals and 68 points this season. Quenneville said Andrew Shaw will get some of Toews’ “quality ice time,” but the team has also recalled forward Joakim Nordstrom from Rockford.

Live Life Well. Naturopathic visits and services are now GST exempt. Book an appointment today!

New patients always welcome in Kimberley and Cranbrook!

Bill Bennett, M.L.A.

For detailed information please visit:

Province of British Columbia

www.roots-to-health.com or call 778-481-5008

Kimberley Health Centre Lower Level

(Kootenay East)

Constituency Office: 100c Cranbrook Street N. Cranbrook, B.C. V1C 3P9

Phone: 250-417-6022 Fax: 250-417-6026 bill.bennett.mla@leg.bc.ca


Page 10 Thursday, APRIL 3, 2014

Sports March Madness down to Final Four John Marshall Associated Press

The invitation to this year’s Final Four seemed to have specific rules: No upstarts or Cinderellas. Big boys only. Yes, we’re well aware that Kentucky was a No. 8 seed and UConn was a 7. But c’mon. These are two power programs with storied histories, each with a championship under their belt within the past four seasons. Following a string of NCAA tournaments with mid-major party crashers, the Final Four is going back to the big time with Florida and Wisconsin joining the Wildcats and Huskies in North Texas. We’ve got a rundown of what to look for: THE TEAMS Florida. The top overall seed in the NCAA tournament has played like it by extending its winning streak to 30 games. Kentucky. John Calipari’s latest group of one-and-dones needed a little time to get going. Once the roll started, no one has been able to stop it. Wisconsin. The Badgers are feisty, fundamentally sound and one of those teams opponents hate to play. UConn. The Huskies won the 2011 behind Kemba Walker. Shabazz Napier is the one-man gang this time. THE STARS Shabazz Napier, UConn. A 6-foot-1 point guard who can do it all and had a great mentor in Kemba Walker. Julius Randle, Kentucky. The projected

No. 1 overall NBA draft pick is big, athletic and often unstoppable. Frank Kaminsky, Wisconsin. When he’s hitting his 3-pointers, this 7-footer is all but unguardable. Scottie Wilbekin, Florida. From being asked to transfer by his own coach to becoming one of college basketball’s best closers. THE OTHERS Patrick Young, Florida. The Gators’ big man is like a linebacker in basketball shorts. Aaron Harrison, Kentucky. Hit the winning jumper against Michigan despite struggling with his shot. Has a twin brother who’s not bad, either. Sam Dekker, Wisconsin. He’s scrappy, versatile and a good shooter - a perfect fit for the Badgers. Ryan Boatwright, UConn. Napier’s backcourt sidekick can shoot and has become a point-guard stopper on defence. THE COACHES Billy Donovan, Florida. So much for not being able to get the Gators to the Final Four without NBA-ready players. Might be the best coaching job of his career. Calipari, Kentucky. The slick coach with the designer suits might irritate some, but he sure can recruit players - and win games. Bo Ryan, Wisconsin. His has been the feel-good story so far, making the Final Four for the first time as a coach after taking his late father, Butch, every year since

1976 as a birthday gift. Kevin Ollie, UConn. Thrust into a difficult situation following the retirement of Jim Calhoun and NCAA sanctions last season. Managed it all incredibly well, particularly for a first-time head coach. NUMBERS -4-Times UConn’s men’s and women’s teams have reached the Final Four in the same season, most of any school. -8-Years since there were no repeat Final Four teams before this season. -16-Straight NCAA tournament appearances by Wisconsin, most among the Final Four teams. -73-Years since Wisconsin’s last and only national championship. FAMOUS ALUMNI Connecticut: Actress Meg Ryan, physicist David Lee, actor Ron Palillo (Horshack!), screenwriter/producer Jeremy Leven. Florida: Actress Faye Dunaway, Nobel Prize winners Marshall Nirenberg and Robert Grubbs, Yankees owner Hal Steinbrenner, Wendy’s owner Dave Thomas. Kentucky: Actress Ashley Judd, Sen. Mitch McConnell, astronaut Story Musgrave, Nobel Prize winner William Lipscomb. Wisconsin: Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig, Vice-President Dick Cheney, architect Frank Lloyd Wright, actor Don Ameche, singers Steve Miller and Boz Skaggs.

daily townsman / daily bulletin

Ronaldo equals record as Madrid beats Dortmund 3-0 in Champions League Paul Logothetis Associated Press

MADRID, Spain Cristiano Ronaldo scored a record equaling goal before exiting to injury as Real Madrid beat Borussia Dortmund 3-0 on Wednesday to take a big step toward the Champions League semifinals. Ronaldo netted his 14th goal of the season in Europe’s top competition to give Madrid a clear advantage ahead of next week’s quarterfinal return leg in Germany. But it came at a price as the Portugal forward, who came into the first-leg nursing a sore left knee, came off in the 80th minute. Gareth Bale scored early and Isco added another before the half hour mark at the Santiago Bernabeu Stadium. “Ronaldo has a problem with his knee but at this moment I’m

not worried about it,” Madrid coach Carlo Ancelotti said. The Spaniards opened against Dortmund as the Germans had against them in the semifinals last season when they thrashed Madrid 4-1 en route to reaching the final with a 4-3 victory on aggregate. In Wednesday’s other quarterfinal first leg, Paris Saint-Germain beat Chelsea 3-1 in the French capital. Madrid, which is vying for a record 10th European Cup, is now on the cusp of a fourth straight appearance in the semifinals - a welcome lift after a difficult run in the Spanish league. In Tuesday’s matches, defending champion Bayern Munich drew 1-1 at Manchester United, and Atletico Madrid drew 1-1 at Barcelona.

YOUR CITY WORKING FOR YOU! Thursday, April 3rd, 2014 COFFEE WITH THE MAYOR @ MAX’S PLACE - SATURDAY APRIL 5, 2014 FROM 1 – 3PM You are invited to have coffee with Cranbrook Mayor Wayne Stetski at Max’s Place on Saturday April 5, 2014 from 1 – 3pm. The afternoon is open for one-on-one discussion for you to discuss concerns and ask questions about the City of Cranbrook. Refreshments are not provided. Please come and join us!

2014 PARCEL TAX ROLL REVIEW WATER AND SEWER FRONTAGE TAX ROLLS The Corporation of the City of Cranbrook has completed improvements to the water and sewer systems that are to be supported in part by a frontage tax levy imposed under the following bylaws: A. Water Frontage Tax Amendment Bylaw No. 3675, 2009 B. Sewer Frontage Tax Amendment Bylaw No. 3736, 2011 Notices were sent the week of March 31, 2014, to each property owner where a change in frontage has occurred. These notices will state the actual and taxable frontage for the property and the frontage tax rates for 2014.

WASTE COLLECTION & DISPOSAL BYLAW

COUNCIL MEETING REBROADCAST DATE CHANGE

Under this bylaw, each household shall be allowed a maximum of three (3) garbage receptacles, including prefabricated receptacles and plastic garbage bags, per weekly pick up. Containers or bags must be a maximum of 20 kg. To leave additional receptacles for pick up, residents must purchase tags, at a cost of $1.50 per bag or receptacle for additional receptacles. Visit our website and click on ‘Bylaws’ for more on all of our City bylaws.

SHAW Cable has advised that the rebroadcast of Cranbrook City Council meetings will be moving from Tuesdays at 6:00pm to Sundays at 11am due to the Western Hockey League playoffs. The WHL playoffs begin on Saturday March 15 and run for approximately nine weeks, ending approximately Saturday May 17, 2014. SHAW Cable will advise its viewers through a community message on the crawl at the bottom of the screen and in their schedules. The City of Cranbrook and SHAW apologize for any inconvenience.

The Parcel Tax Roll Review Panel will be held on the 28th day of April 2014, at 3:00 p.m. in the Council Chamber at City Hall, 40 - 10th Avenue South, Cranbrook, BC, for the purpose of hearing complaints to:

REMINDERS... Monday April 7 – Regular Council Meeting @ 6pm Monday April 28 – Regular Council Meeting @ 6pm

A. The names of owners of parcels of land B. The actual frontage of parcels of land C. The taxable frontage of parcels of land A complaint shall not be heard unless notice of the complaint has been made in writing to the office of the Collector prior to 4:30 p.m. on the 25th day of April, 2014. For more information please call City Hall at 250-426-4211.

PICK UP YOUR LOW FLOW TOILET REBATE APPLICATIONS NOW! For more information and applications about the Low Flow Toilet Rebate program, visit our website or stop by City Hall.

Watch the latest

Cranbrook City Council meeting when you want. Visit www.cranbrook.ca

Working Toward A Greener Community


DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 2014

Elk Valley Water Quality Plan Consultation Open Houses Teck is working with communities, First Nations and governments to create an Elk Valley Water Quality Plan that will maintain the health of the watershed and support continued, sustainable mining in the Elk Valley. We Want to Hear From You

Consultation Open Houses: Ask questions and provide input at an upcoming open house. Fernie Senior Citizen’s Drop-In Centre 562 3rd Avenue April 22, 2014 5:00–8:00 p.m.

The objective of the Elk Valley Water Quality Plan is to address water quality concerns associated with mining activity in the Elkford Community Conference Centre watershed, including selenium. The process to develop the (large meeting room) plan includes several public consultation periods, the first of 750 Fording Drive which took place in fall 2013. The second consultation period April 23, 2014 will take place from April 9–30, 2014. 5:00–8:00 p.m. During the public consultation period, Teck is asking for your feedback on the work being done to develop the Elk Valley Water Quality Plan. Your input will be considered in the development of the Plan. Consultation materials, including an online feedback form, will be available at www.teck.com/ElkValley on April 9.

Sparwood Senior Citizen’s Drop-In Centre 101 4th Avenue April 24, 2014 5:00–8:00 p.m. A presentation will begin at 6:00 p.m. for each open house, followed by a question and answer and open discussion session. Refreshments will be provided.

PAGE 11


B2B

DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

PAGE 12 THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 2014

www.cranbrookchamber.com

BUSINESS TO BUSINESS Our Mission Statement:

Fostering a healthy business climate in Cranbrook & District

PRESIDENT’S

S P E A K E R

REPORT

A

t a recent community meeting, a fellow participant suggested that Cranbrook businesses “only care about profits.” While it’s true that a business without profit is a business that won’t survive, it got me thinking that we don’t talk enough about the link between the success of business and the success of our community. If we consider business and Cranbrook, they’re a classic example of the concept of “symbiosis” that we learned in high school b i o l o g y. Businesses are critical for keeping our community alive and thriving. At the same time, a supportive community is crucial to the success of every business.

Keeping Business in Cranbrook … Keeping Cranbrook in Business

Most of us probably understand that healthy businesses inject money directly into the local economy through purchases of goods and services. Those dollars then circulate through the community as indirect spending. We also know that businesses pay taxes to government, taxes that are used for roads, police/ fire services, hospitals and colleges. And businesses provide meaningful jobs and satisfying careers for people of all ages. Those salaries also circulate in the community.

making this a better place to live, for helping residents who face more than their share of daily challenges, and for helping our young people become leaders.

What’s just as interesting is the degree to which business is woven into our social fabric. By investing in Cranbrook, business is a powerful yet little-understood force for

I didn’t have to dig very deeply to find inspiring examples of businesses all Cranbrook Chamber of Commerce members – that are investing heavily in our community. Ken Bridge (owner of Bridge Interiors) was recently named Cranbrook’s 2013 Citizen of the Year for his incredible and longstanding dedication to this community. While Ken runs a successful business, it was his passion for making Cranbrook a better place to live (sometimes shown

HEDLEY Pre-Concert

Dinner Special!! April 8th, 2014 6oz Steak Sandwich w. Salad & Fries, topped with your choice of pan-fried Mushrooms & Onions or Brandy Peppercorn sauce!

9.95 plus GST

$

Regular Pub menu also available featuring favorites including: CJ’s Legendary Burger • Slow cooked BBQ Pulled Pork Sandwich Jack’s Southwest Nachos

& MANY MORE Reservations are recommended Call 250 489-4146

JOHN WINTER

Dave Butler

u at See yo

ck’s! a J e t Coyo

in high heels, boxing gloves or figure skates) that was the focus of the recognition. Similarly, O w n e r s J o ey a n d Christine and their team at the Bedroom Furniture Galleries are involved in every aspect of our c o m m u n i t y, and contribute to organizations as diverse as Cranbrook Foster Parents, Wings as Eagles Ministry, Kootenay Child Development and Columbia Basin Literacy. For the past 14 years, Trevor and Jamie at Dairy Queen have not only hosted a Bud Caldwell Day (with proceeds to the Cranbrook Hospital Auxiliary), but they work with Arby’s to serve a full turkey dinner to up to 300 people each Christmas. Dave and his team at Cranbrook Dodge sponsor hockey and baseball teams and they host a successful golf tournament each year; in 2013, the proceeds from the tournament went to the East Kootenay Foundation for Health. The folks at East Kootenay Community Credit Union show their deep commitment to the community through involvement in a wide range of community initiatives. They provide $12,000 in college and high school scholarships each year, and since 2003, their Puck Tosses at Kootenay Ice games have raised over $45,000 for 12 local charities including KidSport and Food for Kids. Chris Thom and his 30 colleagues at Rocky Mountain Diesel contribute to a list of local organizations that’s longer than this article

P R O F I L E

President & CEO BC Chamber of Commerce

and has added up to nearly $50,000 over the last 5 years. Amongst many others, they support Kimberley and Cranbrook Special Olympics, the SPCA, and the Canadian Cancer Society. Lisa and Graham from Max’s Place moved to Cranbrook to make a difference, and that’s what they’re doing. They’re a sponsor and food donator for S y m p h o ny o f t h e Kootenays and they’ve provided food for guest artists for the East Kootenay Violin Club. Last November, they created a special cookie for Movember and donated a portion of every one sold to the Movember campaign. The good news is that the list of businesses investing in our community would consume this column for the next year if I wrote about all of them. But why did I think it important to share these stories with you? It’s a reminder that successful local businesses don’t just care about profit; they truly care about our community. As President of the Cranbrook Chamber of Commerce, I ask that you think about our local businesses the next time you consider a shopping trip to Lethbridge, Calgary, Spokane or Kalispell. The more money you spend here in Cranbrook, the more you help businesses do what they do in and for the community. Keeping business in Cranbrook means keeping Cranbrook in business. It’s that simple.

John Winter is the President & CEO of the British Columbia Chamber of Commerce. Prior to joining the Chamber in 1997, John was a Senior Executive with Canada’s largest brewing firm and held the position of President, Western Division, Molson Breweries. John’s 30 year career in the private sector included management assignments in Montreal, Toronto, Calgary, Vancouver and Los Angeles. He has extensive experience working with governments at all levels as a result of that experience in a regulated industry. Throughout his business career, John has been active in support of community endeavors including Lower Mainland United Way, Vancouver Art Gallery, Science World of BC, Jack Webster Foundation, Society for the Advancement of Education, Asia Pacific Foundation, Tourism Vancouver, the Molson Indy Vancouver, and Vancouver Canadians Baseball Club (President). John’s Chamber related activities include a member of the Province’s Small Business Round Table, Degree Quality Assessment Board, Immigrant Employment Council of BC, Minister’s Council on Employment Opportunities for Disabled Persons, Pacific Corridor Enterprise Council, and Lower Mainland Chamber’s Transportation Advisory Panel. John is active in the Cypress Park Little League in West Vancouver where he has been a coach and umpire instructor over the past 20 years. He has coached Little League in various parts of Canada for the past 36 years. John is the Chancellor of University Canada West. He was awarded the Queens Diamond Jubilee Medal for his community service in 2012. He is a graduate of Memorial University of Newfoundland and the recipient of the Variety Club’s Community Heart Achievement Award in 1994 for his work in bringing the Molson Indy annual event to Vancouver.


Y

THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 2014

o

re ’ u

I n vite

THE CHAMBERS

PAGE 13

d.

GENERAL LUNCHEON

..

B2B

DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16TH, 2014 @ 11:45

BUSINESS TO BUSINESS

Prestige Rocky Mountain Resort & Convention Centre $20/Chamber Member & $25/Non-Chamber Member Our Guest Speaker will be John Winter, President & CEO of the BC Chamber of Commerce Sponsored by Dr. Kevin Roberge Please make your reservation by calling 426-5914 or Email info@cranbrookchamber.com by noon Monday, April 14th

SAM STEELE SOCIETY

TIME CAPSULE T

o open and commemorate the 50 year milestone, the Sam Steele Society will be dedicating a TIME CAPSULE to be opened on the 75th Anniversary of Sam Steele Days 2039. The Sam Steele Society is inviting the city of Cranbrook’s citizens, clubs/ organizations, businesses and schools in our community to speak to a future population of Cranbrook by contributing to the SAM STEELE SOCIETY TIME CAPSULE. The Society would like to express our sincere gratitude to the three partnerships whose generosity enabled this commemorative project to become a reality; Fabrite Services Ltd. for donating the materials, design and construction of the Time Capsule vessel; WolfPack Signs & Printing for agreeing to produce the weatherwise sign on the vessel identifying the significance to all who stop to admire; and also to Roderick’s Skid-Steer Service Ltd. for their contribution of the rock slab to mount the completed Time Capsule.

Thursday June 19th, 2014. Time and location to be announced. The Sam Steele Society invites the entire community to make a submission! Write a poem, letter to a future student or citizen, story, submit an *item, picture/photo/painting, record a song. Submit an item that identifies your contribution to the Sam Steele Days Festival or to the city of Cranbook. Describe life in Cranbrook, your business or lifestyle, or what you like best about our community or festival. * some criteria must be adhered to Contact: Sandy Zeznik for more information szeznik@shaw.ca Or call the Sam Steele Society (250) 426-4161

TIME CAPSULE CRITERIA

WHAT SIZE CAN SUBMITTED ITEMS BE?

WHY? - To commemorate 50 years of bringing our

Vessel is 1 metre squared

community together while honouring a man whose actions contributed greatly to the success of our region - Sir Samuel Benfield Steele, NW Mounted Police. We dedicate this Time Capsule and its contents to a future population of Cranbrook so they may share and take pride in our history.

Keep items small so we can fit as many items as possible

WHO CAN SUBMIT? - Business, organizations & individuals

IS THERE A COST TO CONTRIBUTE? - NO

The TIME CAPSULE will be dedicated on

(250)

426-2933 Taco Time Centre

Mountain View District Girl Guides will be selling Girl Guide Classic Cookies on April 5th th and April 12

• Save-on-Foods April 5th • Tamarack Centre April 5th • Safeway April 12th

No perishables (food or liquids)

No batteries

No plant, animal or insect specimens

No rubber

WHEN IS THE LAST DAY FOR CONTRIBUTIONS?

WHAT ARE WE LOOKING FOR?

- Friday May, 23rd, 2014

WHEN IS THE DEDICATION CEREMONY?

Items relative to culture, school life, family life, community, volunteerism, business & economy, recreation, technology

Sam Steele Days historical value - ie: photos, memorabilia

Personal perspectives in a letter to a future citizen

Artistic contributions ie: songs , poetry, paintings, (digital files will be collected on a flash drive) send to info@samsteeledays.org with “Time Capsule” in the subject line

Each item should be submitted in a zip-locked plastic bag – air removed –

tuxedo rentals

Kootenay tailor Shop

WHAT MATERIALS CAN NOT BE SUBMITTED?

- Thursday June 19th, 2014

*LOCATION TBA – ALL ARE WELCOME TO ATTEND - WATCH FOR ANNOUNCEMENT! *TIME CAPSULE COMMITTEE RESERVES THE RIGHT TO REFUSE ANY SUBMITTED ITEM A Cranbrook Community Theatre Production

THE

FOREIGNER The Hit Comedy

Written by Larry Shue Directed by David Stock

If your broker no longer offers Wawanesa Insurance products and you would like to continue insuring with Wawanesa,

You Do Have A Choice!

We have been partnered with Wawanesa for over 10 years, and with our knowledge, experience and involvement in the community, we can provide you the superior service and support you deserve. Please visit or call us today to hear how Kootenay Insurance Services and Wawanesa Insurance can continue to take care of your insurance needs.

April: 3-5th 9-12th 16-19th 2014 7:30 pm • Studio Stage Door Partnered with:

11-11th Ave. South Cranbrook, B.C. 920 Baker St. Cranbrook, BC (within the Credit Union Centre)

Ph: 250-426-6657

PO Box 130 101a – 1028 7th Ave. Invermere, BC V0A 1K0 Ph: 250-342-2175

305 Wallinger Ave. Kimberley, BC V1A 1Z3 Ph: 250-427-2276

References in this advertisement to “Wawanesa Insurance” mean “The Wawanesa Mutual Insurance Company

Tickets at Lotus Books/Cranbrook $13 CCT Members & $15 Non-Members cranbrookcommunitytheatre.ca


DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

PAGE 14 THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 2014

Upcoming Events at Key City Theatre

Ashley MacIssac

Wednesday April 16 at 7:30 pm Tickets: $35 / $30 for members Cape Breton’s favourite son Ashley MacIssac is coming to Cranbrook. Ashley is one of the most celebrated Canadian roots musicians of all time. He has garnered international acclaim by playing the fiddle in that hard-nosed Cape Breton style, adding his own spin, mixing genres and pushing boundaries.

s

show l l a r fo

Seats are selling quickly Act Today!!

E N I L N WO m

s Ticket

NO

tre.co

ythea keycit

www.

SoWeCa Chamber Music Festival

Lisa Marie Presley TICKETS $56 / $50 for members

Rivka Golani

www.soweca.com

Opening Night Friday May 23, 2014 at 7:30 pm Premier Sponsor

Media Sponsor

Limited VIP Passes available for an additional $150 per ticket Call today!

Friday June 27 at 7:30 pm

Community Concert Sponsors

Call: 250 426 7006 Like: keycitytheatre Follow: @ApplaudArt


daily townsman / daily bulletin

Thursday, APRIL 3, 2014

NEWS

Page 15

Controversial spring grizzly bear hunt now open Dene Moore Canadian Press

VANCOUVER — British Columbia’s controversial spring grizzly bear hunt opened Tuesday, with one of the highest number of hunting authorizations issued in decades. Based on government counts that showed stabilization of specific grizzly populations previously closed due to overhunting, the government reopened several areas to hunting this year. An estimated 1,800 authorizations will be issued, up from about 1,700 last year but lower than the 1,980 issued in 2011. “I think we have the best idea (of the population) of any of the jurisdictions that hunt bears right now,’’ said Garth Mowat, a provincial government grizzly bear biologist in the Kootenay region. “We have spent a lot of resources improving our understanding of

about a quarter of the remaining North American population. Only Alaska has more grizzlies. Biologist Paul Paquet of the Raincoast Foundation said it’s extremely difficult to get a proper count of grizzly bears and there could be far fewer — too few to risk a trophy hunt. “The real numbers could be somewhere as low as 6,000 or as high as 18,000. We just don’t know,’’ Paquet said. But the bigger question is the moral one, he said. “Is this ethical, to be hunting bears? That’s really what’s at issue,’’ Paquet said. “This is a trophy hunt, as opposed to a hunt for food.’’ Mowat agrees that the real issue is a question of moral support for the hunt. “The debate about whether an individual morally supports a bear hunt and the debate about the sustainability of the hunt get woven

Kay Macintyre/Townsman File

Two grizzlies came into Kimberley last September. the number of bears in British Columbia and I’m quite comfortable that it’s good enough to allow us to conservatively manage the hunt.’’ The spring grizzly hunt runs from April 1 to the end of May. The fall hunt begins Oct. 1 and continues into mid-November. Though 1,800 hunting authorizations will be issued, so far this year 1,459 licences have been issued via a lottery

system. In 2011, 1,733 licences were issued of the 1,980 authorizations. On average about 300 grizzlies are killed annually. The most recent year for which information is publicly available is 2009, when between 350 and 400 bears were shot. Provincial biologists estimate there are approximately 15,000 grizzly bears in the province, which is home to

together,’’ he said. He does not believe there are conservation concerns. In fact, he said, after 30 years of provincial management grizzlies are repopulating areas where they had been wiped out. Sows with cubs have been spotted moving west from the Kootenay mountains, into the Okanagan and Similkameen regions. Conservation has been a concern. They are largely extinct south of the Canada-U.S. border. The Alberta government suspended its grizzly hunt in 2006 and declared the bears a threatened species in 2010. But in Alaska, there are 30,000 brown and grizzly bears, which are classed as the same species. The state fish and game department said about 1,900 were harvested in 2007. Kyle Artelle, a biologist at Simon Fraser University and Raincoast, said the founda-

tion’s own study found the provincial government quotas are not conservative and over-

kills are common. “There’s a huge amount of uncertainty,’’ Artelle said.

Notable theft falls flat in Nanaimo C ANADIAN PRESS

NANAIMO, B.C. — A cherished French cello has been returned to its elderly owner and four people have been arrested after thieves ransacked a home in Nanaimo, B.C. RCMP Const. Gary O’Brien says 75-yearold Irene Field was devastated to discover her home had been robbed while she was out of town in midMarch, and every single room had been rifled. O’Brien says thieves escaped with goods worth thousands of dollars, include the

cello, a violin, jewelry, purses, china, golf clubs, clothing and a television. Field told police the theft of the cello was especially heartbreaking because the instrument had not been played since the death of her husband several years earlier and it was a beloved keepsake. Mounties rounded up a 43-year-old woman and three men ranging in age from 20 to 43 late last month as the items appeared in Nanaimo-area pawn shops and O’Brien says one of the first pieces returned was the missing cello.

WE’RE FEELING FOOLI$H THIS APRIL! Win Cash and ATVs, every weekend!

KOOTENA

I

FRIDAYS: WIN UP TO $1,000 CASH! SATURDAYS: WIN YOUR SHARE OF $2,500 CASH! SUNDAYS: WIN A YAMAHA GRIZZLY ATV!

GRAND PRIZE

2014 YAMAHA VIKING UTV DRAWING, APRIL 30 SEE CASINO FOR DETAILS.

ROOMS STARTING AT

89

$

99*

PER NIGHT, PLUS TAX

Sunday – Thursday in April (Friday & Saturday, $20 additional per night) Mention this Special When Calling.

Room Special Includes: ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦

$10 IN BONUS PLAY $10 SPRINGS CREDIT 20% OFF AT THE SPA $5 OFF COUPON FOR DELI FREE BREAKFAST

KOOTENAIRIVERINN.COM BONNERS FERRY, IDAHO ♦ (800) 346-5668 SIGN UP FOR SPECIAL EMAIL ANNOUNCEMENTS *Rate good for one night accommodations. Advance reservations required. Not valid with other offers. Based on availability. Valid Sunday through Thursday in April.


DAILY TOWNSMAN

PAGE 16 THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 2014

®

valid all week, April 4th – 10th 915 to 930 g

Red Grapes Product of Chile. No. 1 Grade.

2

7

99

Assorted varieties. 915 to 930 g. LIMIT TWO - Combined varieties.

44

2

49

Lean Ground Beef

Nabob Coffee

lb 5.38/kg

Fluff Style. LIMIT FOUR.

lb 5.49/kg

ea.

12 pack

600 to 700 g

6

Cracker Barrel Cheese

Assorted varieties. 600 to 700 g. LIMIT TWO - Combined varieties.

3

2$

99

FOR

ea.

refreshe Water

99

¢

Grade “A” Turkeys

Under 7 kg. Frozen. LIMIT ONE with a minimum purchase of $50. Valid April 2 to April 10.

12 pack. Plus deposit and/or enviro levy where applicable. LIMIT FOUR.

lb 2.18/kg

Fresh Chicken Breast Boneless. Skinless. LIMIT FOUR.

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

APRIL

APRIL

APRIL

4

5

12

$

6

ea.

Raspberries Product of Mexico, U.S.A. 170 g. LIMIT FOUR.

2

99

2 Litre

AV AI

ea.

Signature CAFE Soup Assorted varieties. 625 mL.

B LA

LE

FRESH DA

Deli

ILY

3

99

Now it’s even easier to save at Safeway!

Coca-Cola or Pepsi Soft Drinks Assorted varieties. 2 Litre. Plus deposit and/or enviro levy where applicable. LIMIT TEN Combined varieties.

5

$

5 FOR

5

$

2 FOR

Safeway Kitchens Thick Sliced White Raisin Bread Or Whole Wheat. 570 g.

everybody gets our lowest price. every day. Safeway shoppers no longer need to use their club card to enjoy our lowest prices every day, in every department, in every aisle. APRIL

Prices effective at your Cranbrook Safeway store Friday, April 4 through Thursday, April 10, 2014 only. We reserve the right to limit sales to retail quantities. Some items may not be available at all stores. All items while stocks last. Actual items may vary slightly from illustrations. Some illustrations are serving suggestions only. Advertised prices do not include GST. ®™ Trademarks of AIR MILES International Trading B.V. Used under license by LoyaltyOne, Co. and Safeway. On BUY ONE GET ONE FREE items, both items must be purchased. Lowest priced item is then free. Online and in-store prices, discounts, and offers may differ.

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

FRI

SAT

SUN

MON

TUE

WED

THU

Prices in this ad good through April 10th


¨ ¨ DAILY ≠ ≠ Ø Ø ∂ ∂ 102 102 105 105

Maury BULLETIN Family Family News News Two KTLA Cunningham/ DAILY TOWNSMAN WGN-A EA1 VISN MM SRC

Funny Videos Manhattan Murder Road-Avonlea VideoFlow Terre Terre

Funny Videos Witch Crooked Lake Murder, She... Eas Top 10 Com Entrée prin Mange

Mother Mother Mother (:10) Due South Mi Columbo Simp De Trial Union TJ C.-B.

Two Vampire Reign KTLA 5 News Mother Mother Mother Mother Parks Parks Parks Rock Proof of Life (:20) American Gangster Time- Enigma Columbo Mi The 2014 Juno Awards Conan Simp Com 30 vies Info Prière Enquête TJ Nou

# $ % & _ ( ) + , ` 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 ∂

April 4 The Midwife Spun Kirstie Last Neigh Unforgettable Dateline NBC Curling Rake New Tricks Market Mercer Rake Rake Rake Anthony Cops Cops Hunt Hunt The First 48 The

The

Mayday Stranger Say Randy Cold Justice Sudden Death Hulk Aveng Adventures Family Family Simp Theory Stor Stor Museum Se Inner Castle Walking Dead MLB Ghost Adv. The Conjuring Whos Whos Mother Mother theZoomer C’est ma toune

Lincoln Center Grimm Shark Tank Hawaii Five-0 Grimm

Saint Louis News News (:01) 20/20 Blue Bloods (:01) Hannibal

PAGE 17

Super Popoff Countdown TJ C.-B.

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 Wash Moy KSPS-PBS Sid News News CTV News etalk Theory Blue Bloods CFCN Ellen Show The Doctors News ABC News News Ent Insider KXLY-ABC Rachael Ray Dr. Oz Show News CBS News Inside Ac KREM-CBS Dr. Phil Judge Judge News News News Million. J’pard Wheel KHQ-NBC Ellen Show NBA Basketball SportsCentre TSN SportsCentre MLB Baseball NET Sportsnet Con. MLB Baseball From Rogers Centre in Toronto. The Young News News News Hour Ent ET GLOBAL BC Queen Latifah Jelly Maya Arthur Dino Wild Se Work Coast KNOW Olly Ste NHL Hockey CBC Cor CBUT Reci News News News News ET Ent Builders CICT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent Builders CIVT The Young Squir Spong Kung Par Spong Spong Spong The Missing Lynx YTV Side Bethenny Two Two Simp Mod Theory Theory KAYU-FOX Steve Harvey Cooper 360 Smerconish Spot Un CNN Situa Cross E. B. OutFront SPIKE Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Bellator MMA Live Income Prop. Hunt Hunt Alaska Alaska Ext. Homes HGTV Holmes The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 A&E The First 48 Private Lives Pure Country CMT CMT’s Hottest: Deal Cash Wife Swap Don’t Cry Now Undercover Property Bro Love It-List It Love It-List It W Collision Earth Continuum Death Race SHOW NCIS Sons of Guns Sons of Guns Mayday DISC How/ How/ Daily Planet Prin Big Brother Secu Secu Stranger SLICE Secu Secu Prin Say Bor Bor Randy Say Say Randy Bor Bor TLC Say Flashpoint Dallas Criminal Minds 19-2 BRAVO Missing Bourne Suprm. (:05) Miami Vice EA2 (3:40) Eraser Gum Jim Pack Johnny Johnny Leg Teen Ben 10 Ulti TOON Res Phi Good LivI Didn’t I Didn’t I Didn’t I Didn’t Next FAM Shake ANT Theory Theory Brown Payne Brown Payne Mod Sein WPCH Middle Mod Sein Gas Theory Parks Theory Match Match Gags Gas COM Sein Behave Yourself The Agony and the Ecstasy TCM What’s the Matter With Helen? Stor Stor Stor Stor Haunted Coll. Stor Stor OUT Mantracker MASH MASH Vikings Amer. Pickers HIST Perfect Storms Amer. Pickers Stargate SG-1 Bulletproof Monk SPACE Inner Inner Castle The Mummy Returns AMC (3:15) The Mummy NASCAR Crowd Goes Wild FS1 NASCAR Racing Surviving Evil The Dead Files The Dead Files DTOUR Disas Disas Treasures (:15) Think Like a Man Scary Movie V MC1 Awaken Maury Family Family News News Two Two KTLA Cunningham Funny Videos Witch Mother Mother Mother Mother Mother WGN-A Funny Videos (:20) Black Christmas V for Vendetta EA1 Wizar (:45) Little Shop of Horrors Murder, She... Eas Yes... Gaither Gospel Time- God’s VISN Road-Avonlea MuchCountdown Simp Cleve Movie 102 102 MM VideoFlow Entrée prin Mange Union TJ C.-B. Paquet voleur 105 105 SRC Karma

THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 2014

PUZZLES

Friday Afternoon/Evening Cbk. Kim.

Arsenio Hall Rock Sunny

Charlie Rose Theory Mey KXLY Kim News Late News J. Fal SportsCentre Hocke Plays News Architects News Georg ET The ET The Young Boys Arsenio Hall Anthony Jail Jail Beach Beach The First 48 Pure Country

Sportsnet Con. Hawaii Five-0 Builders Lewis Work the fifth estate The National Hawaii Five-0 News Hour Fi Hawaii Five-0 News Hour The Next Star Super Spla Raising Hope News Mod Smerconish Cross Un Cops Cops Jail Jail Alaska Alaska Ext. Homes The First 48 The First 48 Deal Private Lives The Next Three Days Rush Hour 2 Death Race Sons of Guns Salvage Hunt Mayday Friend Friend Friend Friend Big Brother Bor Bor Randy Say Bor Bor Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds (10:50) Nowhere to Run Spar League of Extra. Gentlemen Fugget Austin Avalon High Derek Amer. Amer. Jeffer. Jeffer. Hardball Just/Laughs Theory JFL Comedy Now! 55 Days at Peking Haunted Coll. Stor Stor MeatEater Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Vikings Star Trek: Voy. Bulletproof Monk Walking Dead Game of Arms Mummy Return FOX Sports FOX Sports FOX Sports Ghost Adv. The Dead Files Ghost Adv. The Awakening Hart of Dixie News Sports Arsenio Hall Witch Parks Parks Rock Rock Sunny (:15) The Mask Bride-Chucky Follow That Dream Super Popoff South South South South South South Broadchurch TJ Nou TJ C.-B.

GREAT SELECTION OF WINE KITS, WINE MAKING ACCESSORIES AND GIFTWARE

New SpriNg ArrivAlS ISOTONER Cabanas Slippers Assorted Styles & Colours

Gift Certificates Available!

Scarves & Jewellery

KK OOOO T AY E N AY TEN W IINN E CERC A FR T EA R SF T E R S W

250.426.6671

www.kootenaywinecrafters.com

44 - 6th Ave. South,

Cranbrook, BC Behind Integra Tire on Van Horne

Baker St. Mall 250.489.8464

Exciting New Fashions!

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

P: 250-426-2201 • F: 250-426-4727 •TF: 1-800-665-4243

TRENDS N’ TREASURES 1109a Baker St. Cranbrook

1109a Baker Street, Cranbrook 250-489-2611 trendsntreasures@shaw.ca

CALL 426-3272 OR VISIT

www.tribute.ca

for this week’s movie listings Far-Reaching Delivery!

The Cranbrook Daily Townsman and the Kimberley Daily Bulletin are delivered to over 5000 households, 5 days a week and over 300 businesses. In town and rural! Home Delivery in Cranbrook: 250-426-5201 ext 208. Home Delivery in Kimberley: 250-427-5333.

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.

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.

She has all the pieces to your puzzle! 250-426-5201 www.dailytownsman.com

250-427-5333 www.dailybulletin.ca


DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

PAGE 18 THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 2014

COMICS Need help with current events?

Wedding & Party Supply Rentals

• Tents • Tables/Chairs • Table Linens • Dinnerware • Patio Heaters • Chafing Dishes • BBQ’s/Grills • Wedding Arch • Cutlery/Glasses • Wall Light Decorations • Dunk Tank & Bouncy Castle • Dance Floor, Karaoke Machine • Punch Fountains & Liquor Dispensers • Meat Grinder, Slicer, Sausage Stuffer

Read the DAILY newspaper for local happenings!

250-426-5201

Ph: 250-426-5254 Fax: 250-426-4531 Toll Free: 1-800-561-5254 2450 Cranbrook St. N. Cranbrook, BC, V1C 3T4 info@sandorrentals.com

250-427-5333

It costs you money to run an ad. So run it where it will get read.

HOROSCOPES by Jacqueline Bigar

ARIES (March 21-April 19) You might have decided to stay mum about a certain subject, but today you might completely reverse your decision. Pressure is likely to build. An adjustment needs to be made, especially if the situation involves a work-related matter. Tonight: Hang with your friends. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You’ll want to manage your finances a certain way, but a loved one seems to have a very different idea about what is acceptable. You could find yourself in a very difficult situation. Others unintentionally might add to the confusion. Tonight: Have an important talk. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You are all smiles when dealing with a difficult partner. Realize that you could be making the situation even more difficult. Understand your limits when it comes to handling this person. The only way to win a control game is not to play. Tonight: Start the weekend early.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Play it low-key, and don’t accept any more responsibility than you need to. If someone wants to take on more responsibility, let him or her do it! Otherwise, if you can, do some delegating. You need some free time for yourself. Tonight: Take a long-overdue nap. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You might want to try a different approach to the same end. Brainstorm with a friend before deciding. Listen to your sixth sense with a personal matter. Think positively. Know what you want to strive for with this bond. Tonight: Whatever knocks your socks off. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You could feel pressured to change pace and do something in a totally unique way. You have an unusual amount of imagination. When you mix that with your practical side, it is a winning combination. Remain open to others’ ideas. Tonight: Out till the wee hours. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) You might want to think before

Tundra

you leap into action. There are so many options in front of you, so you should check out which destination or goal intrigues you the most. A family member could try to push you in a certain direction. The choice is yours. Tonight: Opt for togetherness. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Little goes on that you aren’t aware of, and you also are able to read between the lines. However, you might decide not to allow someone else to know just how aware you are. Holding back will let you see what this person will reveal naturally. Tonight: Visit with a friend. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You use your ingenuity a lot, as this ability is one of the foundations of your success. Reach into your bag of tricks, but know that there could be a backfire. The costs might be high. Hold out, if you can, and you might see another path. Tonight: Your treat. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Be careful with how much you protest verbally or through

your actions. Inadvertently, you could corner yourself into a decision that you do not want to make. Work on being more laissez faire. In the long run, it could add to your success. Tonight: Add spice to your day. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You have a way about you that attracts many different people and opinions. Choose to take a step back and spend some time alone to assess the possibilities. Finding your center, rather than being so driven, might be a more powerful course for you. Tonight: Out and about. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You often speak your mind and open up discussions. Unfortunately, this approach could have others closing down right now. You might find that saying little will spark a brainstorming session and bring the most diverse ideas forward. Tonight: Order in. BORN TODAY Comedian Eddie Murphy (1961), actor Marlon Brando (1924), astronaut Gus Grissom (1926)

By Chad Carpenter

(Get your money’s worth - with coverage both in newspaper AND online!)

Call Nicole at 250-427-5333 www.dailybulletin.ca

ADVERTISING OPPORTUNITY

Garfield

By Jim Davis

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

Hagar the Horrible

Baby Blues

Rhymes with Orange

By Dick Browne

By Kirkman and Scott

By Hillary B. Price

ANNIE’S MAILBOX by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Annie: I’m 18 years old. I work two jobs to save money for college next year, one during the week and the other at a coffee shop on the weekends. Last week, my boss from the coffee shop sent an email to all employees saying that we are now required to take a daily picture of ourselves on a work camera. At the end of the month, the owners (a husband and wife) will judge who is the best dressed and give the winner a $100 gift certificate. Annie, all of the workers at this shop are high school and college-age females. This makes us uncomfortable, but we are afraid of losing our jobs. There already are video cameras that send black-and-white images directly to the boss’s office. My parents said that they’d be supportive of whatever I decide. I really like and need this job. Yesterday, I dressed very well, but didn’t take a picture. Five minutes ago, I received an email reminding me that the pictures are mandatory. What do I do? -- Confused Employee Dear Confused: We suspect your employers think this is an incentive for you and your co-workers to dress better. While the photographs don’t seem discriminatory, they do appear to be an unreasonable requirement for employment. Your best bet is to get together with the other employees and talk to your bosses. Let them know that you are uncomfortable with this new demand and ask whether they can find another way of getting the preferred results (like an enforced dress code). Dear Annie: I am a 51-year-old married man living in New Jersey. My retired parents live in Pennsylvania, and my older sister lives not far from them. Last November, my wife and I bought a new house 10 minutes from our old one. My parents wanted to see our new home. They rely on my sister to drive them long distances, so she sent an email with the details about when and how long. She also asked, “Is there anything we can bring?” I responded that she could bring four of our family’s favorite sandwiches for lunch. The next night, she sent me a nasty email asking how I could expect them to bring lunch. She said it is the host’s job to provide something to eat. Annie, I’ve gone to their houses many times and have always brought these sandwiches because I know everybody likes them. (I’ve never accepted payment.) After receiving that nasty email from my sister, I told her she is no longer welcome here. Now my parents say I am the bad guy and should have bit the bullet and provided lunch on my own. Was I wrong? -- Offended Brother Dear Brother: While the host should provide refreshments, this is family, and such things can be treated informally. The fact that you’ve brought sandwiches is generous, but that was your choice, not theirs. And your sister should not have asked about bringing something if she was not willing to comply. Her email was rude and incendiary, and your response shoved the argument into the stratosphere. You should each apologize. We suggest you swallow your pride and take the first step before this estrangement becomes permanent and all of you lose out. Dear Annie: I wholeheartedly agree with “Mom” about the PG-13 movies for children. How sad that we, the American public, allow this to continue and even make it profitable. Television is even worse. We all allow the lowest common denominator to set our values and standards. I realize that someday my grandchildren will be dealing with their children being exposed to much more filth. I grew up in the ‘50s and wish I could bottle the innocence my friends and I enjoyed and give it to my grandchildren. Instead, parents today seem to be rushing their children toward adulthood. -- Baton Rouge, La. 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 2014 CREATORS.COM


DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

THURSDAY, 3, 2014 PAGE PAGE 19 19 Thursday, AprilAPRIL 3, 2014

Share Your Smiles!

Your community. Your classifieds.

Happy Jayson!

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.

email classifieds@dailytownsman.com

Obituaries

Personals

Lost & Found

Lost & Found

Snider, Melville Earl

KOOTENAY’S BEST ESCORTS

FORD METAL HUBCAP Lost in Cranbrook area. Please call: 250-417-2514 Fred

LOST IN Kimberley or Cranbrook. 2 men’s wedding bands. Reward!! 250-427-4289

Obituaries

Obituaries

passed away at the age of 95 after living a long and happy life. He was the beloved husband of Alice, father to Eileen Ryton, Norma Balicki and Debbie Gould-Hawke, grandfather to Brad, David, Marlon, Candice, Tyler, Andrea, Brittany, Mitchell, Tyler, and Luke, and great grandfather to Kyle, Alyssa, Kevan, Cash, Raine, Kenya and Presley. Memorial ser vice will be held Friday, April 4th at 2:00 pm at the Cranbrook First Baptist Church on 11th Avenue. If friends desire, they may make a memorial donation to His Hope Uganda through The Great Commision Fo u n d a t i o n a t w w w. tgcfcanada.org

*For your safety and comfort call the best. *Quality and V.I.P Service Guarantee *Licensed studio ~New Location~ Calendar Girls New: Chyanne - 35, French & Native, petite brunette

Scarlett - 21, Strawberry blonde, sweet treat Lily - 25, Sandy-blonde, blue-eyed bombshell Danielle - 25, French seductress, slim, athletic “Spice up your life” (250)417-2800 in/out calls daily Hiring

Lost & Found Lost Panasonic ZS30 camera with blue case in Cranbrook area. (250)919-8643

Westcott, Blaine August 13, 1950 – March 17, 2014 Blaine died in Cranbrook Hospital in his 64th year. For twenty years he and his brother Ross owned and operated Batt Boys Insulation in Cranbrook and area. Blaine loved to golf, read and was a member of the Cranbrook Writers Group. During his battle with cancer the kindness of his friends in Cranbrook meant very much. In keeping with his wishes there will be no funeral. Internment of his cremated remains will take place in Whitewood, Saskatchewan at a later date.

SOUTER, Donald Charles 1937 - 2014 Donald passed away on Wednesday, March 26, 2014 at the East Kootenay Regional Hospital in Cranbrook, BC with family by his side after a very long, courageous fight with cancer. Donald was born in Hamilton, Ontario and as a teenager joined the RCAF. He was a proud member for 21 years while travelling the world in various postings. After retiring, Don worked as a policeman, security officer, gunsmith and finally was employed at a mine in the Arctic. He remained there until ill health forced him into retirement once again. This time, the CranbrookWycliffe area would be his final home with his companion Delma. Donald is survived by Delma Nelson and her family; his daughter Susanne (Mike) Udall, sons Brian (Chris) Dockal, Donald (Joanne) and grandchildren; Taylor, Aedan and Liam. He is also survived by his sister Isabel Souter of Hamilton. Don was predeceased by his mother, father and two brothers Robert and Norman. There will be no service at Don’s request. Condolences may be left for the family at www.markmemorial.com. Any donations in Don’s memory may be made to the Canadian Cancer Society, 19 – 9th Ave. S., Cranbrook, BC V1C 2L9. HAPPY FLYING DONALD!

ON THE WEB:

Sandy-May Christina Kellough-Blake 1964 - 2014 In loving memory of SandyMay Kellough-Blake, born July 9, 1964, and passed away Friday, March 14, 2014. She is survived by her loving husband Randy Blake, her mom Liza, her daughter Alicia and her four grandsons Logan, Dean, Steven and Jonathan, her sister Marlene, step-sister Penny, step-brothers Darrel and Les, sister-in-laws Tracy and Sandy, brother-in-laws Shane, Brent and Cory and lots of aunts, uncles, cousins and friends. She was predeceased by her brothers Jimmy and John and her beloved grandparents Norman and Margaret Kellough. Sandy-May will be sadly missed by all! A Celebration of Sandy-May’s Life will be held at McPherson Funeral Home in Cranbrook on Saturday, April 5, 2014 at 1:00 pm. Arrangements entrusted to McPherson Funeral Service. Condolences for the family can be offered at: www.mcphersonfh.com

Obituary William (Bill) Karmas

William (Bill) Karmas passed away peacefully at the Kimberley Special Care Home (The Pines) with his family by his side on March 30, 2014. Bill was born March 25, 1922 in Elk Point, Alberta. He enlisted with the Royal Canadian Army and served from 1944 to 1947. He met Mary (Sorochan) in Edmonton and they married June 2, 1951. Bill and Mary moved to Yellowknife where they lived from 1951 to 1963. Bill worked as a hoist man at Con Mine during this time. From 1963 to 1965, Bill was the co-owner/manager of Vermilion Bowl, in Vermilion, Alberta. The family then moved to Marysville. Bill resumed working for Cominco/ Teck as an operator at the fertilizer plant, retiring in 1980. Bill was a founding member of the Royal Canadian Legion and the Elks Club in Yellowknife and continued this involvement after moving to BC. He enjoyed curling, camping, travelling, playing cribbage, gardening and wood working. The hobby that gave him the greatest joy was searching for rocks as he walked many miles on the nature path linking Marysville to Kimberley. He transformed those rocks into little painted penguins, turtles, whales and especially lady bugs. He always had a pocketful of lady bugs to give to people he met along the nature path and in the community. Many of Bill’s lady bugs are in homes, gardens and businesses in the area. Bill is survived by his wife, Mary, daughter Adelle, grandsons Jordan and Evan; daughter Lorri (Jim Bennett), grandson Andrew; sister Mary Marusyk (formerly of Kimberley); and numerous nieces and nephews. The family sincerely thanks Dr. Haiduk, staff of the Kimberley Medical Clinic, and especially the staff of The Pines for their compassionate and tender care of Bill and kind support of his family during the past two years. You all have been wonderful. At Bill’s request, there will be no funeral service. Those wishing to make a memorial donation in honour of Bill may do so to the Kimberley Nature Park Society, Box 398, Kimberley, BC, V1A 2Y9.

Mark Memorial Funeral Services in care of arrangements (250) 426-4864

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.

Arrangements entrusted to McPherson Funeral Service. Condolences for the family can be offered at: www.mcphersonfh.com.

Obituaries

Obituaries Anna Dorschner April 1, 1924 March 27, 2014

Anna Dorschner passed away peacefully at Rotary Hospice House in Prince George, a few days short of her 90th birthday. She was a beloved mother and grandmother. Anna was predeceased by her husband Karl in 1981 and her daughter Elfriede Burt (nee Dorschner) in 2004. She is survived by her daughter Renate Dorschner (Prince George), grandson Chris Weitzel and great grandson Nicholas Weitzel (Kimberly) and stepsister Antonia Maerkl (Cranbrook) Anna was born in Germany and was a nurse during WW2. In 1953 she and Karl immigrated to Canada to make a better life for their daughters. After leaving Winnipeg, they finally settled in Cranbrook In 1959. Mom was proud to be a nurse and worked at St. Eugene Hospital and then the East Kootenay Regional Hospital until retirement. After Karl died in 1981, Mom moved to Kelowna and in 2014 came to Prince George. Mom had a real green thumb and could make anything grow. She enjoyed people and was an astute judge of character. Mom kept her quick wit and positive outlook right to the end. We would like to thank Hospice for the wonderful care and affection Mom received. There will be no service per request. Her ashes will be returned to Cranbrook the end of May.

Place a classified word ad and...

IT WILL GO ON LINE! Dianna Faye MacKay 1958 - 2014 Thursday, March 27, 2014 marked the end of a long and very courageous battle in life of a dear wife, mother, grandmother, daughter, sister and friend. Dianna passed away peacefully with her family by her side in the East Kootenay Regional Hospital. Dianna enjoyed the outdoors, travelling in the motor home, the company of friends and most of all precious moments with family. Her warmth of heart, contagious smile and wonderful sense of humour will be missed by all who knew her. Born on December 1, 1958, Dianna was raised and received her schooling in Kimberley. She met the love of her life Steve, and together they settled and raised a family here in Kimberley. When the Cominco Mine closed, Steve and Dianna found work in Thompson, Manitoba where they spent 6 years before returning to Kimberley. Dianna is survived by her loving husband Steven, daughter Erin (Carrie), granddaughter Brodie, parents Scotty (Dorothy) Valin, sister Debra (Bill) Muir, brothers David (Bev) Gordon and Kevin Valin and numerous nieces, nephews and cousins. A memorial service for Dianna will be held on Saturday, April 5, 2014 at McPherson Funeral Home in Kimberley at 2:00 pm with Bill Plant officiating. Those wishing to make memorial donations in honour of Dianna can do so to the: East Kootenay MS Group, #401, 2011 - 2nd Street North, Cranbrook, British Columbia, V1C 3L4. Arrangements entrusted to McPherson Funeral Service. Condolences for the family can be offered at: www.mcphersonfh.com


DAILY BULLETIN DAILYTOWNSMAN/DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

PAGE 20 Thursday, PAGE 20 THURSDAY, APRILApril 3, 20143, 2014

Announcements

Announcements

Announcements

Announcements

Announcements

Announcements

Employment

Obituaries

Obituaries

Obituaries

Cards of Thanks

Cards of Thanks

Information

Business Opportunities

Sympathy & Understanding

The families of

DONALD CHARLES SOUTER

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

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

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

would like to extend a heart-felt thank you to Dr. Davis, Dr. Lowden and the nurses of the Palliative Care Unit for the truly exceptional care and compassion shown to Donald during his final days in hospital. There are no words to express our thanks for the home care provided for Don – an exceptional, caring and compassionate group of men and women – who helped make this passing less painful.

Thank you all!!!

IN-HOME CONSULTATION OR VISIT OUR SHOWROOM

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

Help Wanted

End of Life? Bereaved? May We Help?

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

2PTILYSL` -LYUPL

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

The most effective way to reach an incredible number of BC Sportsmen & women. Two year edition- terrific presence for your business.

250-417-2019

Toll Free 1-855-417-2019

Help Wanted

APARTMENT/CONDO MANAGER TRAINING

Help Wanted

EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATOR EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY

Position:

Early Childhood Educator/ Infant Toddler Educator

Location:

�a�a�ni� Daycare

6JG UWEEGUUHWN ECPFKFCVG YKNN Ü˝ 2TQXKFG SWCNKV[ EJKNFECTG CU YGNN CU RNCP CPF ECTT[ QWV FGXGNQR OGPVCNN[ CPF CIG CRRTQRTKCVG CEVKXKVKGU HQT EJKNFTGP CIGF [GCTU

Your community foundation.

ܽ (WPEVKQP CU C OGODGT QH QWT EQJGUKXG CPF EQQRGTCVKXG VGCO YJKEJ KPENWFGU UVC� RCTGPVU CPF EQOOWPKV[ OGODGTU � Possess current Early Childhood Education Certi�cation ܽ 2QUUGUU C XCNKF %JKNF 5CHG (KTUV #KF %GTVK�ECVG ܽ 2QUUGUU C XCNKF ENCUU FTKXGTܴU NKEGPEG

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

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

Education/Trade Schools • Certified Home Study Course • Jobs Registered Across Canada • Gov. Certified www.RMTI.ca / 604.681.5456 or 1.800.665.8339

Reporter

The Trail Times has an opening for a reporter/photographer. As a member of our news team, you will write news stories and take photos of Greater Trail events, cover city council and other public meetings and respond to breaking news stories. You must work well under pressure, meet daily deadlines and be a flexible self-starter with a reliable digital camera and vehicle. This union position is for four days a week, with the potential for full-time work during holiday relief periods. This is a temporary position, covering maternity leave. Computer literacy is essential, experience with layout in InDesign an asset, newspaper experience or a diploma in journalism preferred. Some weekend and evening work is involved. The Times offers a competitive salary and benefits. The successful candidate will be required to become a member of the Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union, Local 2000. Qualified applicants should apply in writing no later than May 11, 2014 to: Guy Bertrand, managing editor Trail Times 1163 Cedar Ave. Trail, BC V1R 4B8 editor@trailtimes.ca Fax: 250-368-8550 Only qualified candidates will be contacted; no phone calls please.

ɈCኹCOPKM &C[ECTG KU NQQMKPI HQT CP GPGTIGVKE F[PCOKE RGTUQP VQ LQKP QWT VGCO 6JKU YKNN DG C RGTOCPGPV HWNN VKOG RQUKVKQP WRQP C UWEEGUUHWN C UKZ OQPVJ RTQDCVKQPCT[ RGTKQF ďż˝e ďż˝roďż˝ide a co��rehensiďż˝e and co�� ďż˝etitiďż˝e ďż˝eneďż˝t and ďż˝ension ďż˝acďż˝aďż˝eďż˝

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

FOR SALE. Wineworks Cranbrook & Kimberley is the longest running U-vin/U-brew under same ownership in all of BC, having opened in 1990. This successful business is now for sale. Call 250 427 4422 or email wwk4sale@gmail.com.

�tart Date: I��ediately

We build endowment funds that benefit the community forever and help create personal legacies

WONDERFUL BUSINESS

Please call Annemarie 1.800.661.6335 email: ďŹ sh@blackpress.ca

www.kootenaymonument.ca

PU HZZVJPH[PVU ^P[O :[LPKS 2HTILP[a 3H^ *VYWVYH[PVU

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

ADVERTISE in the LARGEST OUTDOOR PUBLICATION IN BC The 2014-2016 BC Hunting Regulations Synopsis

ܽ %QPUGPV VQ CPF RCUU C %TKOKPCN 4GEQTF %JGEM 2TGHGTGPEG YKNN DG IKXGP VQ ECPFKFCVGU YJQ CNUQ JCXG ܽ +PHCPV 6QFFNGT %GTVK�ECVG ܽ 8CNKF %NCUU &TKXGTܴU .KEGPEG ܽ 2TGXKQWU GZRGTKGPEG YQTMKPI KP C (KTUV 0CVKQPܴU EQOOWPKV[ To a��ly or for further infor�ation� su��it Co�er Letter and resu�e� includin� � references to:

,CP $CKNG[ (KPCPEG CPF *WOCP 4GUQWTEGU /CPCIGT 5V /CT[ܴU +PFKCP $CPF /KUUKQP 4QCF %TCPDTQQM $% 8 % ' Fax: E�ail: LDCKNG["CSCO PGV

%NQUKPI FCVG #RTKN VJ RO /56 6JCPM [QW VQ CNN CRRNKECPVU JQYGXGT QPN[ VJQUG UGNGEVGF HQT CP KPVGTXKGY YKNN DG EQPVCEVGF

Help Wanted Trickle Creek Golf Resort

is looking for Cooks and Servers for the up and coming golf season. Please visit our website at tricklecreek.com for more information, or send your resumĂŠ to: pthompson@skikimberley.com

Bootleg Gap Golf

Bootleg Gap Golf is looking for line cooks for the 2014 season. Enjoy golf privileges and an excellent working environment. Food Safe and references are required. Send resumÊ to Bootleg Gap Golf: Attn: Joe Illes Email: proshop@ bootleggapgolf.com BY FAX- 250-427-4077 • ARCHITECTURAL SHEET METAL WORKERS • FLAT ROOFERS

WANTED

Vancouver Island and Lower Mainland opportunities. Top Wages & BeneďŹ ts. Relocation costs paid to qualiďŹ ed applicants. E-mail: hiring@ parkerjohnston.com or Call: (1)250-382-9181

LEIMAN HOMES is currently looking to fill the position for a carpenter. This is a full apprentice position. Please send resumes to Box ‘K’, c/o Daily Townsman, 822 Cranbrook St. N. Cranbrook, BC.

Hospitality

NORTHSTAR Mountain Village Resort is looking for a dynamic Front Desk Supervisor with hospitality experience and a passion for guest satisfaction. The ideal candidate will possess the following: Demonstrated supervisory skills, good judgement and a sense of humour. Computer literate with good working knowledge of Microsoft Office Suite. Superior written and oral communication skills. Excellent organizational and time management skills. This fulltime position will be located in Kimberley. Successful candidate must be available to work evenings and weekends. A competitive wage is offered and will be based on experience. Please deliver your resume in-person to 1351 Gerry Sorensen Way, Kimberley or email to lisa@northstarmountainvillage.com


DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

Thursday, AprilAPRIL 3, 2014 THURSDAY, 3, 2014 PAGE PAGE 21 21

Employment

Merchandise for Sale

Employment

Employment

Services

Services

Services

Trades, Technical

Misc. for Sale

Legal

Legal

Financial Services

Financial Services

Financial Services

FAMILY LAW

LICENSED PLUMBER/ GAS FITTER

Req. at Canuck Mechanical in Prince George. Must have exp. doing service work & be proficient with trouble shooting heating systems & plumbing problems. Top wages & beneďŹ ts Email resume to: canuckm@telus.net

Is Reading Your True Passion?

Love Local News & Politics?

Donald Kawano, QC 2nd Floor, 6 - 10th Avenue S. Cranbrook, BC V1C 2M8 Telephone: 250-426-8981 Toll free: 1-866-426-8981 Email: donk@rellapaolini.com

BUY 2 GET THE 3RD INSERT

FREE

Help Wanted

Offer valid April 1-30, 2014

Financial Services GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com

BLACKTOP NOW! NO JOB TOO SMALL

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

421-1482

FREE ESTIMATES!

CALL NOW!

POWER PAVING

SERVING ALL THE KOOTENAYS Merchandise for Sale

Appliances INGLIS FRIDGE and stove. Excellent condition. White, $500. Call 250-426-1102.

Furniture TOP OF THE LINE oak coffee table set, $400. Big Boy leather La-Z-Boy, $400., was $1000. Dining table set, padded chairs (wood) $700. firm.

250-427-7410

Help Wanted

We currently have an opening for a sales person to help us with our paid distribution newspapers across B.C. This position means getting out in the community and talking to subscribers about our newspapers and working to build stronger relationships with existing readers of our newspapers. It also includes finding new subscribers for our newspapers and helping introduce them our award winning host of community newspapers. This is not a year-around position and will run from March to October each year. We offer a spectacular compensation package and bonus incentives. Your own vehicle is required, but we cover all travel expenses. This is really a great opportunity for the right person. It is a different type of job, but definitely has different types of rewards. If you feel this position would be the perfect fit for you, then we would love to hear from you. Please email all enquiries to Michelle Bedford at circulation@trailtimes.ca.

2001 Buick Regal LS $4,000 OBO, 170000 km, A/T, Grey ext, leather/power/heated seats, sunroof, dual climate contr, cruise, pwr locks & windows, A/C, tape deck/CD/Tape-MP3 adapter incl. 250-421-3485

Misc. Wanted Coin Collector Looking to Buy Collections, Estates, Gold & Silver Coins + 778-281-0030

Legal Services

NOTICE

122-11 AVENUE S 250.417.0584 100, CRANBROOK - NEW LOCATION TH

Black Press has a very unique opportunity for the right person.

CRIMINAL RECORD? Pardon Services Canada. Established 1989. Confidential, Fast, & Affordable. A+BBB Rating. RCMP Accredited. Employment & Travel Freedom. Free Consultation 1-8NOW-PARDON (1-866-972-7366) RemoveYourRecord.com

Contractors

FREE CONFIDENTIAL CONSULTATION

MNPdebt.ca

Unique Opportunity

Call Marion at 250-426-5201, ext. 202 and your ad will run in the Cranbrook Daily Townsman, Kimberley Daily Bulletin and the East Kootenay VALLEY!!

250-427-5333

Services

“I was tired of debt. It was time for a permanent change.�

• Cohabitation Agreements • Divorces • Family Law Litigation • Collaborative Family Law • Separation Agreements • Mediation

250-426-5201

Subscribe Today!

LIFE-CHANGING DEBT SOLUTIONS

Government Licensed Trustees in Bankruptcy & Proposal Administrators

Southeast B.C.’s Law Firm

Legal Assistant / Receptionist wanted in Kimberley Rockies Law Corporation requires a legal assistant/receptionist for our Kimberley location. The successful candidate will have comparable experience working in an office environment with a high level of competency in Microsoft Word. Rockies Law Corporation offers competitive remuneration and provides a progressive and flexible work environment. Please forward your resumĂŠ with cover letter to Rockies Law Corporation, 201 - 290 Wallinger Avenue, Kimberley, BC V1A 1Z1. Only those candidates selected for an interview will be contacted.

Employment

Employment

Employment

Career Opportunities

Career Opportunities

Career Opportunities

ACCOUNT MANAGER, GENERALIST

Cranbrook NPOUI DPOUSBDU

Help Wanted

TRACTOR OWNER OPERATOR SIGNING BONUS OF $3,000!

JOB PURPOSE

Drivers providing our customers with exceptional delivery service and value in exchange for ongoing business success in this fast growing industry.

QUALIFICATIONS

Requirements include: • a reliable and clean tandem axle tractor • Class 1 AB motor vehicle license • Clean Drivers Abstract • Hard working self-motivated and consistently displays superior customer service skills • Organized, punctual and good communication skills

As an SME specialist for the Cranbrook Business Center, you will identify and develop business opportunities with new entrepreneur clients by offering BDC ďŹ nancing and consulting services. You will also create and implement a strategy for building a portfolio of proďŹ table long-term loans with existing clients. Your responsibilities will include developing and carrying out a business development plan based on business centre objectives. You will also prepare and present customized proposals that reect the company’s needs and help grow client relationships. We are looking for people with: t 6OJWFSTJUZ EFHSFF JO DPNNFSDF PS JO CVTJOFTT BENJOJTUSBUJPO t .JOJNVN UP ZFBST FYQFSJFODF JO DPNNFSDJBM mOBODJOH t 4BMFT TLJMMT BOE CVTJOFTT EFWFMPQNFOU FYQFSJFODF t 1BTTJPOBUF BCPVU FOUSFQSFOFVSTIJQ t (PPE LOPXMFEHF PG $SBOCSPPL BOE TVSSPVOEJOH BSFBT XJMM CF DPOTJEFSFE BO BTTFU

Why work for Sysco? • Be home every night

Interested in joining our team? bdc.ca/careers KPC OVNCFS

• Be your own company • Fee adjustments for rising fuel costs • Consistent supply of work • Customer service and food safety training • Paid every 2 weeks • Corporate discounts with preferred • Discounts on food purchases

BDC values diversity in the workplace and encourages all qualiďŹ ed candidates to apply.

Qualified candidates please send resume to Human Resources via email: hr.calgary@cgy.sysco .ca Subject Line: HR-OO14 or call 403-720-1305. Sysco is the global leader in selling, marketing and distributing food products to restaurant, healthcare and educational facilities, lodging establishments and other customers who prepare meals away from home. Committed to Employment Equity

3UBSCRIBE NOW AND ENJOY LOCAL NEWS SPORTS ENTERTAINMENT AND CLASSIFIEDS

We deliver weekdays – to your door!! %VERYONE IN THE FAMILY SHOULD READ THE DAILY NEWSPAPER 250-426-5201

250-426-5201 250-427-5333 0 3 7% !2% /&4%. ,/ /+).' &/2 #!22)%23 Â&#x; ). +)-"%2,%9 ). #2!."2/ /+ Â&#x; &5,, 4)-% Â&#x; 0!24 4)-% #!,, ./7


DAILY BULLETIN DAILYTOWNSMAN/DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

PAGE 22 Thursday, PAGE 22 THURSDAY, APRILApril 3, 20143, 2014

Rentals

Transportation

Transportation

Commercial/ Industrial Property

For Sale By Owner

Apt/Condo for Rent

Auto Accessories/Parts

Recreational/Sale

KIMBERLEY Chapman Camp Apartments - 2 bedroom for rent - available April 1. Great location - backs on to Rails to Trails! $650/month includes heat, covered parking, and common utilities. N/S, No pets, no kids. Contact Bob at 250-427-5132 to view.

FOR SALE 42,000 sq.ft. Shopping Centre in Calgary, 7.5% Cap Rate. Blackstone Commercial. Shane Olin solin@blackstonecommerical.com (403)708-9086

Become a GREEN SHOPPER!

DO YOU HAVE A special talent?

~Crafting~Quilting~Nails~ Catalogue Sales, etc. Calling all home based businesses. We have an opportunity to showcase your talents at very affordable prices. Let everyone in the Kootenays know what you have to offer and expand your customer base. Call Marion at (250)426-5201 ext 202 for all the details, then get ready for some new revenue!

www.pitch-in.ca

Contact these business for all your service needs!

E • RE C YCL

LE • REC YC

SERVICES GUIDE

This little gem will be listed May 1 so check it out now & save thousands in Real Estate fees. Unique well maintained, back to back, very private duplex in Cranbrook. New shingles, flooring & water heater. Finished up and down at time of construction in 1988. Large master bedroom, full bath, kitchen, DR & LR up. 2-bdrms, full bath, laundry room & large family room w/wet bar down. Features carport, covered deck w/spectacular views of sunsets, F/S, DW, W/D, full size basement fridge & mini blinds. 2 blocks from golf course & near hospital, College, schools. Must be seen to be appreciated. $235,000. For appt to view, call (250)417-6841

LE • REC YC

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.

Real Estate

Mobile Homes & Pads For Sale:

1973 2 BEDROOM MOBILE HOME. Totally renovated, including: roofing, plumbing, floors and thermal windows. Large shed, garden and patio. In-town trailer park, close to hospital/shopping.

$30, 000./obo

250-417-9717

Homes for Rent SMALL, 3 BEDROOM house in downtown Cranbrook. W/D, F/S, $900./mo., plus utilities. N/P, references. 250-489-1324

Want to Rent WANTED TO RENT:

LE • REC YC

MARKET PLACE

Real Estate

3 bedroom house, duplex or mobile in Cranbrook. As soon as possible. Please call 250-489-4837 (home) or 250-420-1040 (cell)

Open Houses

Open Houses

OPEN HOUSES Saturday April 5 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.

• • • •

GLEN’S GRASS CUTTING

IS YOUR COMPUTER SLUGGISH OR HAVING PROBLEMS?

Dethatching (includes lawn vacuum) Aerating Gutters Grass cutting

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 10% Senior Spring Discount

250-426-8604

HANDY B8MAN

HANDYMAN to the

*SENIOR STARS*

Painting, Plumbing Carpentry, Reno’s & Repairs. ~Steve~

250-421-6830

TREE PRUNING Spring is here.

*Time to get your trees pruned. *Shade trees, fruit trees, and some tree removal.

LEAKY BASEMENT •

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!

*For quotes, call Mike:

250-426-3418

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

TREES • LAWNS GARDEN • LANDSCAPE

www.superdaveconsulting.ca

Snow Blowing **Home Improvement Projects ** Odd Jobs and Dump Runs.

at 250-422-9336

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

Call SuperDave (250)421-4044

**Residential

Call Reeve

SERVICES

“Sweeping the Kootenay’s Clean”

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

~Book Now~

Serving Cranbrook and area

TIP TOP CHIMNEY

Jody ~ 250-919-1575

www.CHARLTONHOMES.CA

Weiler Property Services • • • •

Professional Tree Pruning Lawn: Aerate, Dethatch, Fertilize, Soils Garden Rototill Landscaping & Stone Work repair

Forest technologist (School of Natural Resources Fleming College), with over 25 years experience, are fully insured and enjoy what we do. David & Kimberly Weiler

250-427-4417 weilerhart@shaw.ca

11:00am - 12:30pm 9561 Pighin Road, Wycliffe $599,900 1/2 way between Cranbrook & Kimberley. 55 acres of paradise! Fenced & x-fenced, 3 paddocks, 30x30 garage, beautiful home – too many features to list. 2393843 Jeannie Argatoff Noon - 1:30pm 3249 Silver Spring Drive $412,900 So close to Cranbrook on 5 acres with a creek through. 3 bdrm, 3 bath home offers over 3200 sq ft of country living – barn, fenced pasture, lots of entertainment space. 2391679 Sonia Mama 1:00 - 2:30pm 301 - 13th Ave. S. $299,900 1445 sq ft beauty located on Baker Hill on 58x122' flat lot. Nice floor plan, hardwood & tile, beautiful kitchen. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, main floor laundry. 2395911 Jeannie Argatoff 2:00 - 3:30pm 920 - 22nd Ave. S. $442,900 A little piece of heaven! 5 bdrm, 3½ bath home set on 1 acre at city limits with inground pool, amazing view of mtns, fenced 60x90' garden, garage/workshop, RV hook-ups. 2395359 Sonia Mama 3:00 - 4:30pm 1345 Southview Drive $649,000 So Beautiful! This home is feature packed. 3+1 bdrm, 4 bath, central air, heated floors, u/g sprinklers, 24x40 heated garage. 2393379 Jeannie Argatoff

OPEN HOUSES Sunday April 6 1:00 - 2:30pm 3208 Beach Road, Moyie $399,900 Live year around just 200' from Moyie Lake. Full lake view on 0.96 acre. Loads of updates in this 1316 sq ft rancher. 2395220 Jeannie Argatoff 3:00 - 4:30pm 7203 Monroe Lake Road $789,000 73 acre paradise! Home boasts 3360 sq ft on 2 floors + full basement with in-law suite. 6 bdrm, 4 bath, 3 car garage, barn & more! 2395371 Jeannie Argatoff

Cranbrook, Kimberley and surrounding areas.

N

ewspapers are not a medium but media available for everyone whenever they want it. They are growing and evolving to meet the consumer’s interests and lifestyles and incorporating the latest technological developments. This is certainly great for readers and advertisers. SOURCE: NADBANK JOURNAL SEPT/08

BLUE SKY REALTY

250-426-8700 1111 Cranbrook St. N. www.blueskyrealty.ca www.mls.ca

Each office independently owned and operated.

Recreational/Sale

FOR SALE

2001 40FT. MONACO DYNASTY MOTOR COACH includes: • 400hp Cumins diesel engine • 66,000 miles • 2 slideouts • remote control awning • washer/dryer • Aqua hot heating system • many more features

$

2009 Trail Sport 27.5’ Great family unit. Well appointed, a small slide with kitchen and couch expanding out for great use of space. Queen walk around bed, rear bunks (double and wide single) both with windows. Dinette, 3 pce bath, fridge, stove, microwave, furnace, air conditioning - sleeps seven comfortably. Large awning. Lightweight halfton towable. Very well maintained. Priced to sell at $14,000. Call 250-464-0712 for more information.

Need help with current events?

122,500

2008 EQUINOX SPORT TOWING VEHICLE

Read the DAILY newspaper for local happenings!

(122,000 kms)

12,500

250-426-5201

130,000

250-427-5333

$

OR TOGETHER

$

250-349-5306

1971 16’ Travelaire Trailer

Boats

Sell Your Boat $30 for 2weeks includes 20 words Valid April 1-30, 2014

Good Shape!

Good for Hunting!

Asking

$

700

Call Marion at 250-426-5201, ext 202.

Phone

250-427-4954 Mortgages

Mortgages

Janis Caldwell-Sawley Mortgage Specialist Royal Bank of Canada janis.sawley@rbc.com mortgage.rbc.com/janis.sawley Serving the East Kootenays

Tel.: 250-417-1336

CLASSIFIEDS HELP YOU SELL

CALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202


daily townsman / daily bulletin

Thursday, APRIL 3, 2014

NEWS

Page 23

Toronto Zoo needs help Firefighter rescues 7-foot snake from blaze naming baby gorilla Associated Press

C ANADIAN PRESS

A firefighter put his reptile-handling experience to good use when he rescued a 7-footlong (2.13-meter-long) boa constrictor from a burning home in western Michigan. Muskegon firefighter Scott Hemmelsbach told The Muskegon Chronicle that he reluctantly agreed to enter the two-storey, smoke-filled house Sunday night to retrieve the snake. He says he cradled the “weighty’’ snake before carrying it to safety. “It was trying to crawl up the side of his terrarium and get out,’’ Hemmelsbach said. “His face was pushed up on the screen and trying to get out. There was a lot of smoke and he was trapped.’’ The firefighter said he learned how to handle snakes while he was at Grand Haven High School, where he helped showcase them. “I’d take them around and show them to the kids in the elementary classes,’’ he said. “That didn’t bother me at all.’’ When Hemmelsbach reached the snake inside the home, he

TORONTO — The Toronto Zoo says it needs helps naming its new baby gorilla. The female western lowland gorilla was born at the zoo on Jan. 10 to mom Ngozi and dad Charles. The three-month-old baby is the 15th gorilla to be sired by Charles and born at the Toronto Zoo since it opened in 1974, zoo officials say. Names can be submitted online on the zoo’s website until April 22 and the winning name will be announced at the end of the month. The zoo says the name should be suitable for a female and African names are desired. The name must also start with the letter “N’’ in line with the zoo’s tradition of naming baby gorillas with the first initial from the mother’s name. The baby’s older brother Nassir was born in 2009. The zoo says the new baby is genetically significant for the western lowland gorilla population being raised in North America, since it is a critically endangered species. The zoo is a longtime partner in the Gorilla Species Survival Plan which focuses on conservation to help prevent extinction. The zoo says Ngozi likes to rock

Courtesy of Gordon Cole/Associated Press

Firefighter Scott Hemmelsbach holds a python after rescuing it from a burning home in Muskegon, Mich., on Sunday, March 30, 2014. gingerly handled him so not to scare the reptile. “I removed the screen off the top and knew to approach it by coming up behind his head. He became very active, and I was glad because that meant that he was okay.’’

Kimberley

Two people in the home escaped without injury, fire officials said. The fire significantly damaged the home, and the cause is under investigation. “I would do it for any creature,’’ Hemmelsbach said. “I’m just glad it had a happy ending.’’

al Vis ito r Gu ide 20 14 - 20 15 Off ici Fre e for you !

Toronto Zoo / YouTube

The Toronto Zoo is hosting a contest to name its latest addition: a female baby gorilla.

her baby and that staff and visitors will often find the mother gorilla tenderly gazing at her newborn’s face. She has not put the baby down since the day she was born, zoo officials say, and she probably won’t for many more months. The zoo also went to the public earlier this year to help name a polar bear cub born in November. More than 14,000 people voted to pick a name from among six offered by the zoo. The winning name was Humphrey but the zoo also gave the cub an additional Inuit name — Piujuq — meaning “good and nice.’’

It’s time! We are working hard to create the Official 2014 - 2015 Visitor Guide for the East Kootenay and we value your input. Send us your high-resolution photos to be included in this year’s publication to: production@dailybulletin.ca Want to be seen year ‘round? Advertise in the Official Visitor Guide and get traffic to your business! Call Nicole at 250-427-5333 or email her at advertising@dailybulletin.ca.

250.427.5333


DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

PAGE 24 THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 2014 14-A041 4 Up Ads_PRT Kootenay Advertiser.pdf

3

2014-03-25

8:31 PM


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.