Cranbrook Daily Townsman, September 15, 2014

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Cause of dead fish in Joseph Creek unknown Arne Petryshen Townsman Staff What has caused a number of fish to die in Joseph Creek over the September 5 weekend is

not known. Ray Gilowitz, a conservation officer based out of Cranbrook, confirmed that fish had died in the creek for un-

known reasons. “The ministry doesn’t know at this point why it occurred,” he said. He said the COs were

initially called because of the reports of fish floating in the creek. Environment Canada has taken water samples and fish samples as well.

He said there are no known causes at this time. “The ministry is certainly aware of it, but there are no answers to

how or why it occurred at this point,” he said. Chris Zettel, the city’s corporate communication officer, said the city was made aware Mon-

day that something occurred over the weekend in regards to the fish.

See CAUSE, Page 3

Cranbrook gang activity down due to RCMP work BARRY COULTER

A semi truck burned to the axlesThursday night on 4th Avenue South.

ARNE PETRYSHEN PHOTO

Semi burns up on residential street A R N E P E T RYS H E N

A semi truck burned on 4th Avenue South overnight Thursday, Sept. 11. Fire crews were on the scene to put out the blaze during the early morning hours. The call came in at 1:55 a.m. and by 3:56 a.m. the blaze was extinguished. Gord Yee, acting captain for the Cranbrook Fire and Emergency Services, said fire crews arrived to a fully in-

volved vehicle fire. He said there was no danger to nearby people or structures. “It was just parked on the side of the road, a residential street, so there was no exposures as far as dangers.” He said crews treat vehicle fires much the same as structural fires. “We just make sure that there are no exposures or hazards to anybody around, like

power lines, or fuels or anything like that,” he said. “We just try to control it as soon as possible before it spreads to anything else.” Six firefighters responded to the call. Yee said the cause is undetermined. He said it is under investigating, but not by fire crews. Rather it will be ICBC and/or the RCMP. Yee said they do get quite a

few vehicle fires over the course of the year. “It’s pretty common,” he said. Neighbours reported hearing the tires explode. “Which is quite common when you have a fully involved vehicle of course tires are going to overheat and catch on fire and with the air inside them you are going to hear the explosions and stuff like that from them,” he said.

The new head of B.C.’s anti-gang agency says police have made “significant headway in the efforts to curtail gang activity.” Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit chief officer Kevin Hackett said earlier this month that the “significant decline” in organized crime homicides comes after a series of high-profile investigations leading to charges, as well as new initiatives to prevent or reduce gang membership. Nearly 100 organized crime figures or gang-related individuals were arrested and charged last year with more than 270 offences in close to 30 B.C. communities, Hackett said. In Cranbrook, gang activity, particularly in the drug trade, is down, after intense police work. Four years ago, RCMP

intervened in a feud between two rival Cranbrook gangs, that had burst out into the open with the shooting of one gang member in front of the Sam Steele Hotel in Cranbrook, in Oct. 2009. Victim Chad Everett Munroe was shot several times in the dispute between two rival groups, but survived. The violence in Cranbrook was part of what police there described as a war for control of the Kootenay drug trade between rival gangs, with significant links to organized crime throughout the Kootenay and southern Alberta regions. In May of 2010, likely as result of the shooting and the ongoing feud, two innocent people — Leanne MacFarlane and Jeffrey Taylor — were murdered in a Mayook cabin just east of Cranbrook.

See GANG , Page 5

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daily townsman

Local NEWS

Monday, September 15, 2014

Page 3

COTR names five new board members Tre vor Cr awley

College of the Rockies’ Board of Governors is pleased to announce the appointment of five new Board members. Appointed to the College Board through Provincial Order in Council are Steen Jorgensen, Jesse Nicholas, and Cindy Yates of Cranbrook, Krys Sikora of Golden, and Wilda Schab of Invermere. Now retired, Steen Jorgensen was previously the Publisher and Regional Manager for Cranbrook Daily Townsman and Kimberley Daily Bulletin. Mr. Jorgensen has 40 years of experience in communication including as Advertising Manager, Publisher, Regional Manager and Vice President of Canadian operations for a large media company. He was also Vice President of Marketing for Valley Cable TV in California. Active in his community, Mr. Jorgensen is the President of Symphony of the Kootenays Association. He was also the Past Chair of Key City Theatre Board of Directors, Former Director of Cranbrook and District Hospital Foundation and Past Director

Photo submitted

College of the Rockies’ Board of Governors welcomes new members (left to right) Jesse Nicholas, Wilda Schab, Cindy Yates, Krys Sikora, and Steen Jorgensen. of BC Press Council. Jesse Nicholas is the Communication Manager for the Ktunaxa Nation Council. He has worked in a variety of positions and roles in the past including Parks Canada and is a former employee of College of the Rockies. Mr. Nicholas is also a Board member on the First Nations Technology Council and was an elected Councillor in his home community of

Akisqnuk First Nation in Windermere from 2006 to 2010. He completed a Bachelor’s degree from the University of Victoria in 2006. He currently resides in Cranbrook with his wife Rachael and son Jacob. Cindy Yates is currently an Investment Advisor and Certified Financial Planner for RBC Dominion Securities. Previously, Ms. Yates was employed as an In-

vestment Advisor for Edward Jones. Active in her community, she is a former Board member of United Way and East Kootenay Foundation for Health. Krys Sikora is currently one of the owners of Chatter Creek Mountain Lodges and Rocky Mountain Cabins. Previously she was the National Sales Manager for WestJet Airlines and Customer Service Manager for Jarvis Travel

Ltd. Ms. Sikora is President of the Golden Golf Club and member of the Columbia Basin Trust Adjudication Committee. She was also a Board member of the Golden and District Community Foundation. Ms. Sikora holds her Bachelor of Commerce from the University of Calgary. Wilda Schab retired as General Manager of Radium Resort Limited

Partnership in 2014. Previously she was General Manager at FHS Golf Management, worked as an English professor in Chile and China, held the position of Chief Financial Officer of PBM Service, was an Accountant with a Certified Accounting firm and taught high school. Ms. Schab served her community as City Councillor in North Battleford, was a Board

member of CODE Canada, President of Saskatchewan Ladies Golf and National Director of Rules. She holds a Bachelor of Education (Business) from the University of Regina and a Masters in Communications from Royal Roads University. “I’m pleased to welcome this talented group of individuals to the College’s Board of Governors,” said COTR President and CEO David Walls. “Their unique skills and experiences will serve the Board well and I look forward to working with them in the years ahead.” The five new members join Dave Handy (Board Chair), Ken Hoeppner (Vice-Chair), Jim Abbott, Glen Campbell, Rob Ondrik, and Gloria Perry who were previously appointed. Retiring from the Board after fulfilling their mandate are Orest Federko, Joe Pierre, Richard Reinders and Doris Penner. “I would like to sincerely thank Orest, Joe, Richard and Doris for their many contributions to the Board and their excellent service to the College,” added Walls.

Cause of dead fish in Joseph Creek unknown Continued from page 1 “We understand there were some pictures and just a step-by-step of where they went on Joseph Creek, where they were checking and what they found to see if anybody was aware of any issues,” he said. “Then it got turned over to the conservation officer

service who are part of (Ministry of Environment). They may in turn pull in the Department of Fisheries.” The information was then circulated to Public Works and Engineering to make them aware of it. Zettel said that because it

is Joseph Creek, responsibilities around investigation and those sorts of things rest with the Ministry of Environment, and possibly Fisheries. “I do know that the conservation officer service is looking into it to see what happened,” he said. “But at this point we’re just like ev-

eryone else and waiting to see what the investigation brings up.” Zettel said in his five years with the city he hasn’t seen something like this before. “We’ll wait and see what the result of the investigation is from the CO service,” he said. “I think that maybe if

the investigation leads to some suggestions and recommendations for the city for things that we might be able to do to help prevent something like this from happening down the line. I know staff will certainly have a look at it and I know mayor and council will certainly

have an interest in exploring what the city can do.” One thing of note is that the storm sewers in the city all empty into Joseph Creek. “Just to make people aware that what they do put down the storm sewer will end up in Joseph Creek,” he said.

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daily townsman

Page 4 Monday, September 15, 2014

Local NEWS Haiduk wins People’s Choice at Arts on the Edge Mike Redfern

When the Arts on the Edge 2014 exhibitions for Established and Emerging artists closed August 30 in the Gallery at Centre 64, the votes cast by gallery visitors for the People’s Choice Award were counted. Coming out on top was the digital painting Spirit Bear by Kimberley artist Simon Haiduk. Simon received the $150 prize sponsored by the Western Financial Group. Close runners-up were the paintings Walking on Water by Lynne Luker of Kimberley and Sound Waves by Jan Zora of Invermere. A total of $2, 550 in prizes was awarded to winning artists in the two Arts on the Edge exhibitions as follows: Established artists’ exhibition: 1st prize ($300 sponsored by Greg Sternig) – Walking on Water, acrylic painting by Lynne Luker 2nd prize ($250

Courtesy Simon Haiduk

Spirit Bear by Simon Haiduk won the People’s Choice award. sponsored by HomeGrown Music Society) – Spirit Bear, digital print by Simon Haiduk 3rd prize ($200 sponsored by Ruth Sauer & Mike Redfern) – Grizzly Bear’s Eterni-

ty, wire sculpture by Grant Smith Honorable Mentions ($150 each) – Rocky Mountain Sheep, photograph by Jim Lawrence; - Sound Waves, acrylic & resin painting

by Jan Zora; - Sophie, cast bronze portrait by Patricia Luders; - Greek Origins, reclaimed fir, soapstone & copper table by Patricia Luders; - Barn with Silo, acrylic painting by Jim

Robertson; and Butterfly Kisses, fibre wall hanging by Darlene Purnell. Emerging artists’ exhibition: 1st prize ($175 sponsored by Ron & Wilma

Mcrae) – Droplets, drawing by Amy Cornelson 2nd prize )$150 sponsored by Steve Brine, Rockies Law) – The Blue Poppy, fibre wall hanging by Donna

Sheppard 3rd prize ($125 sponsored by Michael & Jurate Haiduk) – Dream, digital painting by Amy Cornelson Honorable Mentions ($100 each) – African Safari, epoxy & acrylic panel by Kelly Adolphe; - Reflections of Emma Lake, fabric wall hanging by Donna Sheppard. Kimberley Arts Council’s visual arts programs committee chair, Linda Douglas, was pleased with this year’s entry in the Arts on the Edge exhibition. “This is the 10th year for the Arts on the Edge show and the standard of work submitted continues to be as high as ever. We are really proud of this annual exhibition which showcases some of the best work from around the Kootenays and beyond and recognizes the winning artists with substantial cash awards.”

The zombies will walk on schedule for October Arne Petryshen

Protect your brains! The zombies are coming. Or at least people dressed as zombies for the 2014 Zombie Walk. The walk is happening Oct. 4 from 1 - 5:30 p.m. Organizers of the event describe it as an organized public gathering of people who dress up in zombie costumes and make their

way around the city streets in a group displaying their zombie guises. The event is a fundraiser, noted organizer Chad Engelhardt. “Bring a non-perishable food item for the local food bank,” he said. “We’ll make sure they get it because Zombies only like flesh and brains.” The zombies will

NOTICE OF ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Annual General Meeting of the members of: Kimberley Independent School Society (the “Society”) Will be held on: Wednesday, October 15th, 2014, 7pm (local time) At: Kimberley Independent School (in the gymnasium) 73-101st Ave, Kimberley, B.C. V1A 1A5 for the following purposes: To elect directors for the ensuing year; To review the financial statements of the Society and the report of the directors: and To transact such other business as may be properly brought before the meeting. The Board of Directors has fixed the close of business on Sept 30, 2014 as the record date for determining the members who are entitled to vote at the meeting. Dated Sept 30, 2014 ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD “Cal Johnson” Principal

gather in the parking lot behind Koco Beach on 8th Avenue South between 1 p.m. and 1:30 p.m. to prepared. The walk starts at 1:30 pm. “We are most interested in people to come that are not shy or afraid of really getting into character of being a Zombie,” he said. The walk is an all ages event. Kids 12 and under need to be ac-

NEW NON-FICTION September 15, 2014 152.4 ENGEL, BEVERLY Honor your anger: how transforming your anger style can change your life 170.44 McCULLOUGH, DAVID, Jr. You are not that special and other encouragements 332.63228 LEEDS, PETER Penny stocks for dummies 345.71 Martin’s annual criminal code 2015 346.79401 BECKER, JO Forcing the spring: inside the fight for marriage equality 553.7 NICHOLS, WALLACE J. Blue mind: the surprising science that shows how being near, in, on or under water can make you happier... 641.3 KERWIEN, ERICA The healthy coconut flour cookbook: more than 100 grain free, gluten free, Paleo friendly recipes for every occasion B LEE MILLS, MARJA The Mockingbird next door: life with Harper Lee

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Barry Coulter file photo

Hey, you undead! Get your macabre on for the upcoming Zombie Walk. Above: A tableau from 2013. companied by an adult. The event is drug and alcohol free. The route will be the same as the one followed last year. It begins at the start point behind Koco Beach, follows Baker Street, goes past the skate park and the hoard ends up in Baker Park on 14th Avenue South. Engelhardt posted a Zombie Walk etiquette on the event’s Facebook page “2014 Zombie Walk Cranbrook, B.C.” Engelhardt noted that they must be fol-

lowed to ensure public safety, compliance with the law and to keep future Zombie Walks in the positive realm of public favour. 1: Keep your hands to yourself — Do not under any circumstance wipe, smear, or splatter blood on anything but yourself! It is considered vandalism to deface public & private property with fake blood. 2: Don’t rock cars, climb buses or bang on windows of any kind. 3: Do not litter. 4: Stay on the desig-

nated path. 5: Obey all traffic control signs and signals. 6: Do not harass anyone who isn’t enjoying the experience. Not everyone will know what’s going on, or find it as amusing as we will. Don’t touch strangers. 7: No drugs, no alcohol. The Zombie Walk is outside and we don’t want anyone getting arrested for public intoxication. 8: If you see someone else breaking Zombie Walk etiquette politely

remind them not to and save them from themselves. “During the event If you see damage being caused or people being hurt please report to event volunteer’s or security staff,” the etiquette reads. “Remember the Zombie Walk is a highly documented event. Each individual is responsible for their own actions and behaviour. The Zombie Walk is a community event for the whole family.”


daily townsman

Monday, September 15, 2014

Local NEWS

Page 5

Gang activity down in B.C., Cranbrook Continued from page 1

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Townsman file photo

Sgt. Shinder Kirk is pictured at a high level RCMP news conference in Cranbrook in November, 2010, with an AK-47 similar to the one seized by police in the conspiracy to commit murder investigation.

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count. In August, 2014, RCMP reported that crime was down in all areas in Cranbrook. In a presentation before Cranbrook City Council, Sgt. Brendan McKenna said that of particular note, the drug file charges which were significantly less in this particular quarter compared to the previous quarter in 2013. It shows that is is down 68 per cent, from 19 charges in 2013 to six charges in 2014. “From my conversation with the corporal in charge of that drug enforcement unit that’s been active here for a couple of years says that essentially most of this is due to the fact that the bigger players have been removed from the street and locked up,” he said. “So this really shows the effect of crime reduction in that area.” Corporal Chris Newel of the Kimberley RCMP recently told Kimberley council that drug activity was also down in that community, thanks to efforts of local RCMP. In Vancouver last week, Hackett said he was optimistic the CFSEU’s edgy End Gang Life campaign (endganglife.ca) will help persuade more gang members to reform. It plays on the emotions of gangsters with imagery of loved ones left behind after they’re dead.

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gangs in southern B.C. and Alberta as well to an outlaw motorcycle group in metro Vancouver, he said. Inspector Brian Edmondson, officer in command of the Cranbrook and Kimberley detachments at the time, issued a warning to the criminal gangs operating in Cranbrook. “This type of activity is unacceptable in our community. I have not only committed resources from the Cranbrook detachment, but can also draw on the combined resources from across the province. This is a message to those that engage in crime that not only do they have to be concerned about their rivals, but also the united efforts of law enforcement.” The conspiracy to commit murder trial was eventually moved to Kamloops. In the spring of 2013, three Cranbrook men convicted in the complex murder plot were sentenced to terms ranging from five and a half to 12 years. Lonnie Adams, Colin Correia, and Lorne Carry were all convicted by a jury in April, 2013, of counselling to kill rival drug dealer Doug Mahon in 2009. Carry and Correia were also convicted of conspiracy to commit murder, while Adams was acquitted on that

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The murder was a likely case of mistaken identity. A previous occupant of the property was one of the assailants connected with the Sam Steele Hotel shooting. The Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit launched an undercover investigation — using an undercover agent, a lifelong criminal who agreed to work with the RCMP. At a high level RCMP news conference in November, 2010, in Cranbrook, revealed that the feud between the two factions of organized crime in the city was behind four arrests in a complex murder conspiracy case. “Organized crime is insidious and has no rules, morals, ethics or loyalty. No community is immune, either from the presence of organized crime or the violence that it perpetrates,” said Sgt. Shinder Kirk of the RCMP Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit in Kelowna (CFSEU) at that conference. “During the course of this investigation, two innocent victims lost their lives. While we can’t speculate on the motive behind that tragedy, the intended victim, a 39 year old Cranbrook man, was once an occupant of the home,” said Kirk. It was believed the double murder has significant links to organized crime groups and

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PAGE 6

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2014

OPINION

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Scotland’s vote will be permanent If the Scots vote “yes” to independence on September 18, as one opinion poll now suggests they will, three things are likely to happen in the following week. First, David Cameron may cease to be the leader of the Conservative Party and the prime minister of the United Kingdom. He would be removed by his own Conservative members of parliament, who would hold him responsible for allowing the break-up of a very successful union that has lasted 307 years. Secondly, the British pound would start to fall against other currencies, not because Scottish independence would necessarily be an economic disaster for the rest of the United Kingdom, but because the markets hate uncertainly. To prevent a serious decline of the pound, the British government would have to act on its pre-referendum warnings that a post-independence Scottish government could not have any say in managing the currency. Nobody can stop the Scots from using the pound if they want (and the “Yes” campaigners say they will), but they would be using it the same way that Panama and Liberia use the US dollar. No control over interest rates or anything else. And thirdly, Spain would block automatic membership in the European Union for an independent Scotland (perhaps with support from some other EU members). Maybe Scotland could become a member eventually, but at least it would have to join the end of the queue for membership and go through years of convoluted negotiations. And it would have to accept the euro as its currency. The Spanish government has already said it would insist on this, because the Spanish province of Catalonia is holding its own (unauthorised) referendum on in-

dependence in November. Madrid has veto power, and it is determined to show that breaking up an existing EU country is not easy or painless. On the other hand, it would not be like South Sudan or East Timor: there would be no bloodshed and no refugees. Some businesses, particularly banks, would move their head offices from Scotland to England, but in five or ten years the Scots would stop blaming England for all their problems and start blaming their own politicians. And the English would simply have forgotten Scotland. The right question in this situation, therefore, is not “What will happen if...?” Nothing very extreme would happen, although Gwynne Scotland is unlikely to enjoy the economic and Dyer cultural boom that First Minister Alex Salmond, who called the referendum on independence, frequently predicts. The better question is “How did it end up like this?” How did a country that has shared a monarch with England since the early 1600s, and freely joined a union with the rest of the “United Kingdom” in 1707 (although there was a lot of political jiggery-pokery involved, as was normal at that time), end up on the brink of leaving the Union in 2014? Scotland shared in Britain’s wars, and Scottish emigrants settled in all of Britain’s colonies. The Scots had their industrial revolution almost as early as England and far ahead of the rest of Europe. They played a large part in managing the British empire, and profited immensely from it. Post-industrial Scotland has its deprived inner-city areas, just as England does, but the two countries have pretty much the same standard of living. Scotland always kept its own legal and educa-

tional systems, and for the past 16 years it has had its own elected parliament and government, with powers comparable to those of a US, Indian or Australian state. So what’s wrong with this picture? The real grievance that fuels Scotland’s independence movement is the fact that Britain keeps electing governments that are either explicitly Conservative or (like Tony Blair’s three terms in office) conservative in all but name. They take Britain into stupid foreign wars, and they impose austerity on ordinary British people while looking after the rich. Scots see themselves as being more socially conscious and more egalitarian, and there is some truth in that view. (Only one of Scotland’s 59 members of the British Parliament is a Conservative.) So the “Yes” campaign argues that the only way to avoid perpetual rule by Margaret Thatcher clones in London is to break away and build a separate Scottish state. That argument is getting a lot of traction in Scotland at the moment, and voting intentions have swung from 61 percent for No and 39 percent for Yes in early August to a knife-edge (49 percent No, 51 percent Yes) in one of this week’s polls. The other recent polls still show a small advantage for the Noes, but it could go either way. If it goes Yes, then the change is forever, and everybody will just have to live with it. But since Scotland’s current dissatisfaction with the Union is mainly about the political colour of recent British governments, a No to independence might also be permanent. A couple of genuinely left-wing British governments and a strong economic recovery (which is actually happening), and the whole thing might blow over. Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist whose articles on world affairs are published in 45 countries.


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KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Teachers strike

UPCOMING

The Government’s obfuscation is to the detriment of our children. It is obliged by law to provide them an education. There are clear courses open. Legislate the teacher back to work and/or accept binding arbitration. Our children are our future and deserve nothing less. Bob Pearce Cranbrook

‘Fate of the Inuit’

Shirley Green Cranbrook

Jaffray Rebels

I spent Sunday, September 7, at the Gran Fondo 2014 — not as a participant, but as a spectator watching the Jaffray Rebels ride. They are a group of cyclists who enjoyed the day. Seven of them rode in the Gran, two in the Medio and four in the Piccolo.

Stewart Wilson photo

Members of the Jaffray Rebels cross the finish line at the 2014 Kootenay Rockies Gran Fondo, Sunday, Sept. 7. We began the day at St. Eugene Mission watch the exciting start — each group 10 minutes apart — then went to the Platzl in Kimberley to watch as the riders went through. We cheered for all the riders (a little louder when the Rebels went by) and then back to the beautiful setting of St. Eugene Mission Resort to wait as riders came in. My great-grandson and his cousin, both 12 years old, were in the top 10 of the first finishers of the Piccolo. They were ahead of their mothers. Then the Medio riders and

the Gran Fondo riders, who included two of my grandsons and a grandson-in-law. It was a wonderful day. I heard many of the cyclists comment on how safe and organized the route was. I would like to commend the organizers, the sponsors, and the many volunteers that made the day such a success. As a long-time resident of Cranbrook I will say it is one more event that Cranbrook can be proud of. Maureen Rosicky

Electoral Boundaries Commission coming to town T r e vo r C r awl ey

Local residents will get a chance to voice their opinion on the provincial riding borders when the B.C. Electoral Boundaries Commission rolls through Cranbrook in October. ““Now is the time to have your say and shape your province,” said Commission Chair Justice Tom Melnick. “This democratic process is a unique opportunity for British Columbians to provide their views about how their communities are represented geographically in the Legislative Assembly.” The Commission will start touring through the province on Sept. 22 to visit 29 communities across the province to hear views,

receive presentations and submissions. The commission will be in Cranbrook on Tuesday, Oct. 7th at 7 p.m. at St. Eugene Mission Resort. Input received from the tour will help form the commission’s preliminary report to the legislature assembly, which they are mandated to submit before May 2015. Once the preliminary report has been published, British Columbians will have more opportunity to provide further feedback on proposed provincial electoral district areas, boundaries and names. For more information about the commission or current electoral district maps, visit www. bc-ebc.ca.

Tim Hortons Smile Cookie campaign kicks off T r e vo r C r aw l e y

Everybody loves a smile. Especially when it’s on a cookie. Tim Hortons is kicking off their annual week-long Smile Cookie campaign on Monday with 100 per cent of proceeds going towards the Cranbrook Heath Care Auxilary and the

Page 7

What’s Up?

Letters to the Editor

“Further to my letter “Fate of the Inuit” which appeared in the Daily Townsman on September 11, 2014, the Word “cannibalism” should not have been included in the sufferings of the Inuit families transported to Ellesmere Island. I sincerely apologize for this error, which is mine alone, and for any misinformation this may have generated.”

Monday, September 15, 2014

East Kootenay Foundation for Health. “The Smile Cookie campaign has continuously been successful year after year thanks to our loyal guests for their kindness and support,” said Matt Gareau, owner of Tim Hortons in Cranbrook. “We are honoured to support the Auxilary and Foun-

dation with all of the proceeds raised and to share smiles with all our dedicated guests. Stop by a restaurant this week and purchase your freshly baked Smile Cookie to support a great cause!” This year’s campaign will go towards toe purchase of a glidescope for the regional

hospital’s HART (High Acuity Response Team) program, which operates out of the emergency ward at the East Kootenay Regional Hospital. A glidescope video laryngoscope will provide a consistently clear airway view routine and difficult airways, enabling quick intubation.

Over the last eight years, over $65,000 has been raised in Cranbrook through the Smile Cookie campaign for the EKRH. Created as a fundraiser in Ontario in 1996, the Smile Cookie campaign has raised $5 million in Canada and the U.S., supporting over 500 charities.

Municipal Pension Retirees’ Association (MPRA) meeting, Monday, Sept 15 at Heritage Inn, 803 Cranbrook St. N., 10:45 a.m. Guest speaker, 11:30 a.m., Lisa Hansen, Johnsons Inc. Travel & Pet Insurance. No Host Luncheon 12:00 noon. Cranbrook Garden Club Meeting in the hall of Christ Church Anglican, 46-13 Ave. S., Monday Sept.15 at 6:30pm. Come & join us. New members always welcome. Info: April, 778-517-1222. The East Kootenay Railway Pensioner’s Association will be having a Social Luncheon at 12:30 pm, Tuesday Sept 16th at Arthur’s Sport’s Bar & Grill (Days Inn) 600 Cranbrook St. N, Cranbrook. All Railway Retiree’s and Spouses are welcome. RSVP by Sept. 12, 2014. Info: Secretary Frances Allen at 250-426-2720, Myrtle 250-426-2378, Jean 250-426-8338 2014 FREE FAMILY SWIM Wednesday, Sept 17th, 6:00-7:00pm is sponsored by RCMP/Speed Watch. Persons 18 years & younger must be accompanied by an adult. What: Classic Alpha Course. For Who: Anyone (It’s free). Location: Cranbrook Alliance Church. Starting Date: September 17th (6:15pm Wednesday evenings until Nov 26th). Registration: Call 1-250-489-4704 or email office@cranbrookalliancechurch.com. Registration deadline is September 10th. Myrtle the Magnificent - Sunday, Sept 21. Leader Suzanne McAllister 427-7043. Meet at 10 am at the Nordic Centre trail parking lot for a hike up Myrtle Mountain. Bring snacks/lunch and water for this 3 hour hike with moderate elevation. Extra Life Game Day at the Eagles Hall, Saturday, October 4, 2014. Video games, board games, card games nd more $10 at the door. All proceeds go to Alberta Children’s Hospital. More info www.extra-life.org

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 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! Kimberley Community Fall Fair; Always the last weekend in September (27 & 28.) BOOK YOUR BOOTH NOW!!! Limited number!!! Excellent exposure for your Product & Business and a great venue for shopping! 5000 Recorded Attendance in 2 days!!! Marysville Arena, Saturday 10:00-5:30, Sunday 11:00- 4:00. Info call 427-7876 leave message, or email: 1bev@live.com Help Big Brothers Big Sisters of Cranbrook: One way you can help is by donating to our “Blue Bin” located outside to the left of Wal- Mart. This bin is there for any clothing items or soft items. (250)489-3111 or email us at @bigbrothersbigsisters.ca 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. CRANBROOK QUILTERS’ GUILD hold their meetings every 2nd & 4th Tuesday of each month at 7:15pm upstairs in the Seniors’ Hall, 12517th Ave. S. Everyone welcome. Info: Donna at 250-426-7136. 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. Parkinson’s Support Group are meeting at 2 pm on the third Wednesday of each month at the Heritage Inn. For more info. phone Linda @ 250-489-4252. No meetings July, Aug or Dec. 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 Dance/Practice: every Saturday. Practice from 7 to 8 PM, dancing until 11 PM. Dance With Me Cranbrook Studio, 206-14 A 13th Street, South, behind Safeway. SPECIAL GOSPEL SERVICES: Each Sunday from September 14 to October 26, 2014, from 3 - 4 PM, except no service September 21st. Jaffray Community Hall, 7375 Jaffray Village Loop Rd. Phone contact: (250) 426-4791. North Star Quilters Society Meetings are held the 2nd & 4th Monday at 7:00 PM, basement of Centennial Centre, 100 4th Ave Kimberley. Welcoming all! Info call Heather 250 427-4906 Volunteers are needed to assist staff with childminding while parents attend programs at the Kimberley Early Learning Center. Come play!! Weekly or monthly for 2 hours. Diana 250427-0716 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

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daily townsman / daily bulletin

Page 8 Monday, September 15, 2014

SPORTS Icy weekend in The Pass

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The Kootenay Ice closed out the WHL pre-season in Crowsnest Pass this weekend

Taylor Rocca Photo

Kootenay Ice goaltender Keelan Williams gets taken out by Lethbridge Hurricanes forward Michal Holub Friday night in the Crowsnest Pass. Williams recovered on the play and combined with Jayden Sittler to post a 27-save shutout as the Ice blanked the Hurricanes 2-0. The Calgary Hitmen spoiled the weekend, claiming a 4-1 victory Sunday afternoon. Taylor Rocc a Sports Editor

The Kootenay Ice closed out the 2014 WHL pre-season, splitting a pair of games in

Crowsnest Pass, Alta. over the weekend. The Ice blanked the Lethbridge Hurricanes 2-0 Friday night before stumbling Sunday afternoon, falling 4-1 to the

Calgary Hitmen. The weekend results leave the Ice with a 1-4-0 record through WHL pre-season play. “I thought we had some okay looks in their

Take your game to the next level.

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U10 to U12 Boys U13 to U14 Boys

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zone, but we need to be way more competitive on loose pucks,” said Kootenay Ice head coach Ryan McGill following Sunday’s loss to Calgary. Compete level has been a common concern for McGill as his squad navigated through pre-season play. After suffering three consecutive losses in Kennewick, Wa. last weekend, the coach wanted to see more hunger from his boys through practice this past week. According to assistant coach Jay Henderson, the coaching staff was happy with what they saw heading into this weekend’s pre-season wrap in the Crowsnest Pass. “It’s a learning curve, it’s a process,” McGill said in regards to his team’s compete level. “We’ve got guys coming back from pro camp and they understand what’s expected from them. “We’ll evaluate the five [pre-season] games and who we think is the best group of 18 skaters will play on Friday night [against the Red Deer Rebels]. We’re going to have some extra bodies around and that hopefully brings out the competitiveness of the group.” As has been a focus since the beginning of training camp, goaltending was once again in the

spotlight this weekend. Friday night, it was a 27-save combined effort by Jayden Sittler and Keelan Williams that led the Ice to a 2-0 shutout of the Lethbridge Hurricanes. Sunday afternoon, it was a shaky first period from Wyatt Hoflin that helped the Calgary Hitmen get past the Ice 4-1. Kootenay’s veteran goaltender surrendered four goals in the first period, including three goals in a three-minute span. The native of Spruce Grove, Alta. turned aside 12 of the 16 shots he faced Sunday. Calgary defenceman Jake Bean started the barrage 4:17 into the opening frame. On the very next shift, forward Landon Welykholowa piled on 33 seconds later, knocking a rebound past Hoflin for a 2-0 Hitmen advantage. To make matters worse, Ice defenceman Dylan Overdyk was sent off for hooking less than two minutes after Welykholowa’s marker. It didn’t take long for the Hitmen to cash in. Veteran forward Mike Winther delivered one final crushing blow, skating in all alone and depositing the puck past a helpless Hoflin. Ice forward Austin Wellsby tallied his second goal of the pre-sea-

son Sunday afternoon against Calgary. The 17-year-old from Chilliwack, B.C. mixed things up Friday night as well, getting involved physically when he dropped the mitts, going toe-totoe with Lethbridge Hurricanes defenceman Thomas Lenchyshyn. “He’s still got a lot to learn,” McGill said Friday night. “He stuck his nose in there and he did a good job with that, but we’d like to take a little more hesitation out of his game. We’d like to see him just go and get in on the forecheck without hesitating and looking around. “He thinks the game real well. We just need him to play a little more on instincts.” Just as quickly as Kootenay jumped on the board, Calgary restored the three-goal gap Sunday. Karnaukhov made up for his earlier blunder by tallying his fourth goal of the pre-season to give the Hitmen a 4-1 lead a little more than two minutes after Wellsby’s marker. Though he didn’t find a way on to the scoresheet Sunday afternoon, Moscow native Alexander Chirva was a noticeable presence for Kootenay. The 18-yearold forward finished checks, danced with the puck and drove the net

hard Sunday afternoon after registering one assist Friday night. “He’s getting there,” McGill said of the 33rd overall selection from the 2014 CHL Import Draft. “I think he can shoot the puck more. [Sunday] was a really good sign of him getting involved and now we just need to get him inside the dots in the offensive zone. “He’s improved all through camp.” Chirva finished pre-season play with two assists and a minus-three rating in five contests. After playing two games in three days, the Ice will take Monday off before preparing for the opening of the WHL regular season. With eight players attending NHL training camps and 22 bodies on the active roster, the Ice are not expected to make any immediate personnel changes. According to McGill, hockey operations staff will meet as players are re-assigned to Cranbrook from respective NHL camps. From there, decisions will be made as to who stays and who goes. The Ice open the WHL regular season Sept. 19 when they visit the Red Deer Rebels. The team will then travel to Edmonton to face the Oil Kings Sept. 20.


daily townsman / daily bulletin

Page 9

Monday, September 15, 2014

Sports

Nitros edge Thunder Cats in KIJHL opener Dynamite third period leads Kimberley past Creston Valley Saturday night at Civic Centre Taylor Rocc a Sports Editor

The Kimberley Dynamiters used a third-period comeback to edge the Creston Valley Thunder Cats 4-2 to open the 2014 KIJHL regular season at the Kimberley Civic Centre Saturday night. “We were a little nervous at the start,” said Dynamiters head coach Jerry Bancks following the game. “The second period, [Creston Valley] won a lot of puck battles and kind of outplayed us. “In the third period, we responded really well and we were the team that we need to be.” Kimberley product Jordan Roy broke in alone with 8:34 to play, sliding a backhand shot past Creston Valley goaltender Brock Lefebvre to give the Nitros a 3-2 lead that would hold through the end of the final frame. “I got a nice pass from [Jason] Richter and was lucky to pop it fivehole,” Roy said Saturday night. “It was nice to get the first goal out of the way.” The 16-year-old

Nitro returned to Kimberley after spending some time in Kennewick, Wa. at training camp with the Tri-City Americans. The Kimberley native is looking forward to a strong season here at home and is doing his best to stay focused on employing a strong work ethic. Roy’s tally capped a third-period Kimberley comeback that started when forward Austin Hancherow made good on a turnover in Creston Valley territory. Hancherow walked in all alone on Lefebvre, burying a wrist shot blocker side to tie the game 2-2. Marco Campanella added an insurance marker with 6.9 seconds to play, icing the win for the Dynamiters. “It’s great to have Jordan and Coy [Prevost] back,” Bancks said. “They both played extremely well tonight. They obviously have some things to learn but they’re big, strong, powerful kids. They’re as strong as 20-year-olds and they proved it out there tonight. They won a lot of battles. “It’s great to help them try to move along to the next level. I know

they’re both hoping to play in the Western League in the future. It’s our responsibility to help them along the way.” Creston Valley ended Kimberley’s post-season in Game 7 of the second round of the KIJHL playoffs last year. This was the first time the two teams met since. “In this league, every game is going to be a big win,” Bancks said. “I didn’t want them to focus a whole lot on what took place last year. It was a pretty negative final end to the season. I just wanted them to control what we can control. I know deep down inside the guys wanted to take it to them, so it was nice that we did it.” The Thunder Cats got out to a quick start in the first period. Defenceman Austen Steger threw a harmless looking shot towards the net from the left point that caught Dynamiters goaltender Tyson Brouwer by surprise. The shot eluded the Nitros netminder to give Creston Valley an early 1-0 advantage. Jason Richter responded shortly there-

Kootenay Ice Scoring Summaries FrIday, Sept. 12 (pre-SeaSon)

LethbrIdge hurrIcaneS 0 at Kootenay Ice 2

First Period 1. KTN - Zborosky, (2) (Vetterl, Allan), 14:29 Second Period 2. KTN - O’Connor, (1) (Chirva, Overdyk), 12:00 Third Period No scoring Shots 1 2 3 T Lethbridge Hurricanes 14 8 5 27 Kootenay Ice 8 9 10 27 Goaltenders Saves Min. GA LET - Stuart Skinner 25/27 60:00 2 KTN - Jayden Sittler 19/19 29:41 0 Keelan Williams 8/8 30:19 0 Powerplays Lethbridge Hurricanes 0/4 (0.00%) Kootenay Ice 0/1 (0.00%)

Upcoming Games Regular Season Sept. 19 at Red Deer Sept. 20 at Edmonton Sept. 27 at Red Deer Oct. 3 vs. Spokane Oct. 4 at Calgary Oct. 8 at Regina Oct. 9 at Moose Jaw Oct. 10 at Swift Current Oct. 17 vs. Regina Oct. 18 vs. Victoria Oct. 21 at Prince Albert Oct. 22 at Saskatoon Oct. 24 vs. Calgary Oct. 25 at Spokane Oct. 28 vs. Prince Albert Oct. 31 vs. Red Deer

Scoring Statistics (Pre-season)

Player GP G A PTS PIM Luke Philp 2 4 1 5 0 J. Descheneau 2 1 2 3 4 Austin Wellsby 4 2 0 2 7 Zak Zborosky 5 2 0 2 2 Jon Martin 3 1 1 2 2 Sunday, Sept. 14 (pre-SeaSon) Vince Loschiavo 4 0 2 2 0 Austin Vetterl 4 0 2 2 9 caLgary hItmen 4 Alexander Chirva 5 0 2 2 0 at Kootenay Ice 1 Ryan Chynoweth 5 1 0 1 14 First Period Kyle O’Connor 5 1 0 1 5 Dylan Overdyk 2 0 1 1 2 1. CGY - Bean, (2) (Malenstyn), 4:17 M. O’Shaughnessy 4 0 1 1 0 2. CGY - Welykholowa, (3) (Karnaukhov), 4:40 Shane Allan 5 0 1 1 2 3. CGY - Winther, (2) (Rankin, Harmsworth), 7:02 (PP) River Beattie 5 0 1 1 4 4. KTN - Wellsby, (2) (Beattie, Loschiavo), 13:22 (PP) Troy Murray 5 0 1 1 2 J. Steenbergen 5 0 1 1 4 5. CGY - Karnaukhov, (4) (Welykholowa, Morrison), 15:26 Levi Cable 1 0 0 0 0 Second Period Tanner Faith 2 0 0 0 11 No scoring Tyler King 2 0 0 0 0 Third Period Rinat Valiev 2 0 0 0 2 Cale Fleury 4 0 0 0 2 No scoring Bryan Allbee 5 0 0 0 2 Shots 1 2 3 T Jared Legien 5 0 0 0 2 Calgary Hitmen 9 2 5 16 Kootenay Ice 9 3 13 25 Goaltending Statistics Goaltenders Saves Min. GA Player W L OT SO GAA SV% Keelan Williams 0 1 0 0 2.67 0.897 CGY - Evan Johnson 24/25 60:00 1 Wyatt Hoflin 0 2 0 0 4.58 0.836 KTN - Wyatt Hoflin 12/16 59:35 4 Jayden Sittler 1 1 0 0 5.35 0.840 Powerplays Calgary Hitmen 1/4 (25.0%) *Williams & Sittler shared shutout Sept. 12 vs. Lethbridge Kootenay Ice 1/9 (11.1%)

Taylor Rocca Photo

Dynamiters Jordan Roy battles in the face-off circle with Creston Valley’s Carson Cartwright. Roy would score the game-winning goal later in the third period as the Nitros defeated the Thunder Cats 4-2. after for the home team, wiring a wrist shot home on the power play. Jaret Bordt deflected a shot from the point late in the second period to break a 1-1 tie, giving the Thunder Cats a 2-1 lead heading into

look to make it two wins in a row to start the regular season when they host the Columbia Valley Rockies Sept. 20 at 7 p.m. The Dynamiters will look to make it two wins in a row to start the reg-

the final frame. Brouwer made 30 saves on 32 shots to claim the victory for the Dynamiters. Lefebvre stopped 25 of 28 shots in the loss for the Thunder Cats. The Dynamiters will

Kimberley Dynamiters Scoring Summary

ular season when they host the Columbia Valley Rockies Sept. 20 at 7 p.m. The Thunder Cats will try to bounce back Sept. 18 when they travel to Golden to face the Rockets.

KIJHL Standings

SaturDay, Sept. 13

CreSton Valley thunDer CatS 2 at Kimberley DynamiterS 4

First Period 1. CVT- Steger, (Fuchs), 15:35 2. KIM - Richter, (Haase, Busch), 7:42 (PP) Second Period 3. CVT - Bordt, (Fuchs), 3:10 Third Period 4. KIM - Hancherow, (unassisted), 14:58 5. KIM - Roy, (Richter), 8:34 6. KIM - Campanella, (Marchi), 0:07 (EN) Shots 1 2 3 T Creston Valley 12 13 6 31 Kimberley 11 9 9 29 Goaltenders Saves SV% CVT - Brock Lefebvre 25/29 0.862 KIM - Tyson Brouwer 29/31 0.935 Powerplays Creston Valley Thunder Cats 0/3 (0.00%) Kimberley Dynamiters 1/4 (25.0%) Attendance: 570

Upcoming Games

Sept. 20 vs. Columbia Valley Rockies Sept. 21 at Castlegar Rebels Sept. 26 at Nelson Leafs Sept. 27 vs. Castlegar Rebels Oct. 3 vs. Summerland Steam Oct. 4 at Golden Rockets Oct. 10 at Beaver Valley Nitehawks Oct. 11 vs. Beaver Valley Nitehawks Oct. 12 vs. Kelowna Chiefs Oct. 17 at Golden Rockets Oct. 18 vs. Creston Valley Thunder Cats

Scoring Statistics

Player GP Jason Richter 1 Marco Campanella 1 Austin Hancherow 1 Jordan Roy 1 Jordan Busch 1 Keenan Haase 1 Jared Marchi 1 Eric Buckley 1 Charles Dagostin 1 Jonas Gordon 1 Sawyer Hunt 1 James Jowsey 1 Tyler Kinnon 1 Tyson Klingspohn 1 Coy Prevost 1 Alex Rosolowsky 1 Trevor VanSteinburg 1 Jesse Wallace 1 Rory Mallard 0

G 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Goaltending Statistics

Player Tyson Brouwer Liam McBain

A 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

PTS 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

W L OT SO GAA 1 0 0 0 2.00 0 0 0 0 0.00

PIM 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 SV% 0.935 0.000

The Cranbrook Food Bank needs your help. Drop boxes at Safeway and Save On Foods Food Bank office 104-8th Ave. S. • 250-426-7664 (from 10am-3pm)

EddIE MountaIn dIvISIon TEAM GP W Golden 3 1 Fernie 1 1 Kimberley 1 1 Columbia Valley 1 0 Creston Valley 1 0

L 1 0 0 1 1

T OTL PTS 0 1 3 0 0 2 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0

nEIL MurdocH dIvISIon TEAM GP W Grand Forks 3 2 Nelson 2 1 Spokane 2 1 Beaver Valley 2 0 Castlegar 2 0

L 1 0 1 1 2

T OTL PTS 0 0 4 1 0 3 0 0 2 1 0 1 0 0 0

doug BIrKS dIvISIon TEAM GP 100 Mile House 3 Revelstoke 1 Kamloops 2 Chase 2 Sicamous 2

W 2 1 1 0 0

L 1 0 1 2 2

T OTL PTS 0 0 4 0 0 2 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0

oKanagan dIvISIon TEAM GP Osoyoos 2 Summerland 2 Princeton 2 Kelowna 2 North Okanagan 2

W 2 2 1 1 1

L 0 0 1 1 1

T OTL PTS 0 0 4 0 0 4 0 0 2 0 0 2 0 0 2

Scoring Leaders Player 1. Matt Newton 2. Rainer Glimpel 3. Lincoln Lane 4. Jackson DeMatos 5. Felix Larouche

Team GFB OSO GFB OSO KAM

Goaltending Leaders Player Team 1. Lawrence Langan OSO 2. Brett Huber SUM 3. Jake Holden SPO 4. Mitchel Privett GOL 5. Kolby Pauwels KAM

GP 3 2 3 2 2

G 3 3 2 3 3

GAA 0.00 1.00 1.00 1.71 1.88

W 1 2 1 1 0

A 6 3 4 2 2 L 0 0 0 1 0

T 0 0 0 0 0

PTS 9 6 6 5 5 SO 1 1 0 0 0

Scores - Sunday, Sept. 14 Castlegar Rebels 100 Mile House Wranglers Chase Heat Golden Rockets Sicamous Eagles

3 1 3 1 0

upcoming games : Castlegar Rebels Kamloops Storm

Beaver Valley Nitehawks (Sept. 16) Sicamous Eagles (Sept. 17)

at at

at at at at at

Grand Forks B. Bruins 4 Spokane Braves 4 Princeton Posse 4 North Okanagan Knights 2 Kamloops Storm 8


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PAGE 10 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2014

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HOROSCOPES by Jacqueline Bigar

ARIES (March 21-April 19) You’ll speak your mind as you typically do, yet your tone could motivate others to take action. Make sure your information is correct. You might want to move in a new direction because of a partner. Deal with this person directly. Tonight: Don’t hold back. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Be aware of what is going on within you. You will gain a new perspective if you slow down. Follow your instincts. New information comes forward that could cause you to reorganize your plans. Relax and get past the immediate issue. Tonight: Keep stress levels low. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You’ll flourish despite someone else’s attempt to put you down. You understand the relevance of this behavior and how to bypass it. You could be challenged by a friend who acts in a most unexpected way. Tonight: Do what would make you most happy.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Take your time in how you deal with someone and the choices you make. You will need to take your time and look within yourself in order to find the right answer. Don’t allow someone’s attitude to distract you. Decide if taking action is necessary. Tonight: Keep an easy pace. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You’ll be able to visualize a good idea and then make it a reality. One person inevitably will give you flak, but the majority of people will support you. News from a distance could surprise you. Resist a tendency to be fussy. Tonight: Let it all hang out, even if it is Monday! VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You’ll have a tendency to feel overconfident -- that is, until you have a discussion with someone you look up to. Use this conversation to clarify your views and understand others. Defer to someone who might be more creative and diplomatic. Tonight: Burn the midnight oil. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Use your ability to stay above

Tundra

the fray. Take a complete overview of an event that might have caused a difficult situation. This perspective will be needed when dealing with a key person in your life. You could be taken aback by a loved one. Tonight: Opt to make a change. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You might want to listen to news with a bit of cynicism. Just because someone says a situation is a certain way does not mean it is; that person’s perception simply defines the matter in that way. Decide to gain your own perspective. Tonight: Togetherness works. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You might want to ease some of today’s tension. Detach from an immediate situation, rather than add to your stress level. Sometimes you need to back off and give a situation or others a break. Tonight: Share with a dear friend or loved one. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Keep an even pace, and attempt to see how you can delegate certain tasks, or find a shortcut. Use your leadership skills and

efficiency to head down a new path -- not only for you, but for others as well. Listen to news more openly than you have in the past. Tonight: Happy at home. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Your playfulness might not work with friend who has a solemn attitude. Be smart, and try to avoid this situation. If possible, take off in the evening and do something just for you. Allow greater give-and-take with a child or new friend. Tonight: Let loose! PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Relate to others directly, and avoid getting involved in any gossip. Your personal touch will make all the difference in your dealings. A family member might want your attention. Recognize that you need to focus on your priorities. Tonight: Enjoy being home. BORN TODAY Prince Harry of England (1984), actor Tom Hardy (1977), actor Tommy Lee Jones (1946) ***

By Chad Carpenter

Cranbrook Daily Townsman 250-426-5201 The Kimberley Daily Bulletin 250-427-5333 East Kootenay 250-426-5201 The ValleyExtra 250-426-5201

integraair

Lifting Your Expectations!

99

SEAT $ SALE

Garfield

By Jim Davis

(inc. gst)

ROUND TRIP AIRFARE FROM CRANBROOK TO CALGARY: September 11, 2014 Departing Cranbrook 8:30 a.m. September 14, 2014 Returning Cranbrook 7:30 a.m. Flight availability is based on a first come first serve basis so

CALL TODAY!

For more information & booking please call 403-381-8359 Ninth Annual

“The Magic of Autumn”

Door Prizes!

Artisan Market

Friday, October 17 3pm - 8pm

Saturday, October 18 10am - 4pm

Hagar the Horrible

By Dick Browne

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

Handcrafted Creations

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

OVER THE LAST 8 YEARS WE HAVE DONATED $10,200.00 TO THE KIMBERLEY FOOD BANK!

Carriers of all ages needed

Baby Blues

By Kirkman and Scott

• No collecting • Automatic deposit • Weekends off • Great work experience • A reason to go for a walk • Spending $$

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

250-427-5333

Rhymes with Orange

By Hillary B. Price

ANNIE’S MAILBOX by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Annie: I met the man of my dreams at the workplace. At the time, I was in an abusive marriage and had given up all hope, and then I met “Howard.” Here’s the problem: Howard is 45, still lives in his parents’ basement and works from home. He doesn’t pay rent or utilities, although when he gets a paycheck, he gives his mother some money. On the other hand, my daughter and I have our own place. We make ends meet. Howard bought me a laptop for my birthday and a bedroom set for my apartment, has fixed my car and recently put new tires on it. He has done so much for me, and I am grateful. But because he still lives with his parents, it limits what we can do. He says he is obligated to his mother, daughter and grandchildren. His job sends him on extended trips to other countries where he sometimes spends four months at a time. He says this job looks good on his resume. I am also aware that Howard has a drug addiction, and I hate it with a passion. We drink together, and it’s all a fun thing, but then he gets forgetful and confuses me with some of the other women he’s been with. When I ask whom he’s talking about, he starts yelling that it was before we dated. I trust him, but I don’t know how to do things by degrees. All of my heart belongs to him. Am I being selfish, or is this man so comfortable where he is that I come in second? -- Need Your Opinion Dear Need: We were ready to overlook the fact that Howard still lives with his parents and doesn’t pay rent, but then we got to “drug addiction.” And he gets drunk and yells at you, not to mention he’s away from home for months at a time. Please don’t go from the frying pan into the fire. Howard has been generous, but that doesn’t make him such a great catch. Please take some time to be on your own and learn to navigate life without a man’s help. You need to develop a better guidance system. Dear Annie: You printed a letter about those who cannot have gluten. What about those of us who prepare a dinner only to have a seated guest request something other than what’s available because they want a gluten-free meal? In this particular case, the guest was staying with us for an additional two days, so we needed to do more shopping to accommodate her. My grandson has a severe peanut allergy. My daughter always announced the problem when he was invited out, and now that he is 20, he has no problem asking for information regarding food before it is placed in front of him. Why don’t people tell the hosts these things at the time they accept the invitation? -- Joan in California Dear Joan: No one should wait until the last second. It’s inconsiderate. Those with a food issue, whether allergies, gluten intolerance, vegan, etc., should not expect their hosts to jump through hoops for them. If they wish to be accommodated, they should mention the issue in advance. Otherwise, they need to deal with whatever is served. Of course, these days, a careful host should inquire whether the guests have any food requirements at the time of the invitation so there are no surprises. Dear Annie: Your reply to “The Old Fool,” about his wife’s lack of interest in lovemaking due to hormonal changes, was right on the mark. But he’s not a fool. He deserves a pat on the back for not accusing his wife of having an affair. I wish my husband were that sensible. -- Wife of a Fool 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

PUZZLES

Tuesday Afternoon/Evening # $ % & _ ( ) + , ` M O 6 . / 0 1 2 4 5 9 : ; < = > ? @ A B C E F G H I J W ¨ ≠ Ø ∂

KSPS-PBS Cat in Georg Georg Wild News News CFCN Ellen Show Queen Latifah KXLY-ABC Rachael Ray Dr. Phil KREM-CBS Dr. Oz Show Judge Judge KHQ-NBC Ellen Show Around Hocke TSN SportsCentre NET Sportsnet Con. MLB Baseball GLOBAL BC Meredith Vieira The Young Jelly Kate Magic KNOW Olly Dragons’ Den CBUT Heartland News News CICT The Young News News CIVT The Young YTV 6TEEN Nerds Spong Chuck Meredith Vieira KAYU-FOX Steve Harvey CNN Situa Cross E. B. OutFront Ink Master SPIKE Ink Master HGTV Bryan Bryan Bryan Bryan Stor Brandi Stor A&E Stor CMT All Ac Luke Gags Gags The Riverbank Buying-Selling W Continuum SHOW NCIS DISC How/ How/ Daily Planet Karma Karma SLICE Murder-Parad 19 Kids-Count TLC 19 Kids-Count BRAVO Person-Interest The Listener (:10) Jarhead EA2 2 Fast 2 Fur. Po Camp Groj. TOON Nin Good Phi Jessie FAM ANT Mod Theory Theory WPCH Sein Frasier Frasier COM Laugh Gas TCM Designing Woman Stor Stor OUT Mantracker Cnt. Cnt. HIST Restoration SPACE Inner Scare Castle AMC Mummy Return The Fugitive MLB NFL FS1 NASCAR Hub Man DTOUR Reno Urban Man MC1 Admis Metallica: Through Maury KTLA Cunningham Parks LeadWGN-A Funny Videos EA1 HowQ (:40) License to Wed Murder, She... VISN Anne VideoFlow 102 102 MM VideoFlow Entrée prin 105 105 SRC Castle

September 16

News Busi CTV News News ABC News CBS News News MLB Baseball

PBS NewsHour etalk Theory News News News News Million.

CONTRACTING Now booking appointments for

WINTERIZING & SPRING START-UP

Robin Williams Person-Interest Ent Insider Inside Ac J’pard Wheel

The Roosevelts-Intimate The Roosevelts-Intimate Amazing Race S.H.I.E.L.D. News News Daily Mey Dancing/Stars S.H.I.E.L.D. 20/20 KXLY Kim Big Brother NCIS: LA Person-Interest News Late Got Talent America’s Got Talent News J. Fal SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre MLB Baseball Sportsnet Con. Premier Poker News News News Hour Ent ET Big Brother Remedy Remedy News Jack Wild Hope-Wildlife Marine Mach. 1st World War Lesson Plan Train Marine Mach. CBC News CBC Cor Murdoch Myst. Nature/ Things Arctic Air The National News Mercer News News ET Ent Remedy Big Brother Remedy News Hour Fi ET Doctor News Hour ET Ent Remedy Big Brother Remedy News Hour ET Doctor Par Spong As Witch Sam & Victo Funny Videos Wipeout Young Boys Haunt Haunt Two Two Simp Mod Theory Theory Utopia New Mindy News Mod Mother Office Cooper 360 Special Report CNN Tonight Cooper 360 Special Report CNNI CNNI Ink Master Ink Master Ink Master Tattoo Tattoo Ink Master Ink Master Tattoo Tattoo Hunt Hunt Holmes Makes Tackle Tackle Hunt Hunt Holmes Makes Tackle Tackle House Hunters Stor Stor Stor Stor Brandi Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Brandi Stor Undercover Jim Jim Ship Ship Undercover Jim Jim Ship Ship Gags Gags Love It-List It Love It Love It-List It Property Bro Buying-Selling Buying Love It-List It Romeo Killer: Chris Porco Covert Affairs NCIS NCIS Elementary NCIS Bering Gold Highway Thru Highway Thru Don’t Drive Highway Thru Highway Thru Don’t Drive Matchmaker Southern Ch. Housewives Murder-Parad Friend Friend Southern Ch. Housewives 19 19 19 19 Little People 19 19 Little People 19 19 19 Kids-Count Blue Bloods Saving Hope Missing The Listener Person-Interest Criminal Minds Blue Bloods (:05) Turning Paige Platoon Salvador Rocket Johnny Adven Gum Johnny Camp Day MAD Family Amer. Archer Robot Ftur Fugget Jessie I Didn’t Girl Austin Austin Dog Austin Good Next Win Good Win, Wiz Derek TBA TBA TBA TBA Mod Sein Family Family Amer. Amer. Jeffer. Jeffer. Along Came Theory Theory Match Match Just/Laughs Gags Gags Gas Simp Theory Sulli Daily Colbert Hill 24 Doesn’t Answer Sallah Sword in the Desert Exodus Stor Stor Dynamo: Mag. Stor Stor Stor Stor Dynamo: Mag. Stor Stor Ghost Hunters MASH MASH Hard Heroes Restoration Cnt. Cnt. Pawn Pawn Pawn. Pawn. Pickers Stargate SG-1 Face Off Wizard Wars Inner Scare Castle Star Trek: Voy. Face Off 4th and Loud 4th and Loud Walking Tall 4th and Loud Eagle UEFA Champ. League Soccer CONCACAF Champions FOX Sports MLB FOX Sports Live Live Hotel Impssble Trip Trip Live Live Bggg Bggg Hotel Impssble Trip Trip A Sister’s Nightmare (:40) Paranoia The Fifth Estate What Maisie Knew Family Family News News Two Two Arrow Supernatural KTLA 5 News News Two MLB Baseball From Wrigley Field in Chicago. Parks Parks Parks Rules Rules Rock Rock Rock Saddest Music in the World Legally Blonde (:40) Uptown Girls (:15) The Prince of Tides Columbo Sabah Super I Pro Elmer Gantry Con Un Popoff VideoFlow Simp Cleve Tosh.0 Parks Com Simp At Conan Cleve Tosh.0 Parks Mange Union TJ C.-B. 30 vies La fac Unité 9 Mémoires Le Téléjournal TJ C.-B.

Wednesday Afternoon/Evening

PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER VideoFlow Castle

VideoFlow Entrée prin

VideoFlow Mange Union

Simp Cleve TJ C.-B.

GOOD SELECTION OF ITALIAN HANDCRAFTED GLUTEN FREE PASTAS. PERSONALIZED LABELS

Gift Certificates Available!

New Fall Collection

Assorted Styles, Colours & Sizes

Voiusrit

sprinkler systems. 25 Years Experience

Call John

250-421-7162 or Bob

250-421-3700

Garden

TRENDS N’ TREASURES 1109a Baker St. Cranbrook

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

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

Seasonmal Roo s Christma

KK OOOO T AY E N AY TEN

Need help with current events?

building solutions

Engineered roof trusses & floor systems Read the DAILY newspaper for local happenings!

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• LVL Beams • Glulam Beams • I-joist • Structural Connectors Call us for a quote!

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September 17

The Roosevelts-Intimate # # KSPS-PBS Cat in Georg Georg Wild News Busi PBS NewsHour Earthflight-Nat The Roosevelts-Intimate News News CTV News etalk Theory Myst-Laura Theory Two Criminal Minds News News Daily Mey $ $ CFCN Ellen Show Queen Latifah News ABC News News Ent Insider Middle Gold Mod Mod Nashville KXLY Kim % % KXLY-ABC Rachael Ray Dr. Phil News CBS News Inside Ac Big Brother Criminal Minds Extant News Late & & KREM-CBS Dr. Oz Show Judge Judge News News News Million. J’pard Wheel America’s Got Talent Myst-Laura News J. Fal _ _ KHQ-NBC Ellen Show MLB Baseball From Turner Field in Atlanta. MLB Baseball SportsCentre SportsCentre ( ( TSN SportsCentre MLB Baseball Sportsnet Con. Sportsnet Con. ) ) NET Sportsnet Con. MLB Baseball News News News Hour Ent ET Big Brother NCIS: LA Extant News + + GLOBAL BC Meredith Vieira The Young Jelly Kate Magic Jack Wild Marine Mach. Waterfront Story of India Gala From Berlin 2013 Park Waterfront , , KNOW Olly Dragons’ Den CBC News CBC Cor Murdoch Myst. Nature/ Things Republic-Doyle The National News Mercer ` ` CBUT Heartland News News News News ET Ent Extant Big Brother NCIS: LA News Hour Fi ET Doctor 1 M CICT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent Extant Big Brother NCIS: LA News Hour ET Doctor 3 O CIVT The Young Spong Haunt Witch Sam & Victo Funny Videos Wipeout Young Boys Haunt Haunt 4 6 YTV 6TEEN Chuck Spong Kung Par Meredith Vieira Two Two Simp Mod Theory Theory Hell’s Kitchen Red Band Soc News Mod Mother Office 6 . KAYU-FOX Steve Harvey Anthony CNN Tonight Cooper 360 Anthony CNNI CNNI 7 / CNN Situation Room E. B. OutFront Cooper 360 Cops Cops Cops Cops iMPACT Wrestling Ink Master Cops Cops Tattoo Tattoo Ink Master 8 0 SPIKE Cops Jail Hunt Hunt Beach Beach Vacation Hse House Hunters 9 1 HGTV Bryan Bryan Tackle Tackle Hunt Hunt Beach Beach Vacation Hse : 2 A&E Stor Stor Wahl Wahl Duck Duck Duck Duck Wahl Epic Epic Epic Duck Duck Duck Duck Wahl Epic Jim Jim Ship Ship Undercover Jim Jim Ship Ship Gags Gags < 4 CMT Best Best Gags Gags Undercover The Stepson Buying-Selling Love It Love It Love It-List It Cedar Cove Shan Shan Chris Chris Love It = 5 W Continuum Ghost Storm Dominion NCIS NCIS Dominion NCIS ? 9 SHOW NCIS Yukon Men Dallas Dallas Bering Gold Highway Thru Yukon Men Dallas Dallas Bering Gold @ : DISC How/ How/ Daily Planet Surviving Evil Matchmaker ExExMob Wives Stranger Friend Friend Friend Friend Mob Wives A ; SLICE Stranger Britain’s Fattest Man Half-Ton Killer Transformed 600 Lbs. Mom 600 Pound B < TLC Preg Preg 600 Lbs. Mom 600 Pound Blue Bloods Legends Missing The Listener Person-Interest Criminal Minds Blue Bloods C = BRAVO Person-Interest The Listener (:20) 1941 (:20) Little Men Drunken Master Mortal Kombat Land D > EA2 (3:20) The Frisco Kid Po Camp Drama Rocket Johnny Adven Gum Johnny Regu Day MAD Family Amer. Archer Robot Ftur Fugget E ? TOON Nin Dog Dog LivAustin Jessie I Didn’t Girl Austin Good Next Win Good Win, Wiz Derek F @ FAM ANT Good Phi Sein soMod Theory row Theory(nine TBA cells TBA wide), TBA every TBA column Mod (nine Sein cells Family Family Amer. Amer. Jeffer. Jeffer. Family Preys the grid that every G Fill A inWPCH Laugh Theory Sulli contain Match the Matchdigits Just/Laughs Htall) B andCOMevery boxGas (threeFrasier cells Frasier by three cells) 1 throughGags9 in Gags Gas Simp Theory Theory Daily Colbert Al Capone Billy Budd The Great Sinner That Uncertain Feeling Fast Company I C TCM any order. There is only one solution for each puzzle. Stor Stor Stor Stor Be Alive Stor Stor Stor Stor Be Alive Stor Stor Ghost Hunters K E OUT Mantracker Biker Battle Yukon Gold L F HIST Pawn. Pawn. Pawn Pawn MASH MASH Pawn. Pawn. Pawn Pawn Amer Amer Truckers Stargate SG-1 Doctor Who Intruders Inner Scare Castle Star Trek: Voy. Doctor Who M G SPACE Inner Scare Castle Hitman Lara Croft Tomb Raider: Cradle of Life Hitman Drift N H AMC (:15) Walking Tall The Ultimate Fighter Ultimate Fight FOX Sports MLB Ultimate Fight FOX Sports O I FS1 NASCAR Hub UFC Tonight The Dead Files Airport Airport Vaca Vaca Ghost Adv. P J DTOUR Reno Urban Collec Collec Live Live Vaca Vaca Ghost Adv. (:15) The Nut Job (:45) The Art of the Steal Snitch Oz the Great W W MC1 Step (:45) Planes Maury Family Family News News Two Two Penn & Teller The 100 KTLA 5 News News Two ¨ ¨ KTLA Cunningham Funny Videos Rules Rules Rules Rules Rules Rules Manhattan Manhattan Parks Parks Parks Rock ≠ ≠ WGN-A Funny Videos Mulligans Kindergarten Cop Higher Learning Single White Ø Ø EA1 Excess (:35) The Thomas Crown Affair Murder, She... Columbo The Midwife Last Tango Super I Pro Elmer Gantry Super Popoff ∂ ∂ VISN Anne-Gables MM SRC

PAGE 11

of your

MUSIC & MOVEMENT CLASSES FOR CHILDREN AGES BIRTH TO 9 YEARS.

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

Cbk. Kim.

102 102 105 105

SCOTT’S

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

Cbk. Kim.

# $ % & _ ( ) + , ` 1 3 4 6 7 8 9 : < = ? @ A B C D E F G H I K L M N O P W ¨ ≠ Ø ∂

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2014

Bounty Parks 30 vies Épi

Com Simp Enfants de télé

At Pê

Conan Cleve KO Le Téléjournal

Call for fall registration & information.

Friday’s answers

Come for the fun – Stay for the eduCation! www.roCkymountainmuSikgarten.Com Andrea Grossman 250-489-1290

CALL 426-3272 OR VISIT

www.tribute.ca

for this week’s movie listings Subscribe today and get The Townsman delivered to your home

Bounty Parks TJ C.-B.

Friday’s


DAILYTOWNSMAN/DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN DAILY BULLETIN

PAGE 12 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2014 15, 2014 PAGE 12 Monday, September

Share Your Smiles!

Your community. Your classifieds.

Lennox is smiling because he likes his new hat!

250.426.5201 ext 202

bcclassified.com fax 250.426.5003

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

AGREEMENT It is agreed by any display or Classified Advertiser requesting space that the liability of the paper in the event of failure to publish an advertisement shall be limited to the amount paid by the advertiser for that portion of the advertising space occupied by the incorrect item only, and that there shall be no liability in any event beyond the amount paid for such advertisement. The publisher shall not be liable for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement. bcclassified.com cannot be responsible for errors after the first day of publication of any advertisement. Notice of errors on the first day should immediately be called to the attention of the Classified Department to be corrected for the following edition. bcclassified.com reserves the right to revised, edit, classify or reject any advertisement and to retain any answers directed to the bcclassified.com Box Reply Service and to repay the customer the sum paid for the advertisement and box rental. DISCRIMINATORY LEGISLATION Advertisers are reminded that Provincial legislation forbids the publication of any advertisement which discriminates against any person because of race, religion, sex, color, nationality, ancestry or place of origin, or age, unless the condition is justified by a bona fide requirement for the work involved. COPYRIGHT Copyright and/or properties subsist in all advertisements and in all other material appearing in this edition of bcclassified. com. Permission to reproduce wholly or in part and in any form whatsoever, particularly by a photographic or offset process in a publication must be obtained in writing from the publisher. Any unauthorized reproduction will be subject to recourse in law. ON THE WEB:

Personals AMY’S BACK!! Your perfect companion. ~ in call/out call ~ call: 1-647-461-0160 JUST VISITING

KOOTENAY’S BEST ESCORTS

email classifieds@dailytownsman.com

Education/Trade Schools

Help Wanted

Lily - 24, Curvy, blonde beauty, G.F.E.

Part-Time Deli Clerk

APARTMENT/CONDO MANAGER TRAINING • Certified Home Study Course • Jobs Registered Across Canada • Gov. Certified 35 Years of Success! www.RMTI.ca

S.M. QUENNELL TRUCKING is looking for log truck drivers, based in

Enjoy quality relaxations by our hand-picked beauty’s Swedish relaxation/massage.

Full time work; home every night. Excellent medical, dental, pension benefits Wages competitive with industry standards.

Spoil yourself today!!! (250)417-2800 in/out calls daily Hiring MEET SINGLES right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now: 1-800-712-9851

Announcements

Lost & Found

Cranbrook.

Fax resume and drivers abstract to:

fax:250-426-4610 or call: 250-426-6853

Rick’s Fine Meats & Award Winning Sausage LOCAL TRUCKING Company looking for Log Truck Drivers for local hauls. Steady positions. Wages competitive with USW wages. Medical-DentalPension. Send Abstract and Resume to Box ‘L’ c/o Cranbrook Daily Townsman, 822 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook BC V1C 3R9

SKATEBOARDING PADS found on Wallinger Avenue, Kimberley. Please identify at Togs and Toys.

Travel

Timeshare CANCEL YOUR Timeshare. no Risk Program stop Mortgage & Maintenance payments today. 100% money back guarantee. Free consultation. Call us now. We can help! 1-888-356-5248

Children Daycare Centers FULL-TIME or PART-TIME spot available in Registered Daycare for children aged 0-5 years. Please call

(250)581-1328

Employment Career Opportunities WJS CANADA Now Hiring Community Support Workers in Golden, BC. CSW are responsible for assisting service recipients who are living independently with their physical, economic, vocational, recreational, social, emotional and daily life skills development. This position assists service recipients to achieve the greatest degree of independence and quality of life possible To apply send resume and cover letter to: Attn: Phyllis Ortynski Fax: 1-855-465-5502 Email: bc-hr@telus.net for a detailed job description and more careers with WJS visit www.wjscanada.com

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY Permanent part-time help is needed at a busy office. The ideal candidate should be a team player, flexible, and have basic office skills. Please send a covering letter and detailed resume, with references, to:

Hiring part-time housekeeping staff. Experience required. An Alberta Oilfield Company is hiring experienced dozer and excavator operators, meals and lodging provided. Drug testing required. 1-(780)7235051.

GOLD CREEK MARKET $13.00/hr.

Terry Gibson c/o 2nd Floor, 6 – 10th Avenue South, Cranbrook, BC V1C 2M8 or e-mail to terryg@rellapaolini.com.

FULL TIME & PART TIME M - F 3pm to 11pm Sat/Sun 7am to 5pm Available Immediately

Distribution Centre

Must have Food Safe Level 1 and must be 19 years of age. Gold Creek Market offers lottery tickets, propane, fuel, alcohol, beer, wine, cigarettes, produce, pizza and fresh baked items every day. Lottery training and Propane training will be necessary once hired. Apply in person with resume 2455 - 30th Ave S., Cranbrook BC. V1C 6Z4

Cranbrook

Working in our distribution centre you are part of a team to ensure flyers and papers are ready for delivery in a timely and accurate manner. The person who fills this position must be able to: • Multi-task in distribution and press room • Work well with a team and on your own • Lift paper bundles Please drop off resume, in person to: Bob Bathgate Cranbrook Distribution Centre Middle Bay 1505-4th St., N., Cranbrook, BC

Part-time BABYSITTER needed.

250-464-5636 or 250-919-4141

Sympathy & Understanding

FOUND: IN Kimberley, in front of Village Bistro, across from City Hall: key ring with London Drugs fob. Call 250-427-5333 Found: Key on fob - Sunday, Sept 7, on road in front of Alliance Church, Cranbrook. Please call or come into the Townsman to identify. 250-426-5201

ALMO COURT MOTEL 250-426-3213

Cash experience necessary. Excellent customer service skills. Reliable and bondable. Background in deli & meat wrapping an excellent asset but willing to train. Competitive wages. Family oriented business. Apply in person with resume to: 1350B Theatre Rd., Cranbrook, BC

Help Wanted

Brianna - 45, Busty, best legs, pleaser

Help Wanted

Immediate opening for a

Introducing:

**NEW** Leaha - 24 Tall, Slim, Norwegian Blonde

Drop off your photo and name(s) of subject at the Cranbrook Townsman or Kimberley Bulletin office or email your high-resolution jpeg to production@dailybulletin.ca. Photographs will appear in the order they are received.

Kootenay Monument Installations 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

www.kootenaymonument.ca

End of Life? Bereaved? May We Help?

2PTILYSL` -LYUPL

PUMV'YVJRPLZSH^ JVT c ^^^ YVJRPLZSH^ JVT

Hepatitis C Prevention & Support Program Coordinator Responsibilities: • Provide broad based and targeted primary Hepatitis C prevention and public education programming that includes comprehensive information, resources and outreach to youth, service providers, health care workers and the community at large. •

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

:\P[L ;OPYK (]LU\L -LYUPL )* ;LS!

ANKORS, AIDS Network, Outreach & Support Society - Cranbrook

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

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

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

JOB OPPORTUNITY

IN-HOME CONSULTATION OR VISIT OUR SHOWROOM

250-417-2019

Toll Free 1-855-417-2019

Your community foundation.

Engage with those affected by HCV, service providers; health care workers and East Kootenay communities to build capacity, knowledge and skills to provide a better and more sustainable network of support, care and access for people living with HCV as well as to strengthen our collective efforts to reduce the rate of transmission.

4ualiÂżcations: Work Experience and/or education with respect to community development, education, health prevention and support are considered an asset. We encourage those living with and/or affected by HCV to apply. hrs/wk # /hr Âą %eneÂżts after months Closing Date for Applications: September 26th, 2014 Please send resumes to: Gary Dalton, ANKORS Care Team 209 16th Ave N, Cranbrook BC, V1C 5S8 Fax: 250-426-3221 or email: gary@ankors.bc.ca

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

For more information, please contact Cheryl at 250-505-5506 1-800-421-2437

1-800-421-AIDS

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

HIV, AIDS Network, Outreach & Support Society www.ankors.bc.ca

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

Nelson: 101 Baker Street, Nelson, BC V1L 4H1 Ph: (250) 505-5506 Fax (250) 505-5507 Cranbrook: 46-17 Ave. South, Cranbrook, BC, V1C 3W3 Ph: (250) 426-3383 Fax (250) 426-3221


DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

Monday, MONDAY, September 15, 2014 SEPTEMBER 15, 2014 PAGE PAGE 13 13

Services

Services

Services

Merchandise for Sale

Real Estate

Rentals

Transportation

Art/Music/Dancing

Contractors

Contractors

Firewood/Fuel

Business for Sale

Suites, Upper

Sport Utility Vehicle

Piano fascination, fun, finesse lessons!

NOTICE

GIRO

FIREWOOD

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NO JOB TOO SMALL

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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. IS YOUR COMPUTER SLUGGISH OR HAVING PROBLEMS?

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YOUR NEWSPAPER:

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Apt/Condo for Rent

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FOR SALE: 2 New tires - 205/70/R15 $80. 3 Used tires - 205/70/R15 $65. 1 New car battery - $80. 2 Small trailer tires - $30. 1 set of wheels for fridge dolly $20. 250-426-3699

Misc. Wanted Collector Buying Coin Collections, Native Art, Estates, Gold, Silver + 778-281-0030

Musical Instruments

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Page 14 Monday, September 15, 2014

Marital concerns

Part One of Two Hi Wendy: Every time I see your article in the newspaper I often think I should contact you for a reading. So today is the day. I have longstanding marital concerns and would like to know once and for all if I am with the right partner. My feeling is that we are together because of our past karma and maybe I need to suck it up. I really wonder what happened and why we are together now. I waver between staying and leaving but I am overcome with feelings of guilt. I know guilt is a useless feeling but I can’t help myself. Could you shed some light on this for me? I have learned to compromise and for the most part I am trying to make it work the best I can. I’d also like to know if we would sell our house this year and move on to a better future. I do believe that all that happens in one’s life is for the greater good; but when you are down it’s hard to see that. Me Myself Dear Me Myself: I am going to conduct this letter like I am doing a reading at home with a client. Then we will discuss a few statements that you made in your email to us that may help you along on your journey with this issue. Please realize as this session is being relayed to you and the comments given after the session bears no judgement on our behalf. Q 1. Is this woman with the right partner for her on this plane in this lifetime, at this time? A. Yes Q 2 Is she with this man because of past life karmic debt that she owes him? A. Yes Q 3 Will they sell their house in 2014? A. Yes Q 4 After they sell their house will they move on to a better future together. A. No Q 5 Did this couple have good past lives together. A. No. The reason for this is because lifetime after lifetime

ASK WENDY Wendy Evano they have had control issues with each other. They are always competing against one another and they basically don’t trust themselves so how can they trust each other. Again, they have created much hurt feelings with each other in this lifetime as with the other lifetimes. She is not learning the lessons. Q 6 Does her husband try to compromise with her in the relationship? A. No, he has a tendency to manipulate her rather than to compromise with her. Q 7 Does she try to compromise with him in the relationship? A. Just a little bit. This relationship she has with this man is a learning lesson she must acknowledge if she is to stop having lifetime after lifetime of karmic issues with him. Unfortunately, neither is willing to learn thus far in this lifetime. However, she is starting to observe and acknowledge that there is something definitely happening here karmically with this man and her when it comes to their relationship. That is a good thing for her and perhaps she will seek the help she needs in this lifetime with this man to stop this from happening in the next lifetime. Q 8 Is she happy at all in her relationship with this man at this time. A. No Q 9 Is he happy at all in his relationship with this woman at this time. A. No Q 10 Why are they staying together if they are not happy? Both as in past lifetimes are insecure to leave the relationship and in this lifetime it is because of monetary reasons as well for the both of them. Q 11 So they are staying in the relationship basically because of monetary reasons? A. Yes isn’t that the reason

a good majority of people use when they don’t want to improve or learn the lessons on this plane. One excuse is just as good as another I suppose and money seems to be the ruling issue or the ruling excuse in such cases of these relationships. Hence both parties are frozen in their each individual fears and cease to learn and grow as separate individuals. What I have gathered from this session and what my guides are relaying to me is that you are with this man to learn and when you have learned you will leave. If you do not achieve this goal then you will stay with him till the next lifetime comes and try to learn the lessons again with him. You also tell us that you are overcome with feelings of guilt if you leave. Then in the next breath you say you know guilt is a useless feeling but you can’t help yourself. Your next lesson is you are acting and talking like a victim when you state this. You are a victim of your own unhappiness because you do not want to work on yourself and try to make the few years you have left on this plane happy ones. You want to blame it on karmic debt instead of seeking and growing as an individual on how to solve your karmic debt. You are miserable and depressed with yourself because your soul cries out for you to be your authentic self. Just because you are learning what you need to learn does not mean that you have to or you must leave this man you are living with. It means you will be in more harmony with yourself and those around you and you will not be living in unhappiness and mistrust within yourself. This is about you and your learning lessons. Seek the help you need and learn and grow and start getting some emotional control over your life and this is what you need to learn to start on this journey of self-discovery. Wendy

The Cranbrook Food Bank needs your help. Drop boxes at Safeway and Save On Foods Food Bank office 104-8th Ave. S. • 250-426-7664 (from 10am-3pm)

daily townsman / daily bulletin

NEWS

Help shape how Columbia Basin Trust supports you S ub m i t t e d

Columbia Basin Trust is asking residents where it should focus its efforts to best support residents and communities in the Columbia Basin now, and into the future. The Trust is kicking off a year-long Basin-wide public engagement process starting with a series of drop-in community workshops and an interactive engagement website. Called “Our Trust, Our Future,” this process will connect the Trust with residents to find out what’s important to them and build on the input they may have provided in the past. “We’ll be connecting with Basin residents to reflect and celebrate our collective accomplishments over the past 20 years, and also to imagine what

the next 20 might look like,” said Greg Deck, Columbia Basin Trust Board Chair. “In the next three to five years the Trust’s revenues are expected to double. As our delivery of benefits to the region grows, it’s important that residents continue to provide guidance in charting that future.” The Trust will be reaching out in various ways across the Basin. Expect to find the Trust hosting drop-in community workshops, presenting at community and agency meetings or staffing a booth in a public space. Residents can also send comments by mail or provide their thoughts online. Everyone who participates will have a chance to win $1,000 to donate to a local non-profit of their choice. “Some residents have already

provided input to us in the past—now we want you to expand on those ideas,” said Neil Muth, Columbia Basin Trust President and CEO. “What’s most important to your community? What should we do more of? What are your ideas? We hope you will be part of this conversation and help us shape how we support your efforts now, and into the future.” For more information about the process and to have your say in person or online, visit ourtrustourfuture.cbt.org. Columbia Basin Trust supports efforts to deliver social, economic and environmental benefits to the residents of the Columbia Basin. To learn more about the Trust’s programs and initiatives, visit cbt.org or call 1.800.505.8998.

B.C. Supreme Court judge sounds dirge for unionized musicians’ bylaw C a n a d i a n Pre ss

VANCOUVER — A B.C. Supreme Court judge has settled a score between some Vancouver musicians and their international union. Discord between the groups first sounded more than two years ago when the Vancouver Musicians’ Associa-

tion independently negotiated a new gig with a local film orchestra because it feared losing work to non-union shops. The American Federation of Musicians argued the deal was off key because the association didn’t have the authority under union bylaws to make the

deal, and dismissed the local executive and appointed a trustee. The association decided to take the matter to court, where it asked a judge to rule the trusteeship a mistake and order the section of bylaw unenforceable. Justice Carol Ross has decided that the

controversial rule is inconsistent with the entire bylaw, setting aside the trusteeship. The association represents about 2,000 musicians who have negotiated deals with operas, symphonies and theatres, and the federation has about 240 locals across the continent.

Key players in B.C.’s teachers’ strike quietly resume discussions Tamsyn Burgmann Canadian Press

VANCOUVER — Chief negotiators were quietly hunkered down for talks as another week without school loomed on the horizon for half-a-million British Columbia school children. The warring sides in the province’s protracted teachers’ strike were reticent to reveal details Friday, but the union confirmed its president and the employer’s representative began “discussions’’ with a veteran mediator on Thursday. There was no clarity about the scope or length of the meeting between B.C. Teachers’ Federation head Jim Iker, negotiator Peter Cameron, for the B.C. Public Employers’ Association, and Vince Ready, a respected mediator brought into the dispute earlier in the summer. The government did not confirm the talks. A spokesman only said the parties have agreed not to comment until there is something to report. The school year has been delayed indefinitely as more than

40,000 teachers picket across the province, waiting for their leadership and the government to strike an agreement so they can commence classes. Teachers started strike action almost two weeks before the end of the school year in June. Bargaining has been at a near standstill while both sides attempt to gain public support, families grow weary of the dispute and many on the picket lines say they yearn to start teaching again. The government says a union proposal and landslide vote on Wednesday to end the strike with binding arbitration is a non-starter, saying it would result in a tax hike. Education Minister Peter Fassbender wants a negotiated settlement. Premier Christy Clark said Thursday she is determined to get a conclusion before flying to India on a trade mission on Oct. 9, three days after the legislature resumes. Fassbender had flatly rejected back-to-work legislation until Thursday, when he softened his

position and said legislation was another option available to government. A coalition of Ontario public school educators donated $100,000 Friday to a growing pot of money being distributed as loans and grants to financially struggling teachers. The contribution raised an overall hardship fund to nearly $9 million. Ontario Teachers’ Federation president Rian McLaughlin represents 160,000 teachers, who she said have watched their B.C. counterparts suffer for a long time and want to show their support. Three affiliates contributed to the donation: the Elementary Teachers’ Federation of Ontario, the Ontario English Catholic Teachers’ Association and the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation. McLaughlin said there’s an oversupply of qualified teachers in Ontario looking for jobs across the country, and their decisions on where to go will be influenced by what they’re observing in B.C.


daily townsman / daily bulletin

Monday, September 15, 2014

NEWS

Page 15

Scotland’s Salmond: The nationalist who seeks to rend Great Britain Shawn Pogatchnik Associated Press

Alex Salmond is many things: a gambler with an obsessive eye for the horses, a populist showman equally quick to cause and claim outrage, an improvisational wit with a cut-throat edge. And should he triumph in Scotland’s independence referendum Thursday, Salmond would earn a new reputation — as the man who knocked the “Great’’ out of Britain. The 59-year-old leader of the Scottish National Party says he learned to dream of a better Scotland at his grandfather’s knee, and chose to join the SNP at university in 1973 when his English girlfriend poked too much fun at his separatist sentiments. Nobody’s laughing in England now about the rise of Salmond, a high-energy campaigner who has made a habit of outmanoeuvring opponents and rebounding strongly from any setback. His focus on independence appears all-consuming as he speaks, a pin of the Scottish flag always in his lapel. Even as his words at times careen wildly from the statesmanlike to the bullying, his bushy-browed eyes project equal measures of zeal and glee. “Salmond has long been the most naturally gifted political perform-

er in these islands,’’ wrote Jonathan Freedland, a British novelist and columnist, in a 2011 analysis that cannily forecast Salmond’s ability to rally voters behind independence. Freedland said no rival Scottish politician loomed on the horizon capable of eclipsing Salmond: “The more dominant he becomes, the more dominant he is likely to remain.’’ Salmond’s academic and professional background prepared him to become Scotland’s most economically optimistic and visionary politician. At St. Andrew’s University he double-majored in medieval history, reflecting his love of a Caledonia lost, and economics. In his 20s he worked as an economist first for Britain’s regional government in Scotland and then at Royal Bank of Scotland, where he analyzed the country’s most dynamic industry, North Sea oil. He won a seat in the British Parliament in 1987 and within three years was party leader. He supported the British government’s plans to create a devolved Scottish parliament in Edinburgh, a 1999 reform that stopped short of independence but gave his homeland a taste of self-government for the first time since its 1707 union with England. After being hounded from the Scottish Na-

Alex Salmond: ‘I love campaigning like that. I would happily do it for the rest of my days.’ Photograph: Murdo MacLeod tional leadership by internal party rivals, Salmond came storming back to the top post in 2004. Three years later he led his SNP to a narrow victory over the long-dominant Labour Party in the Scottish Parliament. Unusually, Salmond has always campaigned as a solitary figure. His now 76-year-old wife, Moira, rarely appears in public and the couple had no children. “Being a politician is one of the greatest jobs there is. Being a politician’s spouse is not,’’ Salmond told a Dundee newspaper, the Courier. As Scotland’s fledgling first minister in

2007, Salmond made a referendum on independence his grand strategic goal and predicted, to general disbelief even from supporters, it would be won within a decade. Critics from the three main British parties mocked his independence demand as impotent chest-thumping by a party leader without a majority. Labour, long the party of choice in left-leaning Scotland, calculated that Salmond had taken the SNP as high as it could go. Yet in the 2011 election, Salmond’s ultra-confident promises of a better future for Scotland by harnessing

its own oil revenues delivered an overall parliamentary majority, a triumph at odds with all the mainstream forecasts. Salmond’s demand to hold a popular vote on divorce from England suddenly went from unreachable dream to political reality. “Scotland has chosen to believe in itself. ... We’ve given ourselves the permission to be bold,’’ Salmond declared in his victory address to applause, hollers and hearty whistles. Over the past 18 months of campaigning, Salmond has rarely missed an opportunity to pounce on any mis-

Hillary Clinton’s Iowa trip kicks 2016 run speculation into overdrive Ken Thomas Associated Press

INDIANOLA, Iowa — Hillary Rodham Clinton returned to Iowa Sunday to pay tribute to the state’s retiring Democratic senator as anticipation builds over the possibility of another presidential campaign in 2016. Clinton and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, were to headline Sen. Tom Harkin’s annual steak fry fundraiser in rural Indianola. Sunday’s event was expected to draw

more than 5,000 party activists who form the backbone of Iowa’s presidential caucuses every four years. Iowa is traditionally the first state to hold a presidential nomination contest, giving its caucuses an early role in winnowing out the field of presidential contenders. Following a summertime book tour, Clinton was making her biggest campaign splash in 2014 so far, opening a season of fundraising and campaigning ahead of the November elections for

Democrats who are trying to maintain a Senate majority during President Barack Obama’s final two years. The event was serving as a farewell for Harkin, a liberal stalwart and former presidential candidate who is retiring after four decades in Congress. Clinton finished third behind Barack Obama and former Sen. John Edwards in Iowa’s leadoff presidential caucuses in January 2008, and the former secretary of state has not returned since. Iowa Democrats said

Clinton remained widely popular and predicted she would receive broad support if she chooses to run again. The Clintons’ arrival offered the possibility of a fresh start for the former New York senator and first lady, whose campaign stumbled in the months leading to the caucuses. Clinton, who has conferred with Iowa Democrats in recent days, would enter a presidential campaign with a large advantage over potential rivals.

Early polls have shown her leading other Democrats by wide margins, including Vice-President Joe Biden and Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley. Biden is travelling to Des Moines next week and has not closed the possibility of another campaign while O’Malley has made several visits to the state and dispatched staffers to Iowa this fall. Clinton has said she expects to decide on another campaign early next year.

step by the anti-independence Better Together campaign, particularly those voiced in an English accent. Along the way he has cheekily adopted every Scottish victory as his own, both on the golf course and particularly at the racetrack, where he offers predictions and colour commentary to sports newspapers and broadcasters. At the 2012 Scottish National — the horse race, not the party — he celebrated on air after he backed an underdog, the Scottrained Merigo, to upset the favourite. “A Scottish winner for the Scottish National

... and I tipped the winner,’’ he beamed to reporters, while declining to say how much he’d won. At the Wimbledon tennis tournament last year, as Andy Murray became the first British man to win the competition since 1936 — and the first Scot since 1896 — Salmond somehow found himself sitting directly behind Prime Minister David Cameron and waving a large Scottish flag. The image irritated Cameron’s Conservatives and appeared in every paper. It was all happy coincidence, Salmond insisted, surely not a deliberate stunt. During two TV debates last month, Salmond showed his fighting mettle and resiliency. He lost the first encounter, fumbling the key question of whether an independent Scotland could keep the British pound. A few weeks later he trounced the same opponent, Alistair Darling, a former British treasury chief. The next opinion polls showed likely “yes’’ voters running almost neck and neck with supporters of the union, then narrowly in the lead for the first time. “It’s our time, our moment,’’ Salmond said, looking into the camera. “Let’s seize it with both hands.’’

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DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

The Best Built, Highest Resale!

PAGE 16 MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2014

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