Cranbrook Daily Townsman, December 29, 2014

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MONDAY

DECEMBER 29, 2014

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Special avalanche warning issued FOR THE TOWNSMAN

REVELSTOKE — Avalanche Canada is issuing a special public avalanche warning for the North Rockies, Cariboos, North Columbia, South Columbia, Kootenay-Boundary, Purcells, South Rockies, Lizard and Flathead, and South Coast Inland regions. This warning applies to recreational backcountry users and is in effect from December 26 to December 30. Recent snowfalls coupled with winds and warm temperatures has placed a heavy load on a fragile snowpack, explains Avalanche Canada Public Avalanche Forecaster Joe Lammers. “The wild swings in weather this season have left a mix of smooth crusts and persistent weak layers in our snowpack,” said Lammers. “This complex snowpack has the potential to surprise backcountry users with large avalanches even though riding conditions will be good.” The stormy days leading up to Christmas produced a touchy snowpack that was providing lots of feedback to users—many natural slides and numerous small avalanches easily triggered by human activity. “People were triggering slides even as they approached slopes,” adds Lammers. “This made the dangerous conditions obvious. But that sort of feedback is going to change in the coming days, even though the weak layers are still there buried under 60 – 100 cm of good powder snow.” Avalanche Canada recommends backcountry users stay on simple, low-angle terrain; avoid large, steep slopes; minimize exposure to overhead hazard; avoid travelling where other users are on slopes above; and re-group in safe zones away from avalanche run-outs until conditions improve. If you do not have the training or experience to assess avalanche terrain and local conditions, it’s a good idea to recreate in areas where the avalanche risk is professionally managed. All backcountry users must be equipped with essential avalanche safety equipment. Everyone in the party needs an avalanche transceiver, a probe and a shovel every day. It’s equally important that everyone has avalanche training and has practiced using this equipment. If an avalanche occurs, the rescue is up to you. There is no time to go for help. For the avalanche forecast, check www.avalanche.ca.

BARRY COULTER PHOTO

Left to right: Don McCormick, Mayor of Kimberley; Don Davidson, President, Cranbrook Kimberley Hospice Society; Lee Pratt, Mayor of Cranbrook; Terry Segarty, Hospice Society board member; Bev McCormick;Ken Betenia, Harley Owners Group Assistant Director; Jeanne Davidson, Hospice Society Coordinator; Bob Gilchrist, Hospice Society Treasurer. In front are the two Harley-Davidson motorcycles raffled off Friday, Dec. 26, in support of the Cranbrook and Kimberley Hospice Society. Second prize, a Sportster 883 Iron, is in the foreground. The first prize Dyna Fat Bob is behind it.

Harleys raffled to help Hospice BARRY COULTER

Harley-Davidson of the Kootenays was a busy place on Boxing Day, Friday, Dec. 26. Dozens gathered to see who the lucky winner would be (hopefully themselves) in theannual raffle Harley-Davidson raffle. Each year, Harley Davidson of the Kootenays and the local Harley Owners Group (HOG) join together to raise funds through the motorcycle raffle. For the second year in the row, the raffle was in support of the Cranbrook Kimberley Hospice Society, The Harley-Davidson raffle is the biggest fundraiser of the year for the Cranbrook and Kimberley Hospice Society, which provides services for people at the end of their lives, and support

for their families. Three-thousand tickets were sold for the chance to win some outstanding prizes: • First prize was a 2014 Harley-Davidson Dyna Fat Bob, with a value of 23,545.76. • Second prize was a 2014 Harley-Davidson Portster 883 Iron, with a value of $13,870.08. • Third Prize was a Harley-Davidson storage bench, with a value of $1,295. Don Davidson, President of the Hospice Society, said the raffle helps the society provide all their services in the East Kootenay. “This is the second year that (the Harley Owners Group) has made us their charity of choice. With funds from this raffle, we are able to deliver all of the ser-

vices for the East Kootenay, to help people at the end of their life and their families.” Ken Betenia, Assistant Director of HOG, also thanked the various sponsors for their assistance: ABC restaurant, the Heritage Inn, Moyie Pub, the Sullivan Pub and Marysville Liquor Store; the Tamarack Centre, Save-On in Cranbrook and Overwaitea in Kimberley and Home Depot. The draws for the three prizes were made by Lee Pratt, Mayor of Cranbrook, Don McCormick, Mayor of Kimberley, and Bev McCormick, Don’s wife. Lee Pratt urged the public to become more aware of and give support to the Hospice Society, and Don McCormick praised the work that the society did. “In

spite of the inevitability of death, we really don’t deal with it very well. The services the Cranbrook and Kimberley Hospice Society provides is amazing.” Bev McCormick drew for third place. The winner of the Harley-Davidson Storage Bench was Jack Johnson of Kimberley. Lee Pratt drew for the winner of the Portster — Bryan Beler of Elkford was the winner. And Don McCormick drew the name for first prize, the Dyna Fat Bob. Dale Cook of Cranbrook was the winner. For more information on the Cranbrook Kimberley Hospice Society, go to http://www.ckhospice.com. For more information on Harley Davidson of the Kootenays, go to harleydavidsonkootenays.com.


Page 2 Monday, DECember 29, 2014

daily townsman / daily bulletin

NEWS

Canada faces Cold War in Europe, hot war in Iraq in 2015 M u rr ay Bre ws ter Canadian Press

OTTAWA — It could very well be that 2014 is remembered as the year when Canada traded one shadow war for possibly two others. The flag was barely folded and put away in Kabul, marking a formal end to more than 12 years of counter-insurgency war against the ghostly Taliban, before CF-18s were dispatched to begin pounding extremist targets in Iraq. The summer offensive by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, the al-Qaida splinter group that brought its brutal caliphate to the gates of Baghdad, coincided with the under-cutting of Ukraine. The so-called “little green men” — Russian troops stripped of identifiable badges fighting in Crimea and eastern Ukraine while Vladimir Putin’s government de-

nied their presence — competed for the world’s attention alongside blackmasked, knife-wielding Islamic State warriors, many of them brutal, bloodthirsty mercenaries who encouraged Muslim faithful to rise up and slaughter westerners in their own backyards. Both of them struck from the shadows with inscrutable motives and a fury that sowed a mixture of horror, indignation and confusion. It was brought home for Canadians in a brutal, bloody manner with the Oct. 22 attack on Parliament and the murders of two Canadian soldiers. The would-be jihadists had tenuous links to ISIL, but the group was quick to claim them as their own — and the Harper government was equally ready to make the link. In a year-end interview with The Canadian Press, NATO’s supreme commander suggested

the world has become a less stable, potentially more dangerous place, especially considering Russia is a nuclear power. Some have suggested the world is on the verge of a new Cold War. The Islamic State, with its lurid Internet beheadings and tales of medieval-mindset massacres, represents a different, potential long-term threat, one that is the West is struggling to wrap its head around. “Until we address the root causes of the Islamic State, its going to be hard to win this battle with the Islamic State,” said U.S. Gen. Phillip Breedlove, whose remarks carry the faint echo of Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau’s oft-maligned position. “We put great pressure on this kind of issue in Afghanistan and you saw it moved to the Maghreb (northern Africa) and the eastern part of Africa. This is an adaptive long-

term problem until we get to the root causes and address those issues.” It is the standoff with a now economically battered Russia that mostly preoccupies the 59-yearold career U.S. Air Force commander. “If we can clearly no longer count on Russia as a partner, and we face an issue there that is unresolvable, this is existential because of the types of weapons Russia holds,” Breedlove said in a telephone interview from Brussels. His comments are relatively tame when held up against those from government and academic circles in Poland and the Baltic states, where there is a collective belief that Putin’s long-term goal is to destroy the credibility of NATO by demonstrating it will not use force, regardless of the provocation. The sentiment is reinforced by Russian parlia-

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2014 and assumed an alias name. This male quickly became involved in the criminal element of Cranbrook. Subsequent to his arrest last Friday, the Cranbrook RCMP executed a warrant to search his residence in the Amy Woodland Elementary School area. Inside the residence, police recovered a loaded shotgun, a significant

On the 19th day of December, 2014, the Cranbrook RCMP arrested an adult male on outstanding warrants for Possession of a Controlled Substance for the Purpose of Trafficking. These warrants stemmed from charges out of Dawson Creek from 2010. This male arrived in Cranbrook earlier in

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is absolutely not in the best interests of anybody, least of which is Canada.” Eastern Europe may be the focus of Breedlove’s attention, but Canada’s participation in the coalition air campaign against ISIL fills Vance’s schedule. That will continue in the new year as the Harper government decides whether to extend the six month CF-18 combat mission, due to expire in April. U.S. commanders have warned the campaign to defeat the extremist threat, using Iraqi ground forces and Syrian resistance fighters, could take up to three years. The next campaign phase, likely to involve training of Iraqi forces, will unfold in the new year.

Cranbrook man arrested for trafficking, weapons possession RCMP

H int, h int.. .

S a lm o n

Canada’s operations commander, Lt.-Gen. Jonathan Vance, said the reality of 21st century conflict is that much happens outside the military sphere. The challenge, especially with Russia, is make to sure that the economic perils of low oil and sanctions don’t create massive instability and lead to an even more dangerous brinkmanship, he said. “What we’ve seen in the response by Canada and its NATO allies is a measured response to what Russia is doing,” Vance said. “It’s safe to say it’s rarely useful to further destabilize a situation. Our doctrine, our approach, has generally been to recover a situation. Wider and worse destabilization

mentarians such as Vyacheslav Nikonov, who was ominously quoted by The Financial Times last October as suggesting the crisis over Ukraine “is the most dangerous moment in relations between the Russia and the West since the Cuban missile crisis,” the 1962 showdown between Washington and Moscow that brought the world to the brink of nuclear war. Defence analyst George Petrolekas, a retired colonel, mused recently that the Saudi Arabian-induced tanking of world oil prices has done more to check Russian ambitions than anything the West, particularly NATO, has come up with since the Ukrainian crisis began to unfold last winter.

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amount of cocaine and a large amount of money. Travis Howard Losier, 25 years of age, appeared in Cranbrook Provincial Court on the outstanding warrants as well as new Cranbrook charges of Possession of a Weapon for Dangerous Purpose and Possession of a Controlled Substance for the Purpose of Trafficking. Losier has been remanded in custody and is scheduled to make his next court appearance January 12, 2014. Police would like to thank the community for their cooperation with this investigation. Police are also seeking assistance in regards to an incident that occurred on December 14, 2014. On that date, a residence in the Southview area sustained gunshots to the exterior of the residence and to a vehicle parked at that location, by unknown suspects. Cranbrook RCMP are requesting that if anyone has any information about this crime, that they contact the Cranbrook Detachment at 489-3471, or call CRIME STOPPERS at 1-800-222-8477(TIPS). You can also ‘Google’ “Cranbrook Crimestoppers” and leave a webtip.


daily townsman

Monday, DECember 29, 2014

Page 3

Year in Review

Looking back on 2014

A day by day look at the year past, through the top stories in the Cranbrook Daily Townsman

to a family doctor. The clinic has served notice to patients of Dr. Stuart Macdonald that they will no longer have a family doctor as of March 1, 2014.

January 2 The receiver-manager in charge of the Shadow Mountain Golf Ltd. confirmed Tuesday, Dec. 31, 2013, that the property was sold to a buyers group out of Edmonton. The receiver-manager was court appointed to manage the golf course on Jan. 8, 2013. The property, now known as River’s Crossing, was purchased by Westpoint Capital, an Edmonton investment fund manager. In 2007, the city boundary was expanded for the inclusion of the Shadow Mountain development. *** It was reported that a group of backcountry skiers were been rescued after being caught up in an avalanche near Golden. January 6 Jumbo Glacier Resort was the subject of a court case that got underway Monday, Jan. 6, 2014. The Ktunaxa Nation Council hadpetitioned for a judicial review to determine whether the B.C. government acted appropriately when it approved a Master Development Agreement for Jumbo Glacier Resort in March 2012. The case was later dismissed, and the Ktunaxa are currently appealing. January 7 Four people charged over a series of Cranbrook home invasions appeared in Criminal Court. Terrence Albert Allan, Andrew Daryl James Monnette, Megan Wynter Sands and Jay Leonard Hills each had brief court appearances in Cranbrook Provincial Court on Monday, January 6. The four were charged by RCMP who were investigating two home invasions and a break-in in Cranbrook over the holiday season. *** An Alberta man survived a close call with an avalanche over the weekend near Sparwood. Elk Valley RCMP were notified about an avalanche just after 3 p.m. on Sunday, January 5, near the Teck Coal Mountain mine. The mine is south-east of Sparwood. January 8 With more than a century’s history in the region, Falkins Insurance became part of Western Financial Group in January . Western announced Monday, Jan. 6 that it had completed acquisition of Falkins, which is the

January 23 Brian Panebianco was shaking and unsteady on his feet on Tuesday evening, Jan. 21, as a 12-person jury found him not guilty in connection to the death of Cory Jarock. Members of the jury, made up of Cranbrook, Kimberley and area residents, were also visibly upset as the foreperson announced the verdict. One by one, the court clerk read the charges, and each time, the jury foreperson pronounced Panebianco not guilty. Manslaughter, criminal negligence causing death, robbery and assault causing bodily harm – not guilty four times.

All winter long, Cranbrook and area residents followed the adventures of Danielle Cardozo (second from right) on MasterChef Canada. largest general insurance brokerage in the Kootenays. The final purchase came after the two companies entered into a strategic partnership in May 2005, when Western acquired a 20 per cent ownership stake in Falkins. That portion was increased to 40 per cent in August 2010. January 9 A Cranbrook area resident whose property backs on to Idlewild Park expressed serious concerns about the state of man-made Idlewild Lake, and the problems he said are being caused by the fact that the lake hasn’t been dredged in many years, something that is necessary for the health of the lake and the integrity of the surrounding land. Idlewild Lake was designed to be dredged regularly, of silt build-up and a system to allow Joseph Creek to bypass the lake while dredging was undertaken was incorporated into the lake’s original design. However, Peter Kleindienst, who lives on the last private property where the creek goes into the lake, said the lake hasn’t been dredged for more than 20 years, and the resulting silt build-up has left the lake shallow and malodorous, and caused the creek to backup on Kleinsdienst’s property. January 10 Cranbrook city council

passed the first three readings of a new procedural bylaw that will bring the most pressing matters to the front of the meeting and the information items and less pressing issues to the back of the meeting. January 13 Escalating complaints about highway conditions throughout the East Kootenay, particularly in the Elk Valley, led to a lengthy discussion at the Friday, Jan. 10 meeting of the Regional District of East Kootenay board of directors. Local elected officials appealed to the B.C. Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure and its highway maintenance contractor Mainroad East Kootenay Contracting to explain why it hadn’t done a better job of cleaning up after the weather event. The board heard from Mainroad and from concerned citizens. January 14 It was reported that the Ktunaxa Nation Council and Regional District of East Kootenay would work together to draft a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) in 2014. The project was supported by the Ktunaxa Nation Council in November, 2013, and the Regional District of East Kootenay (RDEK) board of directors supported moving ahead with the project on Friday, Jan. 10.

A new trial date was set for Cranbrook man whose lifetime prison sentence for murder was overturned last year. In 2009, Cheyenne Learn was convicted of second degree murder over the December 2007 shooting death of Tammy Ellis in Cranbrook. He was sentenced to life in prison with no hope of parole for 16 years. The new two-week trial was to start on Tuesday, Nov. 25 in Cranbrook. January 15 It was announced that a new event would be coming to Cranbrook in the form of a multi-cultural festival. Organizers started planning for the inaugural multicultural festival in August. The two-week trial of Brian Panebianco goy underway in Cranbrook Supreme Court Tuesday, Jan. 14. The 25-year-old Invermere man was charged with manslaughter, criminal negligence causing death, robbery and assault causing bodily harm in the death of 32-year-old Cory Jarock, who was found deceased April 3, 2012 in the driveway of a home in Invermere’s Tunnacliffe Heights neighbourhood. January 16 A couple who live at St. Mary Lake sounded an alarm after their dog got caught in a

leg trap on Crown land. The dog was freed with the help of a Conservation Officer, and though injured, was expected to recover. January 17 RCMP arrested three people for drug trafficking during a road check on Cranbrook Street North on Wednesday, Jan. 15. Cpl. Chris Newel of the Kimberley RCMP said police set up a road check after receiving a tip from the public about individuals involved in drug trafficking. Newel said the check had been going for over five hours when the suspect vehicle approached. A 44-year-old man was later charged with cocaine trafficking. January 20 Cranbrook’s very own MasterChef Canada contestant Danielle Cardozo is hosted a viewing party for the series’ first episode on Monday, Jan. 20 at the Heid Out Restaurant and Brewhouse. Cardozo, who works as a sous chef at the Heid Out, has made the Top 50 and will appear in at least the opening episodes of the new Canadian series, which will air on CTV. January 22 It was reported that the F.W. Green Medical Centre sent out 1,100 letters which effectively ended many Cranbrook residents’ access

January 27 Friends, family and associates of Kenny Bridge packed into the Heritage Inn Ballroom Saturday evening, January 25, to celebrate the awarding of Cranbrook’s Citizen of the Year to Kenny Bridge. Since 1973, the Cranbrook and District Chamber of Commerce has been awarding Citizen of the Year to Cranbrook residents who have “contributed to the fabric that makes this community special,” as Master of Ceremonies Loree Duczek said.

January 29 Cranbrook’s Danielle Cardozo proceeded to the top 16 in MasterChef Canada’s second episode, which aired on CTV on Monday, Jan. 27. Danielle, who works for ?aq’am (St. Mary’s Band) and is a sous chef at the Heid Out Brewhouse and Restaurant, was first announced as a member of the new series’ top 50 last month.

Feb. 3, 2014 HSBC gave notice to at least two Cranbrook non-profits that they should find new banks. In a letter to the CUPW Local 728 signed by HSBC’s head of business banking Nigel Davis, the bank said that upon conducting a “strategic review” of personal banking services, it would be closing the accounts.

See LOOKING, Page 4


Page 4 Monday, DECember 29, 2014

daily townsman

year in review

Looking back on 2014 Continued from page 3

Feb. 4, 2014 Two men charged over a series of home invasions in Cranbrook had to wait a few more weeks for a bail hearing. Terrence Allan and Andrew Monnette were among four people charged in connection with two home invasions and a break and enter in Cranbrook around Christmas 2013. *** Cranbrook’s Danielle Cardozo was through to the top 14 in MasterChef Canada after sailing through the third episode on Sunday night. Danielle was not seen in the final version of the episode that went to air on CTV Sunday night after the Super Bowl. However, sometimes no news is good news as Danielle was not among those cut from the reality series that week. Feb. 5, 2014 The Cranbrook RCMP released the fourth quarter of 2013 numbers and Cst. Barry Graham was on hand at Monday night’s council meeting to answer questions. Graham said the numbers drop in almost every category except break and enters, but noted that it is a small

statistical sample for the quarter. Feb. 6, 2014 Cranbrook city council adopted a bylaw that will enable Medical Marijuana grow operations to operate within industrial zones, in anticipation of new federal regulations concerning licensing of MMGOS. *** The NDP MLA for Port Coquitlam came through the Cranbrook and Kimberley area on Wednesday, Feb. 4, on an information gathering trip in advance of the upcoming session of the B.C. legislature and the government budget process. Feb. 7, 2014 Cranbrook council found that the cost of snow removal from all city streets would quickly become expensive, as would the use of snow gates to clear snow from in front of driveways. At the Monday, Feb. 3 regular meeting, city staff outlined the costs, benefits and disadvantages of the additional snow removal services. The street clearing information came as a result of a council inquiry on behalf of a resident. Feb. 11, 2014

Brad Lukowich, the assistant coach with the Lethbridge Hurricanes, was fired from the team on Friday after half a season on the bench. In a terse three-sentence press release, ‘Canes general manager Brad Robson said Lukowich had been “terminated for cause.” Feb. 12, 2014 Police investigated 10 deer traps stolen from a government compound in Cranbrook. On Sunday, Feb. 9, police were called to the Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations compound on Industrial Road G in Cranbrook. All 10 clover traps were missing from the yard. Feb. 13, 2014 Kimberley City Council Chambers was packed with spectators on Monday evening as Council deliberated on spending $350,000 to upgrade the ice plant at Marysville arena. In the end, Council voted five to two to go ahead, but not before much debate, some of it quite passionate. Feb. 14, 2014 The new Sport Chek store in Cranbrook will soon open its doors.

CARRIERS WANTED Monday-Friday

Brendan Arnold, public relations for Sport Chek’s parent company FGL Sports, said the store is slated to open April 10 and will be looking to hire around 31 people in March. Feb. 17, 2014 The hospital district approved funding for a host of projects at East Kootenay hospitals, without raising the tax rate for residents. At a meeting on Friday, Feb. 14 of the Kootenay East Regional Hospital District, the board of directors approved the 2014 annual budget. The budget includes funding for five capital projects that Interior Health plans to complete in 2014. The hospital district funds 40 per cent of the projects, while the B.C. government funds the remaining 60 per cent. Feb. 18, 2014 East Kootenay patients can now see a doctor online from home, even if they don’t have a family doctor, with a new service that has launched in B.C. Medeo is a virtual health care service that launched last January and already has 10,000 patients and 350 family doctors and specialists signed up.

Feb. 19, 2014 Conservation officers euthanized four young cougars beside a walking trail at Cranbrook’s Elizabeth Lake.

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Josh Dueck did Kimberley and Canada proud at the Sochi Paralympic Games. The seven-month-old siblings were put down on Sunday beside the lake, within eyesight of Parkland Middle School, said Cranbrook Conservation Officer (CO) Jared Connatty. Feb. 20, 2014 Cranbrook will know the results of the next municipal election within half an hour of the close of voting thanks to electronic voting machines. At Monday, Feb. 17’s regular meeting, council adopted a bylaw to authorize the purchase of automated voting machines, at a cost of between $12,000 and $14,000. Feb. 21, 2014 An attempt by Councillor Gerry Warner to introduce scaled business license fees failed in council on Monday, Feb. 17. At the moment, all businesses in Cranbrook, regardless of size, are required to pay a $150 annual fee for a license. Feb. 24, 2014

A new local task force tackled the East Kootenay’s childcare crisis. Starting this spring, the group conducted a child care needs assessment for the region. The assessment will seek public input on problems that families face in securing child care, and make recommendations on how to alleviate the issues. Feb. 25, 2014 A number of local athletes were in Mission last week to compete in the BC Winter Games. Over the weekend, they competed in sports ranging from alpine skiing to gymnastics and wrestling. Feb. 26, 2014 Canada defended their gold medal in men’s hockey on Sunday morning, defeating Sweden 3-0 to close out the Sochi Games. Canadians home and abroad celebrated the performance as soon as the final buzzer went, including former Team

Canada captain Scott Niedermayer.

Feb. 27, 2014 A Christian retreat centre beside the St. Mary River in Fort Steele was up for approval by the Agricultural Land Commission. Haven of Hope would consist of a lodge, five cabins, a chapel and a caretaker facility on the riverfront property near the junction of the St. Mary and Kootenay Rivers.

Feb. 28, 2014 Cranbrook Community Theatre held a special event last week, marking the completion of renovations to the historic Studio Stage Door in downtown Cranbrook. The grand re-opening was held Friday, Feb. 21, at the Heritage building on 11th Avenue South. The event was also a celebration of CCT’s 40 years as stewards of the building.

See LOOKING, Page 5


daily townsman

year in review

Looking back on 2014 Continued from page 4 March March 4 It appears as if the rumours of the Kootenay Ice relocating have been greatly exaggerated. Again. According to a report out of the Prince George Citizen, which was picked up by blogs on the internet, an unsourced rumour has it that the Kootenay Ice was relocate to Winnipeg next year. March 6 Kootenay Ice forward Tim Bozon was been diagnosed with Neisseria Meningitis and was in critical condition in a hospital in Saskatoon. Bozon was admitted to Royal University Hospital on Saturday, March 1. *** It was reported that the majority of the physicians of the F.W. Green Medical Centre were to relocate into the new Baker Street Professional Centre this summer. The move would see the creation of two, separate smaller family practices, the FW Green Clinic and Fisher Peak Family Practice. March 7 The City of Cranbrook has been forced to scrap changes to development fees after the B.C. government refused to approve the new bylaw. At its regular council meeting on Monday, March 3, city council rescinded three readings of its Development Cost Charge Bylaw. It would have seen development cost charges (DCCs) rise, for example, from $2,032 per home in a low density residential development to $4,289 per home. *** Parts of Cranbrook, Wasa, Fort Steele, Meadowbrook and Wardner are experiencing flooding after heavy snow gave way to warm temperatures and rain this week. Many areas of the city experienced flooding, including parts of Joseph Creek, Highway 3, the CP rail yard and Cobham Avenue. March 12

Monday, DECember 29, 2014

RCMP arrested a 26-year-old man after another man was stabbed in Cranbrook on Friday, March 7. Police were called when a man was dropped off at East Kootenay Regional Hospital on Friday, suffering from serious stab wounds March 17 You certainly couldn’t ask for a more successful Paralympic Games than those experienced by Kimberley’s own Josh Dueck. Not only did the sit-skier win two medals, a gold in Super Combined and a silver in the downhill, but he lead in his Canadian teammates and carried the flag at the closing ceremonies on Sunday. March 18 No Ice player has been able to crack the century mark for single-season points since Jarrett Stoll in 2000-01. However, Sam Reinhart did it on Friday against the Hitmen, notching an assist on Philp’s first goal to give him 100 points on the season. He ended the night with two goal and two assist for four points. March 19 The man who died in a workplace accident at Teck’s Coal Mountain mine on Sunday has been identified as Miles Bradley Lorenz, 59, from Coleman, Alberta. The B.C. Coroners Service released the information on Tuesday, March 18. According to the coroner, Lorenz was a water truck driver. On Sunday, March 16, he was filling his truck with water when he was hit by frozen rock that fell off a separate vehicle. March 20 More good newscame out of Saskatoon on Tim Bozon’s health. The Kootenay Ice forward was moved out of the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) and into one of the hospital wards, and doctors listed his condition as stable. Bozon’s parents said he was awake, moving around in his

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

bed, trying to feed himself and trying to speak. March 21 RCMP issue arrest warrant for repeat offender Jason Beaudry. A countrywide warrant has been issued for the arrest of high-risk offender Jason Beaudry after he was supposed to check in with his parole officer on Monday but failed to do so. He had previously violated conditions of his parole on Saturday, March 15. March 26 Three University of Calgary students were headed on a trip across Europe with only cans of Red Bull as currency and their wits. Eric Termuende, from Cranbrook, along with teammates Conner Brown and Ben Cannon were embarking on the Red Bull Can You Make It? competition. The trio were to start in London and make their way to Berlin, stopping at checkpoints on the way.

lines Flight 370. Michel Lechmann, who graduated from Mount Baker Secondary School in 1986, is now a software engineer based in Halifax. Through his company, CarteNav Solutions, Lechmann has created a software program installed in the Australian airforce’s P3 Orions, being used in the search for the plane that crashed into the southern Indian Ocean earlier this month. March 28 The B.C. government proposed major changes to the Agricultural Land Commission (ALC), opening the door for East Kootenay farmers to gain permission to use their properties for non-agricultural uses. Kootenay East MLA and Energy and Mines Minister Bill Bennett announced the proposed changes Thursday, March 27, in the legislature, the result of the Liberal government’s core review of government spending, which Bennett is leading.

Ski by torchlight New Year’s Eve Hit the Nordic Trails for a candlelight ski and great view of the fireworks F o r t h e Tow n s m a n

For the last six years, the Kimberley Nordic Racers has been organizing a New Year’s Eve Torchlight Ski Event at the Kimberley Nordic Trails. This event has grown every year, and has become a tradition for family and friends to gather as they ski the beautiful trails of the Kimberley Nordic Centre with three kilometres lit with torches and candles. Last year over 500 people attended the event and it certainly proved to be a crowd pleaser. Skiers enjoyed the amenities that the lodge has to offer by enjoying snacks and hot beverages after their ski. As well the Nordic Trails offer a fantastic view of the firework display that takes place at the Ski Hill. This year’s Candlelight Ski is being sponsored by five local businesses. Corporate sponsors include Kimberley Tourism, Kimberley Logging Company, Kootenay Savings, Kootenay Mountain Works and Re-

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sorts of the Canadian Rockies. The Nordic Racers wish to thank these sponsors for their support. Their support keeps this event affordable for our Community and allows entrance by voluntary donations. The Candlelight Ski takes place between 7 and 10 pm on Wednesday, December 31, at the Kimberley Nordic Centre. All ages are welcome and encouraged to participate. Admission is by donation with proceeds supporting the Kimberley Nordic Racers. The Nordic racers are a group of teenaged skiers that train all year long, and compete in regional, provincial and national races. If you have not experienced the New Year’s Eve Candlelight Ski be sure to take in this memorable community event this year. For more information please contact Kim Miller at 09coreykim@telus.net or Frank Ackermann at frankackermann@me.com.

Market Quotations VNP-T BCE-T BMO-1 BNS-T CM-T CU-T CFP-T ECA-T ENB-T FFT-T FTS-T HSE-T

March 27 Canadian technology developed by a Cranbrook-raised man is being used in the search for missing Malaysia Air-

Page 5

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PAGE 6

MONDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2014

OPINION

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NEWSMAKERS

Stellar year in local sports stories It’s been an interesting calendar year in Cranbrook, splitting duties on the sports desk and the news desk. I moved off of the sports beat in August to cover a maternity leave for our senior reporter on the news desk. While I’ve had the opportunity to cover some interesting stories recently on the news desk, namely the Cheyenne Learn trial in Cranbrook Supreme Court, this list in primarily devoted to what I feel were the top local stories to come off the sports desk in 2014. Hope you enjoy. The shining star of Sam Reinhart It was the highly-anticipated draft year for Kootenay Ice captain Sam Reinhart, the youngest of a trio of brothers who seem destined for the NHL to follow in the footsteps of their father, Paul Reinhart. NHL scouts had their eye on Sam since he was drafted into the WHL as the 15th overall selection by the Kootenay Ice in 2010. He went to the WHL podium twice last year capturing Player of the Year and Most Sportsmanlike Player of the Year awards and finished with 105 points, good for fifth in the regular season scoring race. However, it was his play following the World Juniors that made everyone sit up and take notice, where he tallied 55 points in 27 games. Kootenay Ice playoffs Hockey is a team game; you win and lose as a team, but the trio of Sam Reinhart, Jaedon Descheneau and Zach Franko almost single-handedly took out the Calgary Hitmen in the first round of the 2014 WHL playoffs. In six games, they scored 17 points. Each. Kootenay went in as the underdog,

the sixth seed going up against the third seed, and won in six games. It was fire wagon hockey in almost all of the games— entertaining for fans but nail biters for the coaches. Kootenay stunned the Hitmen with the first win, before losing twice, one of which was a tight 7-6 OT loss. However, the Ice knotted up the series in Calgary and came home for an emotional Game Six where Tim Bozon, who had just been released from hospiTrevor tal after battling Crawley meningitis, delivered the ceremonial puck drop. Kootenay went on to win the game 5-3 and the series. Despite a 3-1 series lead over the Medicine Hat Tigers, the Tabbies were able to battle back and force Game 7, which they won to advance to the Eastern Conference final. Tim Bozon’s battle with meningitis The WHL and the rest of the hockey world reacted in shock when it was announced that Tim Bozon was in a medically induced coma and on the brink of death after being admitted to hospital in Saskatoon with a diagnosis of Nesseria Meningitis. Bozon, a blue-chip prospect for the Montreal Canadiens, taken in the 3rd round of the 2012 NHL Draft, played in a game with the Kootenay Ice against the Saskatoon Blades before heading back to the hotel with the team and had a restless night in his room. Ice athletic therapist Cory Cameron made the call to an ambulance the next morning, and Bozon was diagnosed with meningitis and put into a coma not even two hours later at the hospi-

tal. After two weeks, he was slowly awakened and released a week later, where he briefly returned to Cranbrook before heading back to Europe to make what appears to be a complete recovery.

Bandits win Montana State Championship The Cranbrook Bandits baseball team captured their first state championship this past season after defeating the Medicine Hat Majestics 11-5 in the final game of the tournament. The Bandits went on an undefeated run of five games, dramatically outscoring the opposition during their run to the state title. Led by Devon Marra, Tyler Thorn and Brandon Ouillette, along with some great rookie talent such as Kei Chlopan, the Bandits had a successful season under the guidance of head coach Paul Mrazek. The best thing? The entire team is eligible to return for next season to take another shot at a repeat title.

Josh Dueck earns gold at Sochi Josh Dueck realized a dream in February when he claimed the first gold medal of his Paralympic career, topping the podium in Super Combined at the Sochi Winter Olympic Games in Russia. Not only did Dueck capture gold, he also nabbed a silver in downhill. It’s more hardware on his shelf, as he already captured numerous awards over his sit-ski racing career, such as a silver medal in the Vancouver Winter Olympics, a gold in the X-Games and a world championship. Dueck recently announced his retirement from competitive skiing as he looks to the next chapter in his life.


daily townsman / daily bulletin

Opinion/Events Letters to the Editor

No parallel state This in response to Tom Fletcher’s column (‘Nisga’a proving their critics wrong,’ B.C. Views, Dec. 3) and a recent letter to the editor from Ron Johnson (‘Perils of a parallel state’). First, the Nisga’a Nation is not a “parallel state.” As a result of our treaty, we are very much a part of Canada, a fact about which many Nisga’a citizens are extremely proud. In the manner set out in the Nisga’a Treaty, federal and provincial laws apply to Nisga’a Nation, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms applies to Nisga’a government, Nisga’a citizens pay taxes, and Nisga’a citizens continue to be entitled to all the rights and benefits of other Canadian citizens. If anything, our treaty removed the barriers of the Indian Act that obstructed our full participation in Canadian society. We

take exception to being separated in any way from Canada. Second, Johnson’s comment that Nisga’a citizens have become a “landed gentry” is a completely inaccurate portrayal of the state of Nisga’a society. It suggests that through the recognition of our aboriginal title under the Nisga’a Treaty, Nisga’a Nation has somehow magically transformed its economic conditions to that of a 19th century aristocrat living off rents. In fact we were not allowed to participate in the industrial revolution, and we need to catch up to the rest of Canada. As tax-paying Canadians, we at Nisga’a Nation still have to earn our daily bread, attract investment to our area and carefully plan and build for the future, just like everyone else in Canada. This is why we support the development of the liquefied natural gas industry in B.C.,

are seeking to attract investment, and possibly operate an LNG facility on Nisga’a lands. As we have indicated to the government of B.C. at recent joint press conferences, our efforts at Nisga’a Nation provide LNG proponents project certainty to support the establishment of the LNG industry in B.C. generally. Nisga’a Nation strives for sustainable prosperity and self-reliance. We appreciate how Fletcher has kept an open mind to allow his views on the Nisga’a Treaty to evolve. We are optimistic that eventually more people will understand that we want what all citizens of B.C. want – an improved quality of life. H. Mitchell Stevens President Nisga’a Lisims Government New AiyanshName

2014: Our hypochondriac planet T he main purpose of year-end reviews, of course, is to hold the ads apart. But they can also serve as a kind of annual check-up on the political health — and also on the economic, demographic and even physical health — of the planet and its teeming human population. So imagine that we are a panel of high-priced medicos reviewing the health status of our most important client, the human race. The first thing to note is that the client is still piling on weight at an alarming rate – up from two billion units to seven billion in the past seventy-five years — but continues to thrive, for the most part. And most of the ailments that it worries about are mere hypochondria. Take, for example, the widespread concern (at least in the media and among what Bob Fisk calls the “think-tank mountebanks”) that the emergence of the so-called Islamic State in the no man’s land between Iraq and Syria will lead to catastrophe. There will allegedly be a surge in terrorist attacks around the world, a Sunni-Shia religious war spanning the entire Middle East, or even a global religious war between Muslims and everybody else. The Sunni fanatics and the Shia fanatics are far too busy trying to kill each other to have time to spare for attacking non-Muslims. (Besides, most Muslims don’t want to attack anybody; they just want to be left in peace.) Quite a lot of the slaughter in Iraq and Syria is driven by religion, but we are still a long way from a religious conflict that directly involves the really important states of the Middle East: Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Iran. Even the anticipated surge in terrorist attacks outside the region is not likely to come to pass. The only strategic purpose for such attacks by any organised group of Islamist extremists is to gain support and recruits within their own region. If they can lure Western powers into killing lots of Muslims in their region, then their cause will prosper locally. As it turns out, Islamic State has not even needed to carry out terrorist attacks in the West to achieve this goal. Videos of Western hostages being beheaded have been enough to get the bombing going again, and Western governments are no more troubled by the sheer pointlessness of the bombing than they were in the past. Both sides are playing for the home audience, and really don’t care much about the impact of their actions on the alleged enemy.

Monday, DECember 29, 2014

The whole “Islamic State” panic is a tempest in a fairly small teacup. The casualties are small, and the entire region matters little economically or strategically except to its own inhabitants. Even in the unlikely event that a Sunni-Shia religious war should engulf the whole of the Middle East, it would have no more effect on the rest of the planet than the European wars of religion four centuries ago had on the Middle East. That is to say, hardly any. So in terms of the global system’s health, the rise of radical Islamism is not a life-threatening disease. It’s a local infection that will probably have to run its course. If it really gets bad, some quarantine measures Gwynne may be needed, but this is not ebola. Dyer Speaking of which, the ebola outbreak in Africa seems on the way to being contained, although it will probably remain as a low-level chronic problem in the three West African countries where it reached epidemic status: Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea. There is a small risk that ebola might take root in a densely populated country whose people travel widely, like Nigeria or, even worse, India, but so far, so good. The other great shock of 2014 was a war in Europe. The Ukrainian revolution of last February was a messy and complicated business, but it need not have ended in Russia’s illegal annexation of Crimea and in a Russian-backed separatist war in Ukraine’s two easternmost provinces. We owe that mainly to Russian President Vladimir Putin’s world-view as a former agent of the KGB, the Soviet secret police, which (as the old saying had it) thwarted ten anti-Soviet plots for every one that actually existed. The KGB was full of very clever people — indeed, it was the most intelligent and best informed part of the old Soviet regime, one of the world’s strongholds of institutionalised stupidity — but it was also a nest of paranoid fantasists. You may debate to your heart’s content whether this was a Russian cultural phenomenon or an extreme case of the disease that infects every great-power spy agency, but that’s why Putin reacted the way he did. Western European governments are so divided and introspective that they could not come up with a credible plan to boil an egg, and they care very little about the parts of Eastern Europe beyond the European Union’s borders. The only section of the

American population that sees President Obama’s administration as capable of hatching a plot is the extreme right, and they think he’s a foreign-born Communist plotting the overthrow of the United States. Various Western politicians showed up in Kiev to cheer the protesters on, but these were just the usual suspects taking advantage of a good photo op. Their real intended audience, as usual, was back home. As for NATO, it is another Cold War institution that has long outlived its purpose, but it no more wants to bring Ukraine into the fold than it longs to recruit Mongolia as a member. Too much trouble, and no profit whatever. There was no Western plot, but Putin is driven by the belief that there was. He has taken Russia into a confrontation with the West that it cannot win, and the country’s economy is already crumbling under the twin strains of coping with Western sanctions and the collapse of the oil price. He is finding it almost impossible to back away without losing face, but he has nothing to gain by continuing the conflict either. Risk of a new Cold War: minimal. So far the patient’s health is looking pretty good. There is the usual clutter of minor ailments — a mini-civil war here (Libya, South Sudan), civil rights protesters under attack there (Hong Kong, Missouri) – and there is a significant possibility that next year will bring another recession. That’s as inevitable as catching a cold once in a while. But there has been nothing really out of the ordinary this year, nothing that sets off alarm bells. The only big worry the doctors have is the same one that has bothered them for the past twenty-five years: the patient simply won’t stop smoking. Their increasingly grave warnings are met with empty promises to cut back or quit entirely, but not right now, just some time far in the future. Maybe. Climate change is the spectre at every feast, the unstoppable rot that undermines every positive development. The failure at Copenhagen in 2009 bleeds indistinguishably into the fudge at Durban in 2011 and on into the feeble compromise in Lima in 2014, which sets us up for the bigger disappointment of Paris in 2015. And even if by some miracle we get a useful agreement in Paris next year, nothing will actually be done until 2020. The patient thinks there’s still plenty of time to quit. There isn’t. Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist based in London

Page 7

What’s Up?

KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDAR

UPCOMING

2015 FREE PUBLIC SWIM Wednesday, January 7th, 5:00-6:00pm is sponsored by Royal Lepage East Kootenay Realty.

ONGOING Cranbrook Writer’s Group meet on the 4th Monday of the month at the Arts Council. Engage in writing exercises, constructive critiques & share in information on upcoming literary events & contests. Cbk and District Arts Council, 104, 135-10th Ave S, CBK. info: 250-4264223 www.cranbrookanddistrictartscouncil.com Canadian Cancer Society- if you have spare time and would like to volunteer, interested applicants can call 250-426-8916, drop by our office at #19-9th Avenue S, Cranbrook or go to www.fightwithus.ca and register as a volunteer. Royal Canadian Legion Branch 24; Friday Meat Draw: 4:30- 6:30, Saturday Meat Draw: 3:30-5:30. 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 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 Help stop our wait list from growing!! Apply to be a Kimberley or Cranbrook Big Brother or Sister, “one hour a week or more”. 250489-3111. ‘Military Ames’ social/camaraderie/support group meetings are held in the Kimberley Public Library reading room the first and third Tuesday’s of the month. All veterans welcome. For more information contact Cindy 250 919 3137 Dance/Practice: every Saturday. Practice from 7 to 8 PM, dancing until 11 PM. Dance With Me Cranbrook Studio, 206-14 A 13th Street, South, behind Safeway. Volunteers are needed to assist staff with childminding while parents attend programs at the Kimberley Early Learning Center. Come play!! Weekly or monthly for 2 hours. Diana 250427-0716 Funtastic Singers Drop-In Singing group; free to attend-just for fun! No experience necessary! CDAC Office&Gallery 135 10th Ave S, Tuesdays; 6.45-8.15pm 250-426-4223 / cdac@shaw.ca / www. cranbrookanddistrictartscouncil.com Support literacy and special projects at the Kimberley Public Library-visit the Friends of the Library Used Bookstore-an ongoing fundraiser- on Main Street Marysville, Wed-Sat 10:30-3:30. Operated totally by volunteers. ICBL-Duplicate Bridge–Senior Center in Cranbrook. Mon & Wed 7pm, Thurs & Fri 1pm at Scout Hall, Marysville. Info: Maggie 250417-2868. Volunteers always needed for the Marysville Thrift shop! Please contact Marilyn @ 427-4153 or Jean @ 427-7072. Bibles For Missions Thrift Store, 824 Kootenay St. N., Cranbrook serving our community to benefit others - at home and abroad. We turn your donations into helping dollars! Open Tues-Sat 10am-5pm. Phone 778-520-1981. Cranbrook Community Tennis Assoc. welcome all citizens to play or learn to play. Call Neil 250-489-8107, Cathy 250-464-1903. 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 5:30-7:00. Pay your own tab. Networking, share accomplishments, education. Bev Campbell 778-481-4883 Mark Creek Lions meet 1st and 3rd Wednesdays at the Kimbrook. Meet & Greet from 6:00-6:30pm, supper 6:30-7:00, meeting 7:008:00pm. Contact 250-427-5612 or 250-427-7496. New members welcome – men and ladies! 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 Masonic Lodges of B.C. and Yukon will supply transportation to cancer patients who have arrived at Kelowna or Vancouver. This free service will be at the destination point. Example: from airport to clinic and clinic to airport on return, also around the destination city. Info may be received from your doctor, Canadian Cancer Society, or by phoning Ron at 250-426-8159. 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. 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 non-profit organization. • All notices must be received by the Thursday prior to publication. • There is no guarantee of publication. Notices will run subject to space limitations.

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Looking for vengeance Canada looks to take advantage of struggling Finland Bill Beacon Canadian Press

MONTREAL - Opening with a pair of one-sided wins was a confidence booster for Canada but now comes the first real test at the world junior championship: Finland. Canada (2-0-0) enters Monday’s game at the Bell Centre on a high after shutout wins over Slovakia and Germany, but the defending champion Finns (0-1-1) are a sharp step up in competition. “They’ve yet to win a game, so they’re going to be coming at us,” forward Curtis Lazar said Sunday. “It’ll probably be do or die for them. “They really need to take a step in that direction, and we get the lucky draw of having to face them. We’ve got to try to weather the storm. They’ve got a great team all around and we have to be ready to play.” It has not gone well so far for Finland, which opened with a gutsy performance in a 2-1 shootout loss to the United States but then went south with a surprise 2-1 defeat to Slovakia after wasting a string of scoring chances. Many of the same Finnish players, including defence ace Julius Hinka, captain Artturi Lehkonen and goalie Juuse Saros were riding high at last year’s event

in Malmo, Sweden, when they toppled Canada 5-1 in the semifinals before beating the Swedes to claim their first title since 1998. They are sure to bring the same cautious, patience-testing game they always play to the rematch with Canada, which has seven players back from a year ago. “They’ve got great goaltending too,” added Lazar, one of the returnees. “We’re going to have to get some good traffic in front of their goalie. “Their defence does a great job of moving the puck and they’ve got some crafty forwards as well. So they’re going to keep us on our toes, but if we play the way we can, we’ll be fine.” Canada has more skill up front than last year’s squad. So far, the goaltending has been perfect and the defence has been solid but for some hairy moments in the second period of Saturday’s 4-0 win when the entire team lost its edge for a spell against Germany. Zach Fucale, who needed to make only 12 saves in the opening 8-0 rout of Slovakia, will be back in goal after Eric Comrie picked up a 17save shutout against the Germans. Fucale was in the net for last year’s loss to the Finns, who took the lead in the second period on

a fluke goal by Joni Nikko after Honka shot the puck in along the boards and saw it take a funny hop in front of the vacated net. Finnish checking and counterattacking took over after that. The loss guaranteed that Canada would go a fifth straight year without a gold medal. “I wouldn’t say it’s fresh in my mind, but I remember what happened and I learned from it,” said Fucale. “It’ll certainly serve as a motivator for the game.” Coach Benoit Groulx, an assistant to Brent Sutter last year, doesn’t want to dwell on what happened a year ago. He said both teams are different and this is a new tournament. The Finns no longer have star forward Teuvo Teravainen, who had three points in the semifinal. But they have slick forward Kaspari Kapanen, a first-round pick of the Pittsburgh Penguins who missed last year’s event with an injury. Finland also has six-footthree dynamo Jesse Puljujarvi, who may be their most dangerous forward even if he’s only 16. “We want to play in the now,” said Groulx. “I know they have a good team, but we also have a good team. We expect a very good game.” Canada’s advantages

Aaron Bell/CHL Images

Team Canada and Kootenay Ice captain Sam Reinhart (pictured Friday night in Canada’s win over Slovakia) are undefeated at the 2015 IIHF World Junior Championship heading into Monday’s game against Finland. will be playing at home on an NHL-size rink and having a team brimming with confidence after two big wins. Centre Nic Petan had six points in two games, while Robby Fabbri had four and Max Domi, Sam Reinhart, Connor McDavid and defenceman Madison Bowey each had three. Domi, an Arizona Coyotes prospect who is the son of former NHL enforcer Tie Domi, grew up getting advice not only from his father but from his dad’s friends, like superstars Mario Le-

Take two

Kootenay Ice grab pair of wins over Calgary Hitmen Taylor Rocc a Sports Editor

The Kootenay Ice grabbed a pair of crucial victories over the Calgary Hitmen this weekend, winning 6-2 on home ice Saturday night before edging the Hitmen 4-3 in Calgary Sunday afternoon. Saturday night, Levi Cable answered the call and delivered in entertaining fashion, registering four goals to lead the Kootenay Ice to victory in front of a season-high crowd of 2,976 at Western Financial Place.

“I got a lot of shots today and the bounces were going my way, so I thought I’d just throw everything to the net,” Cable said after Saturday’s win. “A lot of things just happened to go in for me. It was nice. “It was really good to come back [from the holiday break] and get the win here.” The 20-year-old native of Hudson Bay, Sask., tallied twice in the first period before stealing an errant pass from Hitmen starting goaltender Mack Shields in

mieux and Mats Sundin. “I didn’t really listen to my dad when he got mad at me for not shooting,” Domi said with a laugh. “I’d always overpass in minor hockey and he’d get on me and say, ‘If you can’t listen to Mario or Mats Sundin, then I don’t know who else can tell you.’ So I’d say all right. I had to figure it out pretty quick.” Groulx tinkered with his lines late against Germany by putting McDavid between Fabbri and Jake Virtanen, a Vancouver Canucks’ first-round pick from

Abbotsford, B.C., who is of Finnish descent. The only Canadian forwards without a point so far are Nick Ritchie and Frederik Gauthier, an ace penalty killer who leads the tournament with an 84.21 faceoff win percentage. Canada has killed off nine straight penalties so far, but Groulx feels improvements can still be made. “Our PKers were good but we can still be better,” he said. “We blocked many shots because we got in position to block shots. We still

need improvement in our routes when we kill penalties, but I like the attitude of our PK guys.” As for Finland, Groulx is aware they will be a test for his team. “They skate well, they have skills, they have a solid goalie and they play very good as a unit,” said Groulx. “They’re very good at blocking the middle of the ice and taking your time and space away, so it’ll be a matter of us of managing the puck well and making sure we put ourselves in position to use our speed.”

the second period, completing the hat-trick by depositing the puck into the vacated cage. “He brings a lot of speed,” Ice goaltender Wyatt Hoflin said of Cable Saturday night. “He pushes the defencemen back. Tonight, he was shooting really well and getting his own rebounds. “It creates a lot of space when the d-men are backing off to respect his speed.” Cable finished Saturday’s win with five points, adding a third-period power-play goal as well as an assist on the final marker of the night, an evenstrength tally from Jaedon Descheneau with less than five minutes to go in regulation.

Hoflin, making his 24th consecutive start between the pipes for the Ice, had a stellar night of his own, steering aside a season-high 51 shots to earn his 19th win of the 2014-15 campaign. “It’s nice for sure. Obviously we want to get two points while we’re missing some key players,” Hoflin said. “It will be that much easier to catch up in the points race when they get back.” In turning aside 51 pucks Saturday night, Hoflin erased his previous season high of 48 saves, which came in a 3-0 shutout victory on the road over the Medicine Hat Tigers Nov. 22. “You get more touches on the puck, the more confidence you have to

make the save,” Hoflin said. “Tonight, [because of] rebounds, I gave up a little more shots than I wanted to. I think I could have brought that [shot total] down by at least 15 shots with some rebound control, but I felt good.” Sunday afternoon at the Scotiabank Saddledome in Calgary, the Ice racked up its fifth-consecutive victory with a 4-3 win over the host Hitmen. The triumph pulled the Ice (20-17-00, 40 points) to within one point of the thirdplace Calgary Hitmen (19-14-1-2, 41) in the WHL’s Central Division standings.

See ICE , Page 9


daily townsman / daily bulletin

Monday, DECember 29, 2014

Sports

Sunday night showdown Fernie Ghostriders edge Kimberley Dynamiters in electrifying affair

Kimberley Dynamiters Scoring Summary SunDay, Dec. 28

Fernie GhoStriDerS 6 at Kimberley DynamiterS 4

First Period 1. KIM - E. Buckley, (J. Jowsey, J. Marchi), 8:18 (PP) 2. FER - S. Plaquin, (A. Neufeld, D. Smith), 2:26 3. FER - A. Neufeld, (unassisted), 2:14 Second Period 4. FER - D. Smith, (S. Plaquin, J. Burgess), 7:11 Third Period 5. FER - D. Smith, (A. Neufeld, S. Plaquin), 13:51 (PP) 6. FER - D. Smith, (D. Robertson, J. Peers), 10:52 (PP) 7. KIM - J. Busch, (J. Richter, E. Buckley), 9:21 (SH) 8. KIM - L. Lane, (C. Prevost, J. Busch), 6:25 (PP) 9. KIM - J. Richter, (B. Saretsky, E. Buckley), 2:53 (PP) 10. FER - E. Reid, (unassisted), 0:02 (EN) (SH) Shots 1 2 3 T Fernie 9 5 10 24 Kimberley 5 11 11 27 Goaltenders Saves Mins SV% FER - Brandon Butler 23/27 60:00 0.852 KIM - Tyson Brouwer 18/24 59:30 0.750 Power plays Fernie 2/5 (40.0%); Kimberley 3/6 (50.0%) Attendance: 738

Upcoming Games

Sara Moulton Photo/Fernie Free Press

Goaltender Tyson Brouwer makes a stop Sunday night as the Nitros fell to Fernie by a final tally of 6-4. Taylor Rocc a Sports Editor

What was on the verge of being a one-sided affair turned into a nail-biter Sunday evening at the Kimberley Civic Centre as the Dynamiters and Fernie Ghostriders went to battle once again in KIJHL action. Despite battling back from a 5-1 deficit, the Nitros didn’t have enough left for a third-period comeback as the Ghostriders held on for a 6-4 victory. “We pride ourselves on trying to be the better team in third periods,” said Nitros head coach Jerry Bancks Sunday. “It was good that we came back. But I thought we kind of handed it to them in the first and second period -- not enough guys doing what we need to do for us to win. [Fernie] is a good team. They’re older and if you give

them a scoring chance, they’re going to bury it. Our mistakes were big mistakes and they took advantage of it.” After Dynamiters forward Eric Buckley opened the scoring with a power-play marker midway through the first period, Sam Plaquin and Aaron Neufeld responded for the visitors as Fernie took a 2-1 lead to the dressing room after 20 minutes. Doan Smith, scored the only goal of the second period to give Fernie a 3-1 advantage. The 19-year-old native of Duchess, Alta., went on to register two more goals in the third period to complete the hat trick and added an assist for a four-point performance. Smith opened the third period with two power-play tallies to give the Ghostriders a commanding 5-1 advantage before 10 minutes had

expired and it looked as though the night was over for the Dynamiters. With nothing more to lose, Buckley floated at centre ice despite his team skating on the penalty kill. After taking a long stretch pass, the pesky Nitros forward took the puck hard to the net before Jordan Busch followed to clean up the garbage, making it 5-2. The comeback was on. Less than three minutes later, newcomer Lincoln Lane deposited a rebound past Ghostriders goaltender Brandon Butler on the power play to bring the hosts within two. Suddenly, the Dynamiters only trailed 5-3. With the clock quickly wearing down, Dynamiters captain Jason Richter stuffed another rebound past Butler, once again on the power play, and the home team was back in it,

trailing 5-4 with 2:53 remaining in regulation. Unfortunately for the hosts, that’s as close as they would get. “We were slow coming out the gate. We were slow all game until the last couple minutes,” Richter said Sunday night. “We realized we play them [Monday]. We’ve got to man up and start playing. That’s when our effort really picked up.” With goaltender Tyson Brouwer on the bench for the extra attacker and Fernie captain Dylan Robertson serving a slashing minor for the final 1:53 of regulation, the Nitros were unable to capitalize. Ghostriders defenceman Evan Reid blocked a point shot in the dying moments, before chasing down the puck at centre ice and depositing it into the empty net to round out the scoring.

Ice return in strong form Continued from page 8

Ice forward Luke Philp tallied the eventual game-winning goal with less than five minutes to play in the second period Sunday. Cable continued his tear, grabbing his 16th goal of the season and adding another assist, bringing his weekend total against the Hitmen to five goals and two assists in two games. Hoflin tied a Kootenay Ice franchise record for consecutive appearances by a goaltender as he made is 25th straight start between the pipes Sunday afternoon. Todd Mathews set

the record with 25 consecutive appearances in net from Jan. 21 to March 14, 2009. Hoflin’s run began Oct. 24 in a 9-2 setback on home ice against the Calgary Hitmen. “It’s more about getting two points than the records or anything like that,” Hoflin said Saturday night. “Getting a break right in the middle [over Christmas] was nice. Obviously I’m coming back fresh. Every time they call my name to start, I’m going to try to be as good as I can for the team and help us get

two points.” The native of Spruce Grove, Alta., turned aside 34 of 37 shots in Sunday’s win, good enough for a first-star performance. Next up, the Ice head to Medicine Hat for a Tuesday-night date with the Tigers (25-9-1-1, 52). Medicine Hat is coming off an 8-4 drubbing of the Lethbridge Hurricanes (9-21-3-2, 23) Sunday afternoon. Notes: The Kootenay Ice went without D Dylan Overdyk (concussion), F Sam Reinhart (World Juniors), D Rinat Valiev (World Juniors)

and D Tanner Faith (upper body) this weekend… With three defencemen unavailable and only four others on the roster, Ice affiliate defenceman Tanner Lishchynsky (1995) made his Kootenay Ice debut Saturday night. Lishchynsky began the season with the Flin Flon Bombers of the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League, registering 18 points in 29 games. The 19-year-old Saskatoon native had 78 games of WHL experience under his belt prior to Saturday (Prince George Cougars, 201214)…

Page 9

Dec. 29 at Fernie Jan. 2 at Columbia Valley Jan. 3 vs. Columbia Valley Jan. 9 at Fernie Jan. 10 at Golden Jan. 13 vs. Creston Valley

Goaltending Statistics Player Tyson Brouwer Liam McBain

W L OT/L SO GAA 16 6 3 1 2.73 2 6 0 0 3.96

The offensive outburst from Smith, Fernie’s leading scorer, vaulted him to the top of the KIJHL scoring charts. Smith, who came to the Ghostriders from the Columbia Valley Rockies earlier in December, now has 49 points (28G, 21A) to lead the KIJHL in scoring. Osoyoos Coyotes forward Aaron Azevedo (17-30-47) sits second in league scoring. The Dynamiters and Ghostriders won’t get a break from one another as they get right back to it Monday night at the

SP 0.899 0.861

Scoring Statistics

Player Jason Richter Lincoln Lane Jordan Busch Coy Prevost Eric Buckley Jared Marchi Braden Saretsky Keenan Haase Jesse Wallace Marco Campanella Austin Hancherow Alex Rosolowsky Jonas Gordon Sawyer Hunt

GP 35 31 34 34 32 35 27 34 35 30 32 30 25 27 Trevor Van Steinburg 34 Jordan Roy 10 James Jowsey 31 Charles Dagostin 31 Tyler Kinnon 29 Brady Revie 24 Rory Mallard 26 James Rota (AP) 2 Tristan Pagura 2 Jacob Bromley (AP) 1 Korbyn Chabot (AP) 1 Tyler Van Steinburg (AP) 1

Fernie Memorial Arena. “It’s a really good test for our guys,” Bancks said. “Resiliency is a really big word and what you like to see. A bounce back [Monday] -- I would be surprised if we don’t play one of our better games [Monday].” With Sunday’s win, the Ghostriders (25-5-12, 53 points) have built a 10-point advantage in the Eddie Mountain Division. The Golden Rockets (19-13-0-5, 43) sit second while the Dynamiters (18-13-1-3, 40) remain third.

G 27 8 6 9 9 10 6 11 8 7 4 9 2 3 2 4 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0

A 17 24 24 19 19 13 17 8 9 8 10 3 9 7 8 4 7 3 3 0 2 1 0 0 0 0

PTS 44 32 30 28 28 23 23 19 17 15 14 12 11 10 10 8 8 3 3 2 2 1 0 0 0 0

PIM 10 32 9 25 82 49 57 16 6 28 10 2 18 6 8 8 2 25 45 32 8 0 0 0 0 0

“We’re definitely going to go in there with a lot of confidence [Monday],” Richter said looking ahead to the rematch against Fernie. “We know we can play with them. We can score goals against them. We just have to defend better. “We just have to play harder, play better in our own zone by playing man-on-man. We’ve got to take the body more… That’s definitely going to be a focus.” Puck drop in Fernie is slated for 7:30 p.m. Monday night.

Kootenay Ice Scoring Summaries Saturday, dec. 27

Shots 1 2 3 T Kootenay Ice 13 6 4 23 Calgary Hitmen 17 11 9 37 Goaltenders Saves Mins SV% First Period KTN - Wyatt Hoflin 34/37 60:00 0.919 1. KTN - L. Cable, (12) (Z. Zborosky, M. Alfaro), 3:59 CGY - Mack Shields 14/18 35:03 0.778 2. KTN - L. Cable, (13) (unassisted), 18:23 Evan Johnson 5/5 23:13 1.000 Second Period Power plays 3. KTN - L. Cable, (14) (unassisted), 3:10 Kootenay Ice 1/3 (33.3%) 4. KTN - L. Philp, (14) (T. Bozon, T. Lishchynsky), 4:48 Calgary Hitmen 1/3 (33.3%) Third Period Three Stars: 5. KTN - L. Cable, (15) (J. Descheneau, T. Bozon), 0:14 (PP) 1) W. Hoflin (KTN); 2) A. Tambellini (CGY); 3) K. Helgesen 6. CGY - P. Karnaukhov, (12) (C. Lang, C. Rankin), 6:20 (PP) (CGY) 7. CGY - M. Zipp, (4) (P. Karnaukhov, M. Donald), 8:10 Attendance: 10,095 8. KTN - J. Descheneau, (19) (L. Philp, L. Cable), 15:17 Shots 1 2 3 T Upcoming Games Calgary Hitmen 11 18 24 53 Dec. 30 at Medicine Hat Jan. 2 at Red Deer Kootenay Ice 9 9 8 26 Jan. 3 at Edmonton Goaltenders Saves Mins SV% Jan. 9 vs. Red Deer CGY - Mack Shields 11/15 24:48 0.733 Jan. 10 vs. Saskatoon Evan Johnson 9/11 35:12 0.818 Jan. 14 at Moose Jaw KTN - Wyatt Hoflin 51/53 60:00 0.962 Power plays Scoring Statistics Player GP G A PTS PIM Calgary Hitmen 1/3 (33.3%) Jaedon Descheneau 35 19 25 44 36 Kootenay Ice 1/3 (33.3%) Luke Philp 36 15 23 38 12 Three Stars: Tim Bozon 22 13 17 30 6 1) L. Cable (KTN); 2) W. Hoflin (KTN); 3) T. King (KTN) Levi Cable 34 16 12 28 4 Sam Reinhart 15 8 19 27 2 Attendance: 2,967 Rinat Valiev 23 5 20 25 31 Zak Zborosky 37 11 12 23 8 Sunday, dec. 28 Tyler King 33 4 11 15 25 Matt Alfaro 37 5 9 14 14 Kootenay Ice 4 Austin Vetterl 37 3 10 13 30 at calgary HItmen 3 Jon Martin 22 4 8 12 34 Troy Murray 37 2 8 10 16 First Period 2 6 8 28 1. KTN - Z. Zborosky, (11) (J. Descheneau, T. Bozon), 10:04 Ryan Chynoweth 37 Bryan Allbee 34 3 3 6 8 (PP) Tanner Faith 19 1 5 6 29 2. KTN - J. Martin, (4) (L. Cable, T. Murray), 10:49 Cale Fleury 36 0 6 6 4 Vince Loschiavo 31 3 2 5 6 3. CGY - A. Tambellini, (20) (C. Lang), 14:49 2 2 4 21 River Beattie 31 Second Period Dylan Overdyk 22 0 3 3 9 4. KTN - L. Cable, (16) (unassisted), 1:25 Wyatt Hoflin 35 0 2 2 2 5. CGY - K. Helgesen, (11) (B. Thomas, C. Lang), 12:15 (PP) Tanner Lishchynsky 2 0 1 1 0 Austin Wellsby 27 0 0 0 4 6. KTN - L. Philp, (15) (B. Allbee), 15:03 Goaltending Statistics 7. CGY - A. Tambellini, (21) (K. Helgesen), 19:10 (SH) Player W L OTL SO GAA SP Third Period - No scoring Wyatt Hoflin 20 14 0 2 3.29 0.901 Keelan Williams 0 3 0 0 5.37 0.850

calgary HItmen 2 at Kootenay Ice 6


DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

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MONDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2014

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& Wine Dine at

PAGE 11

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PAGE 12 MONDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2014

COMICS Wedding & Party Supply Rentals

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HOROSCOPES by Jacqueline Bigar

ARIES (March 21-April 19) If you wake up with a battle cry in your head, know that you probably were in the midst of a power play for control in your dreams. As a result, you might react quickly when encountering a similar situation today. Tonight: Happily focus on the better parts of your life. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) It is always good to listen to your inner voice to see which direction you should head in. You might feel pushed by a powerful person in your life. You could become irritated and confused as a result. Tonight: Postpone what you can for as long as you can. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You’ll blissfully walk into a situation that might be more intense than you had expected. If you use logic to sort out the real issue, productive conversations are likely to result. Make a point of understanding where an associate is coming from. Tonight: Communication flourishes.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) You could be somewhat withdrawn in the morning. A loved one might decide to pick an argument with you in order to draw you in closer. You tend to not agree with this person a lot, particularly about his or her style of communication. Tonight: Just don’t be alone. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) If you can manage to bypass some of the mental grenades that surround you, you will be a lot happier. Be careful as you attempt to maintain a steady course, because others might act as if you are off-kilter. Tonight: Try some exotic cuisine. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You might try to form something solid out of nothing more than loosely related facts and/or feelings. You would be well-advised to pursue your original course. A creative venture with a child could prove to be ultimately frustrating. Tonight: Use your sixth sense. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) You often seem to be in the wrong place at the wrong time.

Tundra

The nature and strength of your support system will determine what happens in any given situation. Back away from someone who seems a bit off. Tonight: Hang out with a close pal. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You tend to wonder what might be the best course of action. Today, everyone will give you an earful as to what he or she thinks is right and will work. Once you center yourself, you will be able to find an appropriate response. Tonight: Avoid a warring faction. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You seem to have incorporated a little more serenity into your life as of late. You might not be so spontaneous. You’ll actively continue seeking out relevant and important answers to a dilemma that faces you. Tonight: Do not back off. Reach out to an important friend. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Pressure seems to build around a matter that you must deal with. You might want to nix any spending for now. You could feel as if a lot is out of your control

and that your words are falling on deaf ears. Tonight: A situation on the domestic front demands your attention. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Know that your responses could be slightly off. You might want to clobber someone today for an offhand statement, when you typically just might laugh it off. You will try to explain your thoughts, but the message might not be clearly received. Tonight: Try to clear the air. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You will work best with a friend when trying to plan a budget or decide on a gift. However, you might not be speaking the same language right now, as you could have different objectives. Tonight: Take a hard look at your budget, and be sure to count your change. BORN TODAY Engineer Charles Goodyear (1800), actor Jude Law (1972), Mary Tyler Moore (1936) *** Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet at www.jacquelinebigar. com.

By Chad Carpenter

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ANNIE’S MAILBOX by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Annie: My husband and I have been married for 20 years, and we have three children under 15. He has always been a bit of a night owl, but now, in his mid-50s, he’s turning into my 80-year-old father. My husband works from 8 a.m. until 5, comes home and eats dinner and then sits on the couch. He falls asleep watching TV and then isn’t tired again until midnight. He goes to bed and wakes up at 4 a.m. and can’t fall asleep again, so he turns on the TV, falls asleep and is up at 7 a.m. for the day. I don’t resent him for not helping in the evenings with chores and children, but, Annie, he sleeps when the kids are awake and home from school, and they rarely get a chance to have quality time together. The biggest problem is when we go on vacation. He’ll skip the naps for a day or two and then turn into a big, bad bear. He is crabby with everyone. Of course, he cannot see that this is because of his sleep patterns and blames us for making him angry. I believe if he went to bed at 11 p.m. and woke up at 7 a.m., he would get the full eight hours he needs and would be awake when the rest of us are. He won’t entertain any of my suggestions, and it makes him angry even to talk about it. It’s almost as if he is cheating on me with the TV. I am raising the kids alone and feel like I am married to my father. -- Help Dear Help: It sounds as though your husband has a sleep disorder. He is tired when he gets home because he doesn’t sleep sufficiently at night. So he naps. The nap tides him over until midnight, but because he’s already slept a couple of hours, he isn’t tired enough to sleep the rest of the night. It has become a vicious cycle that he doesn’t know how to change. He may even have sleep apnea that interferes with his rest at night. Please approach this like the medical issue it is. Suggest he speak to his doctor and get a referral to a sleep clinic. Dear Annie: For Christmas, one of my sisters sent out a wish list for her 7-year-old son from an online retailer. Annie, the least expensive item was $35. I barely know any of my nephews and nieces, since they live on the other side of the country, and I was planning to send gift cards. But I felt intimidated and picked something from the wish list. I have five other nephews and nieces, not to mention my own child, my husband and my parents. I can’t afford to spend that much on one child. I don’t want to be stuck in this position next year. What do I do? -- Cheap Aunt Dear Aunt: A wish list is not a command. It is a suggestion. You do not have to pick anything from the list, nor do you need to spend the same amount elsewhere. Next Christmas, send your nieces and nephews what you can afford and what you wish to give them. You might even consider a gift card to their preferred online retailer so they can use it toward the purchase of one of their wish list items. Dear Annie: My heart went out to “Grieving,” the grandmother whose toddler grandson died in an accidental drowning. I am a lifeguard. We teach a program for kids ages 9 months to 3 years called “Float for Life.” This program helps children develop the reflex of keeping their heads above water. In some cases, they are even able to learn the elementary backstroke. Please tell your readers to check at their local pools for options like this. It could save many young lives. -- Omaha 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


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DECEMBER 29, 2014 PAGE PAGE 13 13 Monday,MONDAY, December 29, 2014

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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

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In Memoriam

FARM LABOURERS WANTED

emory of In M

Frank Pohl March 1, 1925 December 29, 2013

You are always in our hearts and in our thoughts.

3 General Labourers needed by HyTech Production Ltd operating in 6256 Hwy 95A TaTa Creek, BC V0B 2H0. Seasonal positions Apr 1-Oct 31 2015. $1416/hr. Weeding, spraying, irrigation, rogueing and hand planting/harvesting. Farm experience required. Resumes to be mailed or faxed: PO 1454 Lethbridge AB, T1J 4K2. Fax: 403-345-3489.

Mortgages

janis.sawley@rbc.com mortgage.rbc.com/janis.sawley Serving the East Kootenays

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822 Cranbrook St., Cranbrook This is a year round fundraiser by the Eastern Star for funds to supply Cancer Dressings. Please bring stamps with a 1/4� around the stamp to the Townsman for Skip Fennessy who picks them up.

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Obituaries

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Sympathy & Understanding 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

Granite & Bronze Memorials, Dedication Plaques, Benches, Memorial Walls, Gravesite Restorations, Sales & Installations IN-HOME CONSULTATION OR VISIT OUR SHOWROOM

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www.kootenaymonument.ca

*New* - Hollie - 38

Fun ‘n friendly, Playmate status. *New* - Lyndsay - 43 Sweet and petite GFE type *New* - Chanel - 27 Perfect 10 exotic beauty

Lily - 24 Sweet doll faced, curvaceous brunette Enjoy quality relaxations by our hand-picked beauty’s Swedish relaxation/massage. Spoil yourself today!!! (250)417-2800 in/out calls daily Hiring

Lost & Found Lost: December 17, area of 18th Ave N/Save On Foods in Cranbrook, name: Twilla, long haired black cat, with small white locket patch on chest, about 5-6 years old. Offering reward for safe return. Please call (250)919-7340

Employment CALGARY LOGISTICS CO. is looking for a sales rep. to work in our Cranbrook office. Trucking sales experience an asset. Please email resume to: lynnrick.oneill@gmail.com Looking for house/dog sitter, Jan 23 to Feb 20. Must stay at residence. Please contact, (250)489-9590

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Announcements

Announcements

Obituaries

Obituaries VOHRADSKY, Mary (nee Blyth) December 25, 1917 – December 22, 2014

Janis Caldwell-Sawley Mortgage Specialist Royal Bank of Canada

East Kootenay Adaptive Snowsports

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We build endowment funds that benefit the community forever and help create personal legacies Investing in community for good and forever. 250.426.1119 www.cranbrookcf.ca

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

It is with heavy hearts we announce the passing of Mary Vohradsky at the Kimberley Special Care Home on December 22, 2014, just three days before her 97th birthday. Our special, kind and talented mother was born December 25, 1917 in Linlithgow, Scotland to Walter and Jane Blyth. She immigrated to Canada at the age of 18 months to reside in Cumberland, BC where her father worked in the coal mine. After a short time there, the family moved to Wellington, BC and then on to Coleman, AB. At an early age music became an important part of her life. She was taught by her father who was a classical violinist. Mary’s musical talents developed quickly. She played piano in the Frank Edl and Frank Hosek Orchestras in the Crowsnest Pass starting at the age of 14. In 1938, Mary married Vince Vohradsky of Bellevue, AB and then moved to Kimberley, BC the same year. Together they raised their three children, Walter, Frances and Barbara. Mom was a great homemaker and always had a pantry bursting with canned vegetables and fruits, kitchen containers full of homemade bread and treats like her famous pineapple-cherry square, scotch perkins and shortbread. There were many samples of her embroidery work around our home as well. Mom loved sports, both as a participant and spectator. She loved softball, swimming, bowling, fishing and camping. She hated to miss a hockey game and was an avid fan of the old Kimberley Dynamiters in the 40-50’s right up to the present Junior B Team. The last game she attended was at age 94. She was an active member of the Pythian Sisters for 60+ years, holding many positions. Volunteering for “Meal on Wheels� was another enjoyable activity for her. Through all of these interests, music was her passion. She spent many years playing in local dance bands including, “The Rhythmares�. You could find her “tinkling the ivories� at the Blue Bird Inn and Ta Ta Creek, Elks, KP and Moose Halls. She later became the organist at the Kimberley United Church and continued in this capacity for 30 years, retiring at the age of 88. Mary’s musical legacy lives on through her grandchildren and great grandchildren. Mary is survived by her three children, Walter Vohradsky (Anne) of Merritt, BC, Fran Franklin (Dan) of Courtenay, BC, Barb Streich (Allan) of Kimberley; sister Christine Udahl (Robert); sister-in-law Iris Ruzek; 8 grandchildren; Greg, Vicki, Vincent, Rod, Cindy, Kristen, Sean and Daneen; 13 and 2/3 great grandchildren; special niece, Norma Gates and nephew Gerald Fisher; and many other nieces and nephews. Mary was predeceased by Vince, her husband of 52 years; her brother, Walter; sister and brother-in-law, Margaret and Norman Fisher; and nephew Norman Udahl. Mary’s memorial service will be held on Saturday, January 3, 2014 at 1:00 pm at the Kimberley United Church, 10 Boundary Street, Reverend Christine Dudley officiating. Condolences may be left for the family at www.markmemorial.com No flowers by family request. If so wished, donations may be made in Mary Vohradsky’s memory to the Kimberley Special Care Home (The Pines), 386 – 2nd Avenue, Kimberley, BC V1A 2Z8 The family is most grateful to the dedicated staff of The Pines for their exceptional care of our Mom, Grandma and Great Grandma. Mark Memorial Funeral Services in care of arrangements (250) 426-4864

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


DAILYTOWNSMAN/DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN DAILY BULLETIN

PAGE 14 Monday, December PAGE 14 MONDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2014 29, 2014

Employment

Rentals

Medical/Dental

Suites, Upper

Seeking full-time MOA/Practice Manager

Kimberley Studio Suite.

to join our team at a busy ophthalmology and retinal subspecialty practice in Vernon. We strive to provide high quality patient care in a friendly and team-oriented setting. Our office is paperless and uses the latest in eye care technology. We are looking for an experienced MOA who is highly organized, able to multi-task and communicates effectively.

Furnished, $495./mo. includes utilities, hydro, gas, basic cable and internet. Laundry available on-site. Sorry, no pets. References required. Call Peter at East Kootenay Realty ~ 250-908-0045 ~

SERVICES GUIDE Contact these business for all your service needs!

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.

BEAR NECESSITIES HOME WATCH SERVICE

•Planning a holiday and need your home checked for insurance? •Snow removal, mail p/u, plants, cat care & more. BONDED & INSURED

This position fulfills a leadership role in our clinic and will command a high wage. Please email cover letter and resume to hhollands.office@me.com

For Peace of Mind Travel call 250-464-9900 www.thebearnecessities.ca

LEAKY BASEMENT

Fitness/Exercise

EUC $1200. Phone: 250-581-1328

Contractors

GIRO

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

(250) 426-8504

Merchandise for Sale

Heavy Duty Machinery A-STEEL SHIPPING DRY STORAGE CONTAINERS Used 20’40’45’53’ and insulated containers all sizes in stock. Trades are welcome. 40’Containers under $2500! DMG 40’ containers under $2,000 each. Also JD 544 & 644 wheel Loaders & 20,000 lb CAT forklift. Wanted to buy 300 size hydraulic excavator. Ph Toll free 1-866-528-7108 1-778-298-3192 8am-5pm Delivery BC and AB www.rtccontainer.com

Misc. for Sale HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. Best price. Best quality. All shapes & colours available. 1-866-652-6837 www.thecoverguy.com/ newspaper?

Real Estate Acreage for Sale PRIVATE 150 ACRES

5 minutes from Cranbrook . Borders crown land on 3 sides. Mixture of timber and fields. Surveyed, drilled well, power and Shaw cable. Not in ALR zoned RR60. Serious inquiries only. $695,000.

250-489-9234

Rentals Shared Accommodation ROOM for rent in Cbk, incl util. Must be working or college student, $400. Available immediately. (250)426-2479

Suites, Lower

1 BDRM, furnished basement suite in Dreamcatcher Chalets, Kimberley. Available Jan. 1/15. N/S. $850./mo., includes utilities, cable and internet. Call 403-660-0073

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

Jody ~ 250-919-1575

www.CHARLTONHOMES.CA

Services

9 PIECE, PACE hydraulic fitness circuit and 9 aerobic boards similar to Curves. Own it for your own home!

PLAN DESIGN

WE ARE ALWAYS LOOKING FOR CARRIERS. Give us a call and start walking today! 250-426-5201

Foundation Cracks

Damp Proofing

Drainage Systems

Foundation Restoration

Residential / Commercial Free estimates

250-919-1777 SONNY & CHRIS NOMLAND We rebuild Electrolux vacuums to like-new condition.

ext 208 www.dailytownsman.com

We also repair all other brands.

Help Wanted

Phone 250-489-2733

Cranbrook Kimberley Creston Fernie Marysville Wardner Wasa…

TIP TOP CHIMNEY SERVICES

“Sweeping the Kootenay’s Clean”

Chimney Sweeping Fireplace & Woodstove Servicing Visual Inspections and Installations Gutter Cleaning Available Call for Free Estimate from a W.E.T.T Certified Technician

1. Frequency: The online newspaper Web site user accesses the Internet almost twice as much as the general user. 2. Credibility: The credibility of the newspaper brand

Sell Your Home in the Classifieds. It Has Never Been Easier!

Richard Hedrich 250-919-3643 tiptopchimneys@gmail.com

CLASSIFIEDS

a photo of 1. Take your house.

CALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202

25 words 2. Use to describe it.

WILL SELL WHAT YOU WANT SOLD!

Regional Editor Black Press in the West Kootenay region is seeking a regional Editor to oversee both the Nelson Star and the Castlegar News. The successful candidate will have Editor experience in the community newspaper industry. They will have a keen eye for layout, have an extensive photography resume, be an aggressive user of social media, understand the latest trends in digital media and be able to lead two newsrooms both from a print and digital perspective. This successful candidate will also be part of the senior team for the West Kootenay and will be part of setting the overall vision and goals for these newspapers and websites. This position includes active news and community coverage, engaging editorial and opinion writing, as well as understanding and leading change in our print products and on our websites. This position will be based out of Nelson, B.C. The West Kootenay is often considered one of the best places in B.C. to live and this position would suit any outdoor enthusiast, with spectacular skiing, mountain biking and hiking just outside your door. It is truly a wonderful place to live and to be involved in the community newspaper industry. This position offers a better than average compensation package, that also includes a strong benefits package. If this sounds like the right position for you please send your resume, a cover letter, references and some examples of your work to Karen Bennett at publisher@nelsonstar.com. Please no phone calls.

Ten Reasons to Advertise on a Newspaper Website

in or email 3. Stop classifieds@dailytownsman.com

out your ad 4. Check in the newspaper and count all the calls coming in!!

55 + tax includes 25 words, and photo. Extra words $1.00 each. Enclose photo. If you require your photo back, please include a self-addressed, stamped envelope. ALL ADS MUST BE PREPAID – Visa and Mastercard accepted. Your ad will run up to 2 weeks in the Cranbrook Daily Townsman (10 times), Kimberley Daily Bulletin (10 times)). Ad can be cancelled at any time. Sorry, no refunds. $

250-426-5201 ext 202

extends to the advertiser. Fifty-nine percent of Web users agree that online advertising is more believable from a trusted Web site. Online, newspaper Web sites are the dominant local media site in most markets.

3. Targeted: If you want to focus on a particular backyard, advertising in an online newspaper is more personal, and more relevant because it is local. Newspapers also publish a plethora of niche sites (youth, women, movie fans, seniors, are illustrative) for virtually any demographic advertisers could possibly hope to reach. 4. Purchasing power: Sixty-two percent of newspaper

Web site users purchase online compared with 49 percent of general users. Thirty-nine percent of online newspaper users have incomes higher than $75,000; 65 percent own their homes. Fifty percent of online newspaper users have spent more than $500 online in the last six months, and 63 percent of online newspaper users prefer to find out about new products through the Internet.

5. Content: After e-mail, the most preferred Web

content is news, sports, financial information, entertainment news, and shopping – in that order. Sixtytwo percent of Internet users visit online newspapers for local news, compared with 39 percent for the local TV station Web site and 23 percent for the local radio station site. Not even Yahoo! or AOL’s Digital City can top this.

6. Retailers prefer newspaper sites: Sixty-five percent of retailers report that newspaper sites are efficient in assisting them in meeting marketing needs compared with other sites.

7. High profile: Research.net reports that, among top executives (CEO, CIO, CFO or owner/partner), Internet advertising ranked above over all other media measured for: “Where I prefer to find our about new products,” “Where I prefer to receive information about companies,” and “Where modern, up-to-date brands advertise.” At the same time, these early adopters of technology also skew younger than the traditional newspaper audience. Forty percent of online newspaper users are aged 18-35. 8. Reinforcement: Seventy-six percent of online newspaper users also read the newspaper in the past seven days, and repetition increases awareness. The Internet Advertising Bureau found that, by increasing the number of online banners from one to two per week, branding results on three key metrics increased 42 percent making online a great, inexpensive way to increase the branding lift of traditional campaigns. 9. Quality: Seventy-five percent of advertisers generally said newspaper Web sites’ advertising was as good or better than other Internet sites.

10. Mix: A variety of recent studies have demonstrated the power of online, when included in a mix with traditional media, to elaborate the brand message. Newspaper print and online products combined have the highest penetration and most desirable audience of any other local medium. SOURCE: Newspaper Association of America

Call today and start online advertising. 250-426-5201

250-427-5333

822 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook

dailytownsman.com

250-427-5333

335 Spokane St., Kimberley

dailybulletin.ca


DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

MONDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2014

KELOWNA

2153 Springfield Road (250) 860-2600

VERNON

200-3107 - 48th Ave. (250) 542-3000

PENTICTON

1881 Harvey Avenue (250) 860-1975

ANDRES WIRELESS

101-2601 Skaha Lake Rd. (250) 493-3800

VERNON

WEST KELOWNA

KAMLOOPS

101-2601 Skaha Lake Rd. 200-3107 - 48th Ave. (250) 493-3800 (250) 542-3000

#200 - 2180 Elk Rd. (250) 707-2600

KELOWNA

2153 Springfield Road (250) 860-2600

Villiage Green Mall (250) 542-1496

PENTICTON

ANDRES WIRELESS Cherry Lane Mall (250) 493-4566

KELOWNA

#200 - 2180 Elk Rd. (250) 707-2600

2153 Springfield Road (250) 860-2600

WEST KELOWNA #200 - 2180 Elk Rd. (250) 707-2600

745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 851-8700

VERNON

200-3107 - 48th Ave. (250) 542-3000

NG YI BU ER W PO

CO M M U N IT Y

ANDRES CAR AUDIO WEST KELOWNA

PAGE 15

EX PE RT IS E

KAMLOOPS ANDRES WIRELESS ANDRES WIRELESS ANDRES B USINESS ANDRES CAR AUDIO E IC R P

745 Notre Dame Drive (250) 851-8700

WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!

CASTLEGAR

Aberdeen Mall (250) 377-8880

CRANBROOK

215 - 450 Lansdowne Mall (250) 377-8007

200-1965 Columbia Ave. 101 Kootenay St. North (250) 365-6455 (250) 426-8927

TELUS KIOSK

NELSON

Chahko Mika Mall (250) 352-7258

300 St. Paul Str. (250) 377-3773

KELOWNA

2153 Springfield Road (250) 860-2600

154 Victoria Str (250) 314-9944

WEST KELOWNA #200 - 2180 Elk Rd. (250) 707-2600


PAGE 16 MONDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2014

DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN


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