FRIDAY JANUARY 15, 2016
CHRISTMAS BIRD COUNT
MLA REPORT
NUTHATCH LEADS THE WAY
4-LANE TRANS CANADA
See LOCAL NEWS page 3
See LOCAL NEWS page 5
THE BULLETIN PROUDLY SERVING KIMBERLEY AND AREA SINCE 1932 | Vol. 84, Issue 10 | www.dailybulletin.ca
Council discusses trail building in watershed
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C AROLYN GR ANT Bulletin Editor
Kimberley Council continues to grapple with what to do with the small amount of control they have over their own watersheds. Council received a letter from St. Mary Valley residents Cheryl and Gordon Olsen regarding their concerns with the proposed Bootleg Trails, part of which will be in the Matthew Creek watershed. They have concerns that many of the trails have been built by ‘rogue’ builders already before any memorandum of understand was written; they feel the Kimberley Trails Society has not communicated well with the public on their intentions; and that key stakeholders such as St. Mary Valley residents were not consulted at all. The Kimberley Trails Society has applied for Resort Municipality funding to assist in building the trails. Coun. Nigel Kitto, who is the council representative on the Kimberley Trails Society said that he agreed that the KTS could do a better job of communicating. “The KTS management plan was started in 2013,” he said. “It is a playbook for how the Trails Society could be communicating. It was always meant to be a living document and I’ll be bringing it to the board at the next meeting. KTS came about to bring all users together. But it’s
“But these trails were put in there by a group of people; they were not sanctioned and instead of stopping them, they have been given the go ahead to build more.” Albert Hoglund not up to KTS to see the plan (for Bootleg trails) through. That is up to Rec Sites and Trails BC. I understand the concerns, but if this is a managed trail area, checks and balances will be in place to prevent illegal trail building. There is an MOU coming.” “As a city we don’t have a lot of say in watersheds,” said Coun. Darryl Oakley. “I would like to know how many people are up there, industrial and otherwise.” “I don’t think there has been any logging in Matthew Creek for eight or ten years,” said Coun. Albert Hoglund. “But these trails were put in there by a group of people; they were not sanctioned and instead of stopping them, they have been given the go ahead to build more. See TRAILS, page 5
BARRY COULTER PHOTO
It’s worth a trip down to Cranbrook to see the Tennessee William’s classic Cat On A Hot Tin Roof, superbly acted by the Cranbrook Community Theatre cast. “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof” runs for 10 nights; January 15 & 16, January 20-23 and 27-30, 2016 at the Studio/Stage Door, Cranbrook. Tickets are available at Lotus Books.
Kimberley OCP in a week Share Your Thoughts on Kimberley’s Challenges and Opportunities KIMBERLEY, BC - The City of Kimberley is currently updating its Official Community Plan (OCP). Beginning Wednesday, January 20th through Saturday, January 23rd the City will be hosting its ‘OCP in a Week’ events throughout the community. Sessions are scheduled at multiple locations including downtown in the Platzl at the Green Door, Centennial Hall, Timber Hitch Coffee Shop in Marysville, and at Kimberley Alpine Resort. The Official Community Plan sets out
the vision and supporting policies to guide development and land use decisions in Kimberley. Community input is essential to the development of the OCP. This is an opportunity for community members, groups and other stakeholders to have their say in how Kimberley should evolve. “We have organized a range of engagement opportunities at a variety of locations for residents and business operators to participate in our ‘OCP in a Week’ event” states Troy Pollock, City of Kimberley Planning Services Manager. “This is the community’s plan. We need your input to understand the community’s expectations around land use and development. We look forward to seeing you
throughout the week!” For those that cannot make any of the scheduled events, you can participate at your convenience from your computer or mobile device through the PlaceSpeak online engagement platform. PlaceSpeak provides a convenient option for community members to share their thoughts and comment on topics that are important to them. An online community survey has also been designed to gather input on the OCP and City Services. To find out more information about the OCP, schedule and opportunities to participate, please visit the OCP Update page on the City’s website. Website: www.kimberley.ca/city/departments/planning-services/ocp-up-
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daily townsman / daily bulletin
Friday, January 15, 2016
51 years of Cranbrook Community Theatre JANUS: Cranbrook Then & Now
Jim Cameron “The most important thing in acting is honesty. If you can fake that you’ve got it made.” Author unknown
T
he Cranbrook Community Theatre Society, now in its 51st year, has set yet another milestone in its history, that is to say, it has survived for 51 years. Further, it has remained in the same building for 41 of those years: the city-owned former Masonic Temple built in 1910 and renamed The Studio when the theatre group became the tenants in 1974. Both feats are worthy of praise in the annals of amateur theatre. In truth, the history of the CCT may well be traced by a somewhat perforated line as far back as the 1920s, and includes thousands of Cranbrook individuals, a line that, in some cases, spans four or more family generations. In December, 1920, a company of local amateurs presented the comedy “The New Boy” at the old Cranbrook Auditorium (site of the present day Armond Theatre) on Norbury Avenue for one night. It was an apt title as it was, barring a handful of previous presentations of Gilbert and Sullivan operettas, one of the very first lo-
Cranbrook Community Theatre’s first production “Jack and the Beanstalk,” played at the Mt. BakerSchool auditorium in Feb, 1964. Standing (l to r): Fred Cawte, Sherrill Camilli, Frank Jones, Bud Abbott. Sitting: Ed Lawton. – Courier Feb.5 1964 cally produced non-musical plays. The reviews were good and the house was packed. The cast even took it on the road for a performance at Wycliffe early the next year (Wycliffe featured its own amateur theatre group at the time). Things simmered acting-wise until “The Cranbrook Follies of 1923,” featuring the short play “Happy Country Girl.” With the concurrent introduction of the Rotary Club’s Minstrel Show (entirely politically incorrect by to-
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day’s standards but an annual hit for many years) local theatrics gained a foothold made even stronger by the formation of the Cranbrook Musical Society the same year. The Society tackled both Gilbert & Sullivan’s “HMS Pinafore” and “Trial by Jury” within a few months, running shows at the Auditorium for three nights plus a Saturday matinee and it wasn’t just the actors who garnered attention. A Courier newspaper review of “Pinafore” stated:
“The excellence of its [the orchestra’s] work created a taste for good music that months of jangling jazz will fail to dispel.” Ouch, for jazz. Lauds and applauds for musical theatre. Local amateur histrionics were on the upswing and given another big push by the Gyro Club, who undertook a number of large musical comedies over the next few years, even going so far as to bring in professional directors from as far away as Chicago, who carried with them enough of a hint of the “big-time” to guarantee attendance. Churches also got into the act, so to speak; the Young People’s Society of the United Church, the St. Mary’s Dramatic Society and the Anglican Church Players also tread the boards. By the 1930s, even the Boy Scouts were taking turn with regular productions at the Anglican Parish Hall (now Kennedy Hall), a venue that has served countless theatrical presentations over the years. In 1936, a dedicated group formed the Cranbrook Little Theatre Association (a common title for amateur groups at the time and still used today) and began giving regular one-act plays at the Parish Hall. Admission was by membership only, with the group performing up to a dozen plays a season with occasional public forays at the Auditorium. A public workshop in Windermere in June, 1937, saw the formation of the East Kootenay Drama Association which included Golden, Invermere, Windermere, Fernie, Kimberley, Creston and
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The late Gracie McNeil, who made her early stage appearances in the 1920s as “Little Gracie Higgins. Gracie was voted Cranbrook’s Citizen of the year in 1977. - Courier June 2, 1965. Cranbrook. The main purpose of the group was the annual drama festival, of which Cranbrook hosted the first in March, 1938, an undertaking which has continued throughout the East Kootenay almost unabated since that time. From 1939–1945, the Red Cross Thimble Theatre entertained wartime audiences, joined by yearly productions staged by the students of the St. Eugene’s Nursing School and the Cranbrook High School, the latter of which has carried on the tradition to the present day. Throughout the late 1940s, and into the early 1960s, the local drama chapter of the East Kootenay Arts and Craft Association performed regularly. It was in February, 1964, that a group of individuals officially formed the Cranbrook Community Theatre
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and presented its first production “Jack and the Beanstalk.” Directed by Fred Cawte, it featured Bud Abbott, who had won drama festival top honours the previous year in “A Breath of Spring” with the Cranbrook Players. The play was very well-received, inspiring the local Courier to state, “If this … first production is any indication of the support the Cranbrook Community Theatre will receive, live presentations of family comedies will become a regular feature,” And so they have. And, as a final note, from her role in “Happy Country Girl” in 1923, Gracie McNeil (nee Higgins, granddaughter of A.B. Grace, owner and publisher of The Prospector, among the first newspapers in the district) acted, sang, danced, directed and served on the boards of local theatre groups for over 50 years. She, along with Flo Dorris, became the first lifetime members of the Cranbrook Community Theatre many years ago. And so, a very long standing ovation to the countless dedicated actors, directors, technicians, musicians, backstage and front of house workers who brought live theatre to Cranbrook for over 100 years and to those who continue to do so today. May your curtain never fall.
Jim Cameron is the author of Janus: Cranbrook Then and Now, Vol. 1, available at various locations in the Cranbrook area, including the Daily Townsman.
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daily bulletin
Local NEWS
Friday, January 15, 2016 Page 3
116th Audubon Christmas Bird Count
Nuthatch one of the stars of the Cranbrook CBC Daryl C alder
A
good number of naturalists from the East Kootenay and Crowsnest Pass joined forces on December 27 for the Cranbrook Christmas Bird Count. With the help of several feeder watchers, a wide variety of birds were counted on the cool, cloudy, calm day. Sometimes, a large number of individuals of a particular species such as Bohemian Waxwings, will skew the total, but that was not the case this year. Similarly, the species count can be elevated when only one individual of each of several species is observed. This occurred with the Rough-legged Hawk, Eurasian Collared-Dove, Black-billed Magpie, Chestnut-backed Chickadee and Golden-crowned Kinglet, although these birds are not particularly uncommon. Unfortunately, such year round birds as the Great Blue Heron, Northern Goshawk, Red-tailed Hawk, Golden Eagle, Blue and Ruffed Grouse, Northern Pygmy Owl, Belted Kingfisher and Brown Creeper could not be found. Naturalists were pleased with their effort and opportunity to contribute to the 116th Audubon CBC. One little, non-migrating bird which is common in mature, mixed woods is the White-breasted Nuthatch. All three species of North American nuthatches are found in the East Kootenay. The White-breasted is the largest; it’s clean markings give it a rather appealing look. It is successful because of it’s attributes and habits. The name nuthatch is actually a corruption of the word nuthack, because of it’s tendency to wedge seeds into crevices and hack them open with it’s bill. Thanks to strong legs and toes, long, curved talons and a long, strong bill, this active, agile bird can walk up, down and sideways on tree trunks and large limbs. Starting near the top of a tree and spiralling it’s way down, this nuthatch forages intensively. Unlike woodpeckers which rely on their stiff tails to keep them anchored, the White-breasted uses the long, claw-like hind toe on each foot to get a grip.
Grey-crowned Rosy Finches, photographed by Greg Ross during the annual Christmas Bird Count.
During the summer, when probing bark crevices, they prefer to eat spiders and insects including ants, caterpil-
White-breasted nuthatch lars, weevils and beetles. In winter, they switch to a more vegetarian diet with more seeds. They continue to eat many insects which are pried from their wintering spots in bark crevices. In developed areas, they have learned to eat suet and peanut butter mixes as well. The white-breasted stores large quantities of food in winter, by poking it into bark furrows and tree crevices. By using each storage site only once, food is dispersed across it’s territory, a practice known as scatterhoarding. The precious food stores are often covered up with bark flakes or lichen. With a life span of 10 or 12 years, one can only imagine how much detail this bird will learn about it’s habitat. Often heard before it is seen; it’s nasal ‘quank’ is distinctive and strong. The male performs a rather simple song, a regular series of six to eight notes.
Pairs form long term bonds and remain on nesting territories year round. They do not generally excavate their own holes, but nest in a natural cavity or old woodpecker hole. Occasionally, they use artificial nest boxes. The female builds the nest, which is a soft cup of bark fibers, grass, hair and feathers. Sometimes mud is added to the entrance of the cavity, perhaps to keep larger predators away. They will also brush the nest, inside and out, with a crushed insect. The chemical secretions may keep predators away. The female incubates five to nine eggs for 12-14 days. The male feeds the female while she incubates, and helps her feed the young when they hatch. The little ones leave the nest after 14-26 days, but stay with the adults for several more weeks until they become completely independent.
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The Cranbrook List: Total Species — 49 Total Individuals — 1876 • Canada Goose - 9 • Mallard - 171 • Bufflehead - 2 • Common Goldeneye - 17 • Barrow’s Goldeneye - 2 • Hooded Merganser - 7 • Wild Turkey - 41 • Cooper’s Hawk - 2 • Bald Eagle - 12 • Rough-legged Hawk - 1 • Rock Pigeon - 116 • Eurasian Collared-Dove • Downy Woodpecker - 25 • Hairy Woodpecker - 20 • Northern Flicker - 28
Pileated Woodpecker - 6 Merlin - 5 • Northern Shrike - 3 • Grey Jay - 6 • Steller’s Jay - 8 • Blue Jay - 18 • Black-billed Magpie - 1 • Clark’s Nutcracker - 22 • American Crow - 100 • Common Raven - 163
• Black-capped Chickadee 169 • Mountain Chickadee - 84 • Chestnut-backed Chickadee - 1 • Red-breasted Nuthatch 61 • White-breasted Nuthatch 2 • American Dipper - 10 • Golden-crowned Kinglet - 1 • Townsend’s Solitaire - 5 • European Starling - 25 • Bohemian Waxwing - 105 • Dark-eyed Junco - 4 • Song Sparrow - 15 • Grey-crowned Rosy Finch 35 • Pine Grosbeak - 105 • House Finch - 282 • Cassin’s Finch - 10 • Red Crossbill - 15 • White-winged Crossbill - 10 • Common Redpoll - 90 • Hoary Redpoll - 7 • Pine Siskin - 6 • American Goldfinch - 9 • Evening Grosbeak - 12 • House Sparrow - 24 Watch the Bulletin next week for the Kimberley Bird Count Submitted by Daryl Calder on behalf of Rocky Mountain Naturalists
Notice of Intent
Monroe Lake Road Closure
Notice is hereby given that, pursuant to Section 60(2) of the Transportation Act, the Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure has received four applications to permanently close portions of the surveyed area of Monroe Lake Road, and survey and establish portions of the physical Monroe Lake Road, adjacent to: (1) 7847 Monroe Lake Road, being Lot 12, District Lot 11313, Kootenay District, Plan 1632; (2) 7850 Monroe Lake Road, being Lot 11, DL 11313, KD, Plan 1632; (3) 7874 Monroe Lake Road, being Part of Lot 5, DL 11313, KD Plan 1632 lying SE of a line parallel to and 30 feet distant from the NE boundary of Lot 5; and (4) Lot 6, DL 11313, KD, Plan 1632 in the vicinity of Moyie, B.C., and that such portions of closed road be vested pursuant to Section 60(2) of the Transportation Act. Plans showing the proposed road closures and dedications can be viewed at the Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure Cranbrook District office at 129 10th Avenue S., Cranbrook, B.C., during the office hours of 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Any person(s) wanting to provide comments of support or objection to this application for road closure should indicate their concerns in writing to the aforementioned address or via e-mail to Melissa.Wiekenkamp@gov.bc.ca no later than February 8, 2016. For more information about this closure, please contact District Development Technican Melissa Wiekenkamp, Rocky Mountain District Phone: 250 426-1510 Facsimile: 250 426-1523
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Friday, January 15, 2016
daily bulletin
Local NEWS community challenge from Lindsay park
The Way it Was Courtesy of the Kimberley Heritage Museum Archives
KIMBERLEY NEWS January 16, 1957 Snow Fiesta Committee Gives Progress Report
The Students at Lindsay Park Elementary school would like to Challenge the community businesses to join them in their Food for Thanks event in February. Starting February 1st the students will be collecting non perishable food items and learning lessons like how to be a good neighbour, why the food bank is needed and how giving impacts a community by having guest speakers from the Food Bank and the Salvation army. The Students will wind up their food drive on February 15th. Some ways businesses could be involved include: contributing non perishable items, donation a percentage of a days sales, making a lump sum donation. If your Business would like to be involved in this event or would like more information please contact the Lindsay Park PAC lindsayparkpac@gmail.com
Weekday Morning/Afternoon
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Charlie Rose The Social The Chew News Bold Var. Programs Hockey Lunch World Poker News PAW Kate CBC News Days of Lives Days of Lives Nerds Squir Crime Watch CNN News
Var. Programs Dr. Oz Show Gen. Hospital The Talk Days of Lives Hocke Hocke World Poker Days of Lives RufTum Heartland The Talk The Talk Almost Side Varied Fam Jake Tapper
Varied Programs The First 48 CMT Music Love It Hawaii Five-0
Holmes Varied Programs CMT Music CMT Varied Movie NCIS NCIS
Dateline: Real The Listener Flint. Johnny Make HZipz Million. Million. Theory Theory Var. Programs Liqui Liqui MASH MASH Castle Mysteries at
Thom Georg Dr. Phil The Doctors Make a Deal TMZ Inside Sports Pardon Tim and Sid The Talk Maya Georg Murdoch Myst. Meredith Vieira Meredith Vieira Way Kid Varied Office Situation Room
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Maury News at 1pm Heat of Night Blue Bloods (:15) Movie Var. Programs Sue Thomas Marcus Welby Jimmy Kimmel Tonight Show TJ Pour le plaisir
Steve Wilkos Blue Bloods (:10) Movie Ironside Chris Simp Downton A.
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Cranbrook
Kimberley United Church 10 Boundary St. – 250-427-2428
Rev. Sunny Kim Sunday Worship at 10 am www.kimberleyunited.ca
Cranbrook United Church #2 12 Avenue S.
(Corner of Baker St. and 12th Ave S.)
with Rev. Frank Lewis Ph: 250-426-2022 / Fax: 250-426-2085
The following resume is to give participating organizations an up to date account of what has been accomplished by the committee for the 1957 Snow Fiesta. Letters were written to local organizations asking them to participate in the work and from the replies received the following plan was drawn up: Decorations – Kimberley Chamber of Commerce; Boosters and Jamboree – Kimberley Lions Club; Queen Contest – Kimberley Rotary Club, to be assisted by Kimberley Soroptimist and Business and Professional Women’s Clubs. Twenty per cent ticket sale profit to organizations sponsoring a Queen. Only expense to be taken care of by Kimberley Snow Fiesta to be cost of printing tickets and general advertising. General Publicity and Mardi Gras – “Jaycees” (Kimberley Junior Chamber of Commerce); School Board has agreed to rent the gym for Mardi Gras at a cost of $25; Sbow Castle – Kimberley Fire Dept. Under supervision of Chief Dickens; Hockey Game – Kimberley Dynamiters; Bonspiel – Kimberley Curling Club; Main Parade –
Kimberley
Marysville
Community Church Sunday Service 10:30 am
730 - 302 Street, Marysville
250-427-3161 • 250-427-3795
St. Aidan Orthodox Church 201-7 Ave. S., Cranbrook 250-489-8006 Divine Liturgy Service 10:30am
Sunday School 1st & 3rd Sunday
Fellowship Lunch & Sunday School to follow. Fr. Andrew Applegate, 250-420-1582 All are welcome to come in, see, listen, pray, and stay for lunch.
www.cranbrookunited.com
Sat. evening Vespers Service 6:30pm
Sunday Worship...10:00 am
www.saintaidan.ca
First Baptist Church Cranbrook Alliance Pastor Kevin Ewaskow Children’s Ministries Worship Service 10:30 am 334 - 14th Ave. 250-426-4319 office@fbccranbrook.org
Church
1200 Kootenay Street N. 250-489-4704
Pastor Grant McDowell Sunday Service & Children’s Ministry 10:30 am www.cranbrookalliancechurch.com
Kimberley Kinsmen Club and Young People, under direction of Mr. Rowley; Posters – East Kootenay Schools, under direction of Parent Teachers’ Association; Programs – Snow Fiesta executive, Wm. Campbell, chairman; Beard Contest – Kimberley News; Basketball – Tony Brummett, chairman. One man committee to line up basketball games and to bring in one outside attraction. (Executive to pay all expenses over and above gate receipts); Royal Canadian Navy Band – This band will be in attendance; Hockey Games – Hugh Patterson is lining up games, Midgets, Bantams, Junior and Senior Pee Wee; Dances – Loyal Order of Moose, Rock ‘n Roll, Mardi Gras; Herb Stanton will undertake to arrange boxing matches. Resolution passed at annual meeting – Kimberley Ski Club sponsor Junior Invitational Ski Tournament and bring in outstanding jumpers or hold Western Canadian championships, Snow Fiesta guarantee Kimberley Ski Club expenses plus sum to reimburse loss sustained by cancelling the bi-annual Intercollegiate Ski Tournament. Tentative Program: Thursday, February 21 – 6:00 p.m., Junior Parade (High school to arena); 6:30 p.m., opening ceremonies; speech by Mayor; Address of welcome to athletes; crowning of Queen; 7:30 p.m., giant jamboree in arena. Friday, February 22: 1:00 p.m., Figure Skating competitions; 2:30 p.m., junior hockey; 8:00 p.m., ice carnival; 10:00 p.m., Mardi Gras (High School gym). Saturday, February 23: 9:00 a.m., junior hockey; 2:00 p.m., Snow Fiesta Parade (R.C.N. Band, Calgary); 3:00 p.m., Figure Skating competitions; 3:30 p.m., Boxing; 8:00 p.m., Kimberley Dynamiters vs outside competition; 10:00 p.m., dance at moose Hall; 10:00 p.m., Teenage Rock `n Roll. Sunday, February 24: Western Canada Nordic Ski events (times later); 4:00 p.m., presentation of prizes at arena and flag lowering.
daily bulletin
Friday, January 15, 2016 Page 5
Local NEWS
MLA report - Trans Canada Highway project a much better choice NORM MACDONALD MLA Columbia River Revesltoke
The New Year is always a time to reflect and re-evaluate, and as your representative to the Legislature, I’ve been thinking a lot about public policy and public spending. The BC Liberals promised a Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) industry that would create 100,000 jobs, an end to sales tax in BC, a trillion dollars in economic activity, the elimination of the Provincial debt and a $100 billion Prosperity Fund, with up to 17 LNG plants, the first to be up and running in 2015. Turns out that none of those promises were real; the BC Liberals have failed to deliver on every count. Instead of debt elimination, or even reduction, our debt under the BC Liberals has grown from $30 billion up to $165 billion, with more debt to be accrued. And now with LNG stalled, Premier Christy Clark is placing all our
economic hopes on the Site C dam project, which likely will cost more than $10 billion to build. I disagree with this choice. The BC Utilities Commission, which is the independent body of experts that is supposed to review BC Hydro expenditures, was specifically denied the ability to review the viability of Site C. One can safely assume that the government does not want to be told that Site C is an unnecessary and expensive project. Having failed to create jobs through LNG, Premier Clark is now using Site C as the cornerstone of her job creation plan. But I think that a far better publicly-funded job creation project would be to complete the dividing and four-laning of the Trans-Canada Highway between the Kamloops and the Alberta border. It is a massive project that would create significant benefit to the rural economy. It would create opportunities through apprenticeships to train our next generation of trades-
Trails talk From Page 4 “There’s not supposed to be any building until the MOU is in place but these people don’t get their fingers slapped. “We relented in Matthew Creek because they were using an old skidder road. I was told five years ago by the trails people that they wouldn’t go into Matthew Creek. Now they are full bore ahead. I’m a firm believe that there should be no recreation in water sheds. “Council needs to decide yes or no. I will be bringing a notice of motion forward.” Hoglund pointed out that if drinking water is compromised there wouldn’t be any tourists to fill hotel beds. Coun. Kent Goodwin said it was not necessarily the same group of people building the trails. He also said that his understanding always was that Council’s position on recreation in watersheds had always been Matthew Creek yes and Mark Creek no. “The reality with the Trails Society is, most of these folks are professionals, they are a part of
our community and well versed in stewardship of watersheds,” Oakley said. “Lots of watersheds use stewardship programs. We need to have a discussion about this. We are all very passionate about protecting the watersheds, just how do we go about it?” Hoglund said that it’s true that it may not be the same people, be he still felt that the understanding was to only upgrade old roads and so on, not construct completely new trails. “KTS does not condone illegal trail building,” Kitto said. “I hope if this does go ahead there will be more oversight.” Recreation and logging were two very different things,” said Mayor Don McCormick. “You won’t convince me trails are more dangerous than logging. Because we don’t have control (of logging in watersheds) we don’t have control of the consequences. We are heading down the road to a water treatment plant and that will be hugely expensive.”
people and it would modernize our main national transportation corridor which is far too congested, unsafe and unre-
liable. A four-laned divided highway across our Province would have us join Manitoba, Saskatchewan
and Alberta in having a proper modern highway from east to west, and would provide real ongoing economic benefits for
decades to come. It’s time for government to make a better choice. Let’s put people to work on a project that
actually makes sense for the citizens of British Columbia.
DEVELOPMENT OF A PEST MANAGEMENT PLAN Pest Management Plan: BC Hydro Power Line Corridors 2016-2021
The use of pesticides is intended within the area to which the Pest Management Plan (PMP) applies. The purpose of the proposed PMP is to control vegetation under, above and near BC Hydro’s power lines in order to maintain the safe and reliable delivery of electricity to our customers. This plan applies to all areas of British Columbia where BC Hydro manages its transmission and distribution system and associated power line corridors, access roads and helipads. The proposed duration of the PMP is from April 2016 to April 2021. Vegetation incompatible with the operation of the power system will be controlled using: physical (manual brushing, mowing, girdling, grooming, pruning, tree removal), cultural (compatible land use), biological (release of parasitic insects to control invasive plants), and chemical (herbicide application) techniques, or any combination of these methods. The active ingredients and trade names of the herbicides proposed for use under this plan include: ○ aminocyclopyrachlor and metsulfuron-methyl – Navius or equivalent ○ aminopyralid – Milestone or equivalent ○ aminopyralid and metsulfuron-methyl – ClearView or equivalent ○ aminopyralid, metsulfuron-methyl, and fluroxypyr – Sightline or equivalent ○ aminopyralid, metsulfuron-methyl and triclopyr – Clearview Brush or equivalent ○ Chondrostereum purpureum – Chontrol or equivalent ○ clopyralid – Lontrel or equivalent ○ diflufenzopyr and dicamba – Distinct, Overdrive, or equivalent ○ glyphosate – Vantage, Vision or equivalent ○ imazapyr – Arsenal Powerline or equivalent ○ metsulfuron-methyl – Escort or equivalent ○ picloram and 2,4-D – Aspect or equivalent ○ triclopyr – Garlon products or equivalent ○ 2,4-D – LV700 or equivalent Adjuvant products may also be combined on occasion with an herbicide to improve its effectiveness, such as: nonylphenoxy polyethoxy ethanol – Agral 90, paraffinic oils – Gateway, octadec-9-enoic acid as methyl and ethyl esters – Hasten NT, or siloxylated polyether – Xiameter or equivalents. The proposed methods for applying herbicides include: cut surface, basal bark, backpack foliar (low pressure spray), mechanical foliar (boom, nozzle, powerhose, or wick), or injection (hack and squirt, lance or syringe) techniques. A draft copy of the proposed PMP is available at bchydro.com/pestplanforcorridors. Alternatively, it’s available in person at 6911 Southpoint Drive, Burnaby; 1401 Kalamalka Lake Road, Vernon; 18475 128 Street, Surrey; 400 Madsen Road, Nanaimo; 3333 22 Avenue, Prince George. BC Hydro, the applicant for the proposed PMP, is located at 6911 Southpoint Drive, Burnaby, B.C., V3N 4X8. Please contact Tom Wells, Vegetation Program Manager, at 604 516 8943 or thomas.wells@bchydro.com for more information. A person wishing to contribute information about a proposed treatment site, relevant to the development of the pest management plan, may send copies of the information to the applicant at the above address within 30 days of the publication notice.
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FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 2016
OPINION
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Skin colour, history, prejudice
L
ast week, a Thai cosmetics company called Seoul Secret launched a new beauty product, Snowz, and got locally famous Thai actress Cris Horwang to appear in the promotional video. She starts out white, and explains: “In my world there is tough competition. If I don’t take care of myself, everything I have built, the whiteness I have invested in, could be gone.” Then her skin gradually darkens until she resembles one of those “blackface” comedians in early 20th-century America. She looks down at herself in dismay, then at another Thai beauty, very white indeed, who magically appears beside her. “If I was white, I would win,” Horwang says to herself. But salvation is at hand: her young rival generously points to a package of Snowz that magically appears between them. Cris brightens up, and so does her skin. The ad ends with her smiling again and saying: “Eternally white, I’m confident.” After an eruption of protests the ad was withdrawn with “heartfelt apologies” from Seoul Secret. But they didn’t withdraw the product. They would have been crazy to take it off the market, because Asian women spend $13 billion a year on skin-whitening products. Africa is even more extreme, with 35 percent of South African women using skin-whitening creams, and an astonishing 75 percent of Nigerian women. Several hundred million women are using these products regularly, despite a range of possible side-effects that run from ochronosis (which causes the skin to turn a dark purple shade) to leukemia, diabetes and cancers of the liver and kidneys. But why? What’s wrong with dark skin? Nothing, obviously. Originally, several million years ago, all our ancestors were
“white”, but they weren’t actually human yet. They had pale skin, like most animals with fur, because the fur blocked most of the incoming sunlight, and pale skin is six times more efficient in turning the ultraviolet light (UV) from the sun into the vitamin D that they all need. When modern humans evolved, they lost their fur — and since they evolved in equatorial Africa, where there is an abundance of sunlight, their bare skin was actually getting too much UV. So early humans developed dark skin to cut down on their UV intake, and early humans were all “black”. Then some of them migrated out of Africa and colonised the rest of the planet, including the parts in the high latitudes where is much less UV in Gwynne there the sunlight. The ones who ended Dyer up in northern Eurasia went back to having pale skin — Europeans in the west, North Asians in the northeast — in order to make better use of the limited UV that was available. And that’s the end of the story: we ended up with the skin colour that suited where we lived. The details are more complicated, of course. Bare skin was getting plenty of the UV that triggers the production of Vitamin D, which helps calcium absorption (for bones and teeth) and is needed for various metabolic processes. But so much UV also depleted another vitamin, B12, which is essential for a healthy nervous system and other key metabolic processes. It also risked causing severe sunburn. Dark skin solved both those problems. When the migrants moved north, there was no risk of sunburn and no threat to Vitamin B12, because far away from the equator the UV rays come in at a slant
through the atmosphere, not straight down, and most are absorbed before they reach the surface. In fact, there was not enough UV in the north to make Vitamin D, especially in winter. So evolution went into reverse, and by ten or twenty thousand years ago practically everybody living north of the Mediterranean and the Himalayas was pale-skinned, to make better use of the limited UV that was available. And that’s all there is to know about skin colour. It’s not good or bad; it just suits the geographical circumstances. So why the prejudice against dark skin? It’s all about history, but it’s much older than the European conquest of the world in 1500-1900. That left particularly deep psychological scars, but light-skinned people from the north have been conquering darkskinned people further south for thousands of years. The reasons are too complex to go into here, but it had nothing to do with skin colour. (See Jared Diamond’s classic book “Guns, Germs and Steel” for a plausible explanation.) Nevertheless, dark-skinned people have been the historical losers for thousands of years, and people tend to blame themselves for losing. Add in a few details like the European and Arab slave trade in Africa, and the fact that people who work outdoors, and therefore have skin darkened by the sun, tend to be in the lower social classes, and you have an explanation for the internalised prejudice against dark skin even in many darkskinned people. But this prejudice really is on the way out at last. The most important thing about that awful advertisement is not the fact that it was made. It’s the fact that the outcry in Thailand forced it off the air. Gwynne Dyer is an indepedent journalist based in London
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Secret Deer Cull
Opinion/Events Letters to the Editor
Say it ain’t so, Cranbrook City Hall! I still have difficulty believing that mayor, city council and CAO would approve a clandestine deer cull (kill) in-camera without the taxpayers knowledge while telling the public they were going to translocate deer instead of killing them. Then carry out the cull spending taxpayers’ money doing it — and at the same time — accept plaudits from the many opposed to the cull including the Animal Alliance of Canada who offered to donate $10,000 to the translocation program. Then when their sleazy, deceitful act was exposed in a video — yes, a You Tube video! — by the Animal Rights people and questioned by the media they stick their haughty noses in the air and say they don’t discuss sordid deeds like this in the media! But unless the sun has started rising in the west and setting in the east this is apparently what they did. And once again Cranbrook’s name has been darkened from coast to coast to coast. In his play Hamlet, Shakespeare says “something is rotten in the state of Demark.” Well, I’m going to update the Bard and say unequivocally that “something is rotten at Cranbrook City Hall” and it’s time these representatives of the people fessed up. And oh yes, I have special knowledge of this situation and know how difficult an issue the deer situation is because I was a City councillor myself in the previous administration and foolishly made the same mistake myself of approving a deer cull in camera without telling the people. But when our council got caught in the act, I admitted what we had done, apologized to the public and condemned council for what it had done starting with myself first. Never again, I said and it didn’t happen again during that council’s term. Instead we did surveys and studied the problem which didn’t do a hell of a lot of good either. But at least we didn’t hide behind the public’s back. So I challenge this council, the mayor and the CAO to do the right thing and apologize publically to the citizens of Cranbrook for your perfidy. In the circumstances, it’s the least you can do. Gerry Warner Cranbrook
Destination Marketing
Response to letter “Destination Marketing,” Townsman, Jan. 11: Ironic, isn’t it? We have just had a push by entrepreneurial citizens (www.cranbrookcity.com) to counter the Lonely Planet description that Cranbrook is a dull place. Yet we still have some amongst us who wonder what we have going for us. It is true, that as a hotelier I signed on the dotted line to collect a Municipal three per cent hotel tax. My reasons for doing so are based on the fact that for the past three years we have been meeting with like-minded community stakeholders to formulate an action/business plan on how we can effectively market our community. Yes, the golf, the biking, the mountains and the sunshine are all exceptional, but how do we convey that to a larger audience? By having a base pool of money, we are able to create a sustainable marketing orga-
Friday, January 15, 2016 Page 7
nization (called a DMO). We are one of the last B.C. communities to implement this. The most effective model to date, has been to create a non-profit society with an industry board to oversee the implementation of the business plan. I, along with others in our community have donated our time to sit on this board. As to the question, is this tax mandatory? Your resort fee in Niagara/Vegas? Property collected and you may or may not be successful in having it removed. A property applied Destination Marketing Fee? You can ask to remove it. This Municipal Hotel Tax is government managed and non-negotiable. The list of recreational opportunities presently available in and around Cranbrook is bottomless, and the goal is to reach out to visitors, so that they may also know it. George Freitag, Owner Elizabeth Lake Lodge
Unwise, unprecedented
The October 19th 2015 federal election produced a political sea-change in Canada: the ruling Conservatives became the Official Opposition, the former Official Opposition and temporarily first-place polling New Democrats moved to third-party status in the House of Commons, and the formerly third-place Liberals now have a majority government. There are a number of lessons to be learned from the politics leading up to the election, during it, and subsequently. Here are three lessons not evidently learned by Cranbrook Mayor Lee Pratt. First, politics change through democratic elections. Second, mayors must work with the MPs and MLAs who are elected, and with elected governments. Third: in the discharge of municipal duties, it is preferable for mayors to be publicly non-partisan. Mayors are heads of municipal governments, which in turn, constitutionally, are creatures of provincial governments. Yet municipalities, which are responsible for and to a majority of citizens for essential services, have limited fundraising capacity and thus rely on both provincial and federal governments for their budgetary needs. Municipal governments, particularly mayors, must work with governments of all political stripes in order to advance the interests of their communities. In this context, Pratt’s public comments suggesting that the outcome of the federal election in Kootenay Columbia – won by New Democrat Wayne Stetski – was bad for the riding, and that former Conservative MP David Wilks would have served the riding better; and further, that Stetski’s election may negatively impact infrastructure funding – was both unwise and unprecedented. In an interview with Cranbrook radio The Drive 102.9 on October 20th, Pratt said “the riding would be better represented by Wilks” and “I think the citizens of the Columbia-Kootenay riding have done themselves a big disservice”. (This item Mayor calls Conservative loss a “disservice” to Cranbrook may be accessed at http:// thedrivefm.ca/mayor-calls-conservative-loss-a-disservice-to-cranbrook/) It is common knowledge that Pratt has personal partisan preferences. Most of us do. But to allow those to so compromise his political judgment that he publicly dis-
Letters to the Editor
sed the new MP and the voters of Kootenay-Columbia is unfortunate. His duty to Cranbrook requires him to work with the MP and the MLA chosen by citizens in general elections. It requires him to work with elected governments whether or not they are his personal political choice. His comments should be retracted in as public a manner as they were made. And if he cannot bring himself to work with the NDP MP on Cranbrook’s issues, he should resign in favour of someone who can. Joyce Green, Jim Johnson Cranbrook
Implausible numbers
It is deplorable that in a country as rich as Canada, food banks exist. In Kimberley and the surrounding rural area (RDEK Area E) the Kimberley Helping Hands Food Bank (KHHFB) addresses the needs through the donations of individual citizens and local businesses and the support of dedicated volunteers. In December and January two articles appeared in the Daily Bulletin regarding the distribution of hampers in 2015 by the KHHFB. The first indicated that 1,500 food hampers had been distributed assisting 3,600 people including 1,500 children. The second was more precise indicating that 1,458 hampers had been distributed assisting 3,431 people (2,064 adults and 1,367 children). According to the 2011 census there were 8,286 permanent residents and 4,470 residences in Area E. In September 2015, there were 1,136 students enrolled in K-12 education (public, independent, distance and international). On a pro-rated basis the pre-school population is probably around 450. So the total number of children is likely no more than 1,600. If the numbers in these articles are taken at face value, in 2015 the KHHFB provided hampers to approximately 30% of the adults, 45% of the households, and 85% of the children in Area E. These numbers are just not plausible. Likely the KHHFB counts people every time they use the food bank. So a person benefiting from a hamper ten times during the year would be counted as ten separate beneficiaries. The statistics contained in these articles are misleading in terms of the number of different individuals requiring assistance and create a false impression of the extent of poverty in our community. A more realistic picture of those needing assistance might be obtained by multiplying the number of Christmas hampers (177) by the average number of people receiving each hamper throughout the year (3,431/1,458 = 2.35). This calculation suggests that the beneficiaries might be around 416, and that, at any given time, may be closer to 5% of the total population including a little more than 1% of the children. It is not my intent to downplay the seriousness of poverty in our community or to denigrate the contributions of the donors or the volunteers. I am also not suggesting that we hide or minimize our challenges. I am concerned that publicizing misleading information about our community is counterproductive to our community’s efforts to market Kimberley as “A Great Place to Be”. Bob Johnstone Kimberley
Letters to the Editor should be a maximum of 400 words in length. We reserve the right to edit, condense or reject any contribution. All letters must include the name and daytime phone number of the writer for verification purposes. The phone number will not be printed. Anonymous letters will not be published. Only one letter per month from any particular letter writer will be published. Email letters to editor@dailytownsman.com. Mail to The Daily Townsman, 822 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook, B.C. V1C 3R9. In Kimberley, email editor@dailybulletin.ca. Mail to The Daily Bulletin, 335 Spokane Street, Kimberley, BC V1A 1Y9.
What’s Up?
KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDAR
UPCOMING
Abreast in the Rockies Dragon Boat Team Meeting: Monday, Jan 18, Mt. Baker Library, 6:45pm. Paddling registration available. The Kootenay Railway Pensioners Association will be having a Social Luncheon at 12:30 pm, Tuesday Jan.19th at Heritage Inn, 803 Cranbrook St.N. All Railway Retiree’s and Spouses are welcome. RSVP by Jan.15th. Info: Secretary Frances Allen at 250-426-2720 or Myrtle 250-426-2378, Jean 250-426-8338. Jan. 19th--KIDSZONE- ages 5-12, Tuesdays starting Jan. 19; 3:35-5:00 p.m. at Marysville Community Church. Snacks, Games, Crafts, Stories, Singing. No cost. Registration: 250-427-7099 Kimberley Aquatic Centre FREE FAMILY SWIM: Wednesday, January 20th, 6:00-7:00pm is sponsored by Kimberley Alpine Resort. Persons 18 years & younger must be accompanied by an adult. January 20, GoGo Grannys Travelogue. Jeff and Linda Williams will present their travelogue titled “Normandy: Land of William the Conqueror”. Join us in the lecture theatre at the College of the Rockies at 7:00. All proceeds support Grandmothers in Africa. Want to play your instrument with others? The Cranbrook Community Orchestra (CCO) is for musicians beginner to advanced. Find out more: 250-581-0058 Shelagh or facebook: Cranbrook Community Orchestra. Wednesdays; first meeting Jan 20 Got Scottish?! The annual Robbie Burns Dinner Fundraiser for Kimberley Cranbrook Highland Dance Association. Tickets on sale until Jan 16 at Lotus Books. Dinner is on January 23, Heritage Inn in Cranbrook. Tickets not available at the door. FMI Robin 432-5404 Have Camera Will Travel.... presents “Newfoundland” Join Dave White - “Ramblin’ on the Rock - Hiking the East Coast Trail”. Video presentation at Centre 64 on Tuesday, Jan 26 at 7:30 pm. Admission by Donation to the Kimberley Arts Centre 64. Know someone who is a literacy champion in Cranbrook or Area C? Nominate them as Cranbrook’s 2015 Literacy Champion. Nominations close January 20th and the winner announced January 27th at the Family Literacy Day celebrations. For more info call Katherine 250-420-7596 or khough@cbal.org or on Facebook: Columbia Basin Alliance for Literacy Cranbrook. Adult or Senior? Want to learn or improve your computer skills? CBAL Cranbrook offers a 6 week introductory computer course starting Jan 29th. Pre-registration a must. Call Katherine 250-417-2896, space is limited.
ONGOING KidsZone – Tuesdays, 3:35-5:00 p.m. at Marysville Community Church. Snacks, Games, Crafts, Stories, Singing. No Cost. Registration: 250-427-7099 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! 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. The Cranbrook Quilter’s Guild meet on the 2nd and 4th Tuesday of every month, September - June, 7.15 p.m. at the Cranbrook Senior Citizens Hall, 125-17th Ave South. Interested??? Call Jennifer at 250426-6045. We’re on Facebook and www.cranbrookquiltersguild.ca. Enjoy Painting? Join ArtGroup 75, Fridays 1pm-4pm, Sept. June. Seniors Hall, Cranbrook. 125. 17th Ave. S. Quilters meet in Kimberley on the 2nd Monday at Centennial Hall at 7:00 PM and the 4th Monday for sewing sessions in the United Church Hall at 10 Boundary Street. Hey Kimberley! We need you as Big Brothers and Big Sisters. One hour a week. YOU can make a difference in a Child’s life that will last a life time. Info: 250-499-3111. Cranbrook Community Tennis Association welcomes all citizens to play or learn to play. Call Neil 250-489-8107, Cathy 250-464-1903. Cranbrook Phoenix Toastmasters meet every Thursday, noon -1:00 Heritage Inn. Toastmasters teaches communication & leadership skills. Roberta 250-489-0174. 1911.toastmastersclubs.org. 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 Royal Canadian Legion Branch 24; Friday Meat Draw: 4:30-6:30, Saturday Meat Draw: 3:30-5:30. BINGO at the Kimberley Elks – Mondays, 6:30 start. All welcome. The Canadian Orthopaedic Foundation invites anyone expecting bone and joint surgery to make contact with local volunteers for peer support. The free Ortho Connect program helps to ease the fear, stress and anxiety that go along with surgery and help patients prepare. 1-800-461-3639 ext 4, and ask for Lauralee. 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 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.
CRANBROOK TOWNSMAN & KIMBERLEY BULLETIN COMMUNITY CALENDAR
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Stewart faces former team as Raiders visit Ice
Centre Dylan Stewart ready for former squad as Kootenay Ice hope to return to win column against high-flying Raiders Taylor Rocc a Sports Editor
There’s no question being traded can leave a player feeling discarded and thrown away. That pretty much sums up how Kootenay Ice centre Dylan Stewart initially felt when he was traded by the Prince Albert Raiders in October. “I feel like I have something to prove with these guys,” said the 18-year-old prior to practice Thursday afternoon at Western Financial Place. “When you get traded, it’s never a good feeling. You feel like you’re not wanted. But I’m thankful the Kootenay Ice have seen something in me and want me here. “Every team you go to there are going to be different systems and rituals. I feel used to it now. The rest of the season, I can take advantage of that and finish off strong compared with how I’ve been playing the last couple games.” Stewart will get a chance to prove his point Friday (7 p.m.) when the Raiders (2514-3-1) visit the Ice (833-3-0) in Western Hockey League action at Western Financial Place. Like any young player, Stewart has had his share of ups and downs since coming to the Ice Oct. 21 in exchange for Drew Warkentine and a conditional fifth-round pick in the 2017 WHL Bantam Draft. From scoring on his first shift in his first game with his new team Oct. 23 to playing his 100th career WHL contest on New Year’s Eve, there have been memorable moments since
Friday, January 15
Prince albert raiders at Kootenay ice
WHL Regular Season: Game 45 7:00 p.m. (MT) - Western Financial Place LAST MEETING: PAR 1 at KTN 0 (Oct. 17) RAIDERS vs. ICE 25-14-3-1 RECORD 8-33-3-0 Second (East) DIVISION Sixth (Central) Fifth (Eastern) CONF. 12th (Eastern) 145 GF 89 136 GA 187 14th (19.1%) PP 22nd (12.7%) 11th (80.1%) PK 22nd (72.7%) R. Gardiner (27-33-60) TOP SCORER Z. Zborosky (16-17-33) R. Parenteau (3.01 GAA) TOP GOALIE W. Hoflin (3.81 GAA) 3-1 W at EDM (Jan. 13) LAST GAME 5-1 L vs. SAS (Jan. 12) W2 STREAK L2 Jan. 16 at LET NEXT GAME Jan. 16 vs. MHT
the native of Edmonton came to Cranbrook. In 38 games this season, Stewart has collected four goals and 10 points. But there have also been struggles. The 6-foot-1, 187pound pivot missed five games through the month of December after suffering a concussion and since returning to the lineup, he’s battled to get back into the swing of things. In a 7-1 loss at Lethbridge Saturday night, Stewart registered a team-worst minus-4 rating before starting Tuesday’s game on the fourth line. “Dylan has been battling some injury stuff, but he’s just trying to find something consistent in his game that he can bring,” said Luke Pierce, head coach of the Kootenay Ice, Thursday prior to practice. “Everybody goes through these stretches. Right now, he’s just struggling a little bit to find things. But he’s no different than a lot of players.
“What is our fourth line at this point? It’s hard to identify it. The problem isn’t identifying your fourth line, it’s identifying your second and third. That’s where we need to find more consistency from everybody.” One thing Stewart can definitely bring Friday is a deep knowledge of the upstart Raiders. After going 31-37-2-2 and finishing fifth in the WHL’s East Division at the conclusion of the 2014-15 campaign, the Raiders have 25 wins through 43 games in 2015-16. The turnaround has seen Prince Albert in a never-ending back-andforth dog fight with the Brandon Wheat Kings (26-12-2-2) for first place in the East Division, a drastic improvement from last season. Having spent 80 games with the Raiders prior to arriving in Cranbrook, Stewart suggested the about-face in Prince Albert boils down to a few simple factors. “They’re a really
Gerry Frederick Photo/gerryfrederickphotography.com
Kootenay Ice centre Dylan Stewart, who came to Cranbrook via trade from the Prince Albert Raiders Oct. 21, will face his former team for the first time Friday at Western Financial Place. close group and they want to have success,” Stewart said. “They’re really good in the offensive zone and they have a lot of secondary scoring that can put the puck in the net. “Marc Habscheid has done a good job changing the culture there. Before, it was different. Then he came and he got everyone thinking, ‘We want to win a championship, not just make the playoffs.’” Habscheid took over the head coaching duties from Cory Clouston in Prince Albert Nov. 1, 2014, guiding the club to a 24-28-2-2 mark to finish the 2014-15 campaign. In 2015-16, his squad
is certainly in position to make the playoffs, if not win the East Division. Friday’s tilt marks the second outing on a three-game road trip for the Raiders, who opened the Central Division swing with a 3-1 victory over the Edmonton Oil Kings Wednesday night. After meeting with the Ice, the Raiders head back east, wrapping up the trip Saturday against the Lethbridge Hurricanes. “They’re a big team and a strong club,” Pierce said of the Raiders. “They play hard and they play physical. I think we’ve played pretty well against good hockey teams. They’re
another real good team that’s in a heck of a battle with Brandon and Moose Jaw. We know they’re going to be real hungry for points. “We’ve just got to get back to the way were [playing] last week and find the consistency in our effort level.” After starting the 2016 portion of the calendar with points in three consecutive games, the Ice hit a bump in the road, dropping back-to-back games to the Hurricanes and Saskatoon Blades (5-1, Tuesday). Still, the success of consecutive wins is fresh and Stewart knows what his team needs to do to get back to that.
“We can’t rely on the first line to do all the scoring or even just the little things,” Stewart said. “Everyone needs to find their role. If you’re not a scorer, you need to hit guys and get the forecheck going. We can’t rely on Alfaro, Zborosky and Zaharichuk to do all our scoring. “The last two games we kind of stepped back a little bit. But I’ve got a feeling we’ll have a good one on Friday. I’m very excited for it.” Stewart and the Ice are home for a pair of contests this weekend, beginning with the Raiders Friday and rounding out Saturday (7 p.m.) when the Medicine Hat Tigers come to town.
National Football League
San Francisco 49ers hire Chip Kelly as new head coach Janie McC auley Associated Press
SANTA CLARA, Calif. - The San Francisco 49ers hired Chip Kelly as their coach Thursday, finding a focused, football-first leader CEO Jed York is counting on to turn the once-proud franchise back into a contender. York announced the
move on Twitter and so did the team on its Twitter account. “After a thorough search, Trent & I are thrilled to announce Chip Kelly as the new #HeadCoach of the ↕49ers,” York wrote, referring to general manager Trent Baalke. Kelly won’t be introduced in a news conference until next week
based on schedules. The former Eagles coach will replace fired coach Jim Tomsula. Kelly emerged as the favourite among several experienced candidates that included former Raiders, Broncos and Redskins coach Mike Shanahan, ex-Giants coach Tom Coughlin and former Raiders coach Hue Jackson, who was hired
Wednesday to coach the Cleveland Browns. The 52-year-old Kelly was fired by Philadelphia after Week 16 with one game left in his third season as coach. The former University of Oregon coach was 6-9 in 2015 following two 10-6 seasons, prompting Eagles CEO Jeffrey Lurie to make a change. Hiring the offen-
sive-minded Kelly could give the 49ers good reason to keep quarterback Colin Kaepernick to work his way back into the dominant, dynamic quarterback he was a few years back with his legs and strong arm. There has been thought that Kaepernick would be Kelly’s ideal type of quarterback. Deciding on the
quarterback will be a major decision for Kelly in the coming months. Former first-round pick Blaine Gabbert took over in November for the benched Kaepernick, who has since undergone shoulder and thumb surgeries. Kaepernick’s $11.9 million salary for 2016 becomes fully guaranteed for injury come April 1,
and there had been belief the team might try to trade him or release him. Baalke interviewed Coughlin on Monday on the East Coast and Jackson on Sunday in Cincinnati. Buccaneers offensive co-ordinator Dirk Koetter also interviewed, last Thursday in Tampa, Florida.
daily townsman / daily bulletin
Friday, January 15, 2016 Page 9
Sports
NBA
Selkirk girls’ curling team wins East Kootenay playdowns to advance to provincials Raptors edge Magic in OT at O2 Arena in London Townsman Staff
Photo submitted
Skip Alysha Buchy (front left) calls line while Haylie Farquhar (back, standing) follows her rock as Kayla Buchy (left) and Arissa Toffolo sweep during practice at the Kimberley Curling Club.
The Selkirk Secondary School girls curling team is headed for the B.C. High School Provincial Curling Championship after an undefeated showing at the East Kootenay Playdown. The Selkirk rink, skipped by Alysha Buchy and featuring third Kaila Buchy, second Haylie Farquhar and lead Arissa Toffolo, rattled off three wins at the high school zone playdown, defeating a pair of Creston teams and one other from Invermere. Next up, the Kimberley rink heads for the B.C. High School Provincial Curling Championship, scheduled for March 3 to 5 at the Delta Thistle Curling Club. The provincial cham-
pionship is played under a seven-game round robin (eight ends per game) format. There are no playoffs following the round robin, with the first-place team being declared champion. In the event of a tie, there will be a tie-breaking game to determine the outcome. Team Buchy brings much experience to the rink, having competed together over the past year, most recently wrapping up an appearance at the 2016 Tim Hortons Junior Women’s Provincial Curling Championship at the Kamloops Curling Club. The girls finished the annual event with a 2-5 record, defeating rinks from Vernon and Tunnel Town/Juan De Fuca/ Parksville along the way.
Lady Avs captain Kelsey Thompson named PACWEST Athlete of the Week Taylor Rocc a Sports Editor
The College of the Rockies Lady Avalanche volleyball team is off to a hot start in 2016 and people in the PACWEST have taken notice. After scoring backto-back victories over the Capilano University Blues (3-2, 3-0) this past weekend, fifth-year captain Kelsey Thomspon was recognized with PACWEST Athlete of the Week honours. Thompson, a native of Vernon, led the Lady Avs charge with a total of 26 digs, 23 kills and two blocks over the weekend. The heavy-hitting
veteran has been rock solid all season long. Heading into this weekend’s action, Thompson’s name can be found all across the PACWEST leaderboard, including third in kills (173), sixth in digs (165) and sixth in total offense. The two triumphs over Capilano pushed the Lady Avalanche to 5-9 on the season and back into the playoff race in the tightly-contested PACWEST. Thompson and the Lady Avs return to action Friday night (6 p.m.) at College of the Rockies as they welcome the Douglas Col-
lege Royals (6-6) to Cranbrook. The Royals and Lady Avs will follow up Friday’s outing with a Saturday matinee (1 p.m.) to close the weekend. PACWEST Women’s Volleyball Standings: 1) Vancouver Island University (12-2, 24 points); 2) Capilano University (8-6, 16); 3) Camosun College (8-6, 16); 4) Douglas College (6-6, 12); 5) University of the Fraser Valley (6-8, 12); 6) College of the Rockies (5-9, 10); 7) Columbia Bible College (3-11, 6)
Men look to remain perfect in 2016 after sweep of Capilano Taylor Rocc a Sports Editor
The College of the Rockies Avalanche men’s volleyball team hopes to remain hot following back-to-back sweeps of Capilano University last weekend. The Avalanche cruised to a pair of victories over the visiting Blues, claiming straightsets triumphs Friday (25-16, 25-16, 25-18) and Saturday (25-19, 2523, 25-16). The consecutive wins boosted the Avs to
6-8 on the season. This weekend, the Avalanche will look to claw back to the .500mark with the second-place Douglas College Royals (9-3) visiting College of the Rockies Friday (8 p.m.) and Saturday (3 p.m.). Australian import Patrik Toze continues to pace the Avalanche heading into the weekend. The 6-foot-5 outsider hitter ranks amongst the PACWEST’s best with 28 blocks (seventh) and 138 kills (seventh), con-
tributing to his sixthplace conference rank in total offense this season. PACWEST Men’s Volleyball Standings: 1) Camosun College (13-1, 26 points); 2) Douglas College (9-3, 18); 3) University of the Fraser Valley (8-6, 16); 4) Vancouver Island University (8-6, 16); 5) College of the Rockies (6-8, 12); 6) Capilano University (4-10, 8); 7) Columbia Bible College (3-11, 6)
Taylor Rocca Photo
Lady Avalanche captain Kelsey Thompson (above) was named PACWEST Athlete of the Week after a strong performance in a pair of victories over Capilano University this past weekend. Thompson and the Lady Avs return to action Friday as they host Douglas College at 6 p.m.
Ian Harrison Canadian Press
LONDON - The Toronto Raptors are becoming accustomed to putting in extra effort on their trans-Atlantic trips. Kyle Lowry scored 24 points, Cory Joseph had 19 and the Raptors won their fourth straight game Thursday, holding off the Orlando Magic 106-103 before a soldout crowd at London’s O2 Arena. The last time the Raptors (25-15) visited London, back in March, 2011, they lost in triple overtime to the Nets, a see-saw game that saw DeMar DeRozan and former Raptors centre Andrea Bargnani both missed last-second shots. This time, DeRozan had 13 points and 11 rebounds as the Raptors avenged a Nov. 6 loss in Orlando that spoiled Toronto’s franchise-best 5-0 start. Seven Raptors reached double figures, with Jonas Valanciunas scoring 13, and Bismack Biyombo, Patrick Patterson and Luis Scola each getting 11. Victor Oladipo scored 27 points and Evan Fournier had 21 as Orlando (20-19) lost for the sixth time in seven games. Nikola Vucevic had 17 points and 11 rebounds for the Magic, while Tobias Harris had 16 points and 11 boards. Canadian Andrew Nicholson came off the bench for the Magic, scoring six points in three minutes. Two free throws by Lowry put Toronto up 105-100 with 43 seconds left in overtime, but Oladipo answered with a three-pointer. After a missed shot by Lowry, he redeemed himself by stealing the ball from Oladipo and drawing a foul from Harris. Lowry made one of two, making it a threepoint game. Vucevic saw his last-second shot from near the halfway line bounce off the rim, giving Toronto a hardearned win. The wild finish came after the Raptors gave up an 11-point lead in
the final 7:34 of the fourth quarter, with Oladipo’s jumper tying it at 96-96 with 32 seconds to go. After a missed shot by Lowry, Oladipo had a chance to win it for Orlando, but missed a 21foot jumper with seven tenths of a second remaining. After a replay review to determine possession, the Magic got the ball under Toronto’s basket. Harris inbounded the ball to Jason Smith, but his shot bounced off the rim, sending the game to overtime. Following a trio of pregame anthems, Lowry and Vucevic stood side by side at centre court and thanked the London crowd for coming out to the game. One of four European-born players, Lithuania’s Valanciunas received the loudest cheer during introductions. The others were Fournier, from France, Vucevic, representing Montenegro, and Magic forward Mario Hezonja, from Croatia. The game attracted a large number of celebrities, including retired heavyweight boxer Lennox Lewis, Montreal Impact striker Didier Drogba, actor Michael B. Jordan and chef Gordon Ramsey. Between the first and second quarters, five former NBA stars were honoured at centre court. The quintet was made up of British-born NBA star John Amaechi, former Magic star Horace Grant, Canadian Rick Fox and former Raptors Muggsy Bogues and Hakeem Olajuwon. Several fans wore Raptors jerseys and at least two waved Canadian flags. Even in a foreign land, there was one familiar face in the crowd for the Raptors. Noted “Superfan”’Nav Bhatia sat in a front row seat along the baseline at the same end as Toronto’s bench. Another familiar figure was The Raptor, Toronto’s furry dinosaur mascot who roamed the crowd and donned a chef’s outfit while posing for a photo with Ramsey.
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FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 2016
TV GUIDE
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DAILY BULLETIN
FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 2016 PAGE 11
NEWS
Mammoth bones show early human presence in Arctic MALCOLM RIT TER Associated Press
NEW YORK — The remains of a mammoth that was hunted down about 45,000 years ago have revealed the earliest known evidence of humans in the Arctic. Marks on the bones, found in far northern Russia, indicate the creature was stabbed and butchered. The tip of a tusk was damaged in a way that suggests human activity, perhaps to make ivory tools. With a minimal age estimate of 45,000 years, the discovery extends the record of human presence in the Arctic by at least about 5,000 years. The site in Siberia, near the Kara Sea, is also by far the northernmost sign of human presence in Eurasia before 40,000 years ago, Vladimir Pitulko of the Russian Academy of Science in St. Petersburg and co-authors reported in a paper released Thursday by the journal Science. They also briefly report evidence of human hunting at about the same time from a wolf bone found well to the east. That suggests a widespread occupation, although the population was probably sparse, they said. Daniel Fisher, a mammoth expert at the University of Michigan who did not participate in the study, said the markings on the mammoth bone strongly indicate human hunting.
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It makes sense to conclude that the hunters were from our own species rather than Neanderthals, John Hoffecker of the University of Colorado at Boulder com-
mented in an email. But Robert Park, an archaeologist at the University of Waterloo in Canada who has studied the bones of hunted animals in the far north,
that the mammoth was hunted. If people were living this far north that long ago, he said, it implies they had not only the technical abilities to
for food and fuel, he said. And the skeleton shows far less butchering than one would expect, he said. Park emphasized he’s not ruling out the idea
called the evidence for human hunting “pretty marginal.” The beast had been found with remains of its fat hump, while hunters would be expected to take the fat
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carry out mammoth hunts, but also a social organization complex enough to share the food from the relatively rare kills.
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VISIT bcFORD.cA OR YOUR bc FORD STORE TO GET THE DEAL YOU WANT AND THE VEHIcLE YOU WANT TODAY. WISE BUYERS READ THE LEGAL COPY: Vehicle(s) may be shown with optional equipment. Dealer may sell or lease for less. Limited time offers. Offers only valid at participating dealers. Retail offers may be cancelled or changed at any time without notice. See your Ford Dealer for complete details or call the Ford Customer Relationship Centre at 1-800-565-3673. For factory orders, a customer may either take advantage of eligible raincheckable Ford retail customer promotional incentives/offers available at the time of vehicle factory order or time of vehicle delivery, but not both or combinations thereof. Retail offers not combinable with any CPA/GPC or Daily Rental incentives, the Commercial Upfit Program or the Commercial Fleet Incentive Program (CFIP).¥ Offer valid between January 5, 2016 and February 1, 2016 (the “Offer Period”) to Canadian residents. Receive $500
Available in most new Ford vehicles with 6-month towards the purchase or lease of a new 2015 or 2016 Ford Fusion, or $750 towards the purchase or lease of a new 2015 or 2016 Ford Mustang (excluding 50th Anniversary Edition and Shelby), Taurus, Edge, Flex, Explorer, Escape, Expedition, Transit Connect, E-Series Cutaway, Transit, F-150, F-250 to F-550 (all F-150 Raptor models excluded) (each an “Eligible Vehicle”). Only one (1) bonus offer may be applied towards the purchase or lease pre-paid subscription of one (1) Eligible Vehicle. Taxes payable before offer amount is deducted. Offer is not raincheckable.*Until February 1, 2016, receive 0% annual percentage rate (APR) purchase financing on new 2016: Flex models for up to 60 months, or 2015: Focus BEV, C-MAX, Mustang (excl. Shelby and 50th Anniversary), F-150 SuperCab XL (except in Quebec) and 2016: Focus, C-MAX, Taurus, Escape, F-150 Regular Cab (excl. XL 4X2) 5.0L, F-150 SuperCab,
F-150 SuperCrew 4X4, F-250 Gas Engine models for up to 72 months, or 2015: Focus (excluding BEV) and 2016: Fusion models for up to 84 months to qualified retail customers, on approved credit (OAC) from Ford Credit Canada Limited. Not all buyers will qualify for the lowest interest rate. Example: $25,000 purchase financed at 0% APR for 48/ 60/ 72/ 84 months, monthly payment is $520.84/ $416.67/ $347.22/ $297.62, cost of borrowing is $0 or APR of 0% and total to be repaid is $25,000. Down payment on purchase financing offers may be required based on approved credit from Ford Credit Canada Limited.** Until February 1, 2016, receive $500/ $750/ $1,000/ $1,500/ $1,750/ $2,000/ $2,500/ $2,750/ $3,500/ $3,750/ $4,000/ $4,250/ $4,500/ $5,000/ $5,750/ $6,000/ $7,750/ $8,750/ $10,000/ $11,500 in “Manufacturer Rebates” (Delivery Allowances) with the purchase or lease of a new 2016: Edge, Explorer, Escape/ 2015: Focus, C-MAX; 2016: Fusion/ 2016: Expedition/ 2016: Transit Connect, E-Series Cutaway, Transit / 2015: Edge/ 2016: F-250 Gas Engine, F-350 to F-450 (excl. Chassis Cabs) Gas Engine/ 2015: E-Series Cutaway, Transit/ 2016: F-150 Regular Cab (excl. XL 4X2) 5.0L/ 2016: F-350 to F-550 Chassis Cabs/ 2015: Taurus SE; 2016: F-150 SuperCab, F-150 SuperCrew 4X4/ 2016: F-250 Diesel Engine, F-350 to F-450 (excl. Chassis Cabs) Diesel Engine/ 2015: Fiesta, Fusion, Explorer, Escape/ 2015: Flex, F-350 to F-550 Chassis Cabs/ 2015: Transit Connect/ 2015: Taurus (excluding SE)/ 2015: Expedition/ 2015: F-150 Regular Cab (excl. XL 4X2) 5.0L / 2015: F-150 SuperCrew 4X4/ 2015: F-150 SuperCab, F-250 Gas Engine, F-350 to F-450 (excl. Chassis Cabs) Gas Engine/ 2015: F-250 Diesel Engine, F-350 to F-450 (excl. Chassis Cabs) Diesel Engine – all stripped chassis, F-150 Raptor, Medium Truck, Mustang Shelby and 50th Anniversary excluded. Delivery allowances are not combinable with any fleet consumer incentives.^ Until February 1, 2016, lease a new 2016: F-150 Regular Cab (excl. XL 4X2) 5.0L, F-150 SuperCab, F-150 SuperCrew 4X4 for up to 24 months, or a 2015: Edge and 2016: Fusion, Taurus, Edge, Flex models for up to 36 months, or a 2016: Focus, C-MAX, Escape for up to 48 months, and get 0% APR on approved credit (OAC) from Ford Credit Canada Limited. Not all buyers will qualify for the lowest APR payment. Lease a model with a value of $30,000 at 0% APR for up to 36/48 months with an optional buyout of $13,200/ $10,800 and $0 down or equivalent trade in, monthly payment is $466.67/ $400.00, total lease obligation is $16,800.12/$19,200.00, interest cost of leasing is $0 or 0% APR. Additional payments required for PPSA (RDPRM for Quebec), registration, security deposit, NSF fees (where applicable), excess wear and tear, and late fees. Some conditions and mileage restrictions apply. Excess kilometrage charges are 12¢per km for Fiesta, Focus, C-MAX, Fusion and Escape; 16¢per km for E-Series, Mustang, Taurus, Taurus-X, Edge, Flex, Explorer, F-Series, MKS, MKX, MKZ, MKT and Transit Connect; 20¢per km for Expedition and Navigator, plus applicable taxes. Excess kilometrage charges subject to change, see your local dealer for details. All prices are based on Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price.≠Based on IHS Automotive: Polk Canadian Total New Registration data year-end data 2009 – 2015.†Remember that even advanced technology cannot overcome the laws of physics. It’s always possible to lose control of a vehicle due to inappropriate driver input for the conditions. ‡ F-Series is the best-selling line of pickup trucks in Canada for 50 years in a row based on Canadian Vehicle Manufacturers’ Association statistical sales report up to 2015 year end.©2015 Sirius Canada Inc. “SiriusXM”, the SiriusXM logo, channel names and logos are trademarks of SiriusXM Radio Inc. and are used under licence.©2015 Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited. All rights reserved.
ON NOW AT YOUR BC GMC DEALERS. BCGMCDEALERS.CA 1-800-GM-DRIVE. GMC is a brand of General Motors of Canada. Offers apply to the lease of a 2016 Terrain SLE-1 AWD (3SA), and purchase or finance of a 2015 Sierra 1500 Double/Crew Cab and Sierra 2500HD. License, insurance, registration, administration fees, dealer fees, PPSA and taxes not included. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Limited time offers which may not be combined with other offers, and are subject to change without notice. Offers apply to qualified retail customers in BC GMC Dealer Marketing Association area only. Dealer order or trade may be required. †† Lease based on a purchase price of $31,010, including $670 Loyalty Cash (tax exclusive) and $500 lease cash (tax exclusive) for a new eligible 2016 Terrain SLE-1 AWD (3SA). Bi-weekly payment is $182 for 48 months at 0.9% APR, on approved credit to qualified retail customers by GM Financial. Annual kilometre limit of 20,000 km, $0.16 per excess kilometre. $0 down payment and a $0 security deposit is required. Payment may vary depending on down payment or trade. Total obligation is $18,912, plus applicable taxes. Option to purchase at lease end is $12,886. Price and total obligation exclude license, insurance, registration, taxes and optional equipment. Other lease options are available. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Limited-time offer, which may not be combined with other offers. See your dealer for conditions and details. General Motors of Canada Company reserves the right to amend or terminate this offer, in whole or in part, at any time without prior notice. * Offer valid to eligible retail lessees in Canada who have entered into a lease agreement with GM Financial and accept delivery between January 5 and February 1, 2016, of a new or demonstrator 2016 model year GMC model excluding Canyon 2SA. General Motors of Canada will pay two biweekly lease payments as defined on the lease agreement (inclusive of taxes and any applicable pro-rata amount normally due at lease delivery as defined on the lease agreement). After the first two biweekly payments, lessee will be required to make all remaining scheduled payments over the remaining term of the lease agreement. PPSA/RDPRM is not due. Consumer may be required to pay dealer fees. Insurance, license and applicable taxes not included. Additional conditions and limitations apply. GM reserves the right to modify or terminate this offer at any time without prior notice. See dealer for details. ^ Offer available to qualified retail customers in Canada for vehicles delivered between January 5 and February 1, 2016. 0% purchase financing offered on approved credit by TD Auto Finance Services, Scotiabank® or RBC Royal Bank for 84 months on select new or demonstrator 2015 GMC Sierra 1500 Double Cab 2WD 1SA / Crew Cab 2WD 1SA and Sierra HD’s 1SA 2WD with gas engine. Participating lenders are subject to change. Rates from other lenders will vary. Down payment, trade and/or security deposit may be required. Monthly payment and cost of borrowing will vary depending on amount borrowed and down payment/trade. Example: $45,000 at 0% APR, the monthly payment is $535.71 for 84 months. Cost of borrowing is $0, total obligation is $45,000. Offer is unconditionally interest-free. Freight, air tax ($100, if applicable) included. License, insurance, registration, PPSA/movable property registry fees, applicable taxes and dealer fees not included. Dealers may sell for less. Limited time offer which may not be combined with certain other offers. GM Canada may modify, extend or terminate offers in whole or in part at any time without notice. Conditions and limitations apply. See dealer for details. ®Registered trademark of The Bank of Nova Scotia. RBC and Royal Bank are registered trademarks of Royal Bank of Canada. † $12,000 is a combined total credit consisting of $1,000 Loyalty Cash (tax inclusive) and a $11,000 manufacturer to dealer cash credit (tax exclusive) for a 2015 Sierra HD gas models (excluding 1SA 4x2), which is available for cash purchases only and cannot be combined with special lease and finance rates. By selecting lease or finance offers, consumers are foregoing this $11,000 credit which will result in higher effective interest rates. Discounts vary by model. ‡ $10,380 is a combined total credit consisting of a $3,000 manufacturer-to-dealer delivery credit (tax exclusive) $5,195 Cash Credit (tax exclusive) available on 2015 GMC Sierra Double Cab 1SA 4WD models, $1,000 Owner Cash (tax inclusive), $750 manufacturer-to-dealer Elevation Package Discount Credit (tax exclusive) for 2015 Sierra 1SA Elevation Edition with 5.3L Engine and a $435 manufacturer-to-dealer cash credit (tax exclusive) on any 2015 GMC Sierra Elevation Double Cab AWD with a 5.3L engine, which is available for cash purchases only and cannot be combined with special lease and finance rates. By selecting lease or finance offers, consumers are foregoing this $5,630 credit, which will result in higher effective interest rates. Discounts vary by model. ¥ Offer applies to eligible current owners or lessees of any model year 1999 or newer car that has been registered and insured in Canada in the customer’s name for the previous consecutive six (6) months. Credit valid towards the retail purchase or lease of one eligible 2015 Sierra or 2016 model year GMC SUV, crossover and pickups models delivered in Canada between January 5 and February 1, 2016. Credit is a manufacturer to consumer incentive (tax inclusive) and credit value depends on model purchased: $750 credit available on eligible GMC vehicles (except Canyon 2SA, Sierra 1500 and HD); $1,000 credit available on all 2015 and 2016 GMC Sierra models. Offer is transferable to a family member living within the same household (proof of address required). As part of the transaction, dealer may request documentation and contact General Motors of Canada Company to verify eligibility. This offer may not be redeemed for cash and may not be combined with certain other consumer incentives. Certain limitations or conditions apply. Void where prohibited. See your GM Canada dealer for details.
Page 12
Friday, January 15, 2016
by the former Conservative government in 2011 was that it was based on population, with no age component. “As you age your health care costs become higher and higher,” Lake said. “So to have a pure per-capita transfer actually was a disadvantage for populations that were older,
NEWS
such as British Columbia, and much more of an advantage to populations like Alberta that are younger.” Lake and Premier Christy Clark noted that B.C. is on track to double the number of hospice beds for terminally ill patients, to help keep up with the aging baby boom population and those who are moving west to retire. “We talk about palliative care, we talk about care for people with dementia, we talk about hospice care,” Clark said. “That’s expensive, and that’s why the old funding formula needs to be restored.” The previous formula was introduced by former Liberal prime
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B.C. seeks relief for aging population costs minister Paul Martin, who in 2004 agreed to six per cent annual increases to provincial health transfers in what he called “a fix for a generation.” After the Conservative majority government was elected in 2011, then-finance minister Jim Flaherty tied health care increases T:10.333” to economic growth, with a minimum increase of three per cent per year, to begin in 2017. In a campaign stop in B.C. last fall, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised to add another $3 billion to the health care budget to start, and “sit down with the provinces immediately” to renegotiate the formula.
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That meeting is set for Jan. 20 and 21 in Vancouver, chaired by federal Health Minister Jane Philpott. Studies by the Canadian Institute for Health Information confirm the steep increase in health care costs for people as they enter their senior years, much of it for end-oflife care.
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FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 2016 PAGE 13
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Kimberley Building Supplies 250-427-2400 335 Jennings Avenue, Kimberley
Cranbrook Sharks “Tim Horton” Sharks
Kimberley Novice
Proud of our community and our hockey players.
Jason
WHEELDON
P E R S O N A L R E A L E S TAT E C O R P O R AT I O N
EAST KOOTENAY REALTY
250-426-8211 250-426-9482 25-10th Ave S, Cranbrook www.cranbrookrealty.com jason@cranbrookrealty.com
WE ARE PROUD TO SUPPORT MINOR HOCKEY!
We Support Minor Hockey in the East Kootenay We carry a wide selection of new and used sports equipment – skates, sticks, pucks and hockey gear. Family Consignment and Sporting Goods
380 Wallinger Avenue, Kimberley 250-427-2512
PAGE 14
FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 2016
DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN
CELEBRATING MINOR HOCKEY
Kimberley Novice
Cranbrook Grizzlies “A&W” Novice
From one hard-working team to another;
“Good Luck!”
BAVARIAN HOME HARDWARE 235 Spokane Street, Kimberley
PH: 250-427-2667 FAX: 250-427-2621
Cranbrook “Key City Drywall” Novice
SCORE
BIG!
W hen you shop at:
Open 8am - 8pm 7 days a week
335 Ross Street Kimberley 250-427-4444
Cranbrook “Kal Tire” Novice
Proud to Support Minor Hockey 250-426-4056
Cranbrook “M&R Electric” Novice
Ryan’s Cell 250-421-8195 keycitydrywall@shaw.ca
Cranbrook Royals “CranbrookForSale.com” Novice
Tip Top Chimney Service Proud to Support Minor Hockey! • Chimney Sweeping • Fireplace & Woodstove Servicing • Visual Inspections & Installations • WETT Certified Technicians • Pool Table Service & Installation Phone: 250-919-3643 • Email: tiptopchimneys@gmail.com • “ Sweeping the Kootenays Clean”
DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN
CELEBRATING MINOR HOCKEY
Kimberley Atom Development
FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 2016 PAGE 15
Kimberley Atom Competitive
Proud supporter of our Minor Hockey Industrial • Residential • Commercial
Cranbrook Orange Crushers “McDonalds” Atom
Phone 250-427-4208 • Fax 250-427-6074
Cranbrook Vipers “McDonalds” Atom
Proud to sponsor our Atom hockey teams! 1405 Cranbrook Street North, Cranbrook • 250-426-7767
Cranbrook Thunder Crackers “McDonalds” Atom
Cranbrook Royals “McDonalds” Atoms
Mountain Spirit Resort is proud to support Minor Hockey! www.mountainspiritresort.ca 1-877-432-6006
PAGE 16
FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 2016
DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN
CELEBRATING MINOR HOCKEY
Cranbrook Jets “Players Bench” Atom
Kimberley Peewee Development
If we don’t have it – we’ll get it.
SANDOR
RENTAL EQUIPMENT LTD. 250-426-5254 • 1-800-561-5254
info@sandorrentals.com • www.sandorequipment.com
Kimberley Peewee Competitive
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250-427-2276
www.kootenayinsurance.ca
Cranbrook “Culligan Waters” Peewee
Proud to support Minor Hockey!
Signal Collision Kimberley Hwy 95A • Kimberley • 250-427-7462
Cranbrook “Western Roofing” Peewee
At Signal Collision Ltd., we put over 30 years of experience to work for your car. With state-ofthe-art equipment, factory-certified parts and Licensed Technicians, we’ll get you back on the road quickly and safely.
Cranbrook Kings “H&R Block” Peewee Tier 3
We are so very proud of our teams and their spirit! 822 Cranbrook St. N. Cranbrook • 426-5201 www.dailytownsman.com
PROUD TO SUPPORT MINOR HOCKEY IN OUR COMMUNITIES
335 Spokane Street Kimberley • 427-5333 www.dailybulletin.ca
Missing Photos: Cranbrook Eagles Peewee Tier 2 Cranbrook Knights Midget Tier 2
DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN
CELEBRATING MINOR HOCKEY
Cranbrook “Key City Drywall” Bantam House
Cranbrook “Players Bench” Bantam House TEAMWORK MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
Pass • Shoot
SCORE!
Southeast B.C.’s Law Firm
Cranbrook – Fernie – Kimberley – Invermere Toll Free: 1-866-427-0111 www.rockieslaw.com
FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 2016 PAGE 17
Fire & Water Restoration Insurance Claims 24 Hour Service Emergency Service Insurance Claim Specialists
1201 Industrial Rd. #3, Cranbrook, BC Ph: 250-426-5057
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PROUD SUPPORTERS OF OUR COMMUNITY
Cranbrook Pest Control
BLUE SKY REALTY
250-426-8700 1111 Cranbrook St. N. www.blueskyrealty.ca www.mls.ca
Each office independently owned and operated.
“Proud to sponsor the “Bantam AA Team” • Residential • Commercial • Infra-red Thermal Inspection
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Cranbrook ICE Midget Tier 3
PROUDLY SUPPORTING CRANBROOK & KIMBERLEY MINOR HOCKEY FOR 22 YEARS
PLAYERS BENCH The Hockey Source
1001 Cranbrook Street. N. Cranbrook, BC V1C3S4 Phone: 250-489-5969 Email: bench20@shaw.ca
PAGE 18
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FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 2016
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ARIES (March 21-April 19) You have an element of conservative practicality running through your plans and actions. Others could be taken aback by your new stance. You are full of energy, and are willing to take a leap of faith. Your impulsiveness seems to be in check. Tonight: Dance the night away! TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You might want to be in charge, but the smart decision would be to let someone else have the final say. You could be far too worried about the ramifications. A conversation with a partner will help you zero in on what you want. Tonight: Keep it relaxed and quiet at home. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Zero in on what you want. Don’t be too tough on a special person in your life. You’ll be heard, as long as you don’t become too crazy. Listen to someone who is very controlling and difficult. You can’t bypass this person, as much as you might want to. Tonight: Where the action is.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You could be off-kilter and trying to get past a problem. You might not feel up to snuff, but you have to deal with some issues. A sense of having too much ground to cover is very likely to weigh you down. Understand what is motivating you right now. Tonight: A must appearance. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Reach out to someone at a distance. You might feel as if there is a problem with a creative process. You will wonder which direction it is best to head in. Someone could be pushing you down a certain path. There is a lot of tension around you. Tonight: Initiate the weekend properly. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You could be on top of a personal matter and might want some time with a family member. Still, a conversation is necessary, and this person might be holding you back. Understand what is happening around a key relationship. You need the other party’s support. Tonight: Make nice. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Defer to others, and stay in touch with what you want. Be willing to discuss an issue with someone, even if it makes you uncomfortable. Once you get past a problem, you’ll feel more in sync with this person. Make exciting plans for the weekend. Tonight: Hang out with your pals. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Pace yourself, and take your time with a financial matter. Listen to what is suggested, and know it is coming down the pike. Listen to news more openly, and be willing to pitch in. You could be overtired and not make the most appropriate judgments. Tonight: Put up your feet. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You could be overly serious and determined. Tap into your creativity, and you will fly past a problem quickly and with efficiency. Be careful with your spending, and don’t allow a pressured situation to get the best of you. Tonight: Get into weekend mode quickly! CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You can push and prod as much as you want, but you won’t get as
far as you would like to. A difficult situation is likely to emerge if you keep pressuring yourself. Instead, make the most of the moment. You might need some time away from others. Tonight: Head home for a nap. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You could be in a position where you can’t seem to satisfy a friend or get an issue resolved. You are likely to try different approaches to the same issue. Be more forthright in your dealings with others. Don’t take anything too seriously. Tonight: Hightail it out the door. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Be aware of the importance of handling your finances a certain way. Think in terms of making a change that might feel somewhat difficult or unpleasant, at best. Consider your options with an eye to lightening the mood. A parent or boss could be touchy. Tonight: Indulge a little. BORN TODAY Civil-rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. (1929), music producer Skrillex (1988), rapper Pitbull (1981)
Tundra
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Garfield
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16
Mon Form th is Ba at ck!
Includes: • SD#5, SD#6 days off notice. • Kootenay Ice Schedule • Kimberley Dynamiters Schedule • Fantastic landscape photos of our region shot by local residents. Available at: • 2nd Street Fire Hall • City Hall • Leisure Services • Cranbrook Daily Townsman • Kimberley Daily Bulletin
Rhymes with Orange
By Hillary B. Price
ANNIE’S MAILBOX by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Annie: I met my husband in college. He was outgoing, handsome and a star athlete. We now have two beautiful babies and, I thought, a perfect marriage. A month ago, we had dinner with a couple we’ve known for years. One of them said something about “bisexuals,” to which I replied, “There is no such thing. You are either gay or straight.” Everyone looked uncomfortable. The next day, my husband told me said that he is bisexual. He said he’d had a relationship with another man in college before he met me. But he reassured me that I had nothing to worry about because he loves me and has no desire to be with anyone else of either sex. Annie, I wish he’d never told me. I’ve been upset ever since. I believe my husband when he says he is not interested in anyone else, but I have to ask, is there really such a thing as “bisexual”? My sister says that is just what people claim before they come out as gay. And second, how can I trust my husband when he kept this secret from me for so long? Please don’t suggest counseling. My husband says there is nothing to “change” about him, although he says he will go if I insist. But what if we go and then, just like my sister says, this bisexual stuff is all bogus and he decides he is gay? I don’t want to end our marriage. I just want to turn back the clock so I can think of my husband the way I did before. -- Confused Wife Dear Confused: Your sister is giving you damaging and incorrect information. Decades ago, people may have believed that one was either gay or straight, and that bisexuals were simply hiding their true selves, but this is no longer considered accurate. We have come to understand that sexuality is more complicated and that some people are attracted to both sexes. And one’s sexual orientation has nothing to do with remaining faithful to one’s partner. Your husband is the same man you fell in love with. If you trust him, your marriage is solid. Please look into PFLAG (pflag.org) which can offer information that will help you understand what’s going on. But if you find that your marriage is floundering over this, consider counseling from someone who specializes in LGBT marriages and can address your specific concerns. Dear Annie: Your response to “A.,” about kids learning to balance a checkbook was wrong. The kids finishing school today are dumber than a box of rocks. What exactly are they being taught as “required” subjects if not exactly that? I shudder to think what schools are releasing into society. Kids can barely articulate what they want, much less formulate a complete sentence. Obviously, common sense has been put aside. Basic math is important. We have a generation of know-nothings. -Embarrassed About the Next Generation Dear Embarrassed: We suggest you check out the classroom of the average 6th grader and see how well you do. And don’t forget the 20 pounds of textbooks and homework in your backpack. Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@ creators.com, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. You can also find Annie on Facebook at Facebook. com/AskAnnies. 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 2016 CREATORS.COM
KTLA 5 Morning News at 7 ¨DAILY ¨ TOWNSMAN KTLA KTLA News / DAILY BULLETIN Texas Ranger Texas Ranger ≠ ≠ WGN-A Funny Videos Movie Ø Ø EA1 Movie Movie Varied Cante ∂ ∂ VISN Robi Cope Meyer 700 102 102 105 105
MM SRC
Playlist Robin Mike
KTLA News Celeb Celeb Jerry Springer Texas Ranger Heat of Night Heat of Night Var. Programs Movie Varied Programs Mass Varied Tribal Varied Wine Keep Playlist Playlist Playlist Playlist Conan Gar Salmigondis Caillou Varied Marina Orsini Ric’do Si
Monday Afternoon/Evening
Maury News at 1pm Heat of Night Blue Bloods (:15) Movie Var. Programs Sue Thomas Marcus Welby Jimmy Kimmel Tonight Show TJ Pour le plaisir
Steve Wilkos Blue Bloods (:10) Movie Ironside Chris Simp Downton A.
PUZZLES
January January 18 CLEARANCE
4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30
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FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 2016 PAGE 19
Bang! Bang! South Tosh.0 At Mid. Conan Cleve 30 vies Parent Auberge-chien En haut Le Téléjournal
Bang! TJ C.-
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Selected Bras Briefs P.J.s Nighties Corsets Accessories
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URBAN RESTORATION EST. 2015
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YEAR-END CLEARANCE! January 9-31
Because up to 50% OFF CHRISTMAS, Every Day HOME DECOR and is Special FURNITURE! Mon-Sat, 10:30-5:30
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PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER
Fill in the grid so that every row (nine cells wide), every column (nine cells tall) and every box (three cells by three cells) contain the digits 1 through 9 in any order. There is only one solution for each puzzle.
DAILYTOWNSMAN/DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN DAILY BULLETIN
PAGE 20 JANUARY 15, 201615, 2016 PAGE 20 FRIDAY, Friday, January
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LOST: WALKING STICK with dog’s head, in parking lot at Jim Smith Lake on Thursday, Jan 7/16. If found, please call,
STOLEN $10,000 REWARD CALL: 403-703-4777
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ON THE WEB:
1998 Dodge Ram 3500 Dually, Auto Bankz Air Intake Insignia on front fender. White with White Canopy, ALBERTA PLATE BNF-3571, Odometer 67,000 miles. Stolen from WESTERN RV DEC. 9TH, KELOWNA. Police FILE #67985-2015 $10,000 REWARD TO ANYONE GIVING INFORMATION LEADING TO THE RETURN OF THIS TRUCK. CALL KELOWNA RCMP WITH ANY INFORMATION or CRIMESTOPPERS.
Remembering Horst Riemann’s smiling blue eyes will be missed by all indeed, and he has left behind a legacy of wonderful memories and experiences that will be cherished by all he touched for years to come. April 26, 1940 1944 – January 17, 2015
The Riemann family.
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In Loving Memory of
Angela Gioia Meshwa “Angie”
2PTILYSL`
>HSSPUNLY (]LU\L 2PTILYSL` )* ;LS!
-LYUPL
:\P[L ;OPYK (]LU\L -LYUPL )* ;LS! PUMV'YVJRPLZSH^ JVT c ^^^ YVJRPLZSH^ JVT
Sept. 6, 1936 - Jan. 16, 2014
Loving & missing you. Gus, Melanie & Bill, Chris & Karen, Erma & Mores, Sandy & Barry, Grandchildren & Great Grandchildren.
In Loving Memory of
Hands that Serve – Hearts that Care End of Life? Bereavement? May we help? We offer free and confidential services; Companionship, Resource Information, Respite & Bereavement Support. Donations gratefully accepted – Volunteers always welcome. Call (250) 417-2019 or Toll Free 1-855-2019
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“Go Blue Jays Go!”
MONUMENTS
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1926
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INES JOHNSON November 27, 1927 - December 18, 2015 With great sadness we announce the passing of Ines Johnson (nee DeCecco). Joining in Heaven her father Giulio, mother Germina (nee Del Cozzo), sister Lydia LePage, brother Bruno, and husband James Edward (1997). Left to mourn her passing are sons Ross (Flora) and Gary, and grandchildren Sarah and Adam. Ines enjoyed childhood in Wycliffe BC, moving with family to Cranbrook where she attended high school and graduated from the St. Eugene Hospital School of Nursing (1949). She practiced nursing in Toronto, Bermuda and then in Vancouver at the General and St Paul’s Hospitals. She and Ed married in 1954 and raised their family in North Vancouver. Mom enjoyed watching sports, reading, keeping in touch with old friends, and crosswords but most of all she loved her grandchildren, cats, and gardens. We thank the caring people at Lynn Valley Care Centre, her home during recent years. At Ines’ request there will be no service and in lieu of flowers please donate to the Union Gospel Mission or Salvation Army. Messages to her family may be left at Remembering.ca.
We will invest your gift wisely. We will carry out your wishes. We will ensure your gift has lasting impact. We will honour your generosity. The loss of a loved one is a time of profound sadness. We offer our condolences. When the time is right, we would be honoured to help you to ensure the legacy of your loved one is felt in our community forever. 250.426.1119 www.cranbrookcf.ca
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Mildred Verna “Millie” Sparling (née Osborne)
INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT SCHOOL. Hands-On Tasks. Start Weekly. GPS Training! Funding & Housing Avail! Job Aid! Already a HEO? Get certification proof. Call 1-866-399-3853 or go to: iheschool.com
Career Service / Job Search
Services
Services
Help Wanted
Financial Services
Financial Services
EAGLE PLUMBING & MECHANICAL LTD, Kimberley BC., is looking for a Journeyman plumber/gastter to start immediately. Wage will be according to experience.
GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com
Accounting/Tax/ Bookkeeping
250-427-7471
E • RE C YCL
LE • REC YC
Mildred passed away peacefully on December 22, 2015 in Victoria BC at the age of 93. Predeceased by her husband, Robert (Bob) Sparling and her daughter, Sharon Sparling, Mildred is survived by her daughters, Gloria McDonald (Randy) of Victoria BC, and Mary Tiberghien (Peter) of Grand Forks BC; grandchildren, Seanna McDonald, Jenna Flynn, Sabrina Brown (Nathan), Sarah Robinson (Dan), and Robert McDonald (Amber); great grandchildren, Ashley, Jasmine, Noah, Henry, Skyler and Everett; her siblings, Bill Osborne, Lou Osborne, Ron Osborne and Shirley Gunn and numerous nieces and nephews. A memorial service will be held in the spring of 2016, when the daffodils are in bloom - date to be confirmed. A detailed obituary for Millie can be found at: www.dignitymemorial.ca.
Services
Employment
LE • REC YC
Obituaries
If you see a wildfire, report it to
1-800-663-5555 or *5555
E • RE C YCL
Obituaries
Friday, January 15, 2016 FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 2016 PAGE PAGE 21 21
on most cellular networks.
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
TAX FREE MONEY is available, if you are a homeowner, today! We can easily approve you by phone. 1st, 2nd or 3rd mortgage money is available right now. Rates start at Prime. Equity counts. We don’t rely on credit, age or income. Call Anytime 1-800-639-2274 or 604-430-1498. Apply online www.capitaldirect.ca
Want the L AT E S T news, sports, politics and entertainment?
IN NEED OF A
BOOKKEEPER?
I have over 15 years experience doing books for various companies in the East Kootenays. I can take your company from start-up to year-end prep. Contact Melissa at
~ 250-581-1328 ~
Contractors
GIRO
• Construction • Renovations • Roofing • Siding • Sundeck Construction • Fully Insured • No PST charged between Apr. 1 - Sept. 30, 2015 We welcome any restorational work!
(250) 426-8504
YOUR LOCAL EMPLOYMENT SPECIALISTS
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A: 24 -11th Ave S, Cranbrook
W: ekemployment.org
The Employment Program of British Columbia is funded by the Government of Canada and the Province of British Columbia.
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.
Columbia Tech Services _______
HOUSE SITTER
PLAN DESIGN
Winter client canceled due to health reasons.
New construction, Additions, Renovations, Electrical, Landscape
available immediately.
Cranbrook area preferred. Call Steve at:
250-919-0393
For all your business or residential computer service needs, call Sandy for onsite service.
_______
Phone/text 250-489-9212 columbiatech1985@shaw.ca Serving the Kootenays since 1985
~ HANDYMAN ~
References available.
Start with a good set of plans and be assured your investment will FEEL, FUNCTION and LOOK GREAT!
IN NEED OF A
BOOKKEEPER?
I have over 15 years experience doing books for various companies in the East Kootenays. I can take your company from start-up to year-end prep. Contact Melissa at
~ 250-581-1328 ~
LEIMAN
Jody ~ 250-919-1575
Chimney Sweeping Fireplace & Woodstove Servicing Visual Inspections and Installations Gutter Cleaning Available
Established custom builder for over 30 years.
No job too small.
Certified Journeyman Carpenters
Richard Hedrich 250-919-3643
Reliable Quotes Member of the new home warranty program.
tiptopchimneys @gmail.com
CLASSIFIEDS WILL SELL WHAT YOU WANT SOLD!
CALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202
www.leimanhomes.ca Kevin 250-421-0110 Krister 250-919-1777
“I read world and local news.”
Starting wage $16/hour plus $10/hour vehicle allowance.
Pets & Livestock
Please send a covering email and resume to: gm@impactbrochuresystems.com • 1.866.609.2137
Livestock “I turn to sports with Taylor Rocca.”
Grand Forks Credit Union has an exciting career opportunity for an experienced Information Technology Systems Support Technician. As the first point of contact for employees and directors, strong teamwork and interpersonal skills are required to effectively support and communicate with users at all levels of expertise in matters related to the installation and use of GFCU technology tools. Working together with the Technology & Systems Administrator, you will be responsible for a variety of tasks including the day-to-day oversight of GFCU’s computer systems and networks, hardware and software and problem resolution. Find out more about this career opportunity at www.creditunioncareers.ca where you will find a detailed overview of the position, qualifications and application details. www.gfdscu.com • 447 Market Avenue, Grand Forks
HOLSTEIN milk cow for sale; good producer. $2650 250428-6264
Pets 3 MALE Jack Russell puppies, born Oct 31, Vet checked, dewormed, 4 way vaccination. $600. call 250-342-1125
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
IT Systems Support Technician
KOOTENAY DUCT CLEANERS Locally owned & operated. Affordable, professional, & insured Duct Cleaning Services & System Sterilizations. Toll free 1.844.428.0522 FREE Estimates
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822 Cranbrook Street North CRANBROOK
426-5201
335 Spokane Street KIMBERLEY
427-5333
Flyer Distribution Standards Association
Is Reading Your True Passion? Love Local News & Politics? Desire More Sports?
Help Wanted
Care for Classifieds?
“Sweeping the Kootenay’s Clean”
General carpentry, drywall, painting, and renovations.
250-427-6406
We require an energetic and responsible person to deliver BC maps, magazines and brochures in Cranbrook, Kimberley and area. You must be: organized, detail oriented, personable, like to work independently, be physically fit, able to lift up to 40 lbs. An appropriate delivery vehicle and some storage is required. Permanent part-time, 2 days a month.
TIP TOP CHIMNEY SERVICES
CUSTOM HOMES
Call Todd at:
Work independently and meet interesting people
www.CHARLTONHOMES.CA
RENOVATION SERVICES
AND RENOVATIONS
Household Services
P/ T Brochure Distributor
Call for Free Estimate from a W.E.T.T Certified Technician
~also available~ Pool table installation and service!!!
FIND EVERYTHING YOU NEED IN THE CLASSIFIEDS
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
Lovey-Dovey for Travel?
250-426-5201
MANAGER, COMMUNITY RELATIONSHIPS Permanent, full-time in our Cranbrook office. Apply before January 27, 2016, noon PT.
Apply at cbt.org/careers 1.800.505.8998
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DAILYTOWNSMAN/DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN DAILY BULLETIN
PAGE 22 FRIDAY, Friday, January PAGE 22 JANUARY 15, 201615, 2016
Merchandise for Sale
Merchandise for Sale
Heavy Duty Machinery
Misc. for Sale
A-Steel Shipping Storage Containers. Used 20’40’45’53’ insulated containers. All sizes in stock. Prices starting under $2,000. Modifications possible doors, windows, walls etc., as office or living workshop etc., Ph Toll free 24 hours 1-866528-7108 or 1-778-298-3192 8am-5pm. Delivery BC and AB www.rtccontainer.com
MOVING SALE Must go by Jan 21rst -Large entertainment unit -Large TV & stand -Small freezer -Small wood table -Book shelves -Clothes
250-426-0405 Open to offers
Misc. for Sale
Misc. Wanted
2003 R8 Cat Snowmobile, new motor, long track, electric start. $3500. Snowmobile Trailer - $600. 1980 GMC pickup 4x4, new metal, c/w 350 on propane. $2500.
250-427-2398
Coin Collector Looking to Buy Collections, Olympic Gold & Silver Coins, Loose, Sets, etc Chad: 1-778-281-0030 Local
Rentals Apt/Condo for Rent For Rent
1 bedroom apartment. $600./month plus D.D. Hydro and heat included. Cranbrook.
Call 250-417-5806
Open Houses
Open Houses
Open Houses Saturday January 16 11:45am - 12:45pm • 903 - 5A Street South 2 bdrm, 1 bath, updates throughout, fenced front yard, 2 sheds, alley access & extra parking. Close to school, town, clinic and parks. 2403656 $169,000 Hosted by: Melanie Walsh
1:00 - 2:00pm • 211 - 4th Avenue South 3 bdrm, 1 bath, new windows, roof, appliances. Spacious rooms, close to schools, park, town. 2409080 $129,900 Hosted by: Melanie Walsh
911 Baker Street • Cranbrook, BC 1-250-426-3355 • Toll Free: 1-888-629-4002
OPEN HOUSES Saturday Jan 16 11:00am - 12:00pm #3010, 2501 - 12th St. N. $135,000 Top floor corner unit. 2 large bdrms, in-suite laundry, covered balcony, elevator, quiet, convenient location. 2401933 Waunita Mackintosh 12:00 - 1:00pm 3308 Mt. Royal Drive $345,088 Large rancher with walk-out bsmt. 5 bdrm, gas fireplace, huge kitchen, main floor laundry, private yard. 2406448 Waunita Mackintosh 12:00 - 1:00pm #29, 2025 Kokanee Drive $263,900 1485 sq ft all on one level. 2 bdrm, 2 bath, gas fireplace, double garage, easy, quiet adult gated community. 2409575 Jay Majkowski
Obituaries
Richard John Clouthier “Dick” 1932 – 2016 Dick was born on February 28, 1932 in Sudbury, Ontario. He joined the Canadian Armed Forces in P.P.C.L.I. remustered to R.C.E.M.E. when he was young. Dick was posted to Germany where he met and married Rosemarie. Dad now had an instant family with Rose and her daughter Elke. After Margaret was born they returned to Petawawa in 1956. Dad built a house and we enjoyed being around our grandparents and great grandparents, numerous grand uncles, aunts, cousins and second cousins. We spent summers on the Point, where the Ottawa River meets the Petawawa River. Dad taught to us swim, fish, play games and on occasion to check the trap line. There was lots of outdoors and fresh air! He purchased an Encyclopedia Britannica set and the Book of Knowledge set, so we would start on the road to a good education. He was a great dancer and wherever there was an opportunity he would cut a rug! There was plenty of singing and laughter in our household when we were youngsters. We sang along to various songs of the day If I Had A Hammer by Peter, Paul and Mary, Peggy Lee’s Rocking Around The Christmas Tree, Jim Reeves, Roger Miller and many more. Every Sunday morning we went church and Christmas and Easter were major celebrations. We were so proud to be a family. Dad loved to help others and wherever he was, had an adopted family who in turn gave him company and the benefit of being a good Samaritan. The next posting was back in Germany in 1962 with lots of short trips to Holland in Den Haag on the North Sea, the Seilersee and visits with mom’s sister Hannah, Walter and their three children and other family. We traveled in grand style in a 1950’s style Lincoln Continental vacationing throughout Europe. The next posting was to Calgary in 1965 RCEME, attached to Fort Garry Horse. We traveled across Canada in two Lincolns with the Moose Horns as roof ornaments. Dad won a pistol shooting competition and did a tour in Cyprus as a peacekeeper for NATO. After the last two postings to Lahr, Germany and Edmonton, Alberta with the Lord Strathcona Horse Regiment, he finished his Military career with the rank of Warrant Officer. He taught us how to ski, play chess, cards, parcheesi, collect coins, bowl, dance sing along to Mitch Miller and to love life. Dad always wanted to share his knowledge with others and taught many people how to hunt, fish and to tell bad jokes. Our Great grandfather Henry ”Harry” was a stone mason who built some of the buildings at Camp Petawawa and helped in the building of Our Lady of Sorrows Catholic Church Petawawa. Granpa Jack worked in the mine in Sudbury Ontario and continued the Clouthier tradition of logging, hunting, fishing and tending the trap line. Dad was proud of a film that was made of him guiding a big game hunt of big horn sheep and his trophy Elk that is listed with the Boone and Crockett. Dad had lifelong friends within the military and outside of it as well. He came to BC to start a new chapter in his life. Due to the connection he shared with Dick and Joyce Davis, dad decided to settle in the Kootenays. Dad built and renovated many houses, the pub at the Bull River Inn and was always hardworking. He worked with the Fernie Forestry Service where met some more great people. He also guided with Lunenberg Outfitters in the Flathead. He collected coins (Numnistetist), and was a member of the Royal Canadian Legion in Cranbrook and also bowled with a league. Dad was cared about by his family, his friends and his neighbours. He loved to talk on the phone and find out how everyone was doing. Dad and the neighbours would meet outside to have a drink and talk by the fire at Doug and Pepper’s place. Cliff and Shirley Sandberg, Tom and Carmen Foull and the Davis family, thank you. Joyce, her son Jack and family all kept dad on track. The last years of his life he enjoyed watching the wildlife and birds on and across the Kootenay River from his porch, a beautiful unparalleled view of the Steeples Range - Bull River Mountain. Hummingbirds would visit the many feeders dad had set up and the bears would visit the apple tree. Dad would spot Elk, Moose, Eagles, and even a family of Otters. Dad ended his days on Colony Road at home in his sleep on January 2, 2016. He spent his last days in a house that he renovated with the same fervor that he had throughout his amazing life - ‘BEAUTIFUL’ - it was the word he used to describe people, compliment and encourage and that he handed out to others - and not too sparingly. We children were always dealt a fair hand and not just at playing cards, monopoly or checkers. Dad had a full and enterprising life and loved to entertain. He was a great story teller. He would say ‘listen’ and then tell a joke or a story that would end with a wide smile and enormous laugh. Dick is survived by his son Richard J. Clouthier Junior, his daughters Margaret J. Clouthier and Elke B. Baines and his nephew Thom (Meredith) Rose and their daughter Brooke. He was predeceased by his father John “Jack” Clouthier, his mother Margaret Alice Whiteside, step-mother Marjorie McLeod and uncle Roy Whiteside all of Petawawa, Ontario. He was also predeceased by his sister Sheila (Art) Rose, nephew Rick Rose, aunt Muriel Charette ,uncle Gerald Whiteside, many aunts, uncles and cousins on the Clouthier side, his most beloved uncle Herb Clouthier of Mattawa and our granpa Jack Clouthier had eleven brothers and sisters who have all passed away as well. A funeral service for Dick will be held at McPherson Funeral Home in Cranbrook on or Monday, January 18, 2016 at 1:00 pm. Arrangements T:2.81” entrusted to McPherson Funeral Service. Condolences for the family can be offered at: www.mcphersonfh.com
12:00 - 1:00pm 1208 - 4th Ave. S. $219,900 Close to schools, lovely 3 bdrm, 2 bath with 1040 sq ft on each floor. New roof, newer furnace & fenced yard. 2409453 Sonia Mama 1:15 - 2:15pm A, 1831 Kelowna Crescent $289,900 Built in 2007, 1058 sq ft per floor, 2+2 bdrm, 2 bath, granite counters, stainless appliances, central air & so much more! 2409437 Sonia Mama
BLUE SKY REALTY
250-426-8700 1111 Cranbrook St. N. www.blueskyrealty.ca www.realtor.ca
Each office independently owned and operated.
A powerful tool when you want to reach your potential customers – the Daily Townsman and Daily Bulletin are invited into over 6,900 homes every day, Monday to Friday.
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ROUTES IN C RANBROOK: 102 - Victoria Ave - 27th Ave S, 3 St S 105 - Kootenay St, 17th &18th Ave N, 6th-8th St S 112 - 3rd & 4th St S, Little Van Horne-2nd Ave S 113 - 3rd & 4th Ave S, Van Horne-4th St S 133 - 5th & 6th St S, 5th-9th Ave S 135 - 12th - 14th St S, 2A & 3rd Ave S 136 - 6th & 7th Ave S,16th St S 146 - Hycrest Trailer Park - 19th Ave S, 10th St S 148 - 20th & 21st Ave S, 7th-10th St S 157 - Innes Ave & Jostad Ave 170 - 3rd-5th Ave S, 4th-6th St S 180 - 4th - 10th St S, 14th Ave S 181 - 10th - 12th Ave S, 12th-14th St S 187 - Victoria Ave, 2nd St N 188 - 31st - 34th Ave S, 6th St S 191 - 4th St S & 31st Ave S 302 - Larch Dr, Spruce Dr
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Drop boxes at Safeway and Save On Foods Food Bank ofce 104-8th Ave. S. • 426-7664 (from 10am-3pm)
#6 Make a grocery list together—kids check off the items.
STORY
NO. 6
This Newspaper. It’s a good read. When crumpled and stuffed in your jacket, it’s a good insulator. That’s what Bethany had to do when she lived on the streets.
This toque. It helped Bethany find a better life. Buy yours at RaisingtheRoof.org or donate $5 by texting TOQUE to 45678. Help the homeless in your community.
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DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN
FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 2016 PAGE 23
SATURDAY & SUNDAY
live dungeness crab small or large 20025434 / 20155636
Kraft Dinner 225 g 20087831
8
98
selected varieties, 900 g 20659603001
on gas. Pump up the joy!
5
19.80 /kg
3 lb BAG clementine 20047551001
ea LIMIT 2
Coca-Cola or Pepsi soft drinks
1.47
20313741002 / 20310546002
AFTER LIMIT
97
selected varieties, 6 X 710 mL
Jamieson vitamin D
8.88
20343239001
AFTER LIMIT
97
LIMIT 2
4.49
20618787
AFTER LIMIT
ea
selected varieties, 315-355 g
LIMIT 4
Bio-true eye care solution
8.27
20573017
AFTER LIMIT
per litre in rewards*
70
or earn
35
ea
Maynard’s candy
when you pay with your
3.5¢
5 lb BAG red grapefruit 20127505001
4
selected varieties, 60-240’s
¢
2
ea
product of USA
87
ea
LIMIT 2
7
Earn
4
45
/lb
product of USA
.99
Kraft Cheez Whiz
ALL
CHECKOUT LANES OPEN GUARANTEED† 10AM - 6PM
per litre with any other payment method
2 X 300 mL
3
ea
2
ea
96
.88
no name® tuna selected varieties, 170 g 20521648
47
11
unless we are unable due to unforeseen technical difficulties. †
LIMIT 4
no name® canola oil
3.49
20028656
AFTER LIMIT
97
ea
LIMIT 4
AFTER LIMIT
17.99
Pick up a card at these participating locations and then register online at pcplus.ca *PC Plus™ gas offers and Superbucks® coupons CANNOT be combined. PC Plus™ option must be selected prior to purchase. Minimum redemption 20,000 points and in increments of 10,000 points thereafter. PC points redemption excludes purchase of tobacco, alcohol products, prescriptions, gift cards, phone cards, lottery tickets, all non-participating third party operations and any other products which are provincially regulated or as we determine from time to time. See pcplus.ca for details. Superbucks and PC Plus gas offers may vary by region and can change without notice. MasterCard is a registered trademark of MasterCard International Incorporated. President’s Choice Bank a licensee of the mark. President’s Choice Financial MasterCard is provided by President’s Choice Financial bank. President’s Choice Financial personal banking products are provided by the direct banking division of CIBC. ®/TM Trademarks of Loblaws Inc. ©2016
4
ea LIMIT 4
AFTER LIMIT
.97
48
3L
no name® plates and bowls assorted types and sizes from $2.47-$7.17
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LIMIT 4
AFTER LIMIT
4.88
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20347595 / 20171541 / 20347727
we match
prıces Every week, we check our major competitors’ flyers and match the price on hundreds of items*.
Prices effective Friday, January 15 to Sunday, January 17, 2016 or while stock lasts. Quantities and/or selection of items may be limited and may not be available in all stores. No rainchecks. No substitutions on clearance items or where quantities are advertised as limited. Advertised pricing and product selection (flavour, colour, patterns, style) may vary by store location. We reserve the right to limit quantities to reasonable family requirements. We are not obligated to sell items based on errors or misprints in typography or photography. Coupons must be presented and redeemed at time of purchase. Applicable taxes, deposits, or environmental surcharges are extra. No sales to retail outlets. Some items may have “plus deposit and environmental charge” where applicable. ®/™ The trademarks, service marks and logos displayed in this flyer are trademarks of Loblaws Inc. and others. All rights reserved. © 2016 Loblaws Inc. * we match prices! Applies only to our major supermarket competitors’ flyer items. Major supermarket competitors are determined solely by us based on a number of factors which can vary by store location. We will match the competitor’s advertised price only during the effective date of the competitor’s flyer advertisement. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES (note that our major supermarket competitors may not). Due to the fact that product is ordered prior to the time of our Ad Match checks, quantities may be limited. We match identical items (defined as same brand, size, and attributes) and in the case of fresh produce, meat, seafood and bakery, we match a comparable item (as determined solely by us). We will not match competitors’ “multi-buys” (eg. 2 for $4), “spend x get x”, “Free”, “clearance”, discounts obtained through loyalty programs, or offers related to our third party operations (post office, gas bars, dry cleaners etc.). We reserve the right to cancel or change the terms of this program at any time. Customer Relations: 1-866-999-9890.
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PAGE 24
DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN
FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 2016
EVERY SAT & SUN 10AM-6PM
ALL CHECKOUT LANES
OPEN GUARANTEED†
great brands, low prices
unless we are unable due to unforseen technical difficulties
†
Ponds cold cream 190 mL or towelletes 30’s selected varieties
3
20348329002
97
4
ea
AFTER LIMIT
5.29
2
20299239009
ea
LIMIT 4 AFTER LIMIT
3.99
100 mL selected varieties
10
98
48
ea
LIMIT 4 AFTER LIMIT
6.49
98
ea
LIMIT 4 AFTER LIMIT
3.29
Rub A535
selected varieties 55-150 g, 105-150 mL 20301292001
17
ea
LIMIT 4 AFTER LIMIT
11.49
98
LIMIT 4 AFTER LIMIT
3
48
Q Tips cotton swabs 500’s
20323077001
3.28
ea
LIMIT 4 AFTER LIMIT
3.99
selected varieties 16-52’s
7
98
OR
11.77
AFTER LIMIT
8.49
EACH
Gravol Liquid Gels 24’s or Multi Symptom Tablets 20’s,
600 mL, selected varieties
11
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LIMIT 4 AFTER LIMIT
23.99
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20 20300094
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LIMIT 4
Gaviscon heartburn relief tabs 60/100’s mLor liquid
selected varieties 20088421
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exact™ protective underwear
Cold-FX capsules 45/60’s, or First Signs 18/48’s
HydraSense nasal spray 20794608
98
Colgate super premium toothpaste 75-175 mL or manual toothbrush or mouthwash 236-250 mL
40-50 m, selected varieties
3
2
20603395/20012414
20840652/20839491
LIMIT 4
48
varieties
107 g, selected varieties
Crest super premium toothpaste 78-170mL, Oral-B manual toothbrush Crest Pro-Health mouthwash 237-500 mL or floss 20327006001
Softsoap foam pump 236 mL, or liquid hand soap refill 828mL, selected
Dove or Axe dry spray antiperspirant
selected varieties
5
20502221
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LIMIT 4 AFTER LIMIT
12.99
98
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LIMIT 4 AFTER LIMIT
6.98
Warm up to the brands you Warm up to thetrust
brands you trust
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Children’s Tylenol suspension liquid 100 mL, Complete 20’s, 100 mL or Motrin 20mL/120 mL, or Aveeno body wash 354 mL selected varieties 20601464
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98 ea
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Tylenol 500 mg Eztabs/caplets 100’s, Motrin 200 mg 90’s, 300 mg 60’s 400 mg 45’s tablets, Aveeno or Neutrogena facial skincare selected varieties 20591909
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LIMIT 4 AFTER LIMIT 8.97
Listerine classic 1 L, or Smart Rinse 500 mL mouthwash, Band-Aids 6-80’s, or Polysporin foot care 5-10’s selected varieties 20348067002
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LIMIT 4 AFTER LIMIT 5.47
Reactine 30/36 liquid gels 25’s Benadryl Allergy 25 mg 100’s Zantac 75/150 mg tablets 50-60’s Pepcid 50-60’s, Imodium caplets or liquid gels 20-24’s selected varieties 20058819001
16
98 ea
LIMIT 4 AFTER LIMIT 19.56
The HEALTHY ESSENTIALS® program provides information, solutions and exclusive offers. *Trademark of Johnson & Johnson. © Johnson & Johnson Inc. 2016. e offers. *Trademark of Johnson & Johnson. © Johnson & Johnson Inc. 2016.
Prices are in effect until Thursday, January 21, 2016 or while stock lasts.
Quantities and/or selection of items may be limited and may not be available in all stores. No rainchecks. No substitutions on clearance items or where quantities are advertised as limited. Advertised pricing and product selection (flavour, colour, patterns, style) may vary by store location. We reserve the right to limit quantities to reasonable family requirements. We are not obligated to sell items based on errors or misprints in typography or photography. Coupons must be presented and redeemed at time of purchase. Applicable taxes, deposits, or environmental surcharges are extra. No sales to retail outlets. Some items may have “plus deposit and environmental charge” where applicable. ®/™ The trademarks, service marks and logos displayed in this flyer are trademarks of Loblaws Inc. and others. All rights reserved. © 2013 Loblaws Inc. * we match prices! Applies only to our major supermarket competitors’ flyer items. Major supermarket competitors are determined solely by us based on a number of factors which can vary by store location. We will match the competitor’s advertised price only during the effective date of the competitor’s flyer advertisement. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES (note that our major supermarket competitors may not). Due to the fact that product is ordered prior to the time of our Ad Match checks, quantities may be limited. We match identical items (defined as same brand, size, and attributes) and in the case of fresh produce, meat, seafood and bakery, we match a comparable item (as determined solely by us). We will not match competitors’ “multi-buys” (eg. 2 for $4), “spend x get x”, “Free”, “clearance”, discounts obtained through loyalty programs, or offers related to our third party operations (post office, gas bars, dry cleaners etc.).We reserve the right to cancel or change the terms of this program at any time. Customer Relations: 1-866-999-9890.
superstore.ca