Lakeshore News, January 22, 2016

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Serving the community for 40 years! Vol: 43 No: 4

Friday, January 22, 2016

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INDEX Breaktime Anytime ......................A2 & A27 Sidewalk........................................................A6 Mall Arkey ....................................................A7 Service Directory .................................... A13 2015 Year in Review...................... A16-A21 Community Calendar............................ A22 Restored sleigh................................. A3

Opening our eyes ............................ A5

Funkin’ Dead....................................A11

Classifieds ......................................... A23-A25

Look for these flyers in this issue • Case Furniture* • M&M Meat Shops* • Walmart Canada* • Maritime Travel* *Not in all locations

Dashing through the snow Above, right: the five- to seven-year-old age group waits to start their two kilometre route at the 32nd annual Reino Keski Salmi Loppet held at Larch Hills on Saturday. Below, left: Five-year-old Ian Culkins skis his route with determination. Find the loppet results on page A8. Sky Stevens photos.

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Friday, January 22, 2016 Lakeshore News A27

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CLUES ACROSS 1. Women (French) 5. Hyrax 8. Distress signal 11. Trade 13. Large northern deer 14. The 3 Wise Men 15. Marten of N Asian forests 16. Hoover’s agency 17. Received an A 18. 2nd Islamic month 20. Light brown 21. Clarified butter used in Indian cookery 22. Frankness 25. Argentina’s capital 30. Citizen of Kenya or Zimbabwe 31. Noah’s boat 32. Family of languages in So. Africa 33. Inappropriate 38. Scientific workplace 41. Hungriness 43. Say to talk about an annoying topic 45. Sing and play for somebody 47. Strike buster 49. A citizen of Thailand 50. Civil Rights group 55. Honest Company’s Jessica 56. ‘__ death do us part 57. Malarias 59. Claim against another’s property 60. Mined metal-bearing mineral 61. Dashery 62. Capacity unit 63. Primary color 64. Indian dress

PUZZLE NO. CW161310

ess n i s u b r U YO Here!

Dec. 22-Jan. 19

Capricorn Jan. 20-Feb. 18

PISCES

Apr.20-May20

Taurus

May 21-June 21

34. ___/Tuck: TV drama 35. Black tropical American cuckoo 36. Chest muscle (slang) 37. Expression of disappointment 39. One who assists 40. Antilles island 41. Served food 42. Egyptian Sun god 44. Performed successfully 45. Cavalry-sword 46. Abba __, Israeli politician 47. Jonas __, cured polio 48. The Muse of history 51. Express pleasure 52. Turkish leader titles 53. Castro country 54. Nobleman 58. ___ Lanka

Gemini

June 22- July 22

Cancer

July 23-Aug. 22

Leo

Aug. 23-Sept. 22

Virgo

Sept. 23-Oct. 22

Libra

Oct. 23-Nov. 21

Scorpio

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SUDOKU

Pisces, there is more going on than meets the eye. You have to pay attention to the subtle undercurrents to figure out fact from fiction.

ARIES

Aries, do not allow distractions to keep you from completing tasks that need to get done. Use your ability to focus to plow through your to-do list and finish in record time.

TAURUS

Taurus, this week you may be tempted to take risks you never would have considered before. Just don’t let excitement get in the way of common sense.

GEMINI

Something totally unexpected will grab your attention in the next few days, Gemini. Trust your intuition to take things slowly and put out all feelers before you forge ahead.

CANCER

Cancer, although you have a plan to reach all of your goals, do not put success ahead of others’ feelings. Be considerate of others even if their efforts are not up to par.

LEO

Leo, proceed with caution in a new friendship or partnership. Test the waters before you devote yourself fully. This approach will ensure you made the right decision.

VIRGO

Virgo, if the potential to be criticized scares you, you may not be inclined to express yourself honestly. Worry less about what others think of you and be confident in yourself.

PUZZLE NO. SU161060 ACCESS APPLET APPLICATION ARCHITECTURE ARCHIVE CABLE CHIP COMPILER COMPRESSION COOKIE CURSOR DEVICE DIRECTORY DOCKING STATION DRIVE ENCODING EXPANSION CARD EXTENSION

LIBRA

HOW TO PLAY: Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken down into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can ANSWER TO PUZZLE NO. SU161060 appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle!

CRYPTO FUN Solve the code to discover words related to computers. Each number corresponds to a letter. (Hint: 3 = o)

Libra, if you’re feeling on edge lately, it may be because you haven’t had a chance to relieve stress. Exercise can be a surefire fix to what ails you, so get up and go.

A. 16 3 21 4 17 3 8 Clue: Screen

SCORPIO

Scorpio, an opportunity presents itself in the weeks ahead, and this will be too good to pass up. Embrace the changes that this opportunity offers.

B. 22 8 3 14 9 12 12 Clue: Operations performed

SAGITTARIUS

Sagittarius, your social life is bustling, but sometimes it can be difficult to keep up with all of the things filling your calendar. You may want to take a few days off.

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C. 22 8 3 7 8 11 Clue: Coded software WS161300

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AQUARIUS

Feb. 19-Mar. 20

Aries

1. Manuscripts (abbr.) 2. Netherlands river 3. Italian island 4. One’s own being 5. More adroit 6. Balkan country 7. Psychologist B.F. 8. Investment group Goldman ___ 9. Double curve 10. The plane of a figure 12. Ocean 14. Public presses 19. Civil Rights activist Parks 23. Cooking container 24. Arctic native 25. Founder of Babism 26. Bashkortostan capital 27. Bulky grayish-brown eagle 28. Louse egg 29. About sight

Career obstacles may pop up from time to time, but you have the commitment to see things through for the long haul. Keep up that perseverance this week.

Aquarius

Mar. 21-Apr. 19

CLUES DOWN

CAPRICORN

You can’t always play the peacemaker, Aquarius. Sometimes you just have to let others fight their own battles and then offer support to those who need it.

Pisces

WORD SEARCH

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Answers: A. monitor B. process C. program D. data

January 22-28

A2 Friday, January 22, 2016 Lakeshore News

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Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News A3

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Restored sleigh a true gem

By Deborah Chapman, curator Picture R.J. Haney Heritage Village mid-winter, blanketed by a fresh snowfall. One of the volunteers, Rosemary Wilson, has shovelled the driveway. A truck pulls up. Unannounced, Danley Carriage and Wheel is about to deliver the last of the vehicles that its owner, Dwayne Danley, has contracted to restore. The vehicle is historic. It is a cutter – a small horse-drawn sleigh. The project, which started almost a year and a half earlier, is coming to a close. Danley takes General Manager Susan Mackie through his restoration. He is a pro. He shows Susan the parts he has replaced and saved for the curator. He knows she’ll want them. Susan marvels. There are Robertson screws. She knows her history. The screws are old enough for this restoration. The seat has been repaired and reupholstered in a rich red-burgundy fabric. Susan

smiles. Wouldn’t you just like to put on a fur coat and a muff and go for a ride? The artefact will be on display in the building we affectionately call the Hanna Shed. It is a modified salt box style single gable building that came from Hanna and Hanna orchard. The democrat, doctor’s buggy and a few other cutters sit there now. A total of four vehicles are now restored. The Shuswap Community Foundation

funded this project. “We’re so grateful,” says Susan. “With all the work we do taking care of the buildings and with the Montebello project starting this month at the Village, we don’t have the resources to restore these artefacts.” People need to see what a lovely job Dwayne Danley did. The curator, yours truly, is making plans to take this cutter on the road to town. I am hoping to arrange for the cutter and maybe a fur coat or two to be at the Mall at Piccadilly for Heritage Week. See you in the third week of February! People need to see what a lovely job Dwayne Danley did. The curator, Deborah Chapman, is making plans to take this cutter on the road to town. She is hoping to arrange for the cutter and maybe a fur coat or two to be at the Mall at Piccadilly for Heritage Week. See you in the third week of February!

Correction, addition to column are supported through the branch, but not on a one-to-one basis. The branch will help

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In last week’s Friends and Neighbours column we stated that Sheila Bibby will be the first female president of the Legion, Br. #62, but there have been two previous female presidents. Comrade Jean Watson and Comrade Carol Mikkelsen each served president of Branch 62 in the 1980s. We regret the error and any inconvenience it may have caused. In addition, the following information was not provided: Volunteer help from the membership is welcome, and volunteers must be members to be covered under the Legion’s insurance policy. The public is welcome in the branch for certain events. The BC Liquor Act requires that because it is a membership club, members must be responsible for any guests that they may bring; and that once a member leaves, the guest must leave with them. Members visiting from other branches are welcome, along with a guest. Veteran programs

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A4 Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News

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HEALTH & BEAUTY Tech tutors needed shuswapmind Can you spare one hour a week, for six to eight weeks, to help a local senior learn basic computer skills? No need to be a computer expert, just a computer user. The Literacy Alliance of the Shuswap Society (LASS) wants to help seniors in Salmon Arm and Area gain the computer skills needed to connect with their families and to participate safely in the computer literate world of 2016. The Cyber Seniors program runs in Salmon Arm and Blind Bay. Please contact Darcy Calkins, Literacy Outreach Coordinator, at 250463-4555 or admin@shuswapliteracy.ca for more information.

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Realistic resolutions

As we rang in the New Year, many of us created a lofty resolution to begin 2016 refreshed and committed. Whether it was a fitness, financial, spiritual, work or interpersonal resolution, by late January as many as 80% of these resolutions have flopped. Many began by internalizing a sense of hopefulness and perseverance, but now feel faulty and unworthy to meet their goals. However, the problem is not inherently the person – it’s the type of goals and resolutions we set that set us up for failure. Many resolutions are lofty ambitions such as “go to the gym five times per week.” If you already attend the gym three times per week, this could be a fair goal. But if you want to go from couch potato to an active person, starting small is the best way to achieve success. Major behavioural and lifestyle changes take time to achieve, as well as many compounding behaviours and decisions in a row. To test a goal’s likelihood of success, you may want to compare it to SMART criteria (Specific, Meaningful and Measurable, Attainable, Realistic and Timely.) Give yourself a timeframe to work towards your goal, and plan accordingly. Larger goals are OK to make, but breaking them down into smaller SMART goals increases the likelihood of you closing 2016 knowing you met your resolution.

Laugh it up

Research indicates that people who laugh a lot are much healthier and may live longer than those who don’t find time to chuckle. A good, deep belly laugh can provide your body and mind with a great workout. Laughter can cause blood pressure to drop, blood to become oxygenated and endorphins to kick in, which can improve mood. And that’s just the beginning. Laughing can help reduce stress and promote stronger relationships between people who laugh together. Data indicates children around the age of six laugh the most, laughing roughly 300 times per day, while adults average only 15 to 100 laughs per day.

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Smile People helps all ages

For over six years, the Smile People dental hygiene clinic has been providing dental maintenance services. During their fifth annual Children’s Oral Health Drive, more children were treated to dental hygiene services than the year before. They are less likely to need repairs later, and manage better if they do. The Smile People specializes in providing individualized oral health maintenance, with measurable results. Adults who keep up with their maintenance schedule enjoy more oral health and less dental costs. They are the longest BC partici-

pants in the National February Gift from the Heart event, featuring no-cost dental hygiene services for those who otherwise cannot afford them. They offer Interim Stabilization Therapy, which reduces pain, preserves tooth structure, and creates stability. Since 2014, their Senior Smile Program has offered dental hygiene services to low-income seniors who sign up through the Salvation Army or the Churches’ Thrift Store. Direct insurance billing is available, including Ministry coverage and the Healthy Kids program, as well as in-house financial plans.

familychiropractic COURTESY OF HARBOURFRONT FAMILY CHIROPRACTIC

by Dr. Warren Gage

Kids and antibiotics

Antibiotics are by far the most commonly prescribed medication for children, accounting for nearly 25% of all prescriptions. While there are instances when this medication may save a child’s life, new research is now showing the prescribing of these drugs should be very carefully considered. In a study published in May 2015 in the journal Cell Host & Microbe researchers from the University of Minnesota assessed how antibiotic use in children causes damaging changes to the gut bacteria (called dysbiosis); subsequently leading to diseases later in life. This is a very significant study which should influence antibiotic prescribing habits of medical doctors. It showed the wrong balance of gut microbes has been tied to serious diseases later in life such as infections, allergies and autoimmune diseases, and even obesity. Researchers know dysbiosis leads to allergies because in a normal, healthy state, the bacteria help the immune cells to develop and mature. If the “good bacteria” are not present due to antibiotic use, when an allergen enters the body again, the immune system over-reacts and allergies develop. What is even more important to note is if the proper bacteria are reestablished at a later date, the immune cells may still overreact due to earlier changes in development. The connection between obesity and antibiotics is also now recognized. Dysbiosis is shown to cause a disruption of the balance of healthy vs unhealthy fatty acids in

the body, which then disrupts normal metabolism, leading to obesity. If you regularly follow my articles I often discuss the importance of maintaining the correct balance of healthy bacteria in the gut. There actually are more bacteria cells in our intestine than the number of cells making up the entire body! It is important to understand that having the wrong balance of bacteria will impact many aspects of health in adults and children. This research further supports the importance of seriously considering giving a child even a single dose of antibiotics and doing everything possible before resorting to antibiotic use. If you have given your child antibiotics in the past, it’s essential to restore their healthy gut flora through probiotic supplementation. Remember, antibiotics wipe out everything– good and bad bacteria. We NEED good bacteria for good health. Over the past 19 years in practice I regularly adjust children that have/ had suffered with chronic ear infections. Gentle instrument adjustments performed on a child’s cervical spine helps restore correct nerve function to the inner ear. Clearing the nervous system of subluxation via cervical adjustments will allow their ears to drain correctly without the use of antibiotics or surgical tube insertion. If you have a child suffering with ear infections or throat infections we may be able to help. Dr. Warren Gage at Harbourfront Family Chiropractic has a special interest in pregnancy and pediatrics and can be reached at (250) 803-0224.


www.lakeshorenews.bc.ca

Opening our eyes By Nan Dickie It’s mid-winter. The days are still short. Children don’t want to get up. “Mom, it’s dark out! Let me sleep.” Before we get home from work, the sun has set. This makes some people sad, and gives others SAD (seasonal affective disorder). For those folks who have a predisposition to recurring depression (called clinical depression), or episodes of mania and depression (called bi-polar disorder), winter is a common time for those conditions to take hold. Clinical depression and bi-polar disorder are not well understood by many - possibly most - of us. Yet each of us knows at least one person who lives with one of these disorders, which are, in fact, illnesses. That one person you know may be you. In an effort to broaden our understanding of these illnesses, I am going to write a series of articles in this newspaper, one article each week, which will offer not only understanding, but will lead us all to more compassion for those who experience these mental challenges. First I will outline how to access mental health services in Salmon Arm. What avenues for service are open to us? How do we decide what services to seek? I will then move on to the face of depression – what do clinical depression and bi-polar disorder look like? Can you tell that someone is depressed

Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News A5

Understanding clinical depression and bi-polar disorder

or is experiencing mania? How does clinical depression differ from “regular” depression? Next, learn what the experience is like for one experiencing an episode of his or her disorder. What are the symptoms? Does everyone experience the same symptoms? Armed with this new understanding, you will probably be able to assess whether you, or someone you care for, is experiencing clinical depression or mania. How can you find others to share your experience with? Fortunately for us, there is a depression support group in Salmon Arm for people with these two disorders and/or anxiety. Learn about these meetings. What does participation in this group offer you? Why would you go? The motto of the group is “We’d rather share with strangers who understand than with family or friends who don’t,” and we know this to be true. Those strangers quickly become special friends. If you are not a person who experiences depression or mania, how do you respond to someone you care for when they say to you, “I am severely depressed.” What should you say and

Celebrate literacy

The Literacy Alliance of the Shuswap Society (LASS) is joining Decoda Literacy Solutions, BC’s provincial literacy organization, to reach out to families across the province and to encourage all family members to take part in play-based literacy activities during Family Literacy Week 2016 (January 24-31). Parents and caregivers are their children’s first and most important teachers. “A typical child spends 900 hours a year in school and 7,800 hours outside school, often with their parents. Which teacher has the bigger influence?” says Jim Trelease in The Read Aloud Handbook. Recent studies show that engaging in informal family learning in the home and in the community has a direct positive impact on children and parents. “Children are active learners. When children play, they are experimenting, observing, listening, making mistakes and trying again. Parents who participate in playbased family learning directly and positively affect the language and literacy development of their children,” says Decoda’s CEO, Brenda Le Clair. “Play is vital in children’s lives. It is important for healthy physical, social, emotional and cognitive development. It helps children make sense of the world around them,” adds Le Clair. Parents may ask: what are play-based literacy activities? “Families can build literacy skills through every day activities - playing games together, folding the laundry, making a shopping list, storytelling, doing crafts together or going for a walk outside and talking about what they see,” Le Clair notes. “The benefits go beyond the child,” says Le Clair. “When parents engage in their child’s literacy development, they build stronger bonds and are more likely to continue to take an active role in their children’s learning. Something as simple as reading together for 15 minutes a day

not say? What should you do and not do? Then there is the topic of medication. How are these disorders treated medically? Why do so many people who have bi-polar disorder choose, at some point, to take a vacation from their medication? How can we encourage compliance? Next we will look at the language we use when talking about clinical depression and bi-polar disorder. The words we use sometimes misrepresent the situation. Find out why we should not use words like “enemy” or “infliction” to describe these disorders. Finally, with our newfound knowledge and understanding, we will look at the ongoing issue of stigma. How can we look at these disorders anew? How does our change in attitude affect those individuals who experience clinical depression and/or mania? What gives me the right to write on all of the above? I am not a medical professional, nor am I a therapist. However, I am an expert in living with clinical depression for more years than I care to mention - but I will: fifty years. Since I was in my mid-teens, I have experi-

Calling all pies!

If you’ve got the best pie-baking skills in the Shuswap, you are invited to enter your homemade pie in the 20th Annual Best of the Shuswap Pie Baking Contest at the Heritage Week Celebration on Saturday, February 20th. Judged by appearance, authenticity, texture and taste, apple, fruit or berry pies must be made the old fashioned way, from scratch. Winners will walk away with this year’s title, an engraved trophy and dinner theatre tickets for two to the 2016 “Villain and Vittles” Summer Dinner Theatre Production. Winners also get to enter a pie to next year’s Best of the Shuswap Pie Auction! Simply drop off your pies Saturday February 20 between 10:00 and 11:00 a.m. at The Mall at Piccadilly, centre court. For official pie contest rules call the Village at 250-832-5243 or email info@salmonarmmuseum.org. This popular pie contest promises to be lip-smacking tasty and everyone is welcome to participate! After the judging, slices of the pies may be purchased for $2.50 each with the proceeds going towards extraordinary projects at the Heritage Village and Museum. can dramatically improve both child and parent’s literacy skills.” In addition to informal learning in the home, there are many family literacy programs across BC. The benefits to families who attend these programs are numerous: parents learn to support their children’s learning; they may become interested in developing their own literacy skills or pursuing further education and training; and they form social and support networks. To learn more about family literacy programs in the North Okanagan/Shuswap or to arrange an interview, contact: Darcy Calkins at 250463-4555 or admin@shuswapliteracy.ca or visit shuswapliteracy.ca or decoda.ca.

enced debilitating episodes of clinical depression every five or six years for a year at a time. I started writing about living with my illness in the mid nineties, and my book, “A Map for the Journey: Living Meaningfully with Recurring Depression” was published in 2001. It is available at the public library, in local book stores and online. I continue to write on this topic. As well, I have been the facilitator of the local depression support group since it started three and a half years ago. Garry Hall was co-facilitator with me for the first two years. For information on where and when we meet, please consult the “Support Group Meetings and Hotlines” list in this newspaper. Get in touch with me if you would like more information. Take a journey with me over the next eight weeks as we open our eyes to new learning, as we uncover misconceptions, as we learn what we can do to support people who live with these difficult challenges, and what to do if we, ourselves, happen to be one of those people. Next week: Accessing mental health services in Salmon Arm.

From

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A6 Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News

www.lakeshorenews.bc.ca

START BEEKEEPING, GROW YOUR OWN HONEY Buckerfield’s in Salmon Arm has everything you need to start beekeeping, from complete hive starter kits to frames, smokers, bee suits, foundations and everything in “bee” tween. I found yellow handbooks called Beekeeping for Dummies for $40. Salmon Arm has a number of beekeepers, and a beekeeping club that meets monthly at Askew’s Uptown meeting room. For information, contact Buckerfield’s manager, Toni Walton at toni.walton@buckerfields.org or phone her at 250-832-8424. GOVERNMENT MANDATED TEACHERS TO EXPLORE CURRICULUM CHANGES Teachers are the ones who will be doing homework on February 22! The most significant curriculum update in over a decade for B.C. Public Schools is being piloted this year and will be fully implemented in the upcoming school year. At the January 12 meeting of School District #83, Director of Instruction Carl Cooper reported to trustees that a group of teachers and principals is putting together a plan for the February 22 non-instructional day when teachers will be meeting to explore the renewed curriculum. This is the first of two days that the government has mandated for teachers to explore and familiarize themselves with the curriculum changes. SCHOOL DISTRICT TO SELL TWO PROPERTIES The school district will list two vacant properties. The former board office in downtown Salmon Arm will be on the market for $800,000 and the former South Canoe School will be for sale for $500,000. Secretary-treasurer Nicole Bittante reported at the Jan. 12 board meeting that the district will be working with Colliers International because it has extensive experience selling surplus properties for school districts. BACKPACKS PREPARED FOR REFUGEE STUDENTS School District 83 has “welcome” backpacks ready for the refugee students that are expected. The school district has heard that seven to eight different groups are working on sponsoring a refugee family. With help from Staples, the backpacks the new students will receive include various school supplies and a Me to We T-shirt.www. metowe.com/about-us/our-story. Other planning is also in place. Morag Asquith, Director of Instruction Student Learning, will be overseeing the placement of the students and setting up English language programs for the newcomers. BEST OF THE SHUSWAP PIE BAKING CONTEST On Saturday, Feb. 20th, the 20th annual best of the Shuswap pie baking contest will be held at Piccadilly. It is part of Heritage Week, February 15 to 20 by R.J. Haney Heritage Village. Thanks to the many volunteers and fundraising events, last year this week-long event at Piccadilly raised over $30,000 for the Village. WHEATGRASS HAS NEW, ORGANIC PRODUCT I was looking for an alternative to eating daily salads or juicing veggies and fruits and freezing the drink in plastic containers for daily consumption. I didn’t want to switch to powdered greens, I wanted greens in a capsule. Jude in Askew’s Uptown Natural Foods & Wellness Centre suggested a product that was promoted earlier that day:

Swheatgrass. It was frozen organic wheatgrass in the form of small pucks, each sealed in plastic, and in packages of 28 pucks. Excellent! Liane and Troy Kaltiainen of Vernon have been producing wheatgrass for over 15 years and selling it across the country. Now they are producing an organic product called swheatgrass. Read about it on www.swheatgrass. ca. Shuswap Health Foods and Askew’s Uptown carry it. Uptown has it next to frozen juices. WHEATGRASS RESEARCH HALTED BY PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRY IN 1940s Did you know that eating two ounces of wheatgrass is equivalent to eating four pounds of green vegetables? Wheatgrass will quickly cleanse the liver. It’s a nutritional powerhouse. Swheatgrass is 100 per cent organic wheatgrass and is gluten-free. The organic crops start with premium-select, non-GMO wheat berries and are grown in only the highest-quality mineral-rich soil. KASLO SOURDOUGH PASTA SOLD HERE I spotted a tall display of packages of pasta in the aisle in front of cashier 5 at Askew’s downtown. With it were five laminated pages of information on the products, attached firmly to one of the legs of the display. I didn’t read them, I went to www.microsour.com and read about Pasta Fermentata. German-born Silvio Lettrari started Kaslo Sourdough Bakery in 1993, with an outdoor oven. Two years later, with the help of his wife, he expanded to a fulltime yearround wholesale operation, selling their sourdough breads through retail stores throughout the West Kootenays. In 2013, Silvio invented sourdough pasta and coined it ‘Pasta Fermentata’, the very first sourdough pasta in the world. It is soy, nut, sugar, MSG and dairy free and without any hidden additives. The business has turned into a full on family business with all three kids (one son and two daughters) actively involved. The packages at Askew’s contain 11 different flour combinations and several different shapes. They are sold in Western Canada, Australia and soon in the USA. FOREIGN MEN ATTACKED WOMEN IN COLOGNE German Chancellor Angela Merkel voiced outrage at the sexual assaults and thefts that male gangs inflicted on women in Cologne on New Year’s Eve. Some 516 criminal complaints have been filed over the events of New Year’s Eve, 40 per cent of them for sexual assault, according to police. The men were thought to be refugees or asylum-seekers. “MEN SHOULD STAY HOME” GOLDA MEIR When Golda Meir was Prime Minister of Israel, a cabinet minister asked her to establish a curfew for women to end a series of rapes. She refused and said: “It is the men who are attacking the women. If there is a curfew, let the men stay home.” DYING PERSON CAN APPLY TO JUDGE TO END LIFE SOONER THAN FOUR MONTHS The Supreme Court has added four months to the Feb. 6 deadline to produce a new law on doctor-assisted death. Opponents to the Liberal government’s requested sixmonth extension said that would simply prolong the suffering of many.

In granting the four-month extension, the Supreme Court said someone who is suffering unbearably can make a personal application to a court to ask for a doctor-assisted death sooner. – The Province, Jan. 17, page 24 CAMPBELLS WILL DISCLOSE GM INGREDIENTS Campbells is the first major food company that will disclose genetically modified ingredients. It announced that it is officially supporting mandatory labeling of GMOs, and it is withdrawing from any coalitions of other food and chemical companies like Monsanto that oppose GMO labeling. In addition to its namesake soups, Campbell’s owns popular brands including Pepperidge Farm, Prego, V8 and more — all of which will soon carry labels disclosing whether they contain ingredients made from genetically modified crops. (Health Action Network Society, www.hans.org) YOU MAY NEED A TRIP If you look like your passport picture, you probably need the trip. KEEP THROWING AWAY JUNK Junk is something you’ve kept for years and throw away three weeks before you need it. AN EASY WAY TO STOP NIGHT COUGHING If you have a cough, rub Vicks VapoRub liberally on the soles of your feet, pull on a pair of socks and go to bed. Within five minutes the coughing will stop and allow you to sleep for a few hours without coughing. Works 100% of the time and is more effective than very strong prescription cough medicines. In addition it is extremely soothing and comforting. A.M. Radio had a man talking about why cough medicines in kids often do more harm than good, due to the chemicals in them. This method of using Vicks VapoRub on the soles of the feet was found to be more effective than prescribed medicines for children at bedtime. sallys1@telus.net • 250-832-4831

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of Sally Scales and do not necessarily represent those of Lakeshore News and its staff.

Letters to the Editor

Too much sand on the roads

Is it just me or are we sanding the roads too much? We live on a corner lot in Blind Bay so we get to watch the sanding process. I realize that there are many types of drivers, which requires a lot of sand and salt; however, the amount that is going down is out of control. All this salt turns into a nasty dust every spring and also drains into our lovely lake. Could we not use it more sparingly? Barry Roscoe, Blind Bay ERRORS AND OMISSIONS

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Advertising is accepted on the condition that, in the event of a typographical error, the portion of the advertising space occupied by the error will not be charged for, but the balance of the advertisement will be paid for at the applicable rate. In the event of a typographical error, advertised goods or services at a wrong price need not be sold. Advertising is an offer to sell and the offer may be withdrawn at any time. Lakeshore News will not be responsible for more than one incorrect insertion. The Lakeshore News is a member of the British Columbia Press Council, a self-regulatory body governing the province’s newspaper industry. The council considers complaints from the public about the conduct of member newspa-

pers. Directors oversee the mediation of complaints, with input from both the newspaper and the complaint holder. If talking with the editor or publisher does not resolve your complaint about coverage or story treatment, you may contact the B.C. Press Council. Your written concern, with documentation, should be sent within 45 days to B.C. Press Council, 201 Selby, St. Nanaimo, BC. V9R 2R2. For information, phone 888-687-2213 or go to www.bcpresscouncil.org. Distributed to: Salmon Arm, Canoe, Sicamous, Malakwa, Enderby, Mara, Grindrod, Tappen, Sorrento, Blind Bay, Eagle Bay, Chase, Celista/ Scotch Creek, Anglemont, and Revelstoke (2nd issue of each month).


Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News A7

www.lakeshorenews.bc.ca

Letters to the Editor Goods for goats

Hi, my name is Destaney Dean. I am a Grade 8 student at Carlin Elementary Middle School. In October 2014, I was one of a few very lucky students to be picked to go to We Day BC, in Vancouver. We Day is an inspiring day in which thousands of students from our province gather together in one large building with a whole bunch of celebrities. They tell their stories of how they have helped with different initiatives to help others in need. Again, I would like to do a fundraiser to donate the money through my school for the “Buy a Goat” initiative through Free The Children (www.freethechildren. com). Each $50 we raise buys a goat for a family in a third world country. This allows them to have, on average, 16 glasses of milk each day. It also helps the family with

future income. The fundraiser I would like to do currently is a silent baked goods auction just before Valentines Day. I would like to ask if you would be willing to submit a cake, pie, cookies or something baked. We will be doing this in the Piccadilly Mall on February 12th. This will be held from the morning into the afternoon. I will have a cut-off time so that whoever has won their bid for the item(s) can make it back to the mall to pick it up. We are doing it in time for Valentines Day as every sweetheart wants something sweet for their special day. This will be my second year doing this. Last year together we raised $350! It was enough to buy seven goats for seven families. If you are able to help in this, what I hope to be a terrific fundraiser, could you contact me please. Thank you so much for helping us to help others. Thank you for your time, Destaney Dean jvddca@yahoo.ca 250-675-3437 Left: Destaney staffs her baking table at Piccadilly Mall last year

Terminology

I was driving home from Sicamous recently and the only thing I could think of was how simple and how complex things could be, usually at the same time. Let’s take an example: How about getting a large cargo ship to move from one place to another? Essentially, the procedure breaks down into a few steps. Walk on board the ship. Find out where the cargo is supposed to go. Access tools which assist you to cause the ship to move to where the cargo is to be delivered. Discuss with other crew members to ensure that the vessel is safe to move. That’s pretty much it. Another small detail to take care of is checking out the weather ahead of you. Travelling into a storm at sea can ruin your whole day. Straightforward, you say, and it is. The details surrounding this task, however, are endless. Economic and government paperwork, ship movement and cargo regulations, personnel training standards and obligations, anti-collision requirements, government orders and ship owner rules. How about surgery? Learn how to identify problems which occur in the human body. Have a look at the tools you can use. Practise dexterity, wear comfy shoes and wash your hands. Once again, the surrounding stuff goes on for ever. School, apprentice training, regulations, legal obligations, government standards, office routines and patient assessments. Details, details, details.

I’ve been involved in a number of things over the years and my observation is that they are all similar. Driving an army tank, flying a plane, running a business, operating a studio portrait camera and managing professional theatre productions. If the details are properly completed, the main job is easy. Concerning difficulty, I have come to this conclusion: Something that is a really difficult and complex thing for many of us humans to accomplish, is learning how to honestly accept and be happy with ourselves. I see a fair amount of angst, doubt, delusion and misery. It is my opinion that, to gain selfjoy, one has to search for, learn and accept the truth about oneself; and I think happiness is a cornerstone to a life well lived. You have to forgive yourself for being unkind and untruthful to those who needed your kindness and truth. You have to take on the hard job of working at being a better, understanding, and more caring person. Accurate, ongoing self assessment is another challenging chore needing effort; to be a person who works at discovering the truth of a situation and adopts a reasonable and fair attitude. A person who speaks the truth, as it is found. A person who can accept mistakes for what they are and work at correcting them. I gotta admit, though, some days I just feel like staying in bed. Gerry Lavallee, Enderby

Seeking unused land

mallarkey

by Daron Mayes

Duma’s Meal on Wheels

If you have read my articles over the years, you’ll realize I’m not the biggest fan of rodents. I have no problem with stink bugs, beetles, spiders or snakes; but rodents just give me the heebie-jeebies. The other morning, I was organizing the trash as it was garbage day. As I emptied the trash bins from inside the house into the large can in my garage, I thought to myself “I should let Jasper out to wander around outside and get some exercise.” Just as I was letting him out, I noticed Duma had captured a vole (giant killer fat sausage-like rodent with fangs). She had it on the driveway and was in the beginning stages of tormenting it. However, before I could do anything to stop him; Jasper took off after Duma and began chasing her through the snow and around the house. In the frenzy to escape, Duma dropped the vole. Besides a small flesh wound, the critter was still very much alive and active. So while Jasper was chasing Duma, the killer rodent started running towards my open garage door. Seeing that I was now under attack, I quickly grabbed my trusty hockey stick to protect myself while calling for Jasper to leave Duma alone. The large-fanged killer was now waddling straight for me. In an act of desperation, I “gently” took my hockey stick and with a perfect rodent wrist shot sent the sausage-like creature sailing through the air. After doing a couple barrel rolls on his landing, he righted himself and looked back at me with those pearly white fangs from halfway up the driveway. After corralling Jasper and putting him back inside the house, I began calling Duma; hoping she would come back and deal with her morning snack. As I was calling, the vole began cruising back down the driveway towards the house. This time, however, Duma did return and began playing and eventually munching away on the perpetrator. Now that I was safe and secure, I took the garbage to the end of the driveway and went back in the house. As Jasper greeted me, I told him that by chasing Duma away I was left defenseless and was attacked by a vicious animal. As expected, he simply wagged his tail and looked at me with his tongue hanging out. So as you can see I have more of a guard cat than a guard dog. However, it doesn’t matter much to me so long as one of them protects me from dangerous rodents.

Mall Arkey Investments This Week

Where the serious invest their money there is downward pressure on our shop-for-the-best interest rates this week. Have you bought your tfSa yet? do you need travel or mortgage insurance? Pile your money in a wheelbarrow and bring it on in. You want to make Mall arkey happy, don’t you?

Savings account

1.00%

no change

cashable Gic

1.35%

no change

1 year

1.55%

down 0.05%

2 years

1.75%

down 0.05%

3 years

1.85%

down 0.15%

4 years

1.95%

down 0.15%

5 years

2.20%

down 0.10%

Mall Arkey financial ltd.

Centenoka Park Mall • 250-832-5000 Email: admin@mallarkey.ca Website: www.mallarkey.ca

Outback Jacks Horse Rescue is calling out to the public to please don’t throw out unwanted items, but instead to consider bringing them into the one of the horse rescue thrift stores, in Falkland at 5768 Hwy 97, or in Langley. They will even take leftover garage sale items. Outback Jacks Horse Rescue has just recently became a co-operative partner with The Horse Protection Society of B.C in south Langley, and are very proud to also be their Director for the Interior Horse Protection Society. The two rescues have decided to join forces in the fight to save these animals, and this year will bring big changes. They have been rescuing horses for just over ten years now and have helped over 300 horses directly and indirectly. The past year has been the worst on record for abused and emaciated horses coming into the rescues. As of August 3rd last year, they are at full capacity, which is 16 horses. They save room for a maximum of two emergency cases. Both rescues are looking for additional lands, ideally a suitable ranch in the Falkland area and one in the lower mainland. With the growing numbers of abused and unwanted horses, their goal is to find suitable horse property where they can stable and rehabilitate, as they are two of the only rescue groups that will take in severely emaciated and abused horses. If you have property that might be suitable for the rescues please feel free to contact them at 250379-2400 or 250438-0062.

Macs Only ©

Consultation, Maintenance Troubleshooting, Upgrades, Internet Setup Training for New Users, On site Service

Carol Creasy • 250-835-8587

Every Set

of Lost Keys

Has a Story “We lost our keys at a hockey game out of town, including our expensive-to-replace smart key for the car. Our War Amps key tag did its job when our keys were returned to us last week by courier, much to our relief.” – War Amps supporter

The Key Tag Service – it’s free and it works. Nearly 13,000 sets of lost keys are returned every year. Order key tags online.

The War Amps 1 800 250-3030 waramps.ca

The War Amps does not receive government grants. Charitable Registration No.: 13196 9628 RR0001


A8 Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News

www.lakeshorenews.bc.ca

SPORTS & LEISURE Loppet sees good turnout, raises over $8700 Almost 500 exhuberant skiers were up before dawn, out testing their wax and their mettle on the Larch Hills trails on Saturday, January 16, classic ski racing in the 32nd annual Reino Keski-Salmi Loppet. Fresh snow created soft, beautiful and challenging conditions for the 362 competitive and 121 recreational participants racing from 1 km for the youngest to 34 km. Participants included 233 youth racers under 18 attesting to the vitality of local ski programs. $8715 was raised for the Heart and Stroke Foundation this year, bringing the total raised by the RKSL over the past 32 years to $398,000. Skiers came from B.C, Alberta, Washington and from as far away as Australia. At this multi-generational event, there was a remarkable 79-year span between the youngest skier, 2-year-11-month old Cassie Mai O’Connor and the eldest, 81-year-old Gullan Hansen, who, remarkably, has completed this event every year in its 32 year history. The

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INTERIOR DIVISION STANDINGS

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as of January, 19th 2016

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x = Clinched Playoff Position | y = Clinched Division z = Regular Season Champion

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PTS 75 54 53 39 37 33

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fastest male times were set by Jon Arne Enevoldsen in the 50 to 59 year age category, originally from Norway but currently residing in Canmore; chased by local Alexander Corbett, just 6 seconds behind. The fastest female time was set by local Ski Race Team coach Abbi May. The loppet was supported by over 250 volunteers and 30 local sponsors that provided race organization, food and drinks, safety, awards and encouragement. After crossing the finish line, each racer enjoyed a hot lunch of a Rotary prepared beef on a bun, followed by a community centre swim, and an awards and appy hour. For those with stamina, this full day culminated in an energetic evening family dance. The winners of the 34 km race were: Overall women: Abbigail May, 2:05:03; Pat Pearce, 2:12:38; and Randy Ostby, 2:13:47. Overall male: Jon Arne Enevoldsen, 1:53:15; Alexander Corbett, 1:53:21; and Thomas Hardy, 1:55:50. The winners of the 18 km junior racers were: Junior Female: Rachel May, 1:05:01; Julia Brown, 1:06:08; and Natalie Wilkie, 1:08:27. Junior Male: Seth van Varseveld, 58:05; James Hardy, 58:05; and Konrad van Varseveld, 58:06. The top local females were Abbigail May, Randy Ostby, and Sheila Corbett (2:22:17). The top local males were Alexander Corbett, Thomas Hardy, and Brian May (1:56:04). Other top Junior category finishers included: 4 and under: – Julia Couch, Grace Bushell, Emily Olineck, Kai Cadden, Kincade Tegart, Isaac Engel Ages 5 to 7: Reese Major, Keira Cadden, Sarah Ewanyshyn, Kian Smith, Ben Bonthuys, Cole Maybee Ages 8 to 10: Emily Carelse, Tessa Elliott, Hilary Vukadinovic, Mitchell Bond, Eric Moore, Eli Decker 11 to 13: Julianne Moore, Maggie Beckner, Lucy Elliott, Stephen Moore, Trond May, Torin Andrews Full race results can be found at www.skilarchhills.ca/loppet. Pictured: Ceren Caner skis alongside his 5-yearold daughter Claire as she prepares to do the 2 km route. Sky Stevens photo.

Pickups & Delivery

After your weekend sports event, provide us with scores and standings and we’ll publish them in the following issue. Deadline: Tues. noon • Phone, fax or e-mail

NEXT HOME GAMES

It’s GO Time!

Saturday, Jan.30

VS

7:00

Vernon

Friday, Feb. 5

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Ticket Office Mon-Fri 9-4 & Game Days Sat. 4:00 PM, Sun. 12:00 PM - Shaw Centre Cash accepted

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Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News A9

www.lakeshorenews.bc.ca

Swim meet honours past member

The annual ‘Swim for Jim’ fun meet was held last Sunday at the SASCU Rec Centre pool. Jim Casselman was a longtime Masters swimmer who was diagnosed with mesothelioma (cancer due asbestos exposure) and died at 64 in 2007. In honour of Jim’s commitment to the swimming community in Salmon Arm, the ‘Swim for Jim’ started a few years ago as a fun Masters meet, and this year the event included both Masters and youth swimmers. Far left: Selkirks Swim Club swimmers begin a backstroke heat. Near left: 9-year-old Brookelyn Rasmuson takes her mark for relay. Sky Stevens photos.

Insurance Agent: Life, Critical Illness Disability (Income)

Remember the rules of safe winter driving

Happy New Year to everyone and I hope you had a safe, wonderful Christmas season with loved ones. I want to remind everyone who ventures on our roads that winter is still upon us and it is our responsibility to drive safely and be prepared for harsh conditions. Winter driving can pose many risks and safety concerns for the residents of the Shuswap. It is important to prepare ourselves for the coming winter months and prevent problems before they occur by making your vehicle winter-ready. The roads have often been slick this winter, so it is important to slow down and plan your trip ahead of time. Check road conditions, avoid driving when conditions are hazardous and ensure your winter tires have been installed and inspected. Winter tires have been defined as those labelled with either the Mountain Snowflake symbol or the Mud and Snow (M+S) symbol. Winter tires must be in good condition with a minimum tread depth of 3.5 mm. Drivers who do not have the proper winter tires on their vehicle on the designated routes can receive a fine of $121. Drivers who do not have

Coding to start early

Black Press Parents in B.C. schools will soon have the option of introducing their kids to computer programming as early as Kindergarten to grade three. Premier Christy Clark told a technology conference in Vancouver Monday an introduction to coding option will be available in some schools starting next September. It is expected to be available across the province within three years, and Clark said her goal is to make it mandatory for all students entering school. Post-secondary technology programs already include co-op job placements for 80 per cent of students, but any new programs will have to be 100 per cent co-op, Clark said. The province and federal governments also announced new funding to technology employers to help current and future workers upgrade their skills. Grants cover two thirds of training cost up to $10,000 per employee, and applications can be made at www.workbc.ca/canadabcjobgrant.

DISPLAY AD DEADLINE Tuesday• 12 noon

the minimum tread depth on their tires (3.5 mm) on the designated routes can receive a fine of $109. Winter tires improve safety by providing better traction in snow, slush and icy conditions – which can happen at any time in the Shuswap and North Okanagan at this time of year. Drivers are also reminded to check tire air pressure frequently, because it decreases in cold weather. Here are some more tips for safe winter driving: • Wear your seatbelt. • Drive to the road conditions – during times of bad weather or limited visibility, slow down. • Learn and practise winter driving techniques before you need them. • Don’t drive under the influence. • Keep your gas tank topped up. • Pack an emergency kit. • Plan your trip and tell your

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friends and family. • Check road and weather conditions on DriveBC. • Remove all snow from your vehicle before each trip. • Give yourself extra travel time in bad weather. • Avoid using overdrive and cruise control on slippery roads. • Travel with a fully charged cellphone for emergency situations. This time of year can be especially dangerous with freeze/thaw cycles that can result in black ice. The roads might look OK, but often they’re not. The same goes for slushy roads. Remember the importance of safe winter driving by being prepared, planning ahead and slowing down. Safe travels!

Phone DISTRIBUTION • 250-832-2131

DEVELOPMENT OF A PEST MANAGEMENT PLAN Pest Management Plan Number: SICAMOUS~MOS~PMP~2016-2021

Applicant: District of Sicamous, 446 Main Street, Box 219, Sicamous, BC V0E 2V0. Tel: (250) 836-2477 Fax: (250) 836-4314 Attention: Darrell Symbaluk Location: The boundaries of the mosquito control area include the entire District of Sicamous and the surrounding Regional District land including all areas from the eastern intersection of the Cambie/Solsqua Road and the Trans-Canada Highway and extending west to include all areas within the Municipal boundaries and encompassing the breadth of the Eagle River Valley bottom. The PMP includes all municipal, private, crown and regional lands within this boundary by permission of the applicable landowners or agency. Pesticides: The active ingredients and trade names of the pesticides proposed for use under this plan include: Bacillus thuringiensis var israelensis Strain H-14 (AM6552) (Vectobac 200G); Bacillus thuringiensis var israelensis Strain H-14 (BMP-144) (Mosquito Dunks & Aquabac 200G); Bacillus sphaericus (VectoLex WSP & VectoLex CG). Application Methods: Backpack applicator, granular spreader & manual placement for Vectobac 200G & Aquabac 200G. Manual placement only for Mosquito Dunks & VectoLex WSP. Helicopter or fixed wing aircraft for Vectobac 200G, Aquabac 200G & VectoLex CG. The selection of insecticides has been chosen to target mosquito populations in the most environmentally responsible manner and will be applied within the area outlined in the PMP. The proposed duration of the PMP is from March 30, 2016 to March 30, 2021. A draft copy of the PMP and map of the proposed treatment area may be examined at the District of Sicamous address listed above or by contacting Cheryl Phippen at the address below. The draft PMP can also be viewed online at www.sicamous.ca 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 consultant at the address above within 30 days of the publication of this notice. BWP Consulting Inc Attn: Cheryl Phippen 6211 Meadowland Cres. S., Kamloops, BC V2C 6X3 Phone 250-819-1750 • Email: bwp@shaw.ca


A10 Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News

www.lakeshorenews.bc.ca

SASCU announces new CEO

Fourteen years of colour

Hardie Home Decorating had its 14th Anniversary Celebration on Saturday, with specials on many in-store products, as well as donuts and coffee. Pictured from left are Theresa McKerral, Dot Abbott, Stacey Macfarlane, Nadine Clements, and owner Ron Hardie. Sky Stevens photo.

SALMON ARM, B.C. (January 12, 2016) – SASCU Financial Group announced Barry Delaney as their new CEO effective March 7, 2016. Barry brings 20 years’ experience leading all critical functions of a credit union. He has held several senior management and executive leadership roles with Envision Financial prior to its merger with First West Credit Union. Currently Barry is Interim CEO for Northern Savings Credit Union, a four branch credit union with wealth and insurance subsidiaries in Prince Rupert, where he is fulfilling his commitments until the end of February. Barry holds a Bachelor of Commerce degree from the University of Calgary and a Master of Business Administration from Queen’s University. “I am extremely impressed with the people at SASCU and am excited about joining such a high quality organization,” says Barry. “My family and I have visited Salmon Arm several times over recent months and look forward to making it our home.” SASCU Board of Directors Chair

Glenn Hill is pleased with the results of the nation-wide search that the Board undertook following Michael’s retirement announcement last spring. “SASCU’s strong reputation attracted a quality pool of candidates from across Canada,” says Glenn. “Barry brings all of the qualities we were seeking. We are confident Barry is the right person to evolve SASCU successfully through our industry’s changes.” Current CEO Michael Wagner is set to retire after 19 years with SASCU and is enthused about the SASCU Board of Directors’ selection. “Barry brings exceptional experience and leadership skills,” says Michael. “He will be a good ambassador of the values that have made SASCU strong.” Barry and his wife Ramona have seven children, with five of the children joining them in their move to Salmon Arm. Barry is an aviation enthusiast and commercial pilot. He briefly worked for the Lego Toy Company early in his career and claims that is the only professional achievement of which his children are proud!

Important to check for ticks in winter too

BUSINESS MATTERS

Salmon Arm Chamber of Commerce • Downtown Salmon Arm The Salmon Arm Chamber of Commerce is thrilled to bring back the Business Excellence Awards for 2016. This year’s dinner event will be held on Thursday, April 7, 2016 and will be attended by over 200 key community and business leaders. AWARD & EVENT SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES Position yourself alongside the Shuswap’s top businesses and demonstrate your support for Salmon Arm by sponsoring a Business Excellence Award or Program. Award and program sponsorships are on a first-come, first-served basis so don’t delay. Sponsorship opportunities listed at www.sachamber.bc.ca NOMINATIONS & GUIDELINES You are entitled to nominate any business including your own. Nomination Form available on www.sachamber.bc.ca Submission guidelines are included to help you with your nomination.

2016 AWARD CATEGORIES ARE:

1. Micro-Business of the Year (1-4 employees) 2. Small Business of the Year (5 – 14 employees) 3. Large Business of the Year (14+ employees) 4. New Business of the Year (started in last 24 months) 5. Not-for-Profit Organization of the Year 6. Business Person of the Year Nominations close February 26, 2016. Tickets $50 per person. Contact the Chamber 250-832-6247 or admin@sachamber.bc.ca to reserve your seat at this prestigious business event.

Downtown Salmon Arm wants to keep you up to date with our upcoming events, projects and programs. February is Valentine’s Day, a chance to spoil your loved ones, both two and four-legged! Our unique shops and numerous dining options have something for everyone. Springtime is just around the corner so mark your calendars. We kick off with the AGM, April 20, at Java Jive Neighborhood Bistro, followed by a Community Clean-Up Day. May brings Bike Month, Salty Street Fest and the Spring Business Mixer. Beautification projects include new banners, facelift for the Ross Street Breezeway, more bike racks and BC Hydro Utility Box wrapping. On-going programs include ‘Downtown Live’, where restaurants and café’s showcase live music. Please visit our website or contact 250.832.5440. DSA and SACofC are non-profit membership driven organizations. Be a member and support progress.

www.salmonarmdowntown.com • www.sachamber.bc.ca

Plenty of pet guardians are used to checking their companion animals for ticks in the summertime, particularly after camping or hiking in British Columbia’s beautiful outdoors. But it’s just as important to check them in the winter months, says BC SPCA Kamloops and District Branch animal care attendant Valerie Wilson, a fact highlighted by a cat who came into the Kamloops shelter as a stray – along with nine live ticks. “It’s not just dogs who are susceptible, and it’s not just in the summer,” Wilson says. “We discovered and removed nine living ticks from the cat, who earned the name Ticker, during his initial exam. We believe he was living in a chicken coop, and I guess it just hasn’t been cold enough to kill them off.” Ticks are external parasites that feed off the blood of unlucky hosts, including humans, dogs and cats. Tick bites and tickborne diseases, such as Lyme disease, can be hard to detect, and signs of tickborne disease may not appear for seven to 21 days or longer after a tick bite, notes veterinarian and BC SPCA senior manager of animal health Dr. Emilia Gordon. “Watch your pet closely for changes in behaviour or appetite or for any unusual illness such as fever, lameness, lethargy, bruising or bleeding if you suspect he’s been bitten by a

tick,” Gordon says. “It’s also important to properly remove the tick, or to have it properly removed, to help prevent any disease or infection.” Steps pet guardians can take include: • Check your pets daily for ticks, especially if they spend time outdoors • If you find a tick on your pet, remove it or have it removed by your veterinarian right away • Ask your vet to conduct a tick check at each exam • Talk to your vet about tickborne diseases in your area • Reduce tick habitat in your yard • Talk with your veterinarian about using tick preventatives on your pet Ticker, who is on a course of antibiotics as a preventative measure and awaiting neuter surgery, is available for adoption in Kamloops and is now, of course, tickfree. Other parasites, such as fleas and lice, can also be problematic for pets and humans if not properly addressed, Wilson adds. “Unlike lice, which are species-specific, fleas and ticks don’t discriminate – they’ll latch onto anything with a heartbeat.”

Bridge results Duplicate bridge: Duplicate Bridge Club results for Tuesday, January 12 were: 1. Ona Bouchard and Ruth Embree, 2. Judy Harris and Barb Peterson, and 3. Dennis and Doreen Roberts. Results for Thursday, January 14 were: 1. Barb and Dave Peterson, 2. Betty and Charlie Ward, and 3. Dan Quilty and Gerry Chatelain. The Salmon Arm Duplicate Bridge Club meets Tuesday evenings and Thursday afternoons at the Downtown Activity Centre. Everyone is wel-

come. For more information call 250-832-7454 or 250-832-7323. Sunday duplicate: Sunday Duplicate Bridge Club results for Sunday, January 17 were: 1. Sande and Milford Berger, 2. Edie and Jack Swanson, 3. Barb Grier and Peter Budda, and 4. Dan Quilty & Gerry Chatelain. The Sunday Duplicate Club meets every Sunday at 1:00 p.m. at the 5th Avenue Senior’s Centre. For more information call 250-8328589.


Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News A11

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ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT Funk music drives new dinner theatre play

New art studio downtown

Adam (below) and Jenna Meikle have opened up Meikle Art Studio at 311 Ross Street NE, across from the Ross Street Plaza. Adam specializes in realism and impressionism art, primarily oil on canvas. He does commission work

and art classes are coming! They are open Monday through Friday, 9:00–5:00 p.m., and Saturday by appointment only. Call 587-343-1745 or email meiklestudios@gmail.com for more information.

Music, vocals and a three-piece combo, great food from the Aquatico Restaurant make for a memorable night out. The dinner theatre show Funkin’ Dead has lots of funk music from the 70’s. Vincent “the Pussycat” Myers is under investigation for dealing dope out of his nightclub, the Kitty Club. Two of the most mentally-challenged cops are replaced by two brighter lights, but their past changes the plot of the murder mystery. What happens when three women hate one man – that’s the question. Cheating, revenge, and funk make for a fun plot. A great four-course buffet style dinner is interspersed with scenes from the show. Prizes for guessing the murderer and also for wearing the best ’70’s costume add to your fun. Funkin’

Joyce Marchant

Sleigh Rides

cinemaphile by Emily Garrett

Book NOW for your fun!

Theeb

On the eve of the 1916 Arab revolt, in a forgotten corner of the Ottoman Empire, Hussein (Hussein Salameh) and his younger brother Theeb (Jacir Eid) are from a family of pilgrim guides and have recently lost their father. When a British Army officer comes to their clan’s camp with a desert guide, the rules of Bedouin hospitality force the family to send someone (Hussein) with the two men to their secret destination located along the old pilgrimage route to Mecca. A mischievous Theeb secretly follows and experiences a greatly hastened coming of age as he finds himself trapped amidst threatening terrain riddled with Ottoman mercenaries, Arab revolutionaries, and outcast Bedouin raiders. Filled with stunning scenery, a heart-stopping score, and cinematography that immerses you in the journey through Theeb’s point of view, this film is being hailed as “a classic adventure of the best kind.” Theeb shows at 5:00 p.m. on Saturday, January 23rd at the Salmar Classic Theatre.

Sleeping Beauty ballet comes to Vernon

The much-loved classical ballet Sleeping Beauty waltzes into town on Tuesday, February 9, 7:30pm when Ballet Jörgen visits the Vernon and District Performing Arts Centre. After bringing both Swan Lake (2013) and Romeo and Juliet (2014) to Vernon; Ballet Jörgen now rounds out Tchaikovsky’s famous ballet trio with Sleeping Beauty. Artistic director and choreographer Bengt Jörgen creates his own unique classical ballet rendition of Aurora and her prince complete with its inherently magical qualities and dazzling choreography. This fairytale of the beautiful princess who sleeps for a hundred years, only able to be woken by true love’s kiss, is one that many have grown up with. Sleeping Beauty was first presented in St. Petersburg, Russia in 1890, and today is the crown jewel in the tiara of classical ballet. “It is Tchaikovsky’s most remarkable and riveting tale,” says Jörgen. The underlying theme is the tug between the forces of good (the Lilac Fairy) and evil (Carabosse). Told in three acts, the ballet benefits from the character development and technical expertise for which Canada’s Ballet Jörgen is known.

Bengt Jörgen has seamlessly woven iconic French and German versions of the beloved fairytale together to create a new ballet with a refreshing focus on the seasons. Celebrating 25 years of advancing the art and appreciation of ballet in Canada, Ballet Jörgen Canada aims to inspire, innovate, and educate. After amazing audience responses to their past sold out appearances in Vernon, the company is proud to present 22 talented dancers for their performance of Sleeping Beauty. Local dance students will also have their chance to take on small cameo roles. Many of Ballet Jörgen’s original ballets have earned national and international recognition launching Ballet Jörgen to the forefront of the North American dance scene. The fifth largest ballet company in Canada, Ballet Jörgen is known as Canada’s ‘local’ ballet company, and they are committed to reaching out to over 50,000 Canadian audience members every year. Tickets for Sleeping Beauty are $45 for adults, $42 for seniors and $40 for students and can be purchased now through the Ticket Seller Box Office by calling 549-SHOW (7469) or online at www.ticketseller.ca.

Dead stars Elaine Holmes as Rosa the Kitty Club’s lead singer, with Mike Nash giving her a rough time with his attachment issues. James Bowlby directs what is his fourth dinner theatre mystery and they keep getting better and funnier. If you missed the first three, for funk’s sake don’t miss this one. Tickets are available at Intwined Fibre Arts on Hudson Street or on line at www.saactorsstudio.com. Call James at 250833-5134 for more information. Funkin’ Dead stars Randy Brogden as Vincent “The PussyCat” Myers; Wayne Empy as Captain Williamson; Brett Peters as Detective Paul Soul; and Morgan Horsman as Detective Olivia Peebles. Photo by Bram Hermsen of Level Up Enterprises.

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Winter - Spring Classes Classes resume in January with new students most welcome. • Tuesdays - Instructor Professional Actress Astrid Varnes - Focus on acting skills and the production of an age appropriate show. • Thursdays - Instructor James Bowlby M.Ed. in theatre - Focus on fun, concentration, creativity. Creation of play by the students. This is a developmental drama class not an acting class.

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A12 Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News

Muscadines and Thompson grapes

The largest grapevine in history was discovered in 1584 by Sir Walter Raleigh on Roanoke Island (NC). This monster wild muscadine grapevine measured two feet thick at its trunk, and sprawled over an acre and up 60 feet tall trees. The muscadine, even the wild ones, are 30% sugar, which makes them 25% sweeter than our table grapes. The Spanish that settled in Florida quickly brought their old world skills of wine making to their new country. Thomas Jefferson proclaimed the wine to have a fine aroma and crystalline transparency. During the 1920 prohibition, the locals weathered the dry spell by making muscadine moonshine. Muscadine grapes are now mostly sold as extracts and powders in nutraceuticals (foods containing health-giving additives and having medicinal benefits).

The light-coloured Thompson seedless grapes were discovered in the Ottoman empire. William Thompson, an English vintner, brought sultanas to California in 1863 and sold them under his own name. The dark concord grape is much higher in anthocyanins than the light seedless varieties. Concord grape juice is one of the healthiest juices sold today. We can thank Thomas Welch, a steward at a Wesleyan church who did not wish to serve alcohol for communion, for the production of the non-fermented version of grape juice. Lab tests have shown that grape juice has a higher ORAC (Oxygen Radical Absorbance Capacity) value than the very expensive imported acai juice. ORAC values relate to antioxidant levels; and the higher the better. Other research has shown the positive impact on memory loss of two

glasses of grape juice a day. The juice also has been shown to thin the blood, reducing the risk of clots that may trigger heart attacks or strokes. Test tube studies are finding that concord grape juice protects breast cells from toxic chemicals. Unfortunately, grapes are on the dirty dozen list, which makes this wonderful and delicious fruit not such a good snack in Canada in the winter. Buy organic grapes that look the freshest (green stems and no loose grapes in the plastic wrapping). A common practice in California is to fumigate the harvested grapes with sulphur dioxide to extend their shelf life. This practice is not always noted on the package, and people suffering from asthma are susceptible to this noxious gas. It can’t be very good for us either, I imagine, but we don’t suffer immediate consequences,

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foodsalive COURTESY OF OKANAGAN RAWSOME

by Afke Zonderland so it is deemed safe by the powers that be. Golden raisins have also undergone this treatment, but interestingly retain more of their phytonutrients. I buy organic raisins as a quick pickme-up snack combined with nuts and to sweeten oatmeal porridge. The most nutritious dried grapes are currants – widely used in wonderful almond filled German Stollen.

GRAPE, MINT AND FETA SALAD

• 3 cups black or red seedless grapes (halved) • 1/2 cup crumbled feta • 1/4 cup walnuts or pecans • 2 tbsp fresh chopped mint or 2 tsp dried mint • 1 tbsp freshly squeezed lemon juice • 2 tbsp unfiltered extra virgin olive oil

Prepare fruit and nuts. Combine liquids; pour over grape mixture and marinate 30 min. before serving on a bed of crisp greens. I can imagine a drizzle of a balsamic reduction on the plate and an Okanagan Rawsome Carrot Crisp with a fig goat cheese and sliced avocado topping on a large plate – a wonderful brunch salad!

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Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News A13

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BUSINESS & SERVICE

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A14 Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News

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Bush planes and daring pilots

It’s been years now, but it was a beautiful sun-filled chilly morning at our Postill Lake fishing lodge, as the Westjet 737 pilots applied their reverse thrusters to slow the aircraft down. This happened on its final approach to the Kelowna airport. Standing on the frozen snow-laden boat dock, as the big bird flew directly across the lake in front of the lodge, I now heard a small plane approaching. Suddenly, a Piper

Super Cub equipped with skis came down to land. Motor revving, the craft slowed and came to a stop, just like clockwork, as if retired orchardist and RCMP sergeant Art Day damn well knew the blueberry muffins and freshbrewed coffee were on inside the spacious and comfortable lodge. Most days, Art would leave the airport in the early morning, taking off from his homemade airstrip to ice fish the Never

Touch and Copper Kettle lakes way out in the Greystoke range. On his flight back, he’d pop in for coffee. He was a daring pilot, who used to land high up in alpine meadows at Revelstoke to hunt goat and big muley bucks; or fly under the trestles in the Kettle Valley Railway in that little Super Cub. The Piper company started production of the model PA-18 in 1949, but the model J-3 became available in 1937. The craft are

shuswapoutdoors

still used today, for Nanton, Alberta. There bush hopping, hunting, he was a wrangler and trapping, and pleasure. ranch hand for two Due to the cost of and a half years, then camps. He later were fascinating! parts and upkeep, took a welding course became a Class A Alberta called in fewer small planes are in Calgary. The shop guide, with five years 1986, so Peter took out flying today; although was close to the airport on big game hunts, a guide license there. the fire still burns for and he got the urge to flying and guiding, It was a sunny cool the many pilots that take lessons. He suc- even going into Alaska July morning in 1996 used to fly light air- ceeded with flyin’ on brown bear hunts. when his world came craft. Too, there are colours (pun intendcrashing down. many great stories Peter had just in book form for fueled up at Banff ardent readers, Regional Airport such as Justin de while piloting a Goutiere’s The 1946 Fleet Pathless Way: Canuck. Eight Flying the BC seconds after takeCoast; Bush off, at 70 feet and Pilots, by Peter close to the Boy Boer, with stories Scout camp nearof pilots Wop by, the engine May/Punch quit, and he Bickens, etc; and crashed into the local author Bruce trees, then the Lamb and his ground, bursting The aircraft on the cover of Peter Boer’s Bush Pilots. Outposts and into flames. Peter Bushplanes. managed to get Recently, on a trip ed), and weekends and In 1973 Peter started out, but was badly into Seymour Arm to time off saw him hunt- guiding with Arctic burned, with 65% of visit friends, I had the ing the Nordegg back Red Outfitters in the his body suffering pleasure of running country for goat and Northwest Territories. third-degree burns. He into and interviewing a sheep, as well as fly- His tales of bygone was rushed to the former bush pilot/big ing. snowstorms flying a Calgary hospital burn The Yukon beck- Cessna 206, along unit, and spent 45 days game guide by the name of Peter Szeler. oned, and he then with his hunting expe- in an induced coma. At age 15, Peter hitch- spent 12 years flying riences, hardships, He was in hospital hiked from his home 172’s and Cessna spike camps, grizzly eight months while in Ontario, out to 180’s into wilderness bears, and giant moose recovering. The dozens of trophy mounts he gave to my friend Cliff, and he now spends his days tree topping and selling firewood, along with hunting in the fall with his partner Lorraine Dasnieres, at their cozy trailer in Seymour Arm. This is a very small part, yet, of many stories still untold by one man, as a big game guide/pilot in a remarkable life, and Send us your poems, letters to loved ones, etc. for our love of the outdoors! Here and there Valentine’s editions, published Feb. 5 & Feb. 12 in the Shuswap Submissions MUST be received by noon on Tuesday, Just remember: if Feb. 2 or Feb. 9 you send it on Facebook, etc, it may Email your submissions to come back to haunt ya! lsn@lakeshorenews.bc.ca See next page

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Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News A15

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A good ski

Samantha Peterson comes to the finish line after completing the 5 km route for ages 8-10 at the Reino Keski Salmi Loppet at Larch Hills on Saturday. Sky Stevens photo. cont’d from previous page This happened to three young chaps who where shooting ducks on ponds three years ago with .22’s, all out of season, near Winnipeg. Public complaints and ID’s were established and the law closed in. It was also a busy morning recently, in an Edson, Alberta courtroom, when the judge handed out $135,000 in fines to five lowlifes for wantonly killing/wounding and leaving 26 deer, five moose, four elk, one bear, a kid’s Shetland pony, and a cow. One person received nine months’ jail time along with a $45,000 fine. One got nine months’ house arrest and a $45,000 fine. Two got a $10,000 fine and a 10-year hunting ban. The youth got 200 hours community work and a five-year hunting ban. Finally, the courts and

judges are realizing the value of our wildlife to the hunting fraternity and general public. Fishing report: Gardom is slow. Mealies, small jigs, and shrimp are working, but can be slow. Phillips: Slow, but large trout. Some brook trout are being caught. Lots of effort out there. Small dark jigs, weighted wet flies and shrimp are working. Falkland area: Joyce/Pillar producing for smaller trout on shrimp-mealies-worms, etc. Good to see lots of folks and families out on weekends. Remember... we all need laughter, love, and light, to lift our spirits high! A little silence now and then, to let the world go by. Tight lines and good fishin’!

P A W SHUS

P A W S U H S e 2015

E D I U G ’ S R O T I S VI

Visitors’ Guid

6 1 0 2 -

olour c s s e c ull pro F • s e i day! cop o t 0 t 0 o 0 , p 8 3 ur s

yo k o o b o ure t s e k a M Salmon Arm, BC

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G N I K O O B W NO SPACE AD ed! it m i L e c a Sp


A16 Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News

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January

Tiger the cat was reunited with his Calgary family on New Years Day, six weeks after having disappeared from the scene of a car accident near Sorrento in which he was involved.

Salmon Arm and area was buried under a record twoday snowfall – businesses closed and many School District 83 schools closed. Shuswap Middle School received a bomb threat, the second in five weeks, but it was determined to be fake. A third fake bomb threat would happen in February.

The 31st annual Reino Keski Salmi Loppet at Larch Hills attracted more than 400 skiers. Salmon Arm City councillors voted against allowing financial institutions at Piccadilly or Centenoka Malls. Fourteen-year-old Salmon Arm resident Noah Paterson was crowned Boxing Canada’s 2015 Canadian Junior & Youth National Champion in the 66 kilo Junior C open category in Quebec City, earning him a spot on Canada’s national junior boxing team.

More than 400 elementary school students from 19 schools participated in the annual Pirate Loppet at Larch Hills.

107 Years in business 101 Years in business 87 Years in business 69 Years in business

February

Mary Gould of Sorrento was killed in a collision with a semi transport truck near the Trickle Inn.

The Salmon Arm Ice Breakers Speed Skaters hosted their second annual Ice Jam, with 36 skaters participating. The Salmon Arm Silverbacks came within two points of a playoff spot in the Interior Division. The SAS girls’ curling team went to the BC High School Provincial Curling Championship, held in Creston.

Sorrento’s Nika Guilbault gave birth to twins in her pickup truck on the way to Royal Inland Hospital in Kamloops.

Warm weather, heavy rain, and melting snow caused problems in the area, with a home being destroyed in Anglemont after a road gave way; a mud flow in the Swansea Point area; and a portion of Foothill Road collapsing near Mt. Ida Cemetery. 11-year-old Laura Hall of Salmon Arm won a bronze medal for speed skating in the Canadian Age Class Long Track Championships in Saskatoon, SK. She finished fifth overall for her age group.

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Miss P, a four-year-old beagle from Enderby’s Tashtin Kennels, (shown with her handler Will Alexander) was the 2015 winner of the Best in Show trophy at the prestigious Westminster Kennel Club Show in Madison Square Garden, New York City. The Larch Hills Ski Team won the Championship Trophy for 2014-2015, winning the highest number of points overall for the race season. The Single Mom’s Day Out day was put on by the Broadview Church at the Gathering Place.

Maia Journeau won a bronze medal at the BC Secondary School Alpine Ski & Snowboarding Championships in Revelstoke.

March

Second World War veterans Sigurd Larsen and James Munro both received the French National Order for the Legion of Honour for the part they played in the largest seaborne invasion in history. Tom Lavin and the Legendary Powder Blues played to an enthusiastic audience at the Shaw Centre in a concert to raise money for the Roots and Blues Festival.

Gord Duplisse and Frank Egli of the Salmon Arm Curling Club won the 2015 BC Provincial Open Stick Curling Championship in Vernon, allowing them to represent BC at the national championship in Winnipeg. A mudslide caused by a man-made pond carried away a building and various assets owned by the Wilkinson family on Grandview Bench Road.

Kenna-Rae Stockbruegger and her family went to Disney World, courtesy of the Make-A-Wish Foundation. Kenna-Rae suffered from a rare benign brain tumour and was undergoing treatment. Askew’s Uptown won the Sustainable Forestry Initiative Wood Design Award as part of the 11th annual Wood Works! BC Wood Design Awards, presented in Vancouver.


Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News A17

www.lakeshorenews.bc.ca

March (continued) 55-yr-old Anisha Husseinali Moore of Sorrento was killed in a three-vehicle collision just east of Sorrento. Salmon Arm’s Bradley Hlina won all his races and set a personal best in the 200 metre distance at the Interior Okanagan Regional FUNale Short Track Championship speed skating event in Kamloops.

Former Shuswap MLA George Abbott’s pending appointment as chief commissioner of the BC Treaty Commission was vetoed by the BC Cabinet. Curlers Sandra Jenkins, Kate Horne, Wendy Cseke and Carol Murray won a bronze medal at the Canadian Senior Curling Championships in Edmonton.

April

69 Years in business 68 Years in business 49 Years in business

BC Premier Christy Clark stopped in Salmon Arm for a luncheon hosted by the Chamber of Commerce at the Prestige Harbourfront Resort. Chamber president Jim Kimmerly, left, asked her a few questions. Local runner Matt Mead traveled to Boston to compete in the 118th Boston Marathon.

Award-winning Elvis tribute artist Adam Fitzpatrick performed to a full house at the Shuswap Lake Estates Community Centre. Kevin ‘Chevy’ Cheveldave sold his Chevy Sports shop, located in Shaw Centre, after being in business 30 years. Big Al’s House of Hockey took over the spot.

Fire destroyed a Silver Creek barn; no livestock or people were harmed.

More than 20 riders competed in the Topline Stables Dressage Percentage Day (a two-day event).

After a battle with cancer, treatment at BC Children’s Hospital, and several month stay at Ronald McDonald House, two-year-old Aumie Sato was declared cancer-free and came home with her mother Yuko to be reunited with her sisters Hannah and Anjou and her father Toshi, who remained in Salmon Arm to run the family’s restaurant Sushi Kotan.

May

The second annual Literacy Alliance of the Shuswap spelling bee raised more than $13,000 for literacy programs. The Kween Bees took home the Team Spelling Bee plaque for the second time. The bee also exposed the fact that three Limited Visibility signs in Salmon Arm had the word ‘visibility’ spelled wrong.

250-832-2223

www.bowersfuneralservice.com Independently Owned and Operated

NEW NAME • NEW SERVICE 250-832-6066 • 1-888-970-9781

www. SAL MONARMGM .com 3901 - 11 Ave NE, Salmon Arm

DL#10374

Crown’s APPLIANCES & ELECTRONICS

250-832-2205

250-832-1977

120 - 5th St. S.W., Salmon Arm

120 - 5th St. S.W., Salmon Arm

250-832-6077

44 Years in business 44 Years in business

511 10th St. SW S.A.

www.kaltire.com

Shuswap Driving Academy IT’S WORTH TAKING A TRIAL ROAD TEST FIRST

43 Years in business

250-833-4571

www.westwoodfinecabinetry.com

3 Locations DISTRIBUTORS LTD. PAINT & AUTOBODY SUPPLY SPECIALISTS

• 225 - 5th St. SW, Salmon Arm • 250-832-9381 • 2807A 45th Ave., Vernon • 250-542-1115 • 969D Laval Cres., Kamloops • 250-320-9384

161 Hudson Ave. NE Salmon Arm

41 Years in business 40 Years in business

The Shuswap Hospice Society held its second annual Teddy Bear Hospital and Community Health Fair.

39 Years in business

Paul K. Downie Over 30 years of teaching Ex-Road Test Examiner 250-832-6333

Showroom located at 120 Okanagan Ave SE - behind Jade Buffet

44 Years in business

A small helicopter owned by Kelowna’s Okanagan Mountain Helicopters crashed at the Salmon Arm Airport. The pilot was not seriously hurt. The third annual Shuswap Launch-a-Preneur competition was won by Shawn Greek, for his proposed Apollo Auto Centre, which was later built on the former Wes Bowie Auto site.

440-10th St. SW, Salmon Arm

250-832-9461

www.lakeshorenews.bc.ca

EW N ON LOCATI

• Fresh or artificial flowers • Candles • Giftware • We Deliver Across from SportChek • The Mall at Piccadilly • 250.832.7700

CENTRAL SERVICE & TOWING Full Air Conditioning Service Complete Automotive Repair Licensed Mechanics

391 - 7th St. SW, Salmon Arm

250-832-8656


A18 Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News

www.lakeshorenews.bc.ca

Your Automotive Repair Specialists

39 Years in business 36 Years in business

250-832-9455 across from the Credit Union 416 - 4th St. NE, Salmon Arm

The Shuswap’s Largest Flooring Retailer

250-832-9444 775 Lakeshore Dr SW, Salmon Arm

www.nufloors.ca

34 Years in business

Salmon Arm Custom Upholstery

30 Years in business

191 Shuswap Street Salmon Arm 250-832-1010

Your Foam Specialist

258 Shuswap St. NE Salmon Arm • 250-832-9121

30 Years in business

24 Years in business

Former Larch Hills Nordics racer Eliza-Jane Kitchen was named to the Junior National Ski Team by Cross Country Canada.

A house in the Hillcrest area of Salmon Arm was heavily damaged by fire. Fortunately no one was hurt. A Leonard Cohen tribute concert raised funds for the proposed Shuswap Performing Arts Centre.

June

The Tappen Coop marked its hundred year anniversary with a celebration including First Nations dancers, stories, cake, and its famous colossal cones.

Salmon Arm’s Aria and Jaeden Izik-Dzurko earned three gold medals representing the Shuswap and Okanagan at the Performing Arts BC Provincials in Powell River.

Susan Grimes

Students from School District 83 and King’s Christian School participated in the track meet held at the SASCU sports fields at Little Mountain.

250-832-7288

www.futureshuswap.com

250.803.0156

101-160 Harbourfront Drive NE, Salmon Arm Committed to Health, Hope and Healing in our Community Your donations will continue to help in providing priority equipment needs to our hospital www.shuswaphospitalfoundation.org 250-803-4546

Columbia Shuswap Invasive Species Society (CSISS) staff member Emily Spiler, left, took part in a weed pull along the foreshore with Shuswap Naturalist Club members Clive Bryson and Ed McDonald. The 17th annual Relay for Life was held at Elks Park, with a different format this year–running from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Earnings were the highest in the region, at $101,297.

The CSRD moved into their new $7.8 million building on the waterfront, a space of nearly 23,000 square feet that replaced three separate offices. The Hive, restaurant and roaster for Frog Friendly Wild Coffee, opened in Canoe.

Centenoka Park Mall

28 Years in business 25 Years in business

The Salty Dog Enduro bike race drew more than 700 to the trails at South Canoe, and the Salty Street Fest drew folks to the downtown core with live music provided by Cod Gone Wild, a pie-eating contest, and other activities.

LOCALLY OWNED & OPERATED 181 Okanagan Avenue Salmon Arm

30 Years in business 30 Years in business

For Quality P roducts and Workman ship

May (continued) SASS graduate Samantha Wardrop won a third place medal in the Skills BC competition for Aerospace Technology.

250 832-5000

www.copperislanddiving.com

July

Email: admin@mallarkey.ca Website: www.mallarkey.ca

Haney’s annual Villains and Vittles dinner theatre production The Everlasting Railway Blues focussed on CP Rail and its history in the Shuswap.

• Sales - Service - Rentals - Kayaks • Scuba Courses ages 8 & up • Dive Trips - Local, Coastal, International • Paintball Sales and Rentals, Swim Wear

The Salmon Arm Arts Centre featured an innovative sound and cinematic exhibition by internationally-renowned artists Janet Cardiff and George Bures-Miller.

250-832-5737

271b TCH NE, Salmon Arm

SHIRLEY BARKER REALTOR 24 years of local Real Estate Knowledge

®

Cell 250.833.7869 Shirleybarker@telus.net www.shirleybarker.ca

Salmon Arm’s first in-town winery – Marionette Winery – opened in the North Broadview area.

A 22-year-old Alberta woman was fatally injured by a houseboat propeller on Shuswap Lake.

The Salmon Arm Savings & Credit Union downtown branch was robbed by a man with a sawed-off shotgun who escaped on a bicycle.

The Shuswap Lake Festival of the Arts took place once again in Sorrento and Blind Bay after being revitalized by the Arts Council for the South Shuswap.


Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News A19

www.lakeshorenews.bc.ca

July (continued)

24 Years in business

The Salmon River water level was quite low in July, only a few inches deep in places. Baby Ollie, son of Salmon Arm’s Brianna and Chad McLellan, died two days after his birth in BC Women’s Hospital due to a congenital diaphragmatic hernia.

The gaming centre Chances Salmon Arm officially opened its doors on July 20. Built on Adams Lake Indian Band land, the centre was a collaboration between the band and Berezan Management.

Stage 1 of the six-day Singletrack 6 mountain bike event took place near South Canoe. This is the first time that the yearly Western Canadian event has been in Salmon Arm. The inaugural and very successful Theatre on the Edge fringe theatre event took place at Shuswap Theatre in late July.

August

A 19-year-old Pritchard man was killed when his car collided with a passenger bus on the Trans Canada Highway near Hoffman’s Bluff, 11 km west of Chase. The campaign for the Federal election officially began. Local candidates included Conservative Mel Arnold, Liberal Cindy Derkaz, NDP Jacqui Gingras, and Green Party Chris George.

The annual Culture Crawl spanned the month of August, with 30 local businesses (including Lakeshore News) providing their space for art displays.

The 23rd annual Roots and Blues Festival enjoyed good spirits in spite of a thunderstorm one evening. Attendance was down about 2000 from the previous year, but the festival did break even. Grandview Bench resident Gary Wilkinson was approached by an aggressive black bear on Larch Hills trails. The bear pinned down his dog and then after releasing it, came after him. He was able to escape by hitting it in the snout with his walking stick.

It was announced that a Winners, Dollarama, and a third Tim Hortons would open up at the SmartCentres site in 2016. Peace in the Park, an outdoor public yoga event, was held for the first time at Marine Peace Park. The inaugural Applefest was held downtown at the Ross Street Plaza. A celebration of apples, it featured samples of apples and apple products, live entertainment, and more.

September

Salmon Arm’s Tony Rupp received a kidney transplant donated by one of his employees at Rupp Metalworks. Funds were raised by the community to assist with his three-month stay in Vancouver.

Many local seniors traveled to North Vancouver for the 2015 55+ BC Games, and 46 medals were brought home by Shuswap residents.

24 Years in business

Custom Wood Working

5351 - 46th Ave. SE, Salmon Arm

• Wood doors • Mouldings • Vanities • Entrance ways • Kitchen installation

www.shuswapmillwork.bc.ca

www.panago.com •

250-832-9556

Mobile ordering

310-0001 501-360 Trans Canada Hwy SW, Salmon Arm

23 Years in business 22 Years in business

Locally Owned & Operated

10th Ave. & 10th St. SW, Salmon Arm 250 832-0441 www.piccadillymall.com

Complete Automotive Repair

250-832-1123

1371A 10 AVE. SW, SALMON ARM, BC (Next to The Mall at Piccadilly)

“Uniting Those Who Care with the Needs of Our Community to Create a Vibrant Caring Shuswap”

21 Years in business

Ask us about our Matching Funds Program!

Box 624, 450 Lakeshore Drive NE, Salmon Arm BC V1E 4N7 • www.shuswapfoundation.ca • (250) 832-5428

21 Years in business

RANDY’S CLEANING SERVICES

Professional Window Cleaning / Commercial, Residential 250-804-4856 In the Shuswap Since 1995 Call Randy

19 Years in business 18 Years in business 18 Years in business 16 Years in business

250-832-7335

865 Lakeshore Dr. SW, Salmon Arm Email: championawards@shaw.ca

Professional tattooing & piercing in a comfortable and relaxed atmosphere

NE W T ION LOCA

250-804-0155

#202-121 Hudson Ave NE Salmon Arm vertigotattoos@gmail.com

WOOD STOVES • AIR CONDITIONING • FURNACE & HEATING

SA HOME COMFORT CENTRE

We install everything we sell!

Serving the Shuswap for 18 years

250-804-4328

1860 - 10 Avenue SW, Salmon Arm www.homecomfortcentre.ca

4060 - 1st Ave, SW, Salmon Arm

• 250-833-1129

Serving Kamloops to Golden • Toll Free 1-888-816-1117


A20 Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News

15 Years in business 14 Years in business 14 Years in business 14 Years in business 14 Years in business 13 Years in business 12 Years in business Years in12 business

www.lakeshorenews.bc.ca

Owners: Eric & Shelley

Repairs: U-Haul:

DESIGNATED INSPECTION FACILITY

Family owned and operated

250-832-7543 250-832-2310

2560 10 Ave. SW (TCH), Salmon Arm

The Silverbacks began their first game of the season with a moment of silence for Hallie Grace Bolduc, daughter of Backs forward Carson Bolduc and his girlfriend Kierra Lentz. Hallie died in early September at age one month because of an enterovirus infection.

HARDIE HOME DECORATING 303-251 Trans Canada Hwy NW

250-833-1410

• FASHION • FOOTWEAR • FITNESS 160 Lakeshore Drive Salmon Arm

250-804-0555

The Haney Harvest Festival was a tasty success, with its usual variety of local fare and enjoyable atmosphere.

Helping you look and feel your best, from the inside out!

QUALITY USED VEHICLES. DISCOUNT PRICES ON BRAND NAME TIRES.

4 TIRES installed & balanced … $59.00 1060 Hwy 97B NE, Salmon Arm

www.driverscarandtruck.com

250-804-8817

We do horse blankets, entrance mats, coveralls & more.

SALMON ARM DRYCLEANERS & LAUNDRY

430 - 7th St. SW Salmon Arm

250-833-1470 (across from Blackburn Park)

DAILY BREAKFAST, LUNCH & DINNER SPECIALS

Seniors’ & Children’s Menus, Breakfast All Day, Homemade Desserts Top of the Hill, Salmon Arm

The sockeye salmon numbers were way down, although the chinooks were plentiful.

832-0015 2400 TCH NE, Salmon Arm

DAILY FEATURE: 6 Piece California Roll & Sunomono Salad

1050

The board of directors at R. J. Haney Heritage Village & Museum cancelled the annual and popular Spooktacular event to conserve funds for the Montebello Block project and the community celebration planned for Canada’s 150th birthday in 2017.

Canadian comedian and actor Brent Butt performed at the Salmar Classic Theatre.

Rick & Cindy Herd

$

Approx. $4,575 was raised for cancer research during the Terry Fox Run, held at Blackburn Park. The same weekend, Bike For Your Life Century Ride raised $4,000 for the Second Harvest Food Bank and $750 for the Shuswap Trail Alliance.

The derelict North Canoe Hall was put up for sale, with the North Canoe Community Association hoping to sell it for the land only.

Complete Automotive Repair

250-832-0688

Work began on a new roof of historic Notch Hill Hall, thanks to many volunteers, sponsors, tradespeople, politicians, and residents of Sorrento, Notch Hill and nearby communities.

October

www.homerestaurant.ca

TAKEZUSHI sushi restaurant

The annual Poker Run at the Riverfront Pub in Grindrod raised almost $9,000 for those affected by fires in Rock Creek over the summer.

Notch Hill Hall had its first trade show.

OPEN DAILY AT 7 AM

EVERY DAY

Six North Okanagan Shuswap Jiu-jitsu students returned home with two medals each from the 2015 North American Grappling Championship held in Seattle. The Salmon Arm Art Gallery held an installation featuring a life-size tree made from knitted contributions from the community. The Mall at Piccadilly and the Shuswap Community Foundation both celebrated a twentieth anniversary.

The City of Salmon Arm received a 5-Bloom Community Award for their entry into the British Columbia Communities in Bloom competition.

12 Years in business 11 Years in business

September (continued) The Salmon Arm Fall Fair featured 326 new exhibitors, but attendance was down slightly, by about 800.

The inaugural “Inspired to Shine” conference for girls and women was held in Salmon Arm.

SAMSON

CLEANING SUPPLY “The Original Green Clean Store”

SAMSON

VACUUMS Sales, Service & Repairs

295 5th Ave SW S.A. • samsonsoap@shaw.ca • 250-832-4020

Conservative party candidate Mel Arnold was elected to be MP for the Shuswap. Nationally, Justin Trudeau brought the Liberals back into power, with a Conservative Official Opposition.

Tarnows Hair & Day Spa closed its doors in Centenoka Mall, and staff joined with counterpart Tangles Salon at the Mall at Piccadilly.


Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News A21

www.lakeshorenews.bc.ca

November

Mahalia and Mike Meeuwsen of Salmon Arm, celebrated the birth of their identical triplet girls, an event that doctors say the odds of are one in 50 million births without the use of fertility treatments. After a stay at Royal Inland Hospital in Kamloops, the family came home in time for Christmas. The Skyline Truck Stop, a Craigellachie landmark, was destroyed by fire, thought to have been caused by a space heater on the second floor.

The community raised money for a stay at BC Children’s Hospital for16-year-old Megan Senn who was battling leukemia. One of her teachers, Vivian Morris, wrote a book called Megan’s Smile, to help with fundraising. After 35 years in business, Salmon Arm’s Safeway closed its doors.

60-year-old Shuswap resident Andrej Schmiegel died after his truck collided with a tree in Notch Hill.

BC Hydro and the City of Salmon Arm installed a DC Fast Charging System in the Ross Street parking lot. Customers pay with The Shuswap Rotary’s credit or mobile app and annual fundraising dintheir vehicle receives a ner raised a whopping charge in 20 minutes. $80,000.

The Selkirks swim club started their season by breaking 45 club records at the Triple Pentathlon meet in Penticton.

Various groups in Salmon Arm banded together in a commitment to bring three to five Syrian refugee families to the community.

The Royal Bank of Canada branch in Chase was robbed at gunpoint. The suspect escaped by vehicle, and no one was injured.

December

The body of a 47-year-old Lee Creek woman was found in a residence in the North Shuswap. The RCMP treated the death as suspicious. The Silverbacks won back-to-back victories in one weekend against the Vernon Vipers.

The body of 76-year-old Salmon Arm resident Mildren Ekren was found in the water near Shuswap Wharf after she went missing in the morning and following an intensive search. The groundbreaking ceremony took place for the $1.2 million dollar Montebello Block project at R. J. Haney Heritage Village. The project is slated for completion mid-2017.

After wading through a huge amount of public input, Salmon Arm city council decided to allow leashed dogs access to the foreshore trail for a trial period of one year.

Gord Erickson, owner of the Outlaws building, announced his intention to convert the nightclub into an organic market & café. Outlaws will move into the Hideaway Pub building. From this year’s shopping spree proceeds, Santa’s Workshop in Enderby donated $3,000 to the Enderby food bank and $400 to each of four area school food programs.

10 Years in business 10 Years in business

We Have 7

Your Purified Water for the Shuswap Ph: 250-832-1816 | Fax: 250-832-9815 E: info@h2o4u.ca | www.h2o4u.ca

2 - 320 7th St. SW, Salmon Arm • 250 833-0132

Years in7business

Get it done RIGHT here! 250-832-3644

Years in6business

250-833-1980 171 The Mall at Piccadilly

Proudly Locally Owned & Operated.

INK REFILLS • TONER • PRINTER

SALES & REPAIRS 254 Shuswap Street NE, Salmon Arm BC | E: inkwiz@telus.net

• Pet Foods • Farm & Garden • Bee Supplies

GREAT SELECTION OF SEEDS!

Hidden Gems Bookstore Treasures For Your Mind

1771 10 Ave SW, Salmon Arm, BC

(250) 832-8424

250-833-0011

www.hiddengemsbookstore.com

331 D Alexander Street S.A • Beside Shuswap Pie Company

Prevention, Not Repair

Years in6business Years in6business

centerpointauto.ca

www.appleautoglass.com

Years in9business

Years in8business

Enderby 904 George St (Johnston Meier Ins.) Grindrod 3rd Ave (Beside Mayberry Market) Sicamous #3 444 Main St (Beside Happy Corkers)

• Experienced Mechanics • Diagnostics • Preventative Maintenance & Repair For All Makes & Models, Domestic or Imports • Designated Inspection Facility

Years in9business

Years in8business

- 24 HOUR Vending Sites:

Salmon Arm 121 C Shuswap St (Blue Canoe Bakery) 2890 10th Ave NE (Domino’s Pizza) 401 - 251 TCH (Main Store) Sorrento 1240 TCH That Damm Market (Plaza)

Interim Stabilzation Therapy

Oral Health Exams Teeth Whitening

Unit 206, Towne Square 310 Hudson Ave NE Salmon Arm 250 832 6692 • grin@thesmilepeople.ca

Liz-Ann Munro Lamarre

Quality Homemade Pies & Pastries

• Savoury Pie Menu • Sandwich Menu • Soups • Daily Lunch Specials • Coffee, Cappuccinos, Lattes, Mochas Unit A, 331 Alexander Street – Salmon Arm

www.shuswappiecompany.ca • 250-832-7992

Serving Salmon Arm's furriest & dirtiest.

Between Mac’s / Home Restaurant Hwy 1 East, Salmon Arm

Thanks to all our loyal clients for making year five a success!

Lori: 250-833-2081 Tiara: 250-253-2524

M-F Sat by Appt.


A22 Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News

www.lakeshorenews.bc.ca

COMMUNITYCALENDAR SALMON ARM Shuswap Writers’ Coffee House: Featured guest author Alice Lewis will read from her book entitled “The Book of Mom,” Fri. Jan. 22 at Choices, 40 Lakeshore Dr. Light supper avail at 6:30 p.m., open mic readings 7:00 p.m. Poets, prose writers, songwriters welcome. Or, just come to listen. Free. Info: Dorothy 832-3537. Jumbo Wild, Fri. Jan. 22, 7:00 p.m. at the Salmar Classic. $5, proceeds go to the Larch Hills Junior Race Team for expenses for traveling to Nationals in Whitehorse in March. Dance Series Live On Screen: The Taming of the Shrew (Bolshoi), Sun. Jan. 24, 1:00 p.m. at the Salmar Classic, 360 Alexander St. Tix $20 adults, $11 youth. Buddhist Meditation Class Wed. Jan. 27, 7:00–8:30 p.m. at the Downtown Activity Centre 451 Shuswap St. SW. Drop-in class consists of guided meditations and a teaching. Suggested donation $10. For class topic and info www.dorjechang.ca or 1-5580952. No fragrance please. Paid listing Shuswap Garden Club meeting, Thurs. Jan. 28, 7:00 p.m. at the Scout Hall (2460 Auto Rd). Guest speaker Karen Froess will talk about “lasagne gardening.” All welcome. Salmon Arm & South Shuswap Friends of the Library book sale, Fri. Jan. 29, 9 a.m.–8 p.m., and Sat. Jan. 30, 9 a.m.–4 p.m. outside the library entrance at the Mall at Piccadilly. Donations of gently used books welcomed at each branch of the library the week before the sale. Met Opera Live On Screen: Turandot (Puccini), Sat. Jan. 30, 9:55 a.m. at the Salmar Classic, 360 Alexander St. Tix $24 adults, $18 youth. New Year New You! Yoga classes for beginners to advanced start now. Free introduction to meditation Tues. Jan. 26, 7:00 p.m. Find peace, reduce stress and have good health this new year. Namaste Yoga & Wellness Centre, 201-310 Hudson Ave (next to the post office) 832-3647 or visit wwwyogasalmonarm.com. Shuswap Music Festival Registration closes Sunday, Jan. 31. All entries for strings, piano, band, choirs and vocal, as well as the new discipline of speech arts, must be completed online by Jan. 31. Register now at www.ShuswapFestival.com. No late entries accepted. Festival runs from April 15 to 29 and culminates with a gala concert. More info on the website. Mackenzie Camp Society AGM, Sat. Feb. 6, 7:00 p.m. at St. Andrew’s United Church, 1110 Belvedere St. Salmon Arm Community Band practices Sundays, 7 p.m. at the First United Church, 20 4 SE info: 832-2195. Gospel Coffeehouse, 3rd Sunday/mo, 2 p.m. at the SASCU Downtown Activity Centre, 451 Shuswap St SW. New location. Info: Hank 833-7900 or Lloyd 836-5455. Blind Bay Mixed Curling League meets Mondays, 10:00 a.m. at the Salmon Arm Curling Centre. Info: Eleanor 675-5127 or eapay@telus.net. Co-ed recreational dodgeball league register at www.aspiralyouthpartners.ca, email dodgeball@youthpartners.ca or visit the Shuswap Dodgeball page on Facebook. Scrabble Club, Tuesdays 9:30 a.m. and Wednesdays 7:00 p.m. at Seniors’ Fifth Ave Activity Centre. For info phone Elizabeth 832-7478. TOPS #1767 Salmon Arm meets Tuesdays 10 a.m. at St. John’s Anglican Church, 170 Shuswap St. Info: 832-8399. TOPS #1377 Salmon Arm meets Wednesdays 6 p.m. at the Catholic Church, 90 1st St. SE Info: Heather 832-8399. Healthiest Babies Possible drop-in group on Tuesdays, 10:30 a.m.–1:00 p.m. at Crossroads Free Methodist Church – 121 Shuswap St. SW. Jan. 27: Clothing day. Info: Trish Johnson, 832-2170 ext 205.

Floor curling, Tuesdays 1:30 p.m. at 5th Avenue Senior’s Hall. The Spiritualist Church of Salmon Arm offers spiritual healing with trained healers, third Tues./mo. until the end of Jun. 2016. 7:00 p.m. (drs 6:30 p.m.) at the Seniors’ Drop-in Centre, 31 Hudson Ave NE. All welcome, must be consenting adults or have parental/guardian permission. Info: Rev. Norm Russell 804-0442. Search for Your Roots at Family History Centre, Tues. 10 a.m.-2 p.m., Wed. 10 a.m.12 p.m., 7-9 p.m., and Thurs. 12-3 p.m. at 1400 – 20 St. NE (Mormon Church). Info: Kathie 835-8264 or Barb 675-4533. Salmon Arm Masters Waves Swim Club swim times: Tues/Thurs 6-7:30 a.m., Mon/ Wed 7:30-9 p.m., and Sat 6:30-8 a.m. Info: Lori Roy theroys@telus.net. Shuswap Chess Club meets every Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. at the Seniors Centre, 170 – 5th Ave. All chess players welcome regardless of level. Shuswap Writers’ Group meet first/third Wednesdays/mo., 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. in the boardroom at the Mall at Piccadilly. Develop your writing skills in a supportive environment. Info: swginfo@intheshuswap. ca or 675-5097. Salmon Arm Masonic Lodge #52 meets 2nd Wed/mo, 7:30 p.m. at 270 Alexander St NE. Visitors welcome. Info: 832-9521. Shuswap Lady Striders Year-round Wed. walkers meet at Wearabouts on Alexander St. at 12:15 p.m. for a 45-minute walk; Early Birds meet year-round on Thurs. for a 1-hour walk, 8 a.m. Uptown Askews parking lot. Info: ladystriders@gmail.com. Shuswap Wood Carvers meet Wednesdays and Saturdays, 8:30 a.m. –noon. Anyone interested is welcome. Info: Ken 675-3316 or Norm 517-8089. Shuswap Quilters Guild meets at 9:30 a.m. on 2nd and 4th Wed. of month in the parish hall of St. Joseph’s Church. Info: Carol 8324263 or Blanche 832-9045. Weight & See drop-in service for parents with babies 10 days old to 6 mos. Weds 1:30-3 p.m. at S.A. Health Centre, 851 – 16 St. NE. Info: 833-4100. Air Cadets 222 Shuswap meet Wednesdays, 6:15 p.m. at the Downtown Activity Centre, 451 Shuswap St. SW (new location) Sept. to mid-June. For youth 12-18. Info: 833-0222 (msg) or info@222air.com. Square Dance classes Wednesdays 6:30 p.m. at Seniors Fifth Ave Activity Ctr. Info: Lori 832-4417. Shuswap Men’s Chorus meet Wednesdays, 7:00 p.m. in the band room at SASS Jackson campus. All musical levels, new members welcome. Info: Mary Landers 832-2359. Shuswap Singers is a mixed choir for ages 16 and over. Weekly rehearsals on Thursdays, 6:45 p.m. at New Hope Community Church. All singers welcome. Info: www.shuswapsingers.ca. The Salmon Arm Sketch and Paint Club meets Thursdays, 9:00 a.m. to noon in the lower level of the Salmon Arm Art Gallery. All skill levels are welcome. Info: Marg 832-8367 or Dawn 832-3344. Shuswap Fly Fishers meet 2nd Thurs/ mo, 6:30 p.m. at Yan’s Restaurant. Supper meeting, fishing reports. Info: Al 804-5166. Salmon Arm Toastmasters meet Thursdays, 6:50 p.m. at the Downtown Activity Centre, 451 Shuswap St SW. Visitors welcome. Info: www.salmonarmtm.com or call Walter at 833-5802. Join Mount Ida Harmony, a men’s a cappella chorus in the barbershop style. They meet Thursdays, 7:00 p.m. at Askew’s uptown community room. Info: Dan 6752174, 515-0301; Ron 832-1972, 826-1961; or Dettmar 833-2890, 832-5008. Shuswap Coffeehouse, Fri. Jan. 22, 7:00 p.m. at the Downtown Activity Ctr. All ages welcome! Bring your instrument and dancing shoes! Door prizes! Sharon 8048080.

Shuswap Singles & Friends meet for weekly/monthly activities. Join members for friendship, camaradarie and fun. All ages welcome. Info: Jean 833-1068 or Betty 8322315. TAPPEN/SUNNYBRAE Country Breakfast, Sat. Jan. 23, 8–11a.m. at Sunnybrae Seniors Hall, 3585 Sunnybrae Canoe Point Rd. $8 ($4 under 12). All ages welcome. The Shuswap Needle Arts Guild meets the first/third Thurs., 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. at the Sunnybrae Senior Centre. New members always welcome. Contact Jo 832-9308 or Sharon 832-4588. Sunnybrae Painters meet every Wednesday, 9 a.m. 2:30 p.m. at the Sunnybrae Seniors’ Centre, 3595 Sunnybrae-Canoe Pt. Rd. Info: Ireen Burke 835-8539. CARLIN/SKIMIKIN Carlin Hall: Coffee House first Sat./ mo. Musicians sign up 6:45; music lovers 7 p.m., fun starts at 7:30 p.m. Goodies available by donation. Tuesdays 7–9 p.m.: bring your acoustic instruments and learn in a ’slow pitch’ jam environment. This is for beginners. Call Larry at 675-5426. First session Tues. Oct. 5. $5. NOTCH HILL Notch Hill Town Hall Assoc: no monthly meeting Jan. & Feb. Next mtg Mar. 7, 2016. AGM Mon. Apr. 4. Coffee House 3rd Sat./ mo. Coffee house continues 3rd Sat./mo. Info/hall rentals: 675-4174. SORRENTO/BLIND BAY Foot Care Clinic, Wed. Jan. 27 at Copper Island Seniors Resource Centre. Small fee for 30 min. 515-6047 or cisrcbb@gmail. com for appts. Do you write? Would you like to enhance your writing skills by meeting and working with other writers? Join the Writers’ Group, 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. 2nd/4th Wed/mo at the Okanagan Regional Library, South Shuswap Branch in Blind Bay. Free. Info: www. thethirdhouse.ca. Fitness for Independent Living, Monday and/or Thursday, 10 a.m., at 2510 Blind Bay Rd, Blind Bay Hall. New: monthly fitness class, for individuals who can benefit from a gentle exercise routine and/or may prefer to approach their exercises with the benefit of a chair to stabilize their efforts. Also suitable for individuals with a limited range of motion. Contact Iris Bemister at 778490-5060 or Betty Schriver at 675-2249 to register. Copper Island Seniors’ Resource Ctr: The free Cyber-Seniors Computer Tutoring program at CISRC has openings for learners. Info: Darlene Koss (LASS) 515-6047 (message), 305-9598 (text) or bbseniors@ shuswapliteracy.ca. Grief support: CISRC partners with Shuswap Hospice Society to provide Grief Support in the South Shuswap. Pls contact 515-6047 to register. Limited space. The Blind Bay Painters welcome other painters to join them, to paint in all media, Tuesdays 9:30 a.m.–2:00 p.m. at 2510 Blind Bay Rd. Info: Inge Maier 675-2860 or Judy Frederickson 675-3164. Duplicate Bridge at Cedar Heights Centre runs Wednesdays at 7:00 p.m. Info: Vicki at 675-2141. Social Bridge at Cedar Heights Centre runs Monday, 1:00 p.m. Info: Gloria at 675-4208. N & S Shuswap Guys and Gals Hikers meet 2nd/4th Wed/mo. Meet at Cedar Heights Centre parking lot. Info & meeting times: gloria16@telus.net or 675-0036. TOPS #4369 Sorrento meets Wednesdays 8:15–10:00 a.m. at Our Lady of the Lake Catholic Church (lower level), 2740 Fairway Hills Rd, Blind Bay. Info: 675-2849. TOPS #1856 meets Thursday mornings 8:30 a.m. at Sorrento Place Clubhouse, 2932 Buckley Rd. Info: call Jacquie 675-2574. Shuswap Wood Carvers meet every

Wed. & Sat. from 8:30 a.m. to noon. Any interested is welcome. Info: Ken 675-3316 or Norm 517-8089. Carpet bowling Wednesdays 1:30 p.m. at Blind Bay Hall. New bowlers welcome! Info: 675-2693 or 675-5110. Sorrento Badminton Club Wednesdays 7:00–9:00 p.m. at the Sorrento Elementary School gym. $3 drop in. 675-2397. Sorrento Lions meet 1st/3rd Thurs/mo, 7:00 p.m. at the Memorial Hall, 1148 Passchendaele Rd. Open to men and women. Info: sorrentolionsclub@yahoo.ca or visit http://e-clubhouse.org/sites/sorrentobc/ Sorrento Scottish Country Dancers meet Saturdays, 9:30–10.30 a.m. team practice; 10:30–noon, dances for everyone, at the Sorrento Drop in Society Ctr. New members welcome. Info: Wendy 675-3518 or akwrdean@telus.net. Or visit www. RDSweb.net/SSCD. Cedar Heights Fitness Classes: Coed Fitness: Mon/Wed/Fri 9:00 a.m. with aerobics/strength training and Mon/Wed/ Fri 10:00 a.m. co-ed strength training. Call Heather 675-3350 or Sherri 675-3308. EAGLE BAY Eagle Bay Hall: Quilting: Mon. 10-2 (bring lunch) Inez 675-4531. Crafts: Wed. 10-2 (bring lunch) Dot 675-4282. Fitness: Tues. & Thurs. 9-10. Sharon 675-2408. Darts: Fri. 7:15 p.m. Alan 675-5403. Coffee house Jan. 23, 7:30 p.m. Performers welcome! Gaetane 675-2178. Bottles/cans gratefully accepted all year long. Pls drop off by shed. CHASE The Light of Life Native Fellowship Service, Sundays 3:00 p.m. at the Chase Evangelical Free Church (Shuswap Ave & Brooke Dr). Share food & fellowship with everyone after service. All welcome. Chase Parkside Estates Residential Hymn Sing, 3rd Sun./mo., 2:00 p.m. All welcome; meet & greet residents. GRINDROD Grindrod Recreation Association’s Accoustic Coffeehouse Fri. Feb. 5th, 7:30 p.m. at the Grindrod Hall. New and previous performers welcome. $3 (for nonperformers) includes lunch table. Info: Ethel 838-0807. ENDERBY/ASHTON CREEK Storytellers Club. It’s all about telling a good story, entertaining others and having fun. Participants will be encouraged to write a story and present it orally. The stories presented will be up to five minutes and feedback is optional. No dues, everyone welcome. Each meeting will have a storyteller boss to introduce speakers and keep the meeting moving along. If this is for you please call Estelle at 546-6186. Lego Club at the Enderby library, Wednesdays 2:30–3:30 p.m. at the Enderby branch of ORL, 514 Cliff Ave. For kids 6-12 yrs. Info: 838-6488 or visit www.orl.bc.ca. Fun & Fitness Tuesdays & Thursdays, 9–10 a.m. at the Enderby Seniors’ Centre. Gentle aerobics, strengthening & stretching. Info: Sue 838-6755. The Red Road to Wellbriety: in the Native American Way, Wednesdays 7 p.m. at the Timbercreek Hall. Snacks provided. Info: Garry 309-8847. Enderby River Dancers dance Fridays at the Enderby Seniors Complex. Phase lll Pre-Rounds 7:00 – 7:30, Mainstream with Rounds 7:30 to 9:30. Info: Wendy 838-2107 or Dianne 838-9445. Storytime for ages 3 and up, Saturdays 11 a.m. to Nov. 29 at the Enderby branch of Okanagan Regional Library, 514 Cliff Ave. Stories, songs, puppets and fun. Free, dropin. Info: 838-6488 or visit www.orl.bc.ca. Good Food Box: Must pay by second Wed/ month at Baron Insurance or Century 21. Pick up 3rd Thurs/mo. 10 a.m.–12:30 p.m. at 720 Mill St. (New location) Bring bag or box. Info: 838-6298.


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Donations and bequests are requested for equipment to help care for patients and residents of the Hospital and Bastion Place Tax receipts will be issued. Mail to: Shuswap Hospital Foundation Box 265, Salmon Arm, BC V1E 4N3 • Ph: 250 803-4546 Donate Online (secure site): www.shuswaphospitalfoundation.org CANADA BENEFIT Group Do you or someone you know suffer from a disability? Get up to $40,000 from the Canadian government. Toll-free 1-888511-2250 or www.canada benefit.ca/free-assessment

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Bowers Funeral Service is again pleased to be sponsoring our annual grief information seminar facilitated by Naomi Silver. Naomi has 25 years of experience providing grief support to families in our community. This seminar will include practical and useful suggestions on ways to help yourself when you are grieving. Handouts will be provided. This seminar will be held in the Bowers Funeral Home Mountainside Complex on Saturday, Jan. 30, 2016, from 9:30 am - 12:30 pm with a lunch to follow. There will be an optional support session to follow in the afternoon for those who wish to stay. To pre-register or for more information, please contact Bowers Funeral Service at 250-832-2223. There is no charge for this seminar.

Beryl Fisher August 26, 1925 – 10, 2016 January 11, The ANGELS came 10, 2016 on January 11, for one of their own, Beryl Fisher in her 91st year, formally of 37 Sun Valley, Chase. She is survived by her husband of 71 years, Bill, and two sons, Bill Jr. (Mary) and Edward (Dengie), also four granddaughters, Hannah, Kimberley, Cianna, and Seri with one great granddaughter Honor and great grandson Rowan. Born in the UK, she moved to Calgary, then Adams lake, before becoming a long time resident of Chase where she became an accomplished bowler. Beryl loved gardening, crafts, and reading but her greatest resource was being kind, loving, helpful, a wonderful mother, and in short, an ANGEL. The family would like to thank the numerous friends in Sun Valley and around the Chase area for love shown, including Debbie who went way beyond her duties. Thanks go to all medical personnel in Chase and Shuswap Lake General Hospital. Beryl requested no service. Just remember her the way she was, ’’lovely like a rose� Arrangements entrusted to Fischer’s Funeral Services & Crematorium Ltd., Salmon Arm (250) 833-1129. Email condolences and share memories of Beryl through her obituary at www.fischersfuneralservices.com.

John Stefureak 1949 - 2016 With sadness and sorrow we announce the passing of John Stefureak on January 08, 2016. John was born July 08, 1949 in Two Hills, Alberta. At the age of four his family moved to Edmonton, AB where he spent his early childhood and teen years. After graduating high school in 1967, he began travelling and saw much of the world. He settled in the Shuswap area in the late seventies and he eventually moved to Sorrento, BC where he spent the last 25 years of his life. John’s daughter, Erin, was born in 1983. John began a career welding with Newnes Machine in Salmon Arm, BC, and worked with them for several years. He then took those skills and finished off his working life as a rig mechanic in Sanaa, Yemen. When it was time to retire, he built himself a shop on his property and retired quietly to create beautiful, ornamental iron work. Each piece was unique with his special, artistic touch. John enjoyed golfing, flying planes, and scuba diving, but travel and creativeness were always his bliss. John was predeceased by his parents; Peter and Annie Stefureak. He is lovingly remembered by his daughter Erin and her husband Wayne Lougheed; grandchildren, Aden, Elizabeth, and Gavin; sisters, Vicky Martin and Mary (Frank) MacDonald; brothers, Matt (Bev) and Willis Stefureak; as well as several nieces and nephews, and great nieces and nephews. Thank you to the wonderful staff at Bastion Place for all the tender love and care you provided Dad. Arrangements entrusted to Fischer’s Funeral Services & Crematorium Ltd., Salmon Arm (250) 833-1129. Email condolences and share memories of John through his obituary at www.fischersfuneralservices.com.

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MACDONALD, Kenneth Gerard 1931 – 2015 Ken died at the age of 84 on 6 January 2015. He was born on 19 March 1931 in St. Margaret’s, Prince Edward Island. Ken and his wife Noreen Agnes MacDonald moved to Salmon Arm, British Columbia 30 years ago after Ken retired. Ken trained as a teacher in PEI, but decided to take up a career in operating grain elevators when he moved to Calgary, Alberta to take up his first position with the federal government. He managed grain elevators in Prince Rupert, Moose Jaw, and Churchill. Ken was an avid golfer (four holes in one) and was a member of the eight ender club in curling. He is survived by his wife Noreen, his sons, Ian and Gerard and his sister Margaret. He also has four grandchildren, Sean, Emily, Erin, and Giselle who will miss him. The family would like to thank all those who helped provide care to Ken in his final years, in particular, the staff at the Shuswap Lodge Retirement Residence where Ken and his wife moved in 2014. Prayers will be offered as part of the 5:00 pm mass at St Joseph’s on 23 January 2016. Arrangements entrusted to Fischer’s Funeral Services & Crematorium Ltd., Salmon Arm (250) 833-1129. Email condolences and share memories of Ken through her obituary at www.fischersfuneralservices.com.

Helen Louise Sveinson Helen was born May 20, 1935 in Edmonton, Alberta to Louise and Nicholas Feniak. She lived in rural Alberta until grade 3 when her dad had to give up grain buying because his asthma became difficult. From there she lived in the city of Edmonton, graduating from Vic High. She also completed grade 8 Royal Conservatory piano.

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US capable Class 1 Drivers required immediately: We are an Okanagan based transport company looking for qualified drivers for US loads we run primarily in the Pacific Northwest, Utah, Arizona and Nevada. We offer a new pay rate empty or loaded. All picks and drops paid. Assigned units company cell phones and fuel cards. Regular home time Direct deposit paid every second Friday with no hold backs. We offer a rider and pet policy. Company paid US travel Insurance. All applicants must have reliable transportation and a positive attitude. Please fax resume & abstract to 250-546-0600 or by email to parris@ricknickelltrucking.com NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE.

SUPPORT GROUP MEETINGS & HOTLINES Salmon Arm Overeaters Anonymous info, - contact Rita, 250-804-2739.

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Individuals living with cancer please contact the Canadian Cancer Society, Cancer Information Service toll-free at 1-888-9393333 or email info@cis.cancer.ca to talk with an Information Specialist for info and to answer your questions. Depression support group bi-polar, clinical depression or anxiety. 1st/3rd Monday at noon, Askews (Uptown) conference room. Info: Nan at ndickie@telus.net or 250-8323733. Narcotics Anonymous: Mondays 7 p.m. at Crossroads Church basement, 121 Shuswap St. and Saturdays, 7:30 p.m. at Shuswap Community Church, 3151 - 6th Ave. NE. Alzheimer Society Caregiver Support Group meets 2nd & 4th Mondays, 10 a.m. to 12 noon at Seniors Resource Centre, 320A 2nd Ave. NE (under Dr. Chu’s office) Upcoming dates: Jan. 11 & 25, Feb. 15 & 29, Mar. 7 & 21. Unwanted pregnancy? Need to know all your options? Contact the Pregancy Support Centre of the Shuswap - visit www. pscshuswap.ca, email psc.shuswap.gmail. com or phone 833-9959. New Beginnings Recovery Support Group weekly drop-in sessions for those newly in recovery who are dealing with any type of substance misuse. Practical info & strategies to support the change process - withdrawal, relapse prevention, anxiety, depression, treatment planning and more. Tues. 1:00 – 2:45 p.m. Register/info MHSU Office Downtown 833-4103. Brain Injury Survivor Support Group meets 1st and 3rd Tuesdays, 1-3 p.m. at (new location!) McGuire Lake Congregate Living, Banquet Room. Grandparents Raising Grandchildren support network. Help for area grandparents who are raising or contemplating raising their grandchildren. Resources and support including drop-in every 2nd/ 4thTues. 10 a.m.–12 p.m. at Shuswap Family Resource Centre. Info: Jan 832-2170 ext 354. If you have an Acquired Brain Injury, please join the 2nd/4th Tuesdays of the month at the NOSBIS office, 364B Ross St. NE (ground floor entrance on the side of the Century 21/ EZ Rock office building) from 12–1:30 p.m. Info: North Okanagan Shuswap Brain Injury Society 833-1140. Brain Injury Caregiver/Family Support Group meets 2nd and 4th Tuesdays, 1-3 p.m. at NOSBIS office. 364B Ross St. NE (ground floor entrance on the side of the Century 21/ EZ Rock office building).

Helen trained and graduated in radiation medical technology, x-ray, and radiation. She met Tom at a big band dance at Sylvan Lake. Four years later they married and had children ‌ son Mark, daughter Sydney, and daughter Marla. The family lived in various rural towns in Alberta, as well as Calgary and Edmonton, while raising the children and Tom working for the bank.

Separation & Divorce Care - find help, discover hope, experience healing in a special weekly seminar and support group. Please call 832-3121 to be connected.

Helen gave up a job she loved as head of radiology at Didsbury Hospital due to health issues. Tom and Helen retired to Salmon Arm which they have so enjoyed. Helen worked part time at Shuswap Lake General Hospital until 1999. She loved healing energy work, pastoral care, and her connection to Naramata Healing Centre.

Shuswap Parkinson’s Support Group meets every 1st and 3rd Wednesday/mo, 9:50 a.m. at the First United Church, 20 4th St SE. All welcome. Info: MaryLou 832-4785; Doreen 836-2509; Don 838-0794.

She enjoyed water aerobics, yoga, cross country skiing, and snowshoeing. Her place of peace and refuge was the wharf and the birds.

Grief: are you or someone you know struggling with a terminal illness or the loss of a loved one? The Shuswap Hospice Society is here to help. Call Judy at 250-832-7099.

Helen appreciated her life with First United Church, in choir and other endeavours. She and Tom sang Friday mornings with Bert’s choir ‌ a delight for her. She appreciated the care she received from Dr. Rose, Dr. Willms, and Dr. Delorme. Her faith sustained her through many years of health issues. Helen is survived by her husband Tom, daughter Sydney and her two children, Alex and Lara, daughter Marla (Jamie) and their three children, Dylan, Emily, and Nicholas, granddaughter Melissa and great grandson Tristan. She was predeceased by their son Mark in 2002. A celebration of life service was held at the First United Church on Sunday, January 17, 2016 at 2:00 pm. Online condolences may be shared with family through Helen’s obituary at www.bowersfuneralservice.com

The Compassionate Friends, a support group for bereaved parents, is no longer holding monthly sharing meetings. Individual help is available by phoning Sandy, 675-3793 or Nelly 832-7222.

Community Caregivers Alliance Society no longer meets regularly. Please call 832-0052 or 835-2205 for information, to talk, or to schedule a meeting.

Shuswap Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)

Support Group meets the first Thursday/mo, Public Health Unit, 851 – 16th St NE. 6:307:30 p.m. support group (parents/guardians); 7:30-8:30 p.m. guest speaker presentation. Tanja at autism@shuswapchildrens.ca or call 833-0164. Drop-in Parents Together, Wednesdays 7:00–8:30 p.m. at the Family Resource Centre. Skills, problem-solving and encouragement for parents with teens. Info 832-2170.

OPPORTUNITY Complete Commercial Kitchen for Rent Fully equipped. Ideal for catering.

Call 250 804 4940

Alanon meetings held Wed., 8 p.m. Seniors’ Resource Centre, 320A - 2 Ave. NE, 832-2311; or Thurs. noon at First United Church. Info: John 832-7518 or Bev 835-4368. The FCA (Family Caregiver Alliance) Support Group supports those people who have loved ones that have been afflicted with ABI (Acquired Brain Injury). This groups meets at the NOSBIS office at 364B Ross St. on the 2nd/4th Thurs/mo from 3:30–5 p.m. Info: 833-1140. Hope & Recovery: A supportive and hopeful environment for individuals, family and friends who are living with the effects of brain tumours. This group meets on the 2nd/4th Thursdays, 3:30–5 p.m. at the NOSBIS office at 364B Ross St. Info: 833-1140. Confidential mental illness and substance use family support group - a caring environment for family members of a loved one with a mental illness or substance use disorder. Share with other family members who are also supporting a loved one. This group meets from 7–9 p.m. last Thurs/mo. CMHA, 433 Hudson Ave (entrance in back pkng lot grd flr). Denise 832-8477. If you or someone close to you is affected by multiple sclerosis (MS) the Salmon Arm Reaching Out MS Society support group has a drop-in on Fridays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in their new office across from the main Post Office. 803-0109. Salmon Arm Stroke Recovery Support Group meets 2nd, 3rd and 4th Fri./mo at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church 90 1st Street S.E. 10:30 a.m.1:00 p.m. Bring bag lunch. All welcome. Info: Verna 838-7242; Ruth 832-6213 GriefShare is a special weekly seminar and support group for people who are grieving the death of someone close to them. Please call 832-3121 to be connected.

A.A. meetings in Salmon Arm Sunday: 11 a.m. Sunshine Group meets at the Health Unit 851-16th St. NE. Closed grp. Sunday: 7 p.m. Happy Hour Group meets at the United Church, 450 Okanagan Ave. SE. Open grp. Tuesday: 12 p.m. Turning Point Group meets at the Lutheran Church 1801-30th St. NE. Closed grp. Wednesday: 8:00 p.m. Wed Night Group meets at St. Joseph’s Church, 90 1st St SE. Open grp Thursday: 7 p.m. Women’s Circle meets at St. Joseph’s Church, 90 1 St SE. Closed grp. Friday: 12 p.m. Noon meeting at St. Joseph’s Church 90-1st St. SE. Open grp. Blind Bay Alcoholics Anonymous meet Sat. 10:00 a.m. at Shuswap Lake Estates office, upper flr. Sorrento Alcoholics Anonymous meet Sun. 7:00 p.m. at St Mary’s Anglican Church, 1188 TCH. Info: Len 250-679-3945. Enderby / Ashton Creek Alcoholics Anonymous open discussion meeting Fri evenings at 8 p.m. at St. Andrew’s United Church.1-866-531-7045. SUPPORT PHONE NUMBERS Narcotics Anonymous 250-542-0087. Alanon & Alcoholics Anonymous 1-866-531-7045

ME Y FIND NT NEMPLOYMENT LO T T E P N NT M THE M E E E IN CLASSIFIEDS Y E M YM T YM O O PLO PLOY NT N PL PL EM OYME EM OYME EM NT PL PL MENT OYME MENT M M E Y NT E LOY PTL O E L M M N Y MP YMEE EMP O T E L P ,re looking EN Tyou T T LO N N M EM Everything for is P T E E Y NEM YM ENOYM Ethe LO Y in classifieds! M M P O T OYMPL PL MEN EM PLO L M P E OYEM E EM L

Information

Information

IF YOU and / or YOUR CHILDREN are being abused, call the

Women’s Emergency Shelter 250-832-9616

Stopping the Violence Counseling, 250-832-9700. Children who witness abuse program, 250-832-4474. Shuswap Mental Health Intake, 250-833-4102 or RCMP 250-832-6044

DID YOU KNOW? The Lakeshore News goes to Revelstoke the second Friday of every month. classifieds@lakeshorenews.bc.ca For more information call

Chris or Jeff at 250-832-9461 Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Office Administrator/ Classified Sales We have an immediate opening for an Office Adminstrator/Classified Sales Person for the Lakeshore News. Primary Focus: t (SFFU DMJFOUT BOTXFS UFMFQIPOFT t "TTJTUJOH DMJFOUT XJUI DMBTTJü FE BE CPPLJOHT ø t %BUB FOUSZ BOE PGü DF BENJOJTUSBUJPO Qualifications: t .VTU CF B UFBN QMBZFS t 4USPOH UFMFQIPOF TLJMMT t 8PSL XFMM XJUI UIF QVCMJD t 4USPOH SFBEJOH HSBNNBS BOE WPDBCVMBSZ TLJMMT t #PPLLFFQJOH BOE PS TBMFT FYQFSJFODF BO BTTFU t ,OPXMFEHF PG DPNQVUFS TZTUFNT XJUI .BDJOUPTI 0Gü DF 4VJUF BOE 04 QMBUGPSN BO BTTFU 5IJT JT B QBSU UJNF QPTJUJPO CBTFE JO 4BMNPO "SN #$ .POEBZ UP 8FEOFTEBZ #MBDL 1SFTT PGGFST DPNQFUJUJWF DPNQFOTBUJPO B UFBN FOWJSPONFOU BOE CFOFü UT ø 1MFBTF GPSXBSE ZPVS SFTVN� XJUI B CSJFG OPUF PO XIZ ZPV BSF B HSFBU DBOEJEBUF UP ø +FGG .PSSJTPO 1VCMJTIFS KFGG!MBLFTIPSFOFXT CD DB PS ESPQ JU PGG JO QFSTPO BU )VETPO "WF /& CoNQFUJUJPO DMPTFT +BOVBSZ 0OMZ UIPTF TFMFDUFE GPS BO JOUFSWJFX XJMM CF DPOUBDUFE /P QIPOF DBMMT QMFBTF

Lakeshore News blackpress.ca X bclocalnews.com


Lakeshore News Friday, January 22, 2016 www.lakeshorenews.bc.ca

Services

Education/Trade Schools

Financial Services

HEALTHCARE DOCUMENTATION Specialists in huge demand. Employers prefer CanScribe graduates. A great work-from-home career! Contact us now to start your training day. www.canscribe.com. 1-800-466-1535. info@canscribe.com. 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

LARGE FUND Borrowers Wanted Start saving hundreds of dollars 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

Computer Services

START A new career in Graphic Arts, Healthcare, Business, Education or Information Tech. If you have a GED, call: 855-670-9765.

Help Wanted MORELLI Chertkow LLP is seeking to hire an experienced Corporate Legal Administrative Assistant to join our team of legal professionals. Please submit an application to the Administrator, Beverley Clayton, at bclayton@morellichertkow.com.

Medical/Dental ONLY The Best; Expert Hearing is seeking a dynamic office assistant to join our team. P/T possibly F/T. Please email your resume to Jennifer.Parker@exper thearingsolutions.com

Trades, Technical FULL-TIME LICENSED Autobody Technician required immediately by busy Import dealership in the sunny Okanagan. Candidate must hold a valid Autobody ticket. This is a full time, permanent position. Includes benefits and an aggressive wage package. Resumes to Bodyshop Manager: bodyshop@hilltopsubaru.com http://www.hilltopsubaru.com/ employment-opportunities.htm

Volunteers Shuswap Lake Health Care Auxiliary

invites you to join our volunteer group. Meetings are the 3rd Monday of each month throughout the year (except July & August). We are an active and dedicated group and have several fundraisers each year; raising money to purchase equipment for the Shuswap Lake General Hospital and Bastion Place. Please call Edie at 250-804-0145 for further info.

WE WELCOME NEW MEMBERS

Services

Financial Services GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com INCOME TAX PROBLEMS? Have you been audited, reassessed or disallowed certain claims by Canada Revenue Agency? Call Bob Allen @ 1250-542-0295 35yrs. Income Tax experience, 8.5yrs. with Revenue Canada. Email: r.gallen@shaw.ca C- 250-938-1944 THE CRA now has A DUTY OF CARE and is ACCOUNTABLE to CANADIAN TAX PAYERS.

Merchandise for Sale

Rentals

Firewood/Fuel

Misc. for Sale

Suites, Lower

DUMP truck load firewood cut & split (approx. 2-1/2 cords) fir/birch mix. $500 delivered 250-833-6235

NEWSPAPER ROLL ENDS

Newly renovated 2 bdrm, 1 bath basement suite, downtown Salmon Arm. $1075/mo. includes utilities (gas & elect). Private entrance, washer & dryer, fenced yard, walking distance to all amenities. Work & previous rental references req’d. NS, NP. Available immediately. 250-803-1782

Seasoned split heavy fir slab pine mix $165. Split fir 15”, 16”, large cord $170. Call Hank for all your firewood needs for winter 250-832-1914

Misc. for Sale Garden & Lawn WELL ROTTED GARDEN manure, top soils & bark mulch. Stanley Bland. 250-832-6615, 250-833-2449

Misc Services

Home & Yard • REPAIRS • RENO’S • FENCING 250

• DECKS • IRRIGATION SERVICE

-253-4663

ERICKSON’S APPLIANCES Reconditioned Appliances New/Used Parts 90 Day Return

$100 & Under ARE YOU SELLING A HOUSEHOLD ITEM FOR $100 OR LESS?

Buy a Sell aTrade Get excellent coverage in the Lakeshore News Classifieds! 250-832-9461 or

SAWMILLS FROM only $4,397. Make money and save money with your own bandmill. Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. Free info and DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com/400OT

1-800-566-6899 Ext:400OT.

Snowblower 8HP electric start, self propelled, 5 speed. $250. 250-803-0252 Whirlpool fridge & range. Blk. 7 yrs old. Exc working cond. $750 OBO set or sell separately. 250-803-6509

250-832-9461

classifieds@lakeshorenews.bc.ca

WANTED: Standing fir

or pine trees or any unwanted piles of firewood in sheds. Top prices paid. 250-832-1914 evenings.

Real Estate Mortgages

www.spca.bc.ca

Volunteers

Help keep Salmon Arm safe by going on a 4-hour patrol (car or bike) afternoons or evenings once a month or setting up two 2-hour, radar controlled, speed boards each month. If you are 19+ and have a clean record, contact SACP at http://members.shaw.ca/sacp or pick up an application package at the RCMP Detachment, 1980-11th St NE or download one from the website.

Farm Services

FARM SERVICE SHAVINGS * SAWDUST BARK MULCH WE DELIVER

Ph: 250 804-3030 • 250 260-0110

Senior’s 2 bdrm, 1 bath, daylight suite. Avail Feb 1 in quiet Hillcrest. $1000/mo. incl. util. Tub w/grab bars, raised toilet, WD, DW, no stairs, walk-in from carport. NS in or out. 250-832-6560

Transportation

Become a Super hero!

Auto Financing

Cars Trucks SUV’s & Vans

Donate!

Available

Good Credit Bad Credit No Credit No Problem Get Approved Today!

1.877.793.0620 BC CREDIT FAST Delivery Thru BC DL#24358

Auto Services Your one Stop Vehicle Repair Facility

Best rate 5yr. - 2.64% OAC Serving the Shuswap since 1979. Rates consistently better than banks.

250-832-8766

Toll Free 1-800-658-2345

Rentals Apt/Condo for Rent

Halls/Auditoriums

SALMON ARM CITIZENS PATROL

Farm Services

Coin Collector Looking to Buy Collections, Olympic Gold & Silver Coins, Loose, Sets, etc Chad: 1-778-281-0030 Local

Salmon Arm (5th Ave SW) - 2 bdrm, 2 bath, a/c, fireplace. $950/mo. Irma 250-319-5634

Place a 3 line ad for only $1! GST not included. Some restrictions apply. Each additional line is $1.

Various sizes Various prices

Misc. Wanted

REFORESTATION NURSERY Seedlings of hardy trees, shrubs, and berries for shelterbelts or landscaping. Spruce and pine from $0.99/ tree. Free shipping. Replacement guarantee. 1-866-8733846 or www.treetime.ca

Merchandise for Sale

table covers, drawing, patterns, pets, colouring, crafts,packing, etc.

Do you have something to...

603 - 3rd. Ave. SW Salmon Arm

FULL SERVICE Plumbing from Parker Dean. Fast, reliable, 24/7 service. Take $50 off your next job if you present this ad. Vancouver area. 1800-573-2928.

BLAND’S FARM SALES. Extra clean wheat straw. P/U or delivery. 250-832-6615, 250-833-2449.

GREAT FOR...

250-832-9968

classifieds@lakeshorenews.bc.ca

Feed & Hay

Raven Hill, 1 bdrm. $900/mo. incl util. Working single prefer. NP,NS,No party. 250-833-4537

Stop by the Lakeshore News office at 161 Hudson Ave NE

Plumbing

Pets & Livestock

available for purchase at Lakeshore News

Heavy Duty Machinery 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

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 MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION! In-demand career! Employers have work-at-home positions available. Get online training you need from an employertrusted program. Visit today: CareerStep.ca/MT or 1-855768-3362 to start training for your work-at-home career!

Merchandise for Sale

01/16W_FVM20

Employment

Friday, Januarywww.lakeshorenews.bc.ca 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News A25

250-832-8064 Seniors’ Discount

Brakes 4X4 Servicing Lifetime Warranties (Mufflers & Shocks)

Trailer Hitches & Wiring

COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR

Snowmobiles

GLENEDEN COMMUNITY HALL for rent. Banquets, meetings, weddings, reunions or ? 250-832-9806 www.glenedencommunity.com

2012 Skidoo Tundra LT 550 FE, excellent condition, fan cooled, electric start, electronic reverse, double seat with back rest, hand warmers, hitch, and cover. $6500. Call (250) 804 0332 during business hours.

Storage

Storage

AAA MINI-STORAGE-250.832.3558

Buy! Buy! Buy! SELL! S e ! ll! l l e S

Say yes and change a child’s life today.

www.bcchf.ca


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T:13.5”

Wise customers read the fine print: *, ★, †, ≥, ♦, §, ≈ The Cold Days Hot Deals Sales Event offers are limited time offers which apply to retail deliveries of selected new and unused models purchased from participating dealers on or after January 11, 2016. Offers subject to change and may be extended without notice. All pricing includes freight ($1,745) and excludes licence, insurance, registration, any dealer administration fees, other dealer charges and other applicable fees and taxes. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Dealer may sell for less. *Consumer Cash Discounts are offered on select new 2016 vehicles and are deducted from the negotiated price before taxes. ★The Make No Financing Payments for 90 Days offer is available from January 5 – February 1, 2016, and applies to retail customers who finance a new 2015/2016 Chrysler, Jeep, Dodge, Ram or FIAT vehicle (excludes 2015/2016 Dodge Viper and Alfa Romeo) at a special fixed rate on approved credit up to 96 months through Royal Bank of Canada and TD Auto Finance or up to 90 months through Scotiabank. Monthly/bi-weekly payments will be deferred for 60 days and contracts will be extended accordingly. Interest charges will not accrue during the first 60 days of the contract. After 60 days, interest starts to accrue and the purchaser will repay principal and interest over the term of the contract but not until 90 days after the contract date. Customers will be responsible for any required down payment, license, registration and insurance costs at time of contract. Some conditions apply. See your dealer for complete details. †0% purchase financing available on select new 2016 models to qualified customers on approved credit through RBC, Scotiabank and TD Auto Finance. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Example: 2016 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT with a Purchase Price of $27,790 with a $0 down payment, financed at 0% for 48 months equals 104 bi-weekly payments of $267 with a cost of borrowing of $0 and a total obligation of $27,790. ≥3.99% purchase financing for up to 96 months available on the new 2016 Dodge Grand Caravan Canada Value Package/2016 Dodge Journey Canada Value Package/2016 Chrysler 200 LX models through RBC, Scotiabank and TD Auto Finance. Examples: 2016 Dodge Grand Caravan Canada Value Package/2016 Dodge Journey Canada Value Package/2016 Chrysler 200 LX with a Purchase Price of $21,998/$20,998/$22,998 (including applicable Consumer Cash Discounts) financed at 3.99% over 96 months with $0 down payment equals 416 weekly payments of $62/$59/$65 with a cost of borrowing of $3,706/$3,537/$3,874 and a total obligation of $25,704/$24,535/$26,872. ♦3.49% purchase financing for up to 96 months available on the new 2016 Jeep Grand Cherokee Sport through RBC, Scotiabank and TD Auto Finance. Example: 2016 Jeep Grand Cherokee Sport with a Purchase Price of $26,498 financed at 3.49% over 96 months with $0 down payment equals 416 weekly payments of $73 with a cost of borrowing of $3,880 and a total obligation of $30,378. §Starting from prices for vehicles shown include Consumer Cash Discounts and do not include upgrades (e.g. paint). Upgrades available for additional cost. ≈Sub-prime financing available on approved credit. Finance example: 2016 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT with a purchase price of $27,595 financed at 4.99% over 60 months, equals 130 bi-weekly payments of $240 for a total obligation $31,207. Some conditions apply. Down payment is required. See your dealer for complete details. ^Based on IHS Automotive: Polk Canadian Vehicles in Operation data as of July 1, 2015 for Crossover Segments as defined by FCA Canada Inc. TMThe SiriusXM logo is a registered trademark of SiriusXM Satellite Radio Inc. ®Jeep is a registered trademark of FCA US LLC used under licence by FCA Canada Inc.

A26 Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News

$

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$

26,498

2016 CHRYSLER 200 LX

22,998 PURCHASE PRICE INCLUDES FREIGHT.

PURCHASE PRICE INCLUDES $2,500 CONSUMER CASH* AND FREIGHT.

FINANCE FOR

FINANCE FOR

www.lakeshorenews.bc.ca

COLD HOT

DAYS DEALS SALES EVENT

NO PAYMENTS FOR IT ALL ENDS FEBRUARY 1ST!

%

FINANCING +$ , †

$

WEEKLY♦

$

65 3.99

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CANADA’S #1-SELLING MINIVAN FOR OVER 31 YEARS

2016 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN CANADA VALUE PACKAGE PURCHASE PRICE INCLUDES $7,100 FINANCE FOR CONSUMER CASH* AND FREIGHT.

PURCHASE PRICE INCLUDES $2,000 FINANCE FOR CONSUMER CASH* AND FREIGHT.

$

62 3.99

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FOR 96 MONTHS WITH $0 DOWN

Starting from price for 2016 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT Plus shown: $30,940.§

LEGENDARY JEEP CAPABILITY

2016 JEEP CHEROKEE SPORT

%

FOR 96 MONTHS WITH $0 DOWN

Starting from price for 2016 Jeep Cherokee Limited shown: $34,540.§

CANADA’S FAVOURITE CROSSOVER^

2016 DODGE JOURNEY CANADA VALUE PACKAGE

%

FOR 96 MONTHS WITH $0 DOWN

Starting from price for 2016 Dodge Journey Crossroad shown: $32,140.§

AFFORDABLE LUXURY

%

FOR 96 MONTHS WITH $0 DOWN

Starting from price for 2016 Chrysler 200 C shown: $30,140.§

REBUILDING YOUR CREDIT?

DON’T PAY EXCESSIVE RATES. GET GREAT RATES AS LOW AS 4.99% OAC ≈

chryslercanada.ca/offers

1/13/16 2:40 PM


www.lakeshorenews.bc.ca

www.lakeshorenews.bc.ca

Friday, January 22, 2016 Lakeshore News A27

Tossing & Turning at Night?

Tr y a FOAM mat t re ss

Movie Info 250.832.2263

For all your foam needs call...

playing at the GRAND 100 Hudson Avenue

CROSSWORD

RIDE ALONG 2

Nightly 6:50 & 9:00PM Sat - Sun Matinees 2:10PM STAR WARS - Force Awakens Nightly 6:40 & 9:20PM Sat - Sun Matinees 2:00PM

NORM OF THE NORTH THE REVENANT

Nightly 6:30 & 9:20PM Sat-Sun Matinees 2:00PM

Nightly 6:30PM Sat - Sun Matinees 2:10PM

CONCUSSION Nightly 8:30PM

CLASSIC 360 Alexander

Shuswap Film Society Bolshoi Ballet & Salmar Present... TAMING OF THE SHREW SPOTLIGHT Sun-Thur 7:30PM Sunday, Jan. 24th, 1PM

January 22-28

SALMARTHEATRE.COM

WORD SCRAMBLE Rearrange the letters to discover something pertaining to computers.

ODCUL Answer: Cloud

G THIS... N I D A E R E YOU’R are too) tomer (Your cus

s

Advertise

We cut to any size

Mattresses & Covers (any size) Cushions - home, boat, RV Topping Pads • Wedges • Neck Pillows

HOROSCOPES

CLUES ACROSS 1. Women (French) 5. Hyrax 8. Distress signal 11. Trade 13. Large northern deer 14. The 3 Wise Men 15. Marten of N Asian forests 16. Hoover’s agency 17. Received an A 18. 2nd Islamic month 20. Light brown 21. Clarified butter used in Indian cookery 22. Frankness 25. Argentina’s capital 30. Citizen of Kenya or Zimbabwe 31. Noah’s boat 32. Family of languages in So. Africa 33. Inappropriate 38. Scientific workplace 41. Hungriness 43. Say to talk about an annoying topic 45. Sing and play for somebody 47. Strike buster 49. A citizen of Thailand 50. Civil Rights group 55. Honest Company’s Jessica 56. ‘__ death do us part 57. Malarias 59. Claim against another’s property 60. Mined metal-bearing mineral 61. Dashery 62. Capacity unit 63. Primary color 64. Indian dress

PUZZLE NO. CW161310

ess n i s u b r U YO Here!

Dec. 22-Jan. 19

Capricorn Jan. 20-Feb. 18

PISCES

Apr.20-May20

Taurus

May 21-June 21

34. ___/Tuck: TV drama 35. Black tropical American cuckoo 36. Chest muscle (slang) 37. Expression of disappointment 39. One who assists 40. Antilles island 41. Served food 42. Egyptian Sun god 44. Performed successfully 45. Cavalry-sword 46. Abba __, Israeli politician 47. Jonas __, cured polio 48. The Muse of history 51. Express pleasure 52. Turkish leader titles 53. Castro country 54. Nobleman 58. ___ Lanka

Gemini

June 22- July 22

Cancer

July 23-Aug. 22

Leo

Aug. 23-Sept. 22

Virgo

Sept. 23-Oct. 22

Libra

Oct. 23-Nov. 21

Scorpio

Details: 250.832.9461

Nov. 22-Dec. 21

Sagittarius YOUR GUIDE TO

IN THE SHUSWAP.

CALL 250-832-9461

RIGHT MEOW!

SUDOKU

Pisces, there is more going on than meets the eye. You have to pay attention to the subtle undercurrents to figure out fact from fiction.

ARIES

Aries, do not allow distractions to keep you from completing tasks that need to get done. Use your ability to focus to plow through your to-do list and finish in record time.

TAURUS

Taurus, this week you may be tempted to take risks you never would have considered before. Just don’t let excitement get in the way of common sense.

GEMINI

Something totally unexpected will grab your attention in the next few days, Gemini. Trust your intuition to take things slowly and put out all feelers before you forge ahead.

CANCER

Cancer, although you have a plan to reach all of your goals, do not put success ahead of others’ feelings. Be considerate of others even if their efforts are not up to par.

LEO

Leo, proceed with caution in a new friendship or partnership. Test the waters before you devote yourself fully. This approach will ensure you made the right decision.

VIRGO

Virgo, if the potential to be criticized scares you, you may not be inclined to express yourself honestly. Worry less about what others think of you and be confident in yourself.

PUZZLE NO. SU161060 ACCESS APPLET APPLICATION ARCHITECTURE ARCHIVE CABLE CHIP COMPILER COMPRESSION COOKIE CURSOR DEVICE DIRECTORY DOCKING STATION DRIVE ENCODING EXPANSION CARD EXTENSION

LIBRA

HOW TO PLAY: Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken down into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can ANSWER TO PUZZLE NO. SU161060 appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle!

CRYPTO FUN Solve the code to discover words related to computers. Each number corresponds to a letter. (Hint: 3 = o)

Libra, if you’re feeling on edge lately, it may be because you haven’t had a chance to relieve stress. Exercise can be a surefire fix to what ails you, so get up and go.

A. 16 3 21 4 17 3 8 Clue: Screen

SCORPIO

Scorpio, an opportunity presents itself in the weeks ahead, and this will be too good to pass up. Embrace the changes that this opportunity offers.

B. 22 8 3 14 9 12 12 Clue: Operations performed

SAGITTARIUS

Sagittarius, your social life is bustling, but sometimes it can be difficult to keep up with all of the things filling your calendar. You may want to take a few days off.

FIREWIRE FLASH FOLDER FREEWARE HARDWARE HUB INDEX INSTALL INTERFACE MENU OPERATING SYSTEM PRINTER PROGRAMMING READER REGISTER ROOT SOFTWARE WIRELESS

C. 22 8 3 7 8 11 Clue: Coded software WS161300

• Refreshing Drinks • Thursday - Steak Sandwich $13.95 • Cheap Appies Monday & Tuesday 11 am - 10 pm, $6.95

Sunday Brunch

10 - 2

251 Harbourfront Dr. NE, Salmon Arm (at the Prestige Inn) 250-833-1154

16

D. 13 11 17 11 Clue: Information

ANSWER TO PUZZLE NO. CW161310

ENTERTAINMENT, NIGHTLIFE & RESTAURANTS IT’S TIME TO ADVERTISE

258 Shuswap St. NE • 250-832-9121

AQUARIUS

Feb. 19-Mar. 20

Aries

1. Manuscripts (abbr.) 2. Netherlands river 3. Italian island 4. One’s own being 5. More adroit 6. Balkan country 7. Psychologist B.F. 8. Investment group Goldman ___ 9. Double curve 10. The plane of a figure 12. Ocean 14. Public presses 19. Civil Rights activist Parks 23. Cooking container 24. Arctic native 25. Founder of Babism 26. Bashkortostan capital 27. Bulky grayish-brown eagle 28. Louse egg 29. About sight

Career obstacles may pop up from time to time, but you have the commitment to see things through for the long haul. Keep up that perseverance this week.

Aquarius

Mar. 21-Apr. 19

CLUES DOWN

CAPRICORN

You can’t always play the peacemaker, Aquarius. Sometimes you just have to let others fight their own battles and then offer support to those who need it.

Pisces

WORD SEARCH

Salmon Arm Custom Upholstery

CQ161300

Answers: A. monitor B. process C. program D. data

January 22-28

A2 Friday, January 22, 2016 Lakeshore News

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A28 Friday, January 22, 2016 - Lakeshore News

www.lakeshorenews.bc.ca

VERNON

A G E M

SALE

USED V EHICLE

BLOWOUT!

2015 CHEV

15,995

UC014640

13,900

NOW

$

2008 HYUNDAI

*

VERACRUZ LTD

1 Owner, Local, Leather, Only 61,000kms, Loaded

18,995

UU050869

16,900 16900

$

NOW

WAS $

2014 HYUNDAI

SONIC LS

*

ELANTRA LTD.

12,900

*

14,900

$

*

GRAND CHEROKEE LTD.

UU041814

21,900

*

CRV EX-L AWD

Leather, Panoramic Roof, Low Km’s

*

SANTA FE

29,995

WAS $

UG291108

27,900

$

2011 HYUNDAI

*

ELANTRA GLS

Bluetooth, Heated Seats, Remaining Factory Warranty

27,995

UL806015

24,900

$

2014 DODGE

18,900

$

2015 HYUNDAI

Leather, Loaded, All Power Options

WAS $

UL809971

Like New, Bluetooth, Heated Seats, All Options, Save Thousands!

$

2011 HONDA

UKMO3846

21,995

WAS $

VENZA XR AWD

25,995

WAS $

TRIBUTE 4WD

18,995

2014 JEEP

Warranty Remaining, Leather, Sunroof, Navigation, Great Value

*

4WD, Low Km’s, Great Value

WAS $

8,900

$

2010 TOYOTA

U4147160

$

2011 MAZDA

UL808985

Leather, Loaded, V6

14,995

WAS $

10,995

WAS $

NOW

*

Low kms, Remainder of factory warranty great fuel efficient vehicle!

NOW

Local One Owner Vehicle

WAS $

24,900

$

MATRIX XR

NOW

NOW

2009 TOYOTA

*

UFC54662

CR-V EXL

Leather, Sunroof, Low Km’s

NOW

12,900

$

27,995

WAS $

2008 HONDA

*

GRAND CARAVAN SXT

Full Stow n’ Go, Only 24,000 Km’s, All Power Options

15,995

WAS $

UH018079

13,900

$

NOW

UH504577

CIVIC

Automatic, A/C, P/W, P/L

2 Sets Of Wheels & Tires, Leather, Sunroof, Imaculate Condition

NOW

15,995

2006 HONDA

NOW

Immaculate, Leather, Tons Of Power, Sunroof

WAS $

F-150 LARIAT

2010 FORD

NOW

300 C

NOW

2006 CHRYLSER

2013 HYUNDAI

*

SANTA FE XL

7 Passenger, Automatic, Bluetooth, Heated Seats, Local Vehicle, 1 Owner, NOT EXACTLY AS SHOWN.

38,900

$

*

26,995

WAS $

UR150020

21,900

$

*

TRADES WANTED

VERNON HYUNDAI

|

4608 - 27 St. Vernon, BC *

|

250-275-4004

Plus $499 Doc Fee & Taxes. See Dealer for Details

|

26,995

WAS $

UU001331

23,900

$

1-888-617-5758

|

*

vernonhyundai.com

DL #30922

UC188367

NOW

*

46,995

WAS $

NOW

17,900

$

NOW

UU110228

NOW

18,995

WAS $


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