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< Gardens of Earthly Delights
JULY 6, 2016
20th Annual Open Garden Day | Page 2
Chernove to Paralympics > Local cyclist makes national team | Page 8
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Making Idlewild Great Again
Canada Post Marking the start of a new park issues lockout notice to union TRE VOR CR AWLEY
Canada Post has issued a lockout notice to mail carriers effective Friday, July 8, 2016. The notice comes on the heels of negotiations between the crown corporation and the Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW) for a new collective bargaining agreement, which has been in the works since late last year. The situation has escalated from both sides, with the CUPW voting for a strike mandate, while Canada Post has tabled a contract that the company calls a ‘final offer.’ “The uncertainty caused by the prolonged negotiations and the union’s strike mandate is having a negative and escalating impact on the postal service,” read a Canada Post news release.
See CANADA POST, Page 4
Labour strife in the air, mediation in the offing
City of Kimberley, Union mediation dates set; KSCU, Union mediation fails CAROLYN GRANT
The city of Kimberley and Steelworkers Local I-405 will be meeting with a mediator from the BC Labour Relations Board on July 11 and 12, rather than the 13 as originally announced. Both sides are hopeful an agreement can be reached through mediation. Trevor Sonnes, who assisted the two in finalizing the last collective agreement between the Steelworkers and the Cty of Kimberley is the mediator appointed by the Labour Board. Meanwhile, union employees of Kootenay Savings Credit Union are pondering their next move after mediation in late June failed.
See LABOUR, Page 3
TREVOR CRAWLEY PHOTO
Cranbrook City councillors Tom Shypitka, Norma Blissett and Cranbrook Mayor Lee Pratt look on as Kootenay East MLA Bill Bennett speaks at a sod-turning ceremony to kick start the Idlewild dam replacement process.
Fed’s gas tax fund provides $2.8 million for Idlewild rehab TRE VOR CR AWLEY
L
ocal politicians came together to make Idlewild great again with an official sod-turning ceremony at the park on Tuesday to mark the upcoming construction of a new dam structure and spillway. Work will begin once a con-
tractor is in place and is expected to wrap up before the snow flies in the fall. To pay for the project, Cranbrook secured $2.8 million in funding from the Federal Gas Tax fund, while the RDEK and Area C kicked in $500,000. Though the Gas Tax funding was announced in Febru-
ary, the city is working towards starting construction in August. Once the dam and spillway projects are complete, the focus will shift to redeveloping the whole park. “We have a short construction period,” said Cranbrook Mayor Lee Pratt. “So hopefully we’ll get going here in the next
two or three weeks and things will go well and we can get what we have to get done this year, then next year, we’ll be able to concentrate on enhancing the surrounding park and making it a nice showcase for the community.”
See IDLEWILD, Page 3
Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin
Page 2 Wednesday, July 6, 2016
Cranbrook’s Gardens of Earthly Delights Take a tour through our botanical paradise on the Cranbrook Garden Club’s 20th annual Open Garden Day Barry Coulter
H
ave a wander through a sampling of Cranbrook’s botanical paradise, this Sunday, July 10. The Cranbrook Garden Club’s 20th annual Open Garden Day will prove to be a tour that’s refreshing to the spirit and the senses. This year’s edition features seven beautiful and diverse gardens in Cranbrook and surrounding area, many of them in the corners of the interface, and the Garden Club is urging the public to come out and wander through them. The tour runs from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.; tickets are $10 and are available at Lotus Books, Trends & Treasures and Top Crop Garden, Farm and Pet. A map is included on the ticket, which will help guide you up New Lake Road way and into the lush environs of Gold Creek. • Albert and Janice Pelletier’s garden is 15 years old, but an ongoing project, featuring a goldfish pond surrounded by different shrubs, a vegetable garden watched over by different fruit trees, and different beds of irises in full raging bloom. The Pelletier’s live on Stropky Road, just west of Cranbrook. • Up New Lake Road way, down Harris Road, Judy and Mike Guido’s beautiful yard is centered around a rainbow trout pond — a bucolic setting featuring perennials, shrubs, rock and an expansive lawn. • Also on Harris Road, Corrina and Rod Barth are working on creating an all-season setting, putting in Carl Forrester grass and other shrubs, large vegetable garden and strawberry patch, and amenities like fire pit and soccer pitch (outdoor rink in the winter). • Farther along, down Wilson Road to Klahanni Drive, Janet and Bruce Jackett’s five-acre property is also a work in progress, with the current focus on landscaping. Hanging baskets, planters, gardens located around the property and a new greenhouse are part of the attractions. “An ever-changing landscape is the best garden!”
Images from the Guido, Jackett, Eliason and Breus gardens. Photos by Barry Coulter
• At the opposite point of the compass, to 25th Street South off Hidden Valley Road, Lynette and James Eliason’s property is an agricultural delight — a bird-friendly setting with fenced off garden and separate test orchard, many varieties of fruit
trees, fruit-bearing shrubs, grapevines, and all sorts of fantastic experiments going on. And don’t miss the bees — Lance and Bobby Cuthill will be on hand Sunday to demonstrate a glass observation beehive and hold forth on bee theory. • Back into town we
go, to Daphne Breus’s place on 14th Street South, near Kootenay Orchards School. Daphne’s garden may be small in comparison, but it is lush and wonderfully designed. Her garden’s performance invites you to be the audience. • Closer into down-
town, to 7th Street South, where Werner and Susan Froese have been working hard for 12 years to transform a clay-heavy, hilly terrain into a veritable park bordering on Joseph Creek, with Nanking cherries prominent among the natural and plant flora, and wild deer
wandering through. The Cranbrook Garden Club’s 20th annual Open Garden Day includes a Garden Day luncheon at Christ Church Anglican’s Centennial Hall (nine dollars at the door), and a plant and garden craft sale at 224-14th Avenue South
(by the Key City Theatre). More information available upon purchase of ticket. Let it be noted: This August marks the Cranbrook Garden Club’s 40th anniversary celebration. Watch these pages for more information.
Cranbrook Townsman
Wednesday, July 6, 2016 Page 3
The Week On The Beat
RCMP report busy week, answer 165 calls FOR THE TOWNSMAN
Cranbrook RCMP responded to 165 calls for service over the past week, June 27 (6 a.m.) to July 4 (6 a.m.), according to a press release from Staff Sergeant Hector Lee. On June 27, at about 9:10 p.m., Cranbrook RCMP were dispatched
to multiple reports of a disturbance/assault between a man and woman at the 300 block of 2nd Street South. The officers attended and discovered an injured woman, who was taken to the East Kootenay Regional Hospital where doctors initially suspected a broken orbital
bone. The suspect boyfriend was identified and later arrested. It is believed alcohol to be a contributing factor. The suspect man is facing charges of robbery and assault causing bodily harm. • There were three alcohol-related Immedi-
ate Roadside Prohibitions/Impaired Driving charges issued. • Five collisions were reported. One collision was the result of a cyclist hitting a parked vehicle; three collisions were out of town,where the dirtbike or ATV rider lost control; one collision happened in town where
the vehicle struck a deer. • There was one hitand-run incident reported. • Seven mental health calls were reported no individuals were apprehended in any of the cases. • There were four assault complaints. Three of these were domestic
in nature, one of which resulted in serious injury (see above). • 10 Thefts reported. Two of these were thefts from vehicles (a tailgate and lightbar stolen) and one where the owner interrupted what appeared to be an attempted theft from her vehicle. There was one re-
port of a stolen bike off the back of a pick up. The stolen bike was turned into the Cranbrook RCMP the next day. There were three reports of thefts from coin-operated laundry machines in an apartment complex. There was one report of a theft of a vehicle. A side-byside ATV was stolen form a rural property in Gold Creek on July 2. The ATV is a 2015 Viking 700FI. There was one report of theft of bottles and cans that were taken from front porch. There was a report of an attempted theft of copper wire in the industrial area. The owner interrupted the culprit, who fled with nothing. • One Break and Enter was reported this week past, but proved to be unfounded. • There were three reports of mischief to property (two to vehicles and one to a park picnic table at Gyro Park) • There were five drug seizures, four involving marijuana and one involving meth.
Labour issues TREVOR CRAWLEY PHOTO
Local officials celebrated the start of the process to replace the dam and spillway at Idlewild Lake as well as the subsequent park redevelopment. Pictured above: David Kim (City of Cranbrook CAO), Ron Popoff (city councillor), Wes Graham (city councillor), Rob Gay (RDEK board chair), Wendy Booth (UBCM Second Vice President & Area F Director), Bill Bennett (Kootenay East MLA), Lee Pratt (Mayor), Tom Shypitka (city councillor), Norma Blissett (city councillor).
Idlewild gets $2.8 million injection CONTINUED from page 1 The existing dam is earthen-filled with a concrete core and the rehabilitation work will include strengthening the structure and increasing the slopes upstream and downstream and replacing the spillway to allow for higher capacity water flow. In order to do that, the lake will have to be dredged, however, fish stocks, turtles and other creatures will be relocated to other suitable habitats. “It’s critical for the dam work to be done as far as a safety standpoint with the provincial government,” said Mike Matejka, the project manager. “They have re-
quired us to replace or upgrade the dam or have it decommissioned — those were the options that we had. From a dam safety perspective and an infrastructure perspective, that is mandatory. “The rest of the work with the parks upgrades and the leisure upgrades are just something that we feel needed to happen because it’s been so long since those have been upgraded.” The parks and leisure upgrades will be made following a consultation process that has seen 1,000 responses from public surveys and a Facebook Page called ‘Make Idlewild Great Again.’
The park is a unique area because of it’s geographic location — it borders the outside edge of city limits — and includes Cranbrook users and those who live in Gold Creek, which is RDEK jurisdiction. Rob Gay, the Area C director and RDEK board chair, said that the park is a special case as it is within RDEK jurisdiction, however, the City of Cranbrook is responsible for the lake. The funding, for both the City of Cranbrook and the RDEK comes from the federal Gas Tax Fund. The fund, which accumulates through taking a percentage every time someone gases up their
vehicle at the fuel pumps, is returned to UBCM and distributed to local governments. Gay added that the $500,000 will come out of the RDEK’s portion of the Gas Tax grant and will not mean any adjustments to property taxes. Kootenay East MLA Bill Bennett lauded Mayor Pratt and the council for making a difficult decision to draw the lake down and decommission the dam, which he called a public safety issue. “I’m certainly thankful that this current mayor and council have shown the courage to lower the water, make it safe for people and then go
out and find the money and get it fixed,” Bennett said. The dam was identified as structurally unsound in a report to city council at the beginning of 2015, and the lake levels have been drawn down to relieve stress on the structure. Lake levels were drawn down last summer to relieve pressure on the structure, while city officials worked with various provincial and federal ministries to come up with a plan to fix the dam that wouldn’t have an averse impact on the lake’s ecological system, which is important habitat for migratory birds and turtles.
Where in the world wide web will you find out what’s happening right here at home?
www.cranbrooktownsman.com
CONTINUED from page 1
The USW Locals 1-405 and 9705 representing 110 unionized staff at Kootenay Savings Credit Union at branches in the East and West Kootenay, participated in mediation with provincial mediator Dave Schaub from the BC Labour Relations Board and KSCU on June 20 and 21. Dean Lott, USW Staff Rep and lead negotiator said there was some progress on Day 2 but it still came down to the employer including concessions on pension protection language and zero pay increases in the first two years. Unionized staff previously voted 94 per cent in favour of strike action. A union press release said the next steps are being evaluated and could include 72-hour strike notice. And Canada Post regular service and parcel delivery could be suspended as early as Friday, as the corporation issued 72-hour lockout notice to its unionized workforce on Tuesday.
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Cranbrook townsman
Page 4 Wednesday, July 6, 2016 PAID ADVERTISEMENT
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Submitted photo
Christine Harvey (far right), Manager of the Cranbrook Boys and Girls Club Prime Time program, recently visited Favorit Cycles with some Prime Time participants to give a big thank you to James McKee (centre front) for generously ensuring that Prime Time’s fleet of donated bikes are in tip-top shape. Prime Time still has a few spots available for summer care for 5 year olds who have completed Kindergarten up to 7 year olds--for more information, please call Christine at 778-520-2200.
Canada Post issues lockout notice Continued from page 1
2
Starting in 2019, CPP contributions for a typical B.C. worker earning approximately $55,000 would initially increase by an additional $7 per month, rising to an additional $34 per month in 2025.
Mike Paleck, the president of the CUPW, lamented the move by Canada Post. “We knew this was their game all along,” Paleck said. “They are sabotaging the public review of the post office. They refused to negotiate fairly with us and now they ‘re locking the doors and will try to starve us into submission.” In a news release, Canada Post says that just because a lockout notice has been issued doesn’t mean that the
service won’t be operating on Friday. In issuing the notice, Canada Post says the terms and conditions of the current collective agreement will no longer apply starting on Friday. Under new company-imposed terms and conditions, employees will receive regular pay and some benefits, such as applicable prescription drug coverage. It also allows the company to adjust staffing according to the amount of
work required. The CUPW, with 50,000 members across Canada, is charging that Canada Post is attempting to impose steep concessions on employees. “We will not be bullied by a corporation that is supposed to be providing people with public service, that is raking in millions in profits every year, and that is willfully and needlessly waging war upon tens of thousands of workers and their families,” said Palecek. The two sides have been
locked in negotiations over wage increases and benefits plans. A collective bargaining agreement between Rural and Suburban Mail Carriers (RSMC) expired at the end of 2015, while an agreement with the urban section of the CUPW expired on Jan. 31, 2016. The last lockout by Canada Post was in 2011, however, the Conservative government at the time passed back to work legislation that has now been ruled unconstitutional.
Get to know your friendly local fungi For the Townsman
3
Provincial governments will now review the proposed enhancement and discuss the changes with interested business and labour organizations. BC did not accept the Ontario proposal that was much more expensive than the current proposal
Bill Bennett, M.L.A. (Kootenay East)
Province of British Columbia Phone: 250-417-6022 Constituency Ofce: Fax: 250-417-6026 100c Cranbrook Street N. bill.bennett.mla@leg.bc.ca Cranbrook, B.C. V1C 3P9
Cranbrook Food Action Committee and Wildsight Kimberley/ Cranbrook have teamed up to bring you ‘A Mushroom Workshop’ yet again, ‘everything you need to know about growing your own’. The first sessions in April sold out, meaning this is the public’s second chance to partake in these informative workshops being offered in Kimberley and Cranbrook. The first workshop is coming up on Wednesday, July 6, in Cranbrook and second on Friday, July 8, in Kimberley. Both workshops will start at 7 pm and registrations are open at www.wildsight.ca/ mushrooms. Lija and Monte of Kootenai Fungi will introduce participants to the fascinating world of growing mushrooms. Over the past year, the pair have been growing mushrooms on their urban mushroom farm in Kimberley. With delicious success, Kootenai Fungi has been selling at farmers markets, local stores and restaurants as well as providing mushroom spawn, cultures, grow kits to interested individuals.
Learn to grow your own mushrooms at home. Topics to be covered during these two hour workshops will include mushroom life cycle, starting cultures, inoculation techniques and various growing methods suitable for home growers. The workshops are comprised of technique demonstrations as well as hands on demos. All participants will go home ready to start growing
their own mushrooms. Types of mushrooms that we will be growing include oyster, reishi, garden giants and shaggy manes. Why grow your own mushrooms? They are fat-free, low in calories, and filled with vitamins, antioxidants, and other nutrients. Mushrooms contain compounds that have been linked to lowering the risk of a
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range of cancers. Eating mushrooms has a cholesterol-lowering effect and promotes a healthy immune system. Please visit www.wildsight. ca/mushrooms, or call 250427-9325 ext. 221 to register. Email cranbrookfood@gmail. com for more info and visit www.facebook.com/kootenaifungi to learn more about Kootenai Fungi.
Cranbrook Townsman
Wednesday, July 6, 2016 Page 5
LOCAL NEWS
SUBMITTED PHOTO
At left: A bobcat/lynx study is currently under way at the University of BC Okanagan, in partnership with BC’s Ministry of Environment, that needs public help. The study is seeking photos of bobcats and lynx captured by trail cameras, or conventional cameras, from all corners of the province and from all time periods to help determine the provincial distribution of each species. The photos do not have to be great photography - they just have to show a bobcat or a lynx, or even just a part of one. Photos can be blurry or dark and don’t even have to clearly show which cat species is present. Photos will not be published or shared with anyone without permission, and photographers will retain ownership of their photos. The results of this study will be gladly shared with all those who are interested. Please send photos, along with the date and location of each photo, to TJ Gooliaff at: tj.gooliaff@ubc.ca
KIMBERLEY
Power in the ducks
Duck Race sells out raising $22,100 for Food Bank C A RO LYN GR ANT
Thousands of yellow plastic ducks have had their annual dunk in Mark Creek, been collected and put away until next year. The Royal LePage East Kootenay Realty Kimberley Food Bank Duck Race was another sell-out success this year, with every one of the 5,000 tickets sold, raising $22,100. Winner of the first prize of $2500 cash was Wayne Geiger of Fairmont. Second prize, two nights accommodation in a 3-bedroom condo, compliments of Kimberley Lodging Company; a feast for four from the Old Bauernhaus, and four round of golf with two carts, courtesy of Trickle Creek Golf Resort, was won by Brenda Roberts of Kimberley. Third prize ($250 cash from Meadowbrook Greenhouse) went to Judi Hogg of Kimberley and fourth prize (two rounds of golf from Bootleg Gap and two rounds plus a cart from Kimberley Golf Course) went to Elaine Slavinski of Kimberley. As always, the event could not have been pulled off without the work of the tremendous Food Bank volunteers, and generous local businesses, including Mark Creek Market and Kimberley Meats and Sausage, who help with the barbecue. “The come through for us every year,” said Marilyn Jolie.
SD5 board supports post-secondary funding campaign TRE VOR CR AWLEY
The Southeast Kootenay school district board of education has sent a letter in support of a campaign that is pressuring the provincial government to be more open when making decisions on post-secondary education funding. The ‘Open the Door’ campaign is being organized by the Federation of Post-Secondary Educators of B.C. The board said it understands the strain of chronic underfunding and the impact that it has on students.
“We recognize that whether in trades or academia, outcomes for students — and our economy — greatly improve with post secondary education,” reads the letter. “High tuition fees, and chronic underfunding by government of B.C.’s public schools, colleges, universities and institutes are making it difficult for many young people in BC to achieve their potential and fully contribute to their communities — and local economies —despite receiving a Certificate of Graduation (Dogwood Diploma).”
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Royal LePage East Kootenay Reality Kimberley Food Bank Duck Race volunteer Darren Close snatches the winning duck from the waters of Mark Creek on July 1. All duck race tickets sold out, raising $22,100 for the Food Bank.
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Opinion
Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin
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South China Sea Showdown? N ext Wednesday (12 July) the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea will issue its ruling on China’s claim to practically all of the South China Sea. And already the main military contenders are moving more forces into the region. China’s Maritime Safety Administration announced that Chinese naval and air forces will carry out seven days of exercises in an area extending from Hainan to the Paracel Islands off the Vietnamese coast. The exercises will end on 11 July, just one day before the tribunal’s ruling is released, so they will still be around if things get more exciting after that. They might well get more exciting, because the US Navy’s Task Force 70, including the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan, has now moved into the South China Sea. Its task, according to its commander, Rear-Admiral John D. Anderson, is “to maintain the seas open for all to use.” The Chinese Defence Ministry’s spokesman, Col. Wi Qian, warned last Thursday that this is “an act of militarisation in the South China Sea and it endangers regional peace and stability. But I’d like to say that the US side is making the wrong calculation. The Chinese armed forces never give in to outside forces.” And on Friday President Xi Jinping declared that China will never compromise on sovereignty and is “not afraid of trouble.” So the stage may be set for a serious US-Chinese military confrontation if the Hague tribunal rules against China’s claim next week as expected. The US military fear that China may respond by declaring an Air Defence Identification Zone over the whole of the South China Sea, like the ADIZ it declared in the East China Sea in
2013 in its quarrel with Japan over disputed islands there. Both the US and Japan refused to recognise that ADIZ and sent their own military aircraft to fly through it. The US Navy would unquestionably respond in the same way to a Chinese-declared ADIZ in the South China Sea — and last February China installed two batteries of anti-aircraft missiles with a range of 200 km. on Woody Island in the Paracels. In a worst-case analysis, therefore, we could be only Gwynne a week away from a major Dyer military clash between the United States and China in the South China Sea. But it really shouldn’t go that far, because the Hague tribunal’s ruling will have no practical effect. China’s “nine-dash line” claim to almost 90 percent of the South China Sea looks preposterous on a map — it extends more than a thousand km. from the southern-most point of China while coming within less than a hundred km. of the Filipino, Malaysian and Vietnamese coasts —but it is taken very seriously in China. The historical justifications for Beijing’s claim are flimsy, but beginning with the seizure by force of the Paracel Islands from Vietnam in 1974, China has extended its control to most of tiny islands and reefs in the entire area. In the past three years it has expanded seven of these tiny footholds with concrete and landfill, building airstrips, port facilities and other potential military assets on them. In February, for the first time, it put actual weapons on them. Whether or not this was directly in response to the case brought against it in The Hague by the Philippines in 2013, it certainly had the effect of making a military confrontation more likely. But China stated in advance that it
would not recognise any ruling on the validity of its claim by the UN-backed Hague tribunal, which has no way to enforce its decision. So it should not feel obliged to resort to military force to defend its claim, any more than the US should feel any need to use force to challenge it. In theory. Behind the sometimes belligerent thetoric from Beijing, there has been a long-standing policy that China should avoid military confrontations with other great powers until it has grown strong enough economically to stand a good chance of winning. It’s not there yet, so it should still be gun-shy. But there may now be another consideration at work. The social contract that keeps the Chinese Communist Party in power is simple: so long as the Party delivers steadily rising living standards, the population will accept its dictatorial rule. For almost thirty years it has kept its side of the bargain, with economic growth rates of between 8 and 10 percent per year. But even the Party admits that the growth rate is now down to 6 percent, and hardly anybody else believes it is even four percent. Some observers think the economy may not be growing at all this year. If that is the case, then the regime is drifting into dangerous waters, and it will need a foreign distraction to divert public attention from its failure. An exciting but carefully contained confrontation over the South China Sea with the United States and its Southeast Asian allies could be the solution, igniting nationalist passions in China and generating support for the regime, but the tricky bit is keeping it “carefully contained”. Once you start down that road, you cannot be sure where it will take you. Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist based in London
Cranbrook Townsman / Kimberley Bulletin
Kimberley Aquatic Centre FREE PUBLIC SWIM: Wednesday, Dec 4, 5:006:00pm is sponsored by Grubstake Pizza. Kimberley Aquatic Centre FREE FAMILY SWIM: Wednesday, Dec 4, 6:00-7 Page Wednesday, July 6, 2016 7:00pm is sponsored by Grubstake Pizza. Persons 18 years & younger must be accompanied by an adult.
KNOW IT ALL
What’s Up? So much to do during the lazy days of summer KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDAR
CAROLYN GRANT
UPCOMING Every Saturday from June until the end of August, Home Hardware Cranbrook will be lending out the use of our custom made Lemonade Stand to sell lemonade at our store from 11am3pm. Home Hardware will supply the Lemonade and Cups, and Culligan Cranbrook will supply the Ice and Water. Your group sells a cup of lemonade for $1.00 and you keep the proceeds as a fundraiser. Saturday spots are filling up quick so if your group is interested, please call Margaret at the store 250-426-6288 to reserve your date. The Kimberley Farmers’ Market on Howard Street from 5:00 pm – 7:30 pm every Thursday rain or shine from June 23 - September 8. Moyie Highhouse Museum, open every Sunday through July and August, 1 to 3 p.m. Watch for signage. Hwy 3/95. Military Ames will hold a flea market during JulyFest to raise funds for the new Veterans’ Memorial park. Friday, July 15 7 p.m., Saturday, July 16, 8 a.m. Sunday, July 17, 1 p.m. Kimberley Kootenay Savings Credit Union parking lot. Kimberley Food Bank Garage Sale is scheduled for August 20th at the Kimberley Curling Club. Your items can be delivered, starting August 2nd from 4:00 – 6:00 pm, at the Curling Rink everyday until the sale.
NEXT UP IN THE GALLERY PURCELL MOUNTAIN PAINTERS & HEADWATER ART SOCIETY IN THE GALLERY FROM JULY 5TH TO JULY 30TH Purcell Mountain Painters of Invermere and Headwater Art Society of Canal Flats are two groups of artists which, on a regular basis, meet; paint; teach; and sponsor workshops by inviting renowned artists for their members and interested persons. The groups present their works of art to local collectors; tourists; and visitors of the valley at various shows throughout the year. The groups’ goals are to increase memberships; to encourage arts and culture in their area of the Columbia Valley and reaching beyond the borders of British Columbia; and to have fun doing so.
ART AT CHATEAU KIMBERLEY
The Chateau Kimberley Art Gallery is featuring the art of Karen Arrowsmith, Mary Ann Bidder, Joseph Cross, John de Jong, Lynne Grillmair, Ann Holtby Jones, Teresa Knight, Jeanie Miller, Jeanette Oostlander, Jean Pederson, Darlene Purnell and Marianne Rennick. The Gallery at 78 Howard St. is open 9-7 daily until October 15th, 2016.
SUMMER 2016 CREATIVE KIDS ART CLASSES
Centre 64, Kimberley, July 5 through August 12.
SAT. JULY 9TH
Come to the Friends of the Library’s “Summer Home Show and Shopping Fest” at Western Financial Place. There will be commercial businesses, arts, crafts, local vendors, small and home businesses plus more. Admission and parking are FREE.
ONGOING
PHOTO SUBMITTED
Sign up deadline for the Summer Suitcase Project, a theatre camp at Key City Theatre, is this Friday, July 8.
Visit the food concessions and beer gardens. Come and shop, compare and save. It’s not too late to register for a spot with Shellie Hollister 250426-4063 or A7a91058@telus.net
SUMMER SUITCASE PROJECT KEY CITY THEATRE A Theatre Camp for Ages 12 - 16 July 11-15 9 am to 1 pm $99 for 20 hours of instruction Students will create a piece of “devised” theatre based on items drawn randomly from a suitcase. They will create their own script and direction and will present a completed work for family and friends on the final day. Registration deadline Friday July 8 at 4:00 pm. sioban@keycitytheatre.com
SAT. JULY 9 MEDIEVAL FEAST
Medieval Feast $50. includes dinner and entertainment. At the Kimberley Elks Club.
SAT. JULY 9, SUN. JULY 10 PIANO CONCERT
Arne Sahlen’s Count-down Concert:
United Churches, Kimberley on Sat. July 9, 7pm and Cranbrook on Sun. July 10, 7 pm; by donation. Arne and area performers will follow on last weekend’s rousing events (linking Chopin with “Yellow Polka Dot Bikini”, for instance) presenting varied music with his trademark lively commentary. The events herald PianoFocus 2017 music summer-school in Kimberley BC next July. For details: arnesahlen@hotmail.com or 250-427-2159, cell/ text 250-540-4242.
GEOLOGY IN THE PARK SUNDAY, JULY 10
9 a.m. with Ralph Rudser (250-427-1590). Join a professional geologist for this informative hike. Meet at Matthew Creek turnoff on St Mary’s Lake Rd at 9 am for car pooling. Bring water and a snack.
SUNDAY, JULY 10 OPEN GARDEN DAY TOUR
Enjoy a self-guided tour of 7 beautifully diverse gardens and discover blooms & edibles as well as local artisans from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. on Sunday July 10th as the Cranbrook
RUN TIL END OF APRIL - STOP FOR SUMMER - THEN RESTART SEPT.6TH Cantabelles, an all-female singing group, Garden Club presents meets body. Mondays 7-9pm. Join us and their 20th Annual Open learn how to sing with 2, 3 and 4part Garden Day. Tickets harmonies. Contact: Sue Trombley, 250JULY 25 - 29 426-0808 or suetrombley53@gmail.com are $10.00 available
after June 24th at Lotus Books, Trends & Treasures, & Top Crop Garden, Farm & Pet. Take a tour break from noon to 1:30 p.m. At Christ Church Anglican (lower level) where you can enjoy a homemade lunch provided by the Church ladies for $9.00 at the door. Don’t forget to drop in at our Garden Club’s Plant & Craft Sale at 224- 14th Avenue N. for great bargains from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
SUNDAY, JULY 10 DINNER AND DANCE COLOMBO LODGE
In support of local refugee families. Entertainment by Dawson Rutledge, and Ed King with Bud Abbott and Audrey Jane. Dark Fire Cloud and the Lightning Band play the dance. Tickets $45 at Baker Street PharmaSave or Lotus Books.
JULY 14, 28, AUG. 11 KIMBERLEY COMMUNITY BAND Kimberley Community Band concerts. Platzl bandstand. 7:30 p.m. Wide variety of music, something for every-
SUMMER THEATRE CAMP KEY CITY THEATRE
A Theatre Camp for Ages 6 - 12, July 25 to 29 9 am to 1 pm. $99 for 20 hours of instruction. Theatre games, voice work and lots of fun for all budding young thespians! Come and join us while we create our own show. A final performance will be held on the last day. Registration deadline Friday July 22 at 4:00 pm. sioban@keycitytheatre.com
JULY 28 AT THE GREEN DOOR
Daisy Blue w/ Local Guest. July 28 @8:15 p.m. Green Door Catering $10/door
KIMBERLEY KALEIDOSCOPE ARTS & CULTURE FESTIVAL AUGUST 6-13, 2016
8-day arts & culture festival: live music, art, spoken word, photography, painting, puppet theatre, performances & workshops at affordable prices.
Cranbrook Phoenix Toastmasters meet every Thursday, noon -1:00 Heritage Inn. Toastmasters teaches communication & leadership skills. Roberta 250-489-0174. 1911.toastmastersclubs.org. Royal Canadian Legion Branch 24; Friday Meat Draw: 4:30-6:30, Saturday Meat Draw: 3:30-5:30. Canadian Cancer Society- if you have spare time and would like to volunteer, interested applicants can call 250-426-8916, drop by our office at #19-9th Avenue S, Cranbrook or go to www. cancervolunteer.ca and register as a volunteer. Mark Creek Lions meet 1st and 3rd Wednesdays at the Kimbrook. Supper 6:15-6:45, meeting 7:00-8:00pm. Contact Larry 250-4275612 or Bev 250-427-7722. New members welcome – men & ladies! The Cellar Thrift Store Open Mon. to Sat., noon to 4:30 p.m. Our revenues support local programs and outreach programs of Cranbrook United Church. Baker Lane Entry at 2 – 12th Ave. S. Cranbrook, B. C. Donations of new or gently used items welcome. The Chateau Kimberley Art Gallery is featuring the art of Karen Arrowsmith, Mary Ann Bidder, Joseph Cross, John de Jong, Lynne Grillmair, Ann Holtby Jones, Teresa Knight, Jeanie Miller, Jeanette Oostlander, Jean Pederson, Darlene Purnell and Marianne Rennick. The Gallery at 78 Howard St. is open 9-7 daily until October 15th, 2016. BINGO at the Kimberley Elks – Mondays, 6:30 start. All welcome. The Canadian Orthopaedic Foundation invites anyone expecting bone and joint surgery to make contact with local volunteers for peer support. 1-800-461-3639 ext 4, and ask for Lauralee. Al-Anon Family Group meets weekly. Monday at 7-8 pm at Marysville Community Church. (730 302 st.) The only requirement for membership is that there may be a problem of alcoholism in a relative or friend. For further information call Susan 250-427-0212 or email afglearning2live@gmail.com Thursdays from 5:00 to 6:00 pm; Focus Meat Draw at the Elks Club, Kimberley. Proceeds to Emergency Funds and non-profit organizations. TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) non profit weight loss support group meets EVERY Thursday at 5:00 pm, at Sr Citizen’s Centre, (downstairs) 125 17th Ave S, Cranbrook. Drop in, have fun while losing weight gradually. This Chapter has won an annual B.C. Provincial Award for “Best Avg Weight Loss Per Member”. Info: Marie 250 417 2642 Bibles For Missions Thrift Store, 824 Kootenay St. N., Cranbrook serving our community to benefit others - at home and abroad. We turn your donations into helping dollars! Open Tues-Sat 10am-5pm. Phone 778-520-1981. The Friends of the Kimberley Public Library used book store in Marysville is open Wed to Sat; 10:30 to 3:30 & Sunday 1:00 to 4:00. Noon every Wednesday, downtown United Church & Centre for Peace, the bells will call you to a time of calm. This is NOT church, rather it is a time to gather in a circle in a welcoming and harmonious space to practice the way of Taize. Wouldn’t you cherish a time to stop? to gather when the bells ring? to join with others in silence, in prayer, in meditative song? Masonic Lodges of B.C. and Yukon will supply transportation to cancer patients who have arrived at Kelowna or Vancouver. This free service will be at the destination point. Example: from airport to clinic and clinic to airport on return, also around the destination city. Info may be received from your doctor, Canadian Cancer Society, or by phoning Ron at 250-426-8159. Quilters meet in Kimberley on the 2nd Monday at Centennial Hall at 7:00 PM and the 4th Monday for sewing sessions in the United Church Hall at 10 Boundary Street. Place your notice in your “What’s Up?” Community Calendar FREE of charge. This column is intended for the use of clubs and non-profit organizations to publicize their coming events — provided the following requirements are met: • Notices will be accepted two weeks prior to the event. • All notices must be emailed, faxed or dropped off in person. No telephone calls please. • NOTICES SHOULD NOT EXCEED 30 WORDS. • Only one notice per week from any one club or non-profit organization. • All notices must be received by the Thursday prior to publication. • There is no guarantee of publication. Notices will run subject to space limitations.
CRANBROOK TOWNSMAN & KIMBERLEY BULLETIN COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Drop off: 822 Cranbrook St. N. • Drop off: 335 Spokane Street E-mail: carolyn.grant@kimberleybulletin.com • Fax: 250-427-5336
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Cranbrook Townsman / Kimberley Bulletin
Page 8 Wednesday, July 6, 2016
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Cycling Canada and the Canadian Paralympic Committee announced today the 12 athletes – six men and six women – who have been nominated for selection to Team Canada for this September’s Rio 2016 Paralympic Games. The group of 12 includes two medallists from the London 2012 Paralympic Games, five cyclists with Paralympic Games experience and four world champion cyclists. “I am delighted with our para-cycling team selections for the Paralympic Games in Rio this summer,” said Jacques Landry, high performance director and head coach for Cycling Canada. “Our athletes were selected based on performances at international competitions and on their potential to perform in the Paralympic arena based on showings at selected races. Our team is comprised of athletes with Paralympic experience and also athletes we have recently identified who could surprise many.” Daniel Chalifour of SteThérèse, Que., notches a third career Games nomination while Marie-Ève Croteau of Quebec City, Shelley Gautier of Toronto, Ont., Marie-Claude Molnar of Lemoyne, Que., and Robbi Weldon of Thunder Bay, Ont., all competed at the London 2012 Paralympic Games. Weldon won
gold in the road race (with then pilot Lyne Besette) while Molnar won bronze in the time trial. National team rookie and world champion Tristen Chernove of Cranbrook, B.C. has taken the para-cycling world by storm this year with double gold at the world track championships in March and two victories at the World Cup road event in Belgium in May. The four world champions on the team are Chernove, Weldon, Gautier and Croteau. Para-cycling is one of 22 summer sports on the Paralympic Games schedule and features events for athletes with disabilities including visual impairments, arm and leg amputations or cerebral palsy. The Paralympic Games are set for September 7-18, 2016 with the para-cycling track events September 8 to 11 and the road events September 14 to 17. “Canada is fielding a large and accomplished team in para-cycling and we have a solid core of veterans to lead the way, along with talented newcomers,” said Canada’s Chef de Mission Chantal Petitclerc. ”The team’s training and experience should prove beneficial at the Paralympic Games.” “On behalf of all Canadians, congratulations to our cycling athletes named today to wear the Maple Leaf this summer at the
Rio 2016 Paralympic Games,’’ said the Honourable Carla Qualtrough, Minister of Sport and Persons with Disabilities. ‘’Cycling Canada has done a phenomenal job of preparing our athletes to compete and now it’s their time to shine in Rio. All of Canada is behind you.” The athletes nominated to the Canadian Paralympic Team are as follows: PARA-CYCLING TEAM MEN *Daniel Chalifour (Ste-Thérèse, Que.) Tristen Chernove (Cranbrook, B.C.) Jean-Michel Lachance (Quebec City): pilot for Daniel Chalifour Charles Moreau (Victoriaville, Que.) Michael Sametz (Calgary) Ross Wilson (Edmonton) WOMEN Nicole Clermont (Laval, Que.) *Marie-Ève Croteau (Quebec City) *Shelley Gautier (Toronto) Audrey Lemieux (Alma, Que.): pilot for Robbi Weldon *Marie-Claude Molnar (Lemoyne, Que.) *Robbi Weldon (Thunder Bay, Ont.)
Where in the world wide web will you find out what’s happening right here at home?
www.cranbrooktownsman.com
Cranbrook Townsman / Kimberley Bulletin
Wednesday, July 6, 2016 Page 9
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Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin
NEWS
Canada-EU trade pact on track, say EU reps C anadian Press
OTTAWA - The European Union is giving its 28 member countries a say on the final ratification of its mammoth free trade deal with Canada in order to quell rising anti-trade sentiments, says the continent’s top envoy to Ottawa. Marie-Anne Coninsx, the European Union’s ambassador to Canada, told The Cana-
dian Press the European Commission’s decision Tuesday to proceed with a “mixed” agreement won’t derail the timeline that will see the vast majority of the deal come into force early next year. She also said that all 28 EU countries approve the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement. The mixed designation means each of the
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EU countries must ratify the deal, but the European Parliament’s approval - which Coninsx and others say will take place late this year or early next - will lead to “provisional application” of the pact. Coninsx said there was a political need to deal with the rising tide of anti-globalization forces in Europe, by giving the bloc’s countries the right to ratify as part
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of the mixed designation. “The main concern, or the objective of the European Commission is to make progress with CETA in a maybe difficult environment,” Coninsx said in an interview. “Given, I would say, the atmosphere in the European Union, not so much linked to the UK referendum but more a kind of a trend of anti-globalization … the
European Commission has proposed a mixed agreement.” U.S. President Barack Obama said during his visit to Ottawa last week that while trade deals are crucial, the grievances about inequality being raised by working people had implications for the “social cohesion and political consensus” needed to liberalize trade across the globe. EU Trade Commis-
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sioner Cecilia Malmstrom suggested as much Tuesday, saying that while the EU had the legal authority to claim exclusive jurisdiction over the deal, depriving European parliaments of a vote would do more harm than good. “However, the political situation in the (European) Council is clear, and we understand the need for proposing it as a ‘mixed’ agreement, in order to allow for a speedy signature.” The Council of Canadians, a vocal opponent of trade deals, said Tuesday there is growing resistance in many EU member countries, and that ratifying it won’t be the “cakewalk” that many are predicting. “After the Brexit vote, policy makers on both sides of the Atlantic would be better counselled to listen to voters, rather than pushing discredited solutions down people’s throats,” Maude Barlow, the council’s president, said in a statement. The mixed agreement designation means 90 per cent of deal will take effect early next year, and Britain for the time being will remain bound by the treaty while it enters into its long negotiation to leave
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the EU, said Coninsx. Canada’s trade minister said Canadian business will reap the benefits of the trade agreement well before Europe’s individual parliaments vote on it. “It is very likely, almost certain that provisional application would cover the lion’s share of the agreement,” Chrystia Freeland told The Canadian Press on Tuesday. Freeland said she welcomed EU Commission President JeanClaude Juncker’s warning to European parliaments that the “credibility of Europe’s trade policy is at stake,” so it must vote to deliver the deal. “I think that is a message to European governments,” she said. “It’s important for Europe to show it can get things done, and CETA is a great opportunity to do that.” Freeland said she had a lengthy conversation on Monday with her EU counterpart, Malmstrom, and still believes CETA has enough support to win approval in the European Parliament. “Europe is complicated. We get that. It’s half a billion people. We’re confident we will get this done.” Freeland said she would be lobbying for CETA when she meets some of her key European counterparts at a meeting of G20 trade ministers in Shanghai later this week. the serious side I cover the news. Weekly court reporting in Cranbrook & Kimberley community newspapers. Don’t miss the facts.
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The Cranbrook Food Bank needs your help. Drop boxes at Safeway and Save On Foods Food Bank office 104-8th Ave. S. • 250-426-7664 (from 10am-3pm)
Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin
Cranbrook Cuisine of India
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Wednesday, July 6, 2016 Page 11
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previous puzzle answer
Not sure about the whole
7/06
Fill in the grid so that every row (nine cells wide), every column (nine cells tall) and every box (three cells by three cells) contain the digits 1 through 9 in any order. There is only one solution for each puzzle.
The only real prison is fear, and the only real freedom is freedom from fear. – Aung San Suu Kyi
Yesterday’s Cryptoquote:
digital NOW thing? is the time to get with it! On-Line Advertising – call your advertising representative today. Townsman: 250-426-5201 Bulletin: 250-427-5333
Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin
Page 12 Wednesday, July 6, 2016
Horoscopes by Jacqueline Bigar
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ARIES (March 21-April 19) Put your energy where it counts. A partner could be very direct about his or her expectations. You might want a little less disagreement and a little more contentment. A dear friend will make it clear that he or she wants some chat time. Tonight: Be your frisky self! TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You might be more anchored than you realize when dealing with an emotional situation that involves a partner who sometimes can be touchy or difficult. Say the right words, and you might see a new and improved version of this person emerge. Tonight: Emphasize the positive. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You will say what you think, and mean it. Others could be taken aback by your directness about a situation that surrounds work or your health. Verbalize more of what you need financially and emotionally. A partner might reluctantly respond. Tonight:
Return calls. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Be aware of the costs of proceeding as you would like to. You will find other ways to influence others. Listen to news in a nonreactive way. You have certain expectations, which you will make known. Try to be open in a discussion. Tonight: Take a hard look at your budget. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be more forthright in how you deal with a loved one who could be making an effort to please you. You might note a strong, combative attitude from a family member. Do not make a big deal out of it; instead, see if a little TLC will make a difference. Tonight: You make the call. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Be aware of what isn’t being said. A family member could share a secret that sheds some light on a heated situation. Speak your mind to a friend you trust, as he or she has a different perspective from yours. Consider his or her feedback seriously. Tonight: Stay close to home. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Tundra
Garfield
Not sure about the whole
Hagar the Horrible
You might want to make an effort to schmooze with others, especially an immediate circle of friends. As you network, you’ll see why others might be miffed about a situation. Do not overreact or go overboard when dealing with an authority figure. Tonight: Where the crowds are. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You might opt to be more proactive about a long-term goal. Detach a bit, and be willing to make an effort to get an important person to understand your perspective. Take news with a grain of salt. You will be able to sort fact from fiction. Tonight: Listen to great music. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You might be taken aback by everything that is occurring. Stay steady, and try not to push so hard to have a key person agree with you; listen to his or her vision and ideas, too. A new beginning is likely if you can come to terms with the present situation. Tonight: Try out a new spot. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Close relating is instrumental in coming to an agreement.
You might be doubtful about your ability to draw the type of understanding you desire and need. It is important to be realistic and to let go of any insecurities. Tonight: Share news with a favorite person. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Follow through on what counts to you as well as to others, and you are likely to find some common ground. Don’t let someone you look up to agitate you. Use this person’s energy to tighten up a project. You will like the results far more. Tonight: Say “yes” to an invitation. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You might be focused on achievement and on getting the job done. Keep reaching out to someone who could be playing devil’s advocate. Your understanding of this person’s role might be more significant than you realize. Tonight: Know when to call it a night. BORN TODAY Industrialist Henry Ford Sinclair (1876), former U.S. first lady Nancy Reagan (1921), actor Sylvester Stallone (1946)
By Chad Carpenter
By Jim Davis
By Dick Browne
digital NOW thing? is the time to get with it! On-Line Advertising – call your advertising representative today. Townsman: 250-426-5201 Bulletin: 250-427-5333
Look for love in all the right places!
Baby Blues
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Advertise in the “Meeting Place” in our classified ads. Rhymes with Orange
426-5201 427-5333
By Hillary B. Price
Annie’s Mailbox by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar Dear Annie: I am a 47-year-old woman, married almost 30 years, and I have two grown sons. For the past 10 years, I have been having an affair with my 27-year-old nephew, “Steven.” It began shortly after the death of my father. In the beginning, it was a matter of seeing similarities between my father and nephew, and I was drawn to that. Now, I realize that I am in love with Steven. I also have been sending money regularly to Steven because he’s had some legal problems, and I am hoping it will help him straighten out his life. My husband has no idea this has been going on. I care deeply for my husband, but I am in love with my nephew and dream of running away with him. I have tried counseling, but it just doesn’t seem to be working. I guess that’s because part of me doesn’t want things to change. I don’t want to give up what I have with Steven, but if I tell my husband, he’ll divorce me, and I don’t want that, either. Please, please help. -- Aunt in Agony Dear Aunt: Unless you truly want to get out of this mess, no counseling is going to help. You MUST break it off with Steven NOW. A sexual relationship between aunt and nephew is considered incest. Not only that, if you started this mess when he was only 17, you may be guilty of statutory rape as well. You are risking your marriage and could estrange the entire family. Steven is probably the same age as your sons, and their resentment will be enormous. There is the additional unpleasant possibility that Steven is stringing you along because you are providing him with money. We know having a fling with a 27-year-old must make you feel young. Nonetheless, you are being unfair to your family, and also to Steven. You are preventing him from finding someone more appropriate and available. So far, you have been selfish and immature, but you need to find the strength to tell him it’s over before your world comes crashing down around your ears. Dear Annie: My husband will be retiring soon, and his staff recently threw a party for him. As a gift, they presented him with an enormous piece of artwork meant to be displayed outside. Neither of us likes it. It is definitely not our taste. The problem is that my husband insists on displaying the piece, because he feels guilty about the cost and doesn’t want to offend his staff. He accepted the gift graciously and has thanked everyone for it. Is he obligated to use it? We have had several intense arguments about this. -- Desperate in Pennsylvania Dear Desperate: No one is obligated to use a gift. The recipient can do whatever he likes with it, as long as he properly thanks the givers. Perhaps when your husband actually retires and no longer sees his staff on a regular basis, he will feel more comfortable about donating the piece to a museum or a charity. Until then, move the artwork into the backyard, and allow him to deal with it as he chooses. Dear Annie: You recently printed a letter from Mr. Jack Custer, who thoughtfully alerted you to the error of another reader who had written the phrase “caveat lector, sapeat lector.” Mr. Custer’s correction, “sapiat lector,” though erudite, was only partially correct. He erred in stating that “sapio” is a third conjugation verb. It is, in fact, a third conjugation “-io” stem verb. While we Latin students were thrilled to see someone who cared about Latin grammar, we were distressed that he would shortchange the Latin language so. Please excuse our picayune pedantry. Thank you, and we love your column. -- Several Vermont High School Latin Students Dear Students: You have no idea what a kick we get out of these arcane intellectual arguments. Our Latin expertise begins and ends with “E Pluribus Unum.” We’ll let you know if any other scholars weigh in. To find out more about Classic Annie’s Mailbox and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit Creators Syndicate at www.creators.com.
DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin
Page13 13 Wednesday, Wednesday, July 6, 2016 PAGE July 6, 2016
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DR. JOHN W. NESBITT
would like to thank all who applied for the recently posted positions for Dental Receptionist, Hygienist and CDA. Thank you for your interest and all the positions have been filled. The remaining resumes will be kept on file.
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December 8, 1940 - June 19, 2016 Thomas Mawson (Les), 75, passed away on Sunday, June 19, 2016 while in Nova Scotia on a cross Canada RV trip. Les battled heart disease for many years and passed peacefully. Les, an only child, was born in Kimberley, BC and after high school graduation, lived in the Cranbrook area for most of his working career. Les was a passionate entrepreneur and was successful in several careers. Owner of East Kootenay Supply, Lesco, and Lesco Transportation, Les serviced Cranbrook and the East Kooteneys in the hospitality supply and shipping business. Les retired in 2005 and moved to Creston where he was actively involved in the community, serving with the Lions, Erickson Community Association and Regional District of Central Kootenay advisory boards. Les was a great outdoorsman, enjoying hunting, fishing and camping. He prided himself in being the â&#x20AC;&#x153;jack-of-all-trades but master of noneâ&#x20AC;?, always constructing, repairing, renovating or creating some project. Les was a recent member of the Erickson Covenant Church where he enjoyed serving others. Les will be dearly missed by his wife, Jackie (Creston), son Dan (Kelowna), his daughters, Stacie (Kelowna), Jacki (Creston) and Fran (Edmonton), his step-sons, Ron (Fruitvale) and Mike (Trail), his 12 grandkids and his many friends and colleagues. Funeral service will be held at 11 am on July 16, 2016 at the Erickson Covenant Church â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 4017 Canyon-Lister Road, Erickson, BC. In lieu of flowers please donate in memory of Les to the Canadian Heart and Stroke Foundation ~ www.heartandstroke.com
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Jaxon Campbell age 15 months, passed away on June 28, 2016 at Canuck Place Childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Hospice in Vancouver. Jaxson was full of personality and character and anyone who met him instantly fell in love with him. He was sweet, kind, and always made people laugh. Jaxson may have been a baby but he had an old soul. He was also the greatest cuddler. His sister Amber was his best friend, he was his dadâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s sidekick and mom was his comfort. He was full of life and full of love. Jaxson is survived by his parents Justin and Darelyn Campbell, sister Amber Campbell, grandparents Janet Hall, Bob Hutchinson, Tamie Neufeld, Mark Armstrong, Gordon Campbell and Mel Dorchak, as well as many greatgrandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins, all who loved him dearly. The funeral service will be held at 1:00 pm, Friday, July 8, 2016 at the Cranbrook Alliance Church. Interment will follow in Westlawn Cemetery. Memorial donations may be made to Canuck Place Childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Hospice, 1690 Matthews Avenue, Vancouver, BC, V6J 2T2, or online at www.canuckplace.org. Arrangements entrusted to McPherson Funeral Service. Condolences for the family can be offered at: www.mcphersonfh.com
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DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin
Page 14 Wednesday, PAGE 14 Wednesday, July 6, 2016 July 6, 2016
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Mary Margaret Dunbar (nee Bulkot) Sunrise: January 5, 1928 Sunset: September 23, 2015 Mary passed away peacefully at Brandt’s Creek Mews in Kelowna, BC on the morning of September 23rd. Mary was born in St. Eugene’s Hospital in Cranbrook, BC, the youngest daughter of Mary and Basil Bulkot, immigrants from Skola, Poland who arrived in Canada in the early 1900’s. Mary was raised on her family homestead farm in Mayook and upon graduation she moved to Cranbrook where she worked at the local newspaper. In 1949 she married the love of her life, John Dunbar and they raised four children together. Over the years they would live in 5 provinces as John’s career in the RCAF had them moving every time they seemed to have settled in. In 1973 they retired to Kelowna to enjoy their remaining years together. While in Kelowna Mary was an avid gardener, enjoyed a hobby business making dry flower arrangements, and excelled annually winning over 20 blue ribbons for her food and craft entries in the Peachland Fall Fair. Mary is predeceased by her loving husband of 62 years, John and her sisters Katherine Anderson, Anne Lancaster, and Staffie Citra, all of Cranbrook, BC. She is survived by her son Jay - wife Swan, granddaughter Sonya and husband Andrew, great grandsons Kaden and Nathan and grandson Danny; son Tim - granddaughter Valerie Joy and husband Ryan and great granddaughter Brooklyn; son Dan, Rose, granddaughter Amy and husband Noah and great grandson Zane; son Michael and grandson Glenn; her sister Laura Godderis of Cranbrook, her sister-in-law Mary Jansen of Kelowna, and her many nieces, nephews and their families. A service for Mary will be held in Cranbrook on Saturday, July 9, 2016 at 11:00 am at Christ The Servant Church, 1100 - 14th Avenue South. Refreshments will follow in the church hall. Her interment will be in Westlawn Cemetery, where she will join her husband John. Go well Mom/Grandy. If you would like to make a memorial donation, please consider the Chronic Pain Association of Canada, The BC Schizophrenia Society or the charity of your choice. Arrangements entrusted to McPherson Funeral Service. Condolences for the family can be offered at: www.mcphersonfh.com
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Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin
Wednesday, July 6, 2016 Page 15
Brexit Aftermath
Conservative Party starts choosing leader as pound sinks Associated Press
LONDON — The race to succeed Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron intensified Tuesday as Britain grappled with growing signs of economic strain resulting from the country’s vote to leave the European Union. With the British currency plunging to its lowest point in three decades, Home Secretary Theresa May scored a substantial victory in the first round of voting to determine who will follow Cameron as party leader and prime minister. She garnered just over half the votes cast, with 165 Conservative Party members of Parliament backing her. Her strong showing does not guarantee she will eventually reside at 10 Downing Street, however, as lawmakers will vote until they narrow the field to two candidates and then put the matter to a vote before the entire party membership. That means more twists and turns are like-
ly in the vital leadership race. The victor, to be announced Sept. 9, will be charged with becoming prime minister and leading what are expected to be tense negotiations to extricate Britain from the 28-nation EU bloc. May, who backed remaining in the EU during the hard-fought campaign, said she was pleased by the result in the leadership vote and very grateful to her colleagues. “There is a big job before us: To unite our party and the country, to negotiate the best possible deal as we leave the EU, and to make Britain work for everyone,” said May, who now says the peoples’ desire to leave the EU must be respected. The ramifications of leaving the EU’s vast single market of 500 million consumers are roiling financial markets. The British pound was down sharply Tuesday, as were shares in U.K. real estate companies, amid concerns that the exit from the EU will hurt property
prices in Britain. Top EU officials, wondering with whom they will eventually negotiate, had sharp comments Tuesday about the U.K. leaders who pushed so hard to get Britain out of the EU - and then stepped aside rather than take part in the delicate talks. They include former London Mayor Boris Johnson, who declined a Conservative leadership bid after losing key support, and Nigel Farage, who resigned as leader of the U.K. Independence Party after helping lead Britain to a Brexit, as the exit plan is known. The grim economic news in Britain was briefly offset by a rare glimpse of two Conservative Party grandees talking bluntly about their younger colleagues, apparently unaware they were being filmed by TV cameras. Former Treasury chief Kenneth Clarke, speaking candidly to former Foreign Secretary Malcolm Rifkind, described May - leader in
the first voting round - as a “bloody difficult woman.” He said she knows little about foreign affairs.
Rifkind, for his part, said he didn’t care who gets into the final round as long as it isn’t Justice Secretary Michael Gove,
Associated Press
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Eight years after Hillary Clinton helped unite Democrats behind Barack Obama’s presidential campaign, he’s returning the favour. Obama and Clinton are making their first joint appearance of the 2016 campaign Tuesday in North Carolina, hours after FBI Director James Comey announced he was not recommending charges be brought against Clinton for her controversial email practices at the State Department. Still, Comey’s scathing criticism of Clinton — he called her “extremely careless” in her handling of classified information — ensures the matter will continue to hang over her campaign. Yet Clinton and Obama were all smiles as they stepped off Air Force One after a quick flight from Washington, pausing side-by-side to wave for cameras. Then they walked together to greet supporters on the concrete before leaving in a motorcade. The timing of the trip pulls the president into a controversy he has at times tried to keep at arm’s length, and the White House said he wouldn’t address the investigation during his speech at the rally. His appearance with Clinton is a potent reminder that it was his political appointee who declined to pursue criminal charges against his preferred successor. Presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump, who was making his own campaign stop in North Carolina, tweeted that Comey’s decision was
evidence of a “rigged” system. Democrats hope Obama’s presence on the campaign trail can alleviate voters’ questions about Clinton’s honesty and trustworthiness, some of which stem from the email investigation. The president is expected to outline his own evolution from a Clinton skeptic to one of her biggest boosters. The Clinton campaign is also hoping Obama’s presence at her side serves as a reminder of other aspects of her State Department tenure. For four years, Obama trusted her to circle the globe representing his foreign policy. She sat at his side in the Situation Room. She was the good soldier, putting aside her political ego to join the administration of the man who defeated her. During her tenure at the State Department she was viewed favourably by most Americans. Presidents make all their airplane flights on Air Force One, no matter the purpose of the trip. Political committees are required to contribute to the cost of a president’s campaign-related travel, though a portion of such costs is borne by taxpayers, too. Obama makes his first campaign appearance with Clinton during a wave of popularity unlike anything he’s experienced since his first term. Clinton aides say they’re confident they could deploy him in any battleground state, though they believe he’ll be particularly effective in rallying young people, as well as black and Hispanic voters, and will be instrumental in voter registration efforts.
Gove finished a disappointing third in the voting. The next round of voting is set for Thursday.
THEATRE CAMPS at Key City Theatre!
n o i t i d E r e m m Su
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Meanwhile, Across The Pond
Obama, Clinton making first joint campaign appearance
who threw the race into chaos last week by withdrawing support for Johnson and running himself.
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Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin
Page 16 Wednesday, July 6, 2016
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