Kimberley Daily Bulletin, October 04, 2016

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TUESDAY OCTOBER 4, 2016

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This group of students had roses for their Moms last week courtesy of Flowers Galore and their Flowers for Meaghan promotion. Anyone who dropped by the store last Thursday received a dozen roses for free. Owners Paddy and Sue Brown just asked that you pass a couple on to friends and family.

Chernove reflects on Paralympics trials and tribulations W T r e v o r C r aw l e y

ith a dislocated shoulder and numerous scrapes and bruises after crashing with five other riders in the Paralympic cycling road race, Tristen Chernove could’ve easily — and un-

derstandably — called it quits. However, that’s not in his nature. The Cranbrook cyclist, already with three medals to his name during his time at the Paralympics, picked himself up, fiddled with his

bicycle — which was still functional even though the handlebars were twisted and there was limited access to all gears because of a busted front derailer — and got back on the course. He finished in 15th place. “It’s unfortunate to not

have been able to contend for the win, but I’m more proud of that race than any of the races of the Games,” said Chernove. “Looking at my power profile data after the ride, it’s the strongest ride I’ve ever done. I went from several minutes be-

hind the whole pelaton to finishing 15th, which required a monumental effort. “…So I’m super proud of the effort, but I rode really hard to end up with the finish I had.” Chernove is back home in Cranbrook after a whirl-

wind experience at the Rio Parlaympic Games, nabbing a full spectrum of medals — gold, silver and bronze — while competing in track cycling and road racing events.

See CHERNOVE, Page 4


Page 2 Tuesday, October 4, 2016

Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

Community

​Photos courtesy Becky Litz Photography.

Despite the chilly, rainy weather dozens of moms, dads and babes gathered at Rotary Park today in Cranbrook to celebrate breastfeeding week. We had our official “latch-on” at 11:00 am local time joining with over 100 other sites around the world to record the number of moms and babes participating in the Quintessence Foundation’s Annual Breastfeeding Challenge. This year we reported 55 moms and 57 babes breastfeeding. We were overwhelmed with the community support we received in the way of door prize donations and “swag bag” contributions. A huge shout out to Diane Cameron, Jessica Swanson, Hayley Moldenhauer, Alyssa Quick, and Daleen Bybee for all pulling together another fabulous challenge for Cranbrook & Kimberley families.

looking after you from the inside out.

Dawn’s weekly features

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what their kids are doing in class during an open house on Tuesday, Oct. 4, at the school gymnasium

Cranbroook Society for Community Living

60th Anniversary Gala Saturday, October, 22

Cocktails 5pm, Dinner 6pm, Semi Formal Silent Auction, Cash bar, Dance to Canadian Crossfire St. Eugene Golf Resort and Casino $40 per person $75 couple Tickets Available online at: www.cranbrookscl.ca or in person at : Cranbrook Society for Community Living.

Tickets available until Oct 12 at 250-426-7588

starting at 6 p.m. The gym will be set up like a trade fair, with tables lining the walls to allow parents to go from station to station to get information about school classes and programs. The students will also be showcasing their talents in the form of performances from the music department and refreshments from the foods department. Parents will also have the chance to enter a date night giveaway — a prize package that includes dinner at The Heidout, two movie passes for the Columbia Theatre, and a night at the Sandman Inn.


Kimberley bulletin

Tuesday, October 4, 2016 Page 3

Local NEWS

MLA report

We must press the government to do more to stop invasive species

A

Jonathan Righton

September player of the month Franco Colapaolo, was presented a Fossil watch at Saturday, Oct 1, game, sponsored by Jewels on 9th from Troy Polluck, Kimberley Dynamiters Club Treasurer

Submitted

Above: The North Star Quilters Society presents quilts to the Kimberley Refugee Resettlement Group for Kimberley’s newest refugee family. Left to right: Tanis Rye, Louise Hockley, Lenore Gish, Lorna Willey

cross our area this summer, we saw an incredible number of visitors. It was wonderful to see so many visiting our beautiful part of the world. But with travelers who arrive in British Columbia with watercraft, there is always the danger that they may inadvertently bring with them invasive species. For many years, I have raised with government the particular threat raised by zebra and quagga mussels. I have seen them established in Lake Winnipeg and was struck by how quickly they take over an area. Zebra and quagga mussels came originally from Russia and were likely brought on a ship into our Great Lakes forty years ago. They have thrived and from there spread to many lakes and rivers including just two years ago reaching Manitoba. These mussels encrust boats, engine parts, turbines, irrigation systems, as well as shorelines. Because of their numbers, they completely change lake ecosystems. They can easily be transported inadvertently by boats because they can survive a surprisingly long time out of water and they multiply incredibly fast with no effective way to eradicate an infestation once it is established. I’ve long been worried that these mussels will accidently be brought into British Columbia. I have pushed for funding of inspection stations at our borders because with the right measures we have the ability to keep zebra and quagga mussels out of our water systems.

Norm Macdonald The government has responded in some measure. First, the government established three temporary inspection sites. Last year, a number of organizations such as the Columbia Basin Trust and BC Hydro funded more inspection crews. This was progress, but given what is at stake for Lake Windermere, Columbia Lake, Revelstoke, or any of hundreds more water bodies here in our area, we need government to do more. Further relatively small investments in preventing zebra and quagga mussels could save millions in the future spent to manually remove the mussels each year. Those investments could keep our lakes and rivers healthy. I ask you to take the time to write the Premier at premier@gov. bc.ca and the Minister of Environment at env. minister@gov.bc.ca. Thank them for what they have done but press them to do more. Keep our province free of zebra and quagga mussels. Norm Macdonald MLA Columbia River Revelstoke | 1 866 870 4188 | norm.macdonald.mla@leg.bc.ca

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Page 4 Tuesday, October 4, 2016

Kimberley bulletin

Local News

Chernove reflects on Paralympics trials and tribulations Continued from page 1

Chernove was the first multi-medalist of the Paralympics, winning a silver medal in the Men’s C2 3,000metre Individual Pursuit on Sept. 9 and claiming a bronze the next day in the C1-2-3 1,000-metre Time Trial. His golden performance came out on the time trial portion of the road race on Sept. 14, as he cycled to the top of the podium with a time of 27:43.16 — almost 20 seconds ahead of the silver medallist. Though his fourth and final event, the Men’s Road Race C1-23, didn’t go as he planned, he is proud of how he responded after the crash to pedal back into 15th place, despite being a few minutes behind the pack. The crash in the road race wasn’t the first hurdle of adversity Chernove faced during the Games. While the road race events are his strength, the two gold medals he won at the Para-cycling Track World Championships in Italy this past March was a stark reminder that he certainly was a gold-medal threat at the velodrome. However, there were a number of circumstances that conspired

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The spawning grounds

CHARLTON, BLAKE Spellbreaker

MacBRIDE, STUART In the cold dark ground

MARTIN, GEORGE R.R High stakes

PERCER, ELIZABETH All stories are love stories

against him, namely in the form of digestive issues and sleep deprivation, which compounded the stress of preparing to perform at his athletic peak. “It all culminated to four nights of zero sleep before the track events started as well as some other health issues, so I went into those events pretty shattered already,” said Chernove. “…When you haven’t slept for many, many nights and you’re not feeling well and not able to eat, I was really questioning whether it was even safe to sit on a bike. I was questioning whether it was even safe to ride and not crash, let alone put in a performance.” But perform he did, straight to a silver medal in the Men’s C2 3,000-Metre Individual Pursuit followed by a bronze in the C1-2-3 1,000-metre Time Trial. While Chernove says he was personally frustrated with his performance — he knew he could have raced faster if he was feeling 100 per cent — hitting the podium in spite of his health setbacks is not an insignificant accomplishment. Ever the glass-halffull optimist, he also took other positive outlooks from the experience. Chernove referenced the performance of Liang Guihua of China, who won the gold in the Individual Pursuit, noting that his life will be changed forever because of the payout from that nation’s government, which is roughly anywhere from $36,000 $55,000. “For him, a gold medal is a lot of money,” Chernove said. “For me, if I had one gold or two golds or three golds coming out of the Paralympics, it doesn’t really make a

difference in my life. “For him, that changes his life forever, for him and his family.” Following the track events, Chernove was able to stabilize his accommodations, get some rest and was fully healthy for the road race events. “It was because of all of those elements coming together and being back to myself, I knew that I would be able to ride to my own standards and do what I wanted to do,” said Chernove. Brimming with confidence, he attacked the Copacabana road course for the C2 Time Trial, and was the fifth rider out of the gate as athletes were released in one-minute intervals and timed to establish the final results. Being the fifth rider is somewhat of a disadvantage because there isn’t a lot of competition in front of you; there’s “not a lot of rabbits to chase down,” as Chernove explained. After his first lap, he heard from his coach through an earpiece that his closest competition was leading by one second, so Chernove turned on the gas. By the time he finished the second lap, he was up nine seconds and by the halfway point of his third lap, he was up by 24 seconds — a huge margin. “I knew that I had it then, so it was just staying safe,” Chernove said. “There were six 180-degree turns on the course where you pretty much have to lose all your speed, pretty technical turns, so I knew that I had such a gap that I could play it safe and make sure I didn’t have a crash and just ride it out.” His time at 27:43.16 was good for the gold medal, which completed the set along with silver and bronze, ce-

ROBB, J.D.

Apprentice in death

SCOTTOLINE, LISA Damaged

SIMONSON, HELEN The summer before the war

KIMBERLEY PUBLIC LIBRARY 115 Spokane St., Kimberley http://kimberley.bclibrary.ca

Kimberley Nordic Club AGM Wednesday, October 5, 2016 7:00 p.m. Nordic Lodge Phone: 250-427-1721

ALL WELCOME!

Courtesy Canadian Paralympic Committtee/Dave Holland

Cranbrook Paralympic cyclist Tristen Chernove gets his injuries tended to following his crash in the Men’s C1-2-3 road race. menting his status as one of the greatest Canadian athletes to participate in the Rio Games. But there was one competition left , the C1-2-3 Road Race — his favourite event — which makes the crash all that much more frustrating. Chernove was battling with five other riders at the head of the pelaton, as all five rotated making attacks to move to the front while the other four took advantage of the draft. Germany’s Steffen Warias made a move up to the front on the left side, with Chernove pedaling behind the wheel of Ireland’s Eoghan Clifford. However, a Colombian rider to Chernove’s right, tried to cut in front of the Cranbrook rider, who only had a two-foot gap between himself and Clifford, to take advantage of Warias’ draft. “He cut right across

our front wheels and knocked myself and a New Zealand rider down,” Chernove said. “And when he knocked us down, we fell into a Belgian and instantly there were five of us on the ground.” It took a few minutes to recover and get his bicycle operational, but Chernove hopped back on his seat and pedalled to finish in 15th place. The storybook script would have been sweeping gold at all of his events and parlaying the success he’s had on the world cup circuit into the Rio Games. However, sometimes unforeseen plot twists aren’t always a bad thing. “I think if I’d have gone to the Games and hit all my goals,” Chernove said, “been at my best for everything and if everything had have lined up so I could do my normal performances on the track

and break the world record and get multiple gold medals —if I didn’t have the crash happen in the road race, and had everything go perfectly, I don’t think there would have been much motivation for me to continue on and go to the Tokyo Games. “As there’s some unfinished business, maybe that needed to happen to give me something to still pursue and keep me motivated.” A triple-medal debut performance at the world’s premiere sporting event has turned some heads within the national cycling community, as well as the media. That notoriety is allowing him to do what he originally wanted when he got involved with competitive cycling, which is to raise awareness on hereditary neuropathy opportunities through pa-

ra-sport. In 2009, Chernove was diagnosed with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, a neurological condition with symptoms similar to muscular dystrophy and got involved with competitive cycling as a way to manage his symptoms. Now, he’s going to be a headlining guest at a Cycling B.C. gala next week in Vancouver and will be going to Toronto at the end of the month for a celebration of Olympic and Paralympic medal winners, where he will be a guest on the CBC’s George Strombolopolous show, alongside the Tragically Hip. “That’s why I started all this,” Chernove said. “When I realized I had this disease, I wanted to be a part of fundraising for treatment and cure for future generations and now I really am in a place where I can have a global impact that way.” While Chernove has returned to Cranbrook and has transitioned back into is role as CEO of Elevate Airports, where he manages the Canadian Rockies International Airport, training for 2017 World Cup events is already in the back of his mind. Last Thursday, he headed down to Burnaby to get in some time on the velodrome track, but for now, it’s about racing for fun rather than for results. Still, the memories of Rio are still fresh, and it’s not necessarily the medals he’ll treasure. During down times outside of the Paralympic events, athletes could wander over to the food pavilion, a huge single room lined with buffets that could feed all the athletes at once. “Any time you go there, you’re sitting down with international folks,” Chernove said, “so one day I might be sitting with the Iraqi team or the Chinese team or the Saudi team, you’re just constantly intermixing with these international folks with a common passion and it’s wonderful. “Everyone is so supportive and curious about each other and 167 countries all sharing mealtimes is a powerful thing.”


Kimberley bulletin

Tuesday, October 4, 2016 Page 5

NEWS

B.C. has headstart on Trudeau’s carbon price To m F l e tc h e r Black Press

Provincial environment ministers meeting in Quebec were taken by surprise Monday when Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced a mandatory carbon price across Canada starting in 2018. Trudeau announced the policy in the House of Commons Monday as MPs began debate on ratifying the latest international climate change agreement signed in Paris last year. B.C.’s $30-a-tonne carbon tax puts it three years ahead of Trudeau’s requirement that every province have a $10-a-tonne price on greenhouse gas emissions by 2018, rising by $10 a year to $50 in 2022. With Saskatchewan and Nova Scotia opposed to a national carbon price and Alberta making its own demands, Trudeau vowed to force the issue. “If neither price nor cap and trade is in place by 2018, the government of Canada will implement a price in that jurisdiction,” Trudeau said. In a statement issued from meetings in Montreal, B.C. Environment Minister Mary Polak said the federal policy would mean other provinces will “catch up” with B.C. “We also need to make sure we remain competitive for job-creating industries,” Polak said. “There is no point bleeding jobs to a place with no carbon price.” Alberta Premier Rachel Notley issued a statement Monday, demanding the Trudeau government approve the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion to deliver more oil to its Burnaby marine terminal, or the Energy East pipeline proposal to the East Coast. “Alberta will not be supporting this proposal absent serious concurrent progress on energy infrastructure, to ensure we have the economic means to fund these policies,” Notley said. “What we are ask-

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ing for now is that our landlock be broken in one direction or the other, so that we can get back on our feet.” Premier Christy Clark has said B.C.’s $30-a-tonne carbon tax will remain frozen until 2018, and other provinces need to catch up before B.C. can impose further measures without creating an economic disadvantage with its neighbours. Trudeau’s pledge at the Paris climate summit was to uphold the previous Stephen Harper government target of a 30 per cent cut in Canada’s emissions by 2030.

Black Press files

Alberta Premier Rachel Notley, B.C. Premier Christy Clark, Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard and Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall at UN climate change conference in Paris, December 2015.

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The Coming Antibiotic Apocalyse I have never advocated that people who routinely feed low doses of antibiotics to livestock should be executed without trial. That would be too harsh, too irrevocable. There should be fair trials, and fines for a first offence, and prison for a second. Only habitual offenders should face the death penalty. But first, there has to be a law. At the moment, it isn’t even illegal in most countries. At the United Nations last week, every single member country signed a declaration that recognises the rise in antibiotic resistance as a threat to the entire enterprise of modern medicine. It’s a start, but that’s all it is — and time is running out. “The emergence of bacterial resistance is outpacing the world’s capacity for antibiotic discovery,” World Health Organisation director-general Margaret Chan warned the meeting. “With few replacement products in the pipeline, the world is heading toward a post-antibiotic era in which common infections will once again kill.” The declaration urges countries to cut back on the use of existing antibiotics in order to preserve their effectiveness, to make better use of vaccines instead, and to spend more money on developing new antibiotics. It doesn’t put any actual money on the table, however, and it doesn’t even make make it illegal to pump “sub-therapeutic” doses of antibiotics into farm animals. (It can’t. National governments have to do that.) I was not really recommending the death penalty for feeding antibiotics to livestock. That was just for dramatic effect. But the reckless misuse of antibiotics is rapidly destroying their effectiveness. A recent study by Public Health England found that the proportion of campylobacter bacteria that are resistant to ciproflaxin, the standard antibiotic in cases of

food poisoning, has risen from 30 percent to 48 percent in just the past ten years. If we don’t stop the rot we are heading back to the 19th century in terms of our ability to control infections. Even minor wounds and simple operations will carry the risk of death. The same goes for communicable diseases. In the 19th century tuberculosis was the biggest killer of young and middle-aged adults in Europe and America. With the discovery of streptomycin in 1944, isoniazid in 1952, and rifamptin in the 1970s it Gwynne ceased to be a major health problem. But now the drug Dyer resistance has grown so great that at least 190,000 people worldwide died of tuberculosis last year. The problem of bacterial resistance has been understood for a long time. If the antibiotic kills all the harmful bacteria it targets in the person or animal it is given to, then no resistance develops. But if it only kills off the weaker ones because it was a very low dosage, or because the course of drugs was not finished, then the surviving bacteria will be the most resistant ones. They will pass their resistance on to all their descendants, who will undergo similar episodes of winnowing out the the less resistant ones many more times, and gradually the resistance grows. The only way to keep antibiotics effective, therefore, is to use them as rarely as possible, and to make sure that they kill off all the target bacteria when they are used. We are not doing this. Doctors over-prescribe antibiotics, often giving them to people who do not have bacterial infections just to get them out of their offices (and sometimes getting a kickback from drug companies for each prescription they write). And nobody makes sure that patients complete the course of treatment

even though they already feel better. Much worse is the widespread practice of giving regular low doses of antibiotics to cattle, pigs and chickens, partly as a means of controlling the spread of disease in their cramped and insanitary living conditions, but mostly because it makes them put weight on more quickly. Getting them to the slaughterhouse a week or two faster is money in the hand. This insanely greedy and reckless practice is now banned in the European Union, but it is still commonplace in China and the United States. In fact, 80 percent of American antibiotic production goes to farm animals who are not ill, and as intensive farming methods spread to developing countries so does antibiotic use in agriculture. This has to stop. So does over-prescribing by doctors in developed countries, and the over-the-counter sale of antibiotics without prescriptions that is so normal in many developing countries. “We are now staring at overwhelming evidence of rampant antibiotic resistance, across all ages, all over the country,” said Dr Vinod Paul, head of pediatrics at the All-India Institute of Medical Sciences in Delhi. We also need a whole new generation of antibiotics to replace those that are hopelessly compromised, which requires persuading large pharaceutical companies to change their research priorities. (They make more money by developing new drugs that address the chronic health problems of the affluent, so we’ll have to subsidise them.) It all has to be done, and it has to start now. “On current trends,” said Dr. Chan at the UN, “a common disease like gonorrhea may become untreatable. Doctors facing patients will have to say, ‘I’m sorry, there’s nothing I can do for you’.” Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist based in London


Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

Opinion/Events

What’s Up?

Letters to the Editor

Death of the bears

It was a sad day for a momma bear and her two cubs on Friday evening. Wildlife officers captured momma in a bear trap and her two cubs lay under a tree close by. There had been a complaint and all three were killed. No chance of relocation? They are habituated. To what — the apple trees and fruit the bears come for year after year? We have lived on our street for many years and have been blessed with being able to observe first hand the comings and goings of bears raiding the old apple and crabapple trees on the wild, deserted land behind us. This piece of land, with an old dilapidated farmhouse, borders the forest and we suspect the bears follow Mark Creek up to the area. They are fattening up for the winter and are only interested in eating as much as they can. We and our close neighbours have never had a problem with them. The children on our street know that when the bears are there, they are to stay away from the area. Instead of taking our dogs back there to walk or throw the ball for them, we walk elsewhere and play with them in our own back yards. We make sure we stay away from the area while the bears are coming and going, until all the apples have been consumed, or they leave to go into hibernation. It is only for a few short months. Several years ago, the owner of the land built a fence dividing the houses on the street and their land. This fence pretty much keeps the bears and residents apart, but for many, many years the area was wide open. The residents didn’t bother the bears and the bears didn’t bother the residents. Oh for the good old days! Over the last couple of years, the de-

mographics of the area have changed. New construction has taken place and different people have moved into new and existing houses close by our street. Perhaps they haven’t been quite as diligent in keeping their garbage locked away, or aren’t as tolerant of the idea of bears being close by. Bears have been sighted in much more populated areas of the city for years. In fact, I am much more afraid of the deer. The moms with newborn fawns are especially dangerous and with rutting season now, there seems to be a huge influx of bucks into Marysville which makes me very nervous when I take my dog for our evening stroll. I see them everywhere and have witnessed bucks fighting in our front yard. Children walking to and from Marysville School are often afraid to walk by these huge, unpredictable animals with very big antlers. I don’t know what the best solution is. I understand the Conservation Officers are only doing their job to keep us safe, but perhaps the community and the bears would be better served by getting the owner of the land to chop down the apple trees that attract the bears there. All I know is, I want the bears to live! All I know is, I don’t want to ever again hear the anguished bawl of young cubs as they are shot out of the tall trees they scrambled into for safety! One ... two … three shots ...then silence. Heather Gellner Marysville

Electoral Reform

Readers may feel that electoral reform is about as interesting as watching paint dry and completely irrelevant to your

lives. But we have a rare chance to express our views on electoral reform now, and the deadline to give your opinion is October 7. Have you ever voted to get rid of a dictatorial leader who is hated by everyone you know? Do you protest decade after decade for policy change that never happens? Have you voted your whole life but never elected anyone? Do you want to tear your hair out at the constant useless mudslinging and ‘gotcha’ moments in politics? How many elections have you voted for someone you kinda don’t want just to get rid of someone else you really don’t want? If you answered yes to any of the above, then electoral change is relevant to you. You are not alone. Ed Broadbent said 46% of voters cast a ballot for a candidate who was not their first choice. In the last federal election, 9 million Canadians might as well have just stayed home because their votes were not counted in the representational outcome. How can we expect to get the government we want if our votes aren’t counted, as in our present plurality system? A proportional electoral system is used by almost all developed countries around the world, except for USA, England and Canada. Not a single country has moved back to “First Past the Post” (the plurality system) after getting a proportional system. 70% of Canadians want a proportional electoral system. Please let the parliamentary committee know you do too. Email your MP, Wayne Stetski at wayne. stetski@parl.gc.ca and the ERRE committee at erre@parl.gc.ca. Your voice matters! Ann Remnant Nelson, B.C.

Big Brother’s coming to city hall

R

emember two years ago when B.C. Liberal cabinet minister Peter Fassbender took on the B.C. Teachers’ Federation? The province weathered its longest-ever public school strike, five weeks of full-scale shutdown from disrupted graduation to cancelled fall classes, with the B.C. government dividing up the salary savings and sending cheques to thousands of parents. The province’s most militant union was wrestled to the ground, its strike fund exhausted, and the BCTF signed a fiveyear agreement with economic growth sharing similar to all the other provincial government unions. Then Premier Christy Clark assigned Fassbender a new job: do the same thing with municipalities. It started last year, when a provincially commissioned study on municipal wages was leaked just as mayors and councillors from around the province gathered in Whistler for the annual Union of B.C. Municipalities convention. The study showed that municipal staff wage increases had been running at about twice the rate of provincial wage settlements, as the province came out of a recession-driven wage freeze and into a period of slow economic growth. NDP leader John Horgan and the Canadian Union of Public Employees dis-

Tuesday, October 4, 2016 Page 7

missed the study as full of holes, partly because left-leaning cities refused to supply the data. It seems some municipalities, particularly in Metro Vancouver, are not keen to have Big Brother get involved in their contract negotiations. At this year’s UBCM convention in Victoria, FassBC Views bender let it be known in his closing speech that a review Tom of municipal compensation Fletcher is underway. That means not only CUPE agreements, but executive pay and even the rich arbitrated settlements handed out to municipal police and firefighters. I asked Fassbender about the plan after his speech Friday, and he was the smooth salesman. He emphasized, as Finance Minister Mike de Jong did last year, that there is no legislative hammer hidden behind his back. At least not at the moment. “I’ve had a number of good discussions with mayors as I’ve traveled around the province who clearly recognized one of their biggest cost drivers is compensation, and they are more than willing to talk about it,” Fassbender said. “It takes their provincial organization, I think ideally you have UBCM and all of its members, and I emphasize all of its members, willing to sit down and start that conversation.” The likelihood of that appears to be

somewhere between slim and none. Just before Fassbender’s speech, local government leaders debated a resolution dealing with the province’s last effort to help them run their affairs, the Auditor General for Local Government. The upshot of that was similar to last year: Dear Minister Fassbender, put this thing where the sun don’t shine. Several mayors and councillors suggested the UBCM should lift its ban on cooperating with the auditor, but in the end the majority sided with Invermere Mayor Gerry Taft, who pointed out the province’s new municipal auditor spends $5 million a year to find ways for communities to cut costs. The only way to get rid of it is to change the provincial government next year, Taft said. So this will be one of the showdown issues in the next provincial election: strong fiscal discipline vs. meddling in the affairs of local governments. It will inspire CUPE and other unions as they ramp up their third-party advertising campaigns next spring. It’s been 15 years since Christy Clark as education minister, and Gordon Campbell as premier, tore up sweetheart contracts the NDP had negotiated with teachers and hospital workers, setting off an epic court fight that continues today. Tom Fletcher is B.C. legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press.

Community Calendar

uPcoMiNG Kimberley Aquatic Centre FREE PUBLIC SWIM: Wednesday, October 5, 2016. Sponsored by Kimberley United Church Kimberley Nordic Club AGM Wednesday October 5 at 7:00 pm at the Nordic Lodge. All welcome, refreshments, memberships for sale... ph: 250-427-1721 for info. October 5th, 2016 (Wednesday) Oceans, Rivers and Mountains! Travel Inspirationalist and World Traveller Erin Buttler from G Adventures will take you on Grand Ocean Adventures, Cruising the world’s iconic Rivers, and hiking some the most eye-popping Mountain Trails on the planet. Mountain City Travel presents this fundraising Travel event “in support of AN IMAGE FOR HEALTH MRI Campaign. Light refreshment and groovy prizes. Doors open 6:30 – Presentation 7:00PM- 8:30 Buy tickets at: www.keycitytheatre.com October 12: Kimberley Garden Club first Fall 2016 meeting. Program is potpourri, what it is, how to make. Selkirk High School Library 7-9 pm. New members are always welcome. More info: contact Nola at 250-427-1948 or Marilee at 250-427-0517. A winter clothing re-use for the whole community, Sat. Oct. 15 at 395 Marsden. Donations of good clean coats, hats, mitts and outerwear gratefully accepted and passed on. 427-7316 for more info.

oNGoiNG Cranbrook Phoenix Toastmasters meet every Thursday, noon -1:00 Heritage Inn. Toastmasters teaches communication & leadership skills. Roberta 250-489-0174. 1911.toastmastersclubs.org. 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. Enjoy Painting? Join ArtGroup 75, Fridays 1pm-4pm, Sept. June. Seniors Hall, Cranbrook. 125. 17th Ave. S. MILITARY AMES is a social/camaraderie/support group that meets the first and third Tuesdays of the month in the Kimberley Public Library reading room. All veterans are welcome. For more information call Cindy @ 250 919 3137. Funtastic Singers meet every Tuesday 6:45 pm at the Cranbrook United Church (by Safeway). No experience necessary. Contact Cranbrook Arts, 250-426-4223. The Cranbrook Quilter’s Guild meet on the 2nd and 4th Tuesday of every month, September - June, 7.15 p.m. at the Cranbrook Senior Citizens Hall, 125-17th Ave South. Call Jennifer at 250-426-6045. 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.

toWnsman & Bulletin Community Calendar

Drop off: 822 Cranbrook St. N. • Drop off: 335 Spokane Street E-mail: carolyn.grant@kimberleybulletin.com • Fax: 250-427-5336


Page 8 Tuesday, October 4, 2016

Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

The Early Years

Humans together: Etiquette at Play Groups F o r t h e Tow n s m a n

Cranbrook has many playgroups for parents/ caregivers with children from birth to five years of age. They are free drop in groups where children can play and learn and new connections are made between families. If you’ve never been to a play group, here are some guidelines that will help you to know what you can expect. Dress code: Unlike fine dining restaurants, at playgroup it is best your child comes dressed in clothes that can get dirty when playing outside, painting, gluing or other messy and fun activities. If it’s a playgroup that has access to a yard (like Wiggle, Giggle & Grow), dress your child and yourself appropriately for the weather so you can participate in outdoor play. Appropriate behaviour for the child: Children are still learning how to behave in a social situation. It is particularity challenging in a big group, when they are tired, hungry, thirsty or recently had to

deal with a big change in their lives, like the arrival of a new sibling. That’s okay. That’s why it’s so great to have someone who loves them with them at playgroup whether that’s a parent, other relative or caregiver who can assess what they need and guide their behaviour. Appropriate behaviour for the parent/caregiver: Every parent has a different philosophy and that’s okay, but at playgroups there need to be some ground rules we all agree on: Please set a good example for your child verbally and physically. Physical punishment teaches your child that it is okay to hurt someone if you’re bigger and stronger and it is not acceptable at playgroups. Talk to them in a way you would like them to speak to you and others. Keep a close eye on your child, this way you can help them navigate difficult situations. Yelling instructions at your child from across the room is usually not very effective and startles everyone

else. You can help them assert themselves, for example you can tell your child:” Tell Sally ‘I’m playing with this now, I’ll give you a turn when I’m done’, instead of taking your child’s toy out of their hands to give to someone else to avoid conflict. Learning to assert themselves in a friendly, non-aggressive but direct way is a very useful skill for their whole lives. Re-direct them when they are doing something inappropriate. Sometimes it works best to let a child know what they can do, instead of what they can’t do. For example “Here is a ball you can throw. The block is too hard and might hurt someone.” Children will learn eventually how to resolve their own conflicts, but young children need guidance to learn to interact appropriately. It’s not an easy skill to learn! Snack time: Please stay close to your child at snack time and help your child put an appropriate amount of food on their napkins to avoid wasting

food. Teach them to only take what they will eat. They can always have more! Craft time: The finished product is not important at this age. What’s important is the creative process. Let your child take the lead. You don’t need to be an artist to engage in arts and crafts with your child. Just have fun and supply the materials and your child will enjoy being given the opportunity to express their creativity. Play time: If you’re playing with your child, let them take the lead and see where they take you. Children don’t have a lot of control in their lives, so it’s fun for them to take the lead in their play. Song time: Please join us for song time. Sing if you like, but there is no pressure. Stay focused to set a positive example for your child. If your child wonders off, you can gently encourage them to join the group, but as long as they aren’t disrupting the singing, it’s okay to play and only listen to the songs. They might surprise you and sing them at home or

join in with the group eventually, when they’re ready. Sanitary Environment To maintain a healthy, clean and safe environment, please ensure that you: • change your child on the designated change table, disinfect it after use and wash your hands; • assist your child when using the bathroom and ensure they wash their hands afterwards; • put mouthed toys in the designated bin to be sanitized by staff; • sit with your child at the table at snack time for safety, sanitary and social reasons. Health — Let’s all help to reduce the spread of diseases. Please stay home if you or your child experiences the following symptoms: Fever For most viruses, a child should be fever-free for 24 hours (without medicine) before returning to programs. For children with possible swine flu, experts recommend that they stay home for 10 days after the onset of symptoms.

Diarrhea or Vomiting Keep your child home until the illness is over, and for 24 hours after the last episode (without medicine). Bad Cough/Cold Symptoms Children with bad coughs need to stay home and possibly see a doctor. It could be a severe cold or possibly bronchitis, flu, or pneumonia. But when the cough improves and the child is feeling better, then it is okay to attend programs again. There is no need to wait for the cough to disappear entirely -- that could take a week or longer! Mild Cough/Runny Nose If there’s no fever and the child feels fairly well, attending programs is fine. Please ensure your child’s nose is wiped as needed and put mouthed toys into the mouthed toys bucket. CAPC Cranbrook For more information about playgroups in Cranbrook, go to www.Ekkids.ca Submitted by the Cranbrook Early Years Committee

YOUR CITY WORKING FOR YOU! Tuesday, October 4th, 2016 IDLEWILD PARK DRAFT MASTER PLAN FEEDBACK

WATCH THE IDLEWILD DAM REHAB CONSTRUCTION IN REAL TIME

Ideas and priorities we heard from Cranbrook citizens, stakeholders, and staff has been crafted into a draft Master Plan for Idlewild Park. If you missed out on the open house on September 20th, you are still able to provide feedback on the draft plan. Information provided at the open house can be downloaded from our website @ www.cranbrook. ca, or a hard copy can be viewed at City Hall or the administration office at Western Financial Place. Hard copies of the comment form are also available at these locations, or can be filled out on line by visiting http:// fluidsurveys.com/surveys/urbansouthcoast/idlewildmaster-plan/ Please provide your feedback before Monday October 10, 2016. We hope you will share your perspectives on the future of Idlewild Park. If you have questions, please contact: Chris New Director of Leisure Services Phone: 250-489-0251 chris.new@cranbrook.ca

Work on the rehabilitation of Idlewild dam and the lake continues at a great pace. Check in on the activities anytime from your desktop or smartphone via our project webcam at http://playfullscreen.com/ cranbrook_1.php.

REMINDERS... Monday October 24, 2016 – Regular City Council Meeting @ 6pm Monday November 7, 2016 – Regular City Council Meeting @ 6pm

Watch the latest

Cranbrook City Council meeting when you want. Visit www.cranbrook.ca

Please remember this is an active construction area. If you decide to visit Idlewild in person, please obey all barricades and signage for your own safety.

NOTICE TO MOTORISTS REGARDING POTHOLE DAMAGE CLAIMS The law in British Columbia does not make a municipality legally responsible to ensure that its roads are always free of defects or hazards such as potholes and The Local Government Act, Section 288, provides that a municipality does not have the legal liability for damages that arise from a breakdown in a road. The municipality must be found to have been negligent in the particular circumstances. Motorists are advised that written notice of intent to claim must be provided to a municipality within two (2) months of the events that give rise to the claim – per The Local Government Act, Section 286. The City deals with a large network of streets and Public Works has a fixed number of work crews, equipment and other resources with which it can respond to and repair road defects. To report potholes, please contact the City of Cranbrook Public Works Department at 250-489-0218.

DEER MATING SEASON APPROACHES; PUBLIC AWARENESS ENCOURAGED Focus on the local urban deer population shifts away from aggressive does to the upcoming autumn deer mating period or the fall rut. Residents and visitors are advised to continue to exercise both caution and common sense. In the weeks leading up to the rut (into November and December) bucks increase their displays of dominance and indirect threats. Visit our website @ www.cranbrook.ca, and click on the ‘Urban Deer’ quick link for more information.

WEEKEND PASSES ON SALE NOW WESTERNFINANCIALPLACE.CA WEESTERNFINA W OR CALL 250-426-7328

ALTERNATIVE APPROVAL PROCESS (AAP) – 2017 CAPITAL ROADS PROGRAM LOAN AUTHORIZATION Residents and business owners in Cranbrook are being asked to consider whether or not to borrow $10 million to expand the capital roads program in the City in 2017. Through this past winter’s budget process, Council approved an expanded Capital Roads Program in 2017, including the proposed borrowing of $10 million which would allow for an extensive road resurfacing and rehabilitation program while also addressing priority water and sewer infrastructure throughout the City. Funds would be utilized to resurface or reconstruct many arterial and local roads in residential, commercial and industrial areas, as well as a full reconstruction of 2nd Street South from Highway #3 through to 10th Avenue South with repaving from 10th Avenue South through to 14th Avenue South. This project in particular involves replacement of failing underground trunk mains and pavement structure as identified in the City’s Integrated Infrastructure Capital Plan (IICP). Extensive work on infrastructure asset management, priorities and risks has assisted Council in making this decision. Visit our website @ www.cranbrook.ca/aap to get all the information you need to make an informed choice. Elector response forms must be submitted by 4:30pm MT, Monday October 31, 2016. Only those opposed to the proposed borrowing need to complete an elector response form. If you have questions regarding the AAP process, please contact: Charlene Courtney Deputy Director, Finance & Computer Services

charlene.courtney@cranbrook.ca 250-489-0203


Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

Tuesday, October 4, 2016 Page 9

Tuesday Afternoon/Evening

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October 4

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October 5

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Simp Le Téléjournal

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Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

Page 10 Tuesday, October 4, 2016

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October 6

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Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

Tuesday, October 4, 2016 Page 11

BookNotes

Brontë or Bell: The age of ‘Jane Eyre’

L

Mike Selby

ong before the international copyright law of 1891 offered British publishers legal protection, they relied on something called the “courtesy of the trade”—an open trust that their American counterparts wouldn’t reprint their books without permission and compensation. Surprisingly, this transatlantic trust worked more often than not (it wasn’t until after

the copyright law was passed that illegal reprints really began to increase). One book it did not work for, and even the British publishers didn’t really expect it to, was ‘Jane Eyre.’ In the decade before the American Civil War erupted, the United States was swept up it what newspapers of the time called “Jane Eyre fever … a distressing mental epidemic which

defied all the usual nostrums of the established doctors.” ‘Jane Eyre’ had hit the shores of the United States at the exact time when the importance of literature became paramount to people’s lives (the now common practice of displaying books in homes had only begun a decade earlier). Since ‘Jane Eyre’ was all anyone talked about, publishers did what they could to fill to the demand.

Adhering or not to the “courtesy of the trade,” reprinting ‘Jane Eyre’ was going to be much easier said than done. Much of the difficulty publishers had came from the identify of the novel’s author. While we now know that Charlotte Brontë is the book’s author,’ it was originally published as having been written by Currer Bell. This was because all three Brontë sisters had used the Bell name as

pseudonyms, correctly believing that male authors were taken much more seriously than female ones. ‘Jane Eyre’ written by a woman would be fluff; written by a man, it was seen as a work of genius. In 1848, the American publisher Harper & Row had successfully secured not only the reprint rights to ‘Jane Eyre,’ but also to any future works by Currer Bell. But Harper soon cried

Warrior Arts

Your code is better than the world Joel Hunc ar

As

I sat here with my keyboard thinking about what my observations on martial arts would be for the next column, I couldn’t shake this feeling of frustration I had over the last few weeks. At first I couldn’t put my finger on where this frustration was coming from but really it is frustration that has been part of me since I’ve grown enough to look at the world through open eyes. However, after writing the article on the warrior code of conduct, it really hit home for me; honestly looking at the world and trying to live my personal code sometimes makes me feel concern on the path our culture is headed on. We live in a world of distraction and misinformation overload. What is on the surface seems more important than the truth. Morals are sold for convenience and we are more enthralled with brand names and new stuff than we care about the third world labour, often child labour that is used to make our stuff cheap. Our politicians who should hold the highest moral codes are expected as a whole to be corrupt. Most people have no faith in the system. We fear those who serve and protect and teach our children to fear and hate authority. We are bombarded with images of police and while we accept political corruption as part of the system, we condemn all police for incidents sensationalized by the media for the purpose of making ratings. The media creates in us unrealistic fears and stress but we don’t see

Courtesy Joel Huncar

The world is not a reflection of one’s code. One’s code is better than what is going on in this world. the real corruption in our cities and towns. There is a more visible homeless population in Cranbrook these days. Hard drugs, mental illness and tough economy are just part of the problem, the other part is a tuned out distracted populace of people who could make a difference. We care more about looking like we care than actually caring about and for the human beings picking the empties out of our garbage cans. Everything in our world is disposable these days, even our fellow humans. On a more personal level one of my most hated phrases is “he’s a good guy.” I have heard people tell me that men who have been charged with murder or conspiracy to commit murder are “good guys” by peo-

ple I thought were sane (Good guys don’t get charged with that kind of thing, bad guys do). Child molesters in these times charm church congregations and city leaders so when they go to trial they have a lot of well-meaning misguided (maybe even stupid) people who are the pillars in our community saying, “it can’t be true he’s a good guy”, throwing doubt on the victim who was probably picked because they would be weak on the stand to begin with. Real good guys don’t need a cheerleading squad telling people they are good guys, they just are. This is how superficial our culture is, it is not what people are that is important, it is how they appear. Charisma is more important than honour. Shine and pol-

ish more important than substance. I am fortunate I get to reflect on my code often because I have to be a mentor to some of our communities most vulnerable. I teach children and adults and many have had deep personal reasons to be in my gym. Most are there to learn martial arts and have fun. Some are there to heal, or to take back some power that was taken from them from abuse or criminal assault. For these people I have to do my best to not only know my code but to live by it as well. I stumble at times but I get back to my path as soon as I do, no shame, just a bit of retracing footsteps and heading back to my journey. The thing is, we all have our code. Most reading this share many of the same frustrations. That’s because the world is not a reflection of your code. Your code is better than what is going on in this world. Sure you may make mistakes and stumble but if you know what your code is, it gives you a road map to follow to get you back on your way. You may never get to the destination but you will lead a path that your children and people who look up to you will try to follow. Let’s not sell out to an empty media culture, let’s all remember the codes our own pathfinders set for us and do our best to set the path for our children. We are all mentors, each and every one of us. Not just teachers and coaches but every living person. In our bad moments and in our moments of nobility there are people who are looking to us to see

what is right and wrong to do. We are not alone; we are all in this together. We are part of a community as a whole. Our media culture is our own creation, let’s take it back and live in our communities again instead of in our distraction. Let’s not make excuses for charismatic bad guys and let’s make the words honour, integrity and respect things we believe in, instead of anachronisms. The world is yours to shape; shape it by living your code.

Charlotte Brontë foul after discovering another American publisher, T. B. Peterson, had announced the publication of a new work by Currer Bell. In fact T. B. Peterson was announcing publication of all Currer Bell’s work, including ‘Wuthering

Heights,’ ‘Agnes Grey,’ and ‘The Tenant of Wildfell Hall.’ While it appeared that T.B. Peterson was making a crooked move for Bell’s work, the publisher was as confused as Harper was. ‘Wuthering Heights, ‘Agnes Grey,’ and ‘Wildfell Hall’ were not the work of Currer Bell (Charlotte Brontë), but by Ellis Bell (Emily Brontë) and Acton Bell (Anne Brontë) respectively. Similarities appearing in all these books had most British reviewers concluding that all books were written by one person only.

See JANE, Page 20

Joel Huncar teaches out of the Rocky Mountain Martial Arts Family Centre, he is a freelance writer who has written for Black Belt Magazine, Filipino Martial Arts Informative and other publications. Rocky Mountain

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Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

Page 12 Tuesday, October 4, 2016

Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

Tuesday, October 4, 2016 Page 13

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Annual mammograms are widely recommended for women beginning at age 40. Some estimates suggest that more than 48 million mammography screenings are performed in the United States every year. Whether it is a woman’s first mammography or her twentieth, preparing for the appointment can ease anxiety and make the experience go more smoothly. The following are some guidelines to consider when preparing for a mammography visit. • Choose a reputable and certified facility. Select a radiology center that is certified by the FDA, which means it meets current standards and is safe. Many women also prefer to select a facility that is covered by their health insurance. Plans usually allow for one mammogram screening per year. • Time your visit. Schedule the mammogram to take place one week after your menstrual period if you have not reached menopause. Breasts are less likely to be tender at this time. Also, schedule your visit for a time when you are not likely to feel rushed or stressed. Early in the day works best for many. • Dress for the occasion. Two-piece ensembles enable you to only remove your shirt and bra for the examination. A blouse that opens in the front may be optimal. Some facilities require you to wear a paper

gown for the exam. • Watch your grooming practices. You’ll be advised to abstain from wearing powder, perfume, deodorant, ointment, and lotions on the chest or around the area. These substances may look like an abnormalities on the mammogram image, potentially resulting in false positive diagnoses. • Take an OTC pain medication. Mammograms are not necessarily painful, but they can put pressure on the breasts, which creates discomfort. Breasts are compressed between a plastic plate and the imaging machine. This spreads out the tissue and helps create a clearer picture. If your breasts are tender, medications like acetaminophen or ibuprofen taken an hour before the appointment may ease discomfort. • Expect a short visit. Mammogram appointments typically last around 30 minutes. The technician will mark any moles or birthmarks around the breasts so they can be ignored on the imaging. You’ll be asked to hold your breath as the images are taken. If the images are acceptable, you are free to go. But new images may be needed in some instances. Mammograms are now a routine part of women’s preventative health care. The procedure is simple and appointments are quick and relatively painless.

Cancer is a formidable foe. Among women, no cancer poses a greater threat than breast cancer, which the World Health Organization reports is the most often diagnosed cancer both in the developed and developing worlds. Gaining a greater understanding of breast cancer may not prevent the onset of this disease that kills hundreds of thousands of women each year, but it might increase the chances of early detection, which can greatly improve women’s chances of survival. The following are the established risk factors for breast cancer. • GENDER: Being female is the single biggest risk factor for developing breast cancer. Men can get breast cancer, but the risk for men is substantially smaller than it is for women. According to Breastcancer.org, roughly 190,000 women are diagnosed with invasive breast cancer each year in the United States alone. • AGE: The American Cancer Society notes that about two out of every three invasive breast cancers are found in women ages 55 and older, whereas just one out of every eight invasive breast cancers are found in women younger than 45. The WHO notes that instances of breast cancer are growing in developing countries, citing longer life expectancies as one of the primary reasons for that increase.

• FAMILY HISTORY: According to the WHO, a family history of breast cancer increases a woman’s risk factor by two or three. Women who have had one first-degree female relative, which includes sisters, mothers and daughters, diagnosed with breast cancer are at double the risk for breast cancer than women without such family histories. The risk of developing breast cancer is five times greater for women who have two firstdegree relatives who have been diagnosed with breast cancer. • MENSTRUAL HISTORY: Women who began menstruating younger than age 12 have a higher risk of developing breast cancer later in life than women who began menstruating after their twelfth birthdays. The earlier a woman’s breasts form, the sooner they are ready to interact with

hormones and chemicals in products that are hormone disruptors. Longer interaction with hormones and hormone disruptors increases a woman’s risk for breast cancer. • LIFESTYLE CHOICES: A 2005 comparative risk assessment of nine behaviors and environmental factors published in the U.K. medical journal The Lancet found that 21 percent of all breast cancer deaths across the globe are attributable to alcohol consumption, overweight and obesity and physical inactivity. Women can do nothing to control breast cancer risk factors like gender, age and family history, but making the right lifestyle choices, including limiting alcohol consumption, maintaining a healthy weight and living an active lifestyle, can reduce the likelihood that they will develop breast cancer.

Upon receiving a breast cancer diagnosis, patients will soon receive a pathology report that informs them about the stage their cancer is in. The stage indicates how advanced the cancer is and whether or not it is limited to one area of the breast or has spread to other tissue or even other parts of the body. Understanding the stages of breast cancer can help patients cope with their diagnoses more effectively. Once the doctor has completed all the necessary testing, patients will then receive their pathology reports, which will include the stage of the cancer. The following rundown of the various stages of breast cancer can help breast cancer patients better understand their disease. STAGE 0 Non-invasive breast cancers are considered to be in stage 0. When doctors have determined the cancer is in stage 0, that means they have not seen any indication that the cancer cells or the abnormal non-cancerous cells have spread out of the part of the breast in which they started. Breast cancer patients may hear the term “five-year survival rate� when discussing their disease with their physicians. The five-year survival rate refers to the percentage of people who live at least five years after being diagnosed with cancer. According to the American Cancer Society, the five-year survival rate for women with stage 0 breast cancer is nearly 100 percent. STAGE I Stage I refers to invasive breast cancer and is broken down into two categories: stage IA and stage IB. Stage IA refers to invasive breast cancers in which the tumor is up to two centimeters and the cancer has not spread outside the breast. The lymph nodes are not involved in stage IA breast cancers. In some stage IB breast

cancers, there is no tumor in the breast but there are small groups of cancer cells in the lymph nodes larger than 0.2 millimeter but not larger than two millimeters. But stage IB breast cancers may also refer to instances when there is both a tumor in the breast that is no larger than two centimeters and small groups of cancer cells in the lymph nodes that are larger than 0.2 millimeter but no larger than two millimeters. The ACS notes that the five-year survival rate for stage I breast cancers is roughly 100 percent. STAGE II Stage II breast cancers are also divided into two subcategories: stage IIA and stage IIB. Both subcategories are invasive, but stage II breast cancers are more complex than stage 0 or stage I breast cancers. Stage IIA describes breast cancers in which no tumor can be found in the breast, but cancer that is larger than two millimeters is found in one to three axillary lymph nodes (the lymph nodes under the arm) or in the lymph nodes near the breast bone. But an invasive breast cancer can still be considered stage IIA if the tumor measures two centimeters or smaller and has spread to the axillary lymph nodes or if the tumor is larger than two centimeters but not larger than five centimeters and has not spread to the axillary lymph nodes. Stage IIB breast cancer describes breast cancers in which the tumor is larger than two centimeters but no larger than five centimeters, and there are small groups of breast cancer cells in the lymph nodes. These small groups of cells are larger than 0.2 millimeters but no larger than two millimeters. Stage IIB may also be used to describe breast cancers in which the tumor is larger than two centimeters but no larger than five centimeters and the cancer has spread to between one and three axillary lymph nodes or to lymph nodes near the breastbone. Tumors that are larger than five centimeters but have not spread to the axillary lymph nodes may also be referred to as stage IIB breast cancers. The five-year survival rate for stage II breast cancers is about 93 percent. STAGE III Stage III cancers are invasive breast cancers broken down into three categories:

IIIA, IIIB and IIIC. When patients are diagnosed with stage IIIA breast cancer, that means doctors may not have found a tumor in their breast or the tumor may be any size. In stage IIIA, cancer may have been found in four to nine axillary lymph nodes or in the lymph nodes near the breastbone. Tumors larger than five centimeters that are accompanied by small groups of breast cancer cells (larger than 0.2 millimeter but no larger than two millimeters) in the lymph nodes also indicate a breast cancer has advanced to stage IIIA. But stage IIIA may also be used to describe breasts cancers in which the tumor is larger than five centimeters and the cancer has spread to one to three axillary lymph nodes or to the lymph nodes near the breastbone. A stage IIIB breast cancer diagnosis indicates the tumor may be any size and has spread to the chest wall and/or the skin of the breast, causing swelling or an ulcer. The cancer may have spread to up to nine axillary lymph nodes or may have spread to the lymph nodes near the breastbone. In stage IIIC breast cancer, doctors may not see any sign of cancer in the breast. If there is a tumor, it may be any size and may have spread to the chest wall and/or the skin of the breast. To be categorized as stage IIIC, the cancer must also have spread to 10 or more axillary lymph nodes or to the lymph nodes above or below the collarbone or to the axillary lymph nodes or lymph nodes near the breastbone. The ACS notes that women diagnosed with stage III breast cancer are often successfully treated and that the five-year survival rate is 72 percent. STAGE IV Invasive breast cancers that have spread beyond the breast and lymph nodes to other areas of the body are referred to as stage IV. Stage IV breast cancer may be a recurrence of a previous breast cancer, though some women with no prior history of breast cancer receive stage IV diagnoses. The five-year survival rate for stage IV breast cancers is 22 percent. More information about breast cancer is available at www.breastcancer.org

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Page 14 Tuesday, October 4, 2016

Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

NEWS

B.C.-wide registry of dangerous dogs urged Jeff Nagel Black Press

Dangerous dogs identified by one municipality should be tracked when their owners move to another city. That’s the request from the Union of B.C. Municipalities after delegates passed a motion from Pitt Meadows asking the B.C. government to set up a province-wide dangerous dog registry that all animal control agencies and police would be required to use. They’d be required to record in the registry every dog that kills or severely injures a person or a domestic animal. Pitt Meadows Coun. Janis Elkerton said it’s too easy for an owner to skip town to a new community with their vicious dog and escape tough restrictions that might otherwise apply. In two recent incidents of vicious dog attacks in her community, she said, the dog and owner relocated to another municipality, with no notification to au-

Black Press file

RCMP coverage is a major cost driver for B.C. municipalities and those costs jump sharply when a population exceeds 5,000.

Wikimedia Commons

Dangerous dogs should be recorded in a registry that applies across B.C., municipal leaders say. thorities there. She said that makes it harder to prevent future attacks involving known dangerous dogs. Public pressure in Pitt Meadows grew last year after Shih Tzu cross ‘Buttons’ was killed by a bull mastiff – spawning a “Justice for Buttons” campaign – and tiny Pomeranian ‘Lilly’ was killed by a pit bull. The pit bull that killed Lilly was subsequently moved to an-

other community where the dangerous dog designation slapped on it by Pitt Meadows meant nothing. The B.C. SPCA has also supported a provincial dangerous dog registry to insure dangerous or vicious designations on dogs made in one community can bolster enforcement elsewhere. Different cities have different regulations

governing dangerous dogs. Surrey requires designated dangerous dogs there to be muzzled, on leash and competently under control when off property, and in a fully enclosed pen when not in the home, with stiff fines for violators. UBCM also passed a resolution calling on the province to make owners liable for injuries or damage their pets cause.

Small B.C. cities seeking police cost-sharing reform Jeff Nagel Black Press

B.C. municipal leaders are urging reforms to the current formula for allocating policing costs. When a small city reaches more than 5,000 population, its share of policing costs suddenly spikes and property tax bills soar Grand Forks Coun. Christine Thompson said there will be a “horrendous cost” to her taxpayers when Grand Forks reaches 5,000 residents and its share of policing costs leaps from 30 per cent to 70 per cent. “It can be pretty catastrophic for small communities,” added Oliver Mayor Ron Hovanes, whose city has crossed that threshold. A resolution passed Thursday by UBCM calls on the province to redraw the formula so the municipal contribution grows more gradually. It was opposed by representatives of even smaller communities and unincorporated areas who said their ju-

risdictions don’t cause as much crime as urban centres nor do they get the same level of police service, and therefore they shouldn’t be forced to pay more than they do now through such a reform. North Cowichan Coun. Al Siebring noted Duncan has somehow kept just under the 5,000-resident threshold. “The joke is they send 15 people to Hawaii at census time because it’s cheaper.” UBCM delegates passed a second Terrace-sponsored resolution that calls for a detailed analysis of rural policing requirements so any changes can be based on actual data. Terrace Coun. Stacy Byers noted Terrace so far doesn’t bar its municipally funded RCMP officers from leaving city limits to help patrol outlying neighbourhoods that don’t contribute to city police costs. But she noted other municipalities are beginning to take that hard-line approach.

Full-Scale Emergency Exercise Creates Unique Learning Opportunity

KirK Muyres Team Laycock

VAL sweeting Team SweeTing

NOV 8 – 13 /CurLing sLAMs

@grAnDsLAMCurL

For the Townsman

Emergency responders from across the Elk Valley and South Country will be participating in a full scale emergency exercise later this month designed to test the Regional District of East Kootenay’s Elk Valley and South Country Emergency Management Program. “The exercise will test everything from inter-agency cooperation and response times, to procedures, information systems, communications, coordination and more,” explains Elk

Valley and South Country Emergency Program Coordinator Marianne Stone. People can expect to see emergency vehicles and activity in and around Sparwood, including the Sparwood Hospital, as well as Fernie, Elkford, Hosmer and Elko between 8:00 am and 4:00 pm on October 19, 2016 during the exercise. Up to 12 agencies are expected to take part in the day, with dozens of volunteers and emergency program personnel participating in the

event. There will be no impact to regular emergency response or health care facilities during this time. “At the end of the day, we will get together and take part in a detailed debrief about what worked well and what could be improved upon. Every one of these lessons will help us be better prepared in the event of a real emergency,” adds Stone. The RDEK hosts a full-scale exercise each year in one of its three Emergency Management Program areas.


Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

Tuesday, October 4, 2016 Page 15

Saturday Morning/Afternoon Cbk. Kim.

October 8 Sunday Morning/Afternoon

7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30

India: Nature’s # # KSPS-PBS Amer Fly Motor Gree Wood Rough House Old House Kitche Move Martha Cook BBQ Antiques Worst Driver Disrup Mo $ $ CFCN Gas Gas Your Morning Operat. Smile Marilyn Denis Written etalk Believing in Heroes Foot College Football % % KXLY-ABC Paid Paid Good Morning Hanna Ocean College Football Hidden Open Paid Cop Drag Boat Foot College Football & & KREM-CBS This Morning Lucky Dr. Inno In Make Best Red Bull Series Red Bull Series Horse Racing _ _ KHQ-NBC (6:00) Today KHQ Saturday Wake Up Show SportsCentre SportsCentre College Football UEFA CFL Football ( ( TSN (5:00) Golf Sportsnet Sportsnet FIFA 2018 Qualifying Gotta FIFA World Cup 2018 Qualifying MLB Base ) ) NET Sportsnet Fish’n Fishing Boat Driving News at Noon Continuum Moves Amaz + + GLOBAL BC Chuck Fishful Global News Morning , , KNOW Ella Rob PAW Georg PAW Digby Magic Shut Wild Ready PAW Doki Ani Ani The The Monster Moves Doc Zone Nature/ Things On the Money Dragons’ Den ` ` CBUT Tiger Animal Super Arthur Snap Cat in Our Vancouver Absolutely Fish’n Fishing Boat Driving Restoration Continuum Moves Amazing Spdr 1 M CICT Weekend Morning News Fish’n Fishing Boat Driving Restoration Continuum Moves Amazing Spdr 3 O CIVT Global News Morning Max Henry 4 6 YTV Squir Kid Chuck Just Spong Par Par Loud Spong Pen Kung Turtles Animals United 6 . KAYU-FOX Beauty Paid Arthri Fish Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Cop Old Tree Paid Tai Mike Mike Two Anger CNN News CNN News CNN News CNN News CNN News CNN News CNN News CNN News 7 / CNN Smerconish Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops 8 0 SPIKE Lip Lip Lip Lip Lip Four Brothers Bryan Inc. Hunt Hunt Property Bros. Property Bros. Property Bros. Love It Love It 9 1 HGTV More Paid McGillivrays Zombie Flip Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor 60 60 Days In The First 48 : 2 A&E Zombie Flip CMT Music CMT Music Top 20 Countdown Billy Billy Billy Billy Bill Engvall: Off Cool Larry < 4 CMT Number 1s Pitch Perfect Bachelorette = 5 W Love It or List Love It or List Will Will Dirty Dancing Star Trek Into Darkness Star Trek ? 9 SHOW More Paid Star Trek Dual Survival Mayday Mayday Railroad Dual Survival Highway Thru @ : DISC Highway Thru Jade Jade Mayday Forgetting Sarah Marshall Easy A Mean Girls A ; SLICE More Paid 12 Hours to Live B < TLC Cake Cake Cake Cake Cake Cake Cake Cake Stories of ER Stories of ER Stories of ER Stories of ER Stories of ER From Paris With Love The Expendables Lethal Weapon C = BRAVO Lethal Lethal Weapon 2 A.I.: Artificial Intelligence Rush Hour 2 (:35) Tremors D > ENC2 (6:15) Whiteout The Da Vinci Code Camp Be Wabbit Super Scooby-Doo Scoob Po Rang Yu-Gi- Transf. Yo-Kai Dinof E ? TOON Rocket Jungle Masha Al F @ FAM HZipz Awe Turbo Slug Thun Figaro Nature Taking Big Ticket Sum Back Back Back Back Big Ticket Sum The X Factor Last Rules Bond G A WPCH On Coo P. Aff Riche Trust Rules Middle Sein College Football Com Com JFL Cash Cash Just/Laughs Theory Theory License to Wed Wedding H B COM Just/Laughs Paris Playboys Sergeant York Paths of Glory (:15) Kim I C TCM Isle of the Dead Paid Paid Myth Hunters Myth Hunters Myth Hunters Myth Hunters Myth Hunters Myth Hunters K E OUT Can Paid Equestrian Gangland More Paid Paid Paid Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn L F HIST Truckers Back to the Future Back to the Future Part II (:15) Back to the Future Part III Sea M G SPACE E.T. Terrestrial Batman Begins Alien N H AMC Rifle Rifle Rifle Comic Rosemary’s Baby College Ftball College Football From Cotton Bowl Stadium in Dallas. TBA To Be Announced O I FS1 Women’s Soccer P J DTOUR Secu Paid Secu Secu Secu Secu The Dead Files The Dead Files The Dead Files The Dead Files The Dead Files The Dead Files (:05) Fury (:25) Outcast Hobbit: Battle of the Five Armies Her W W TMN1 ACOD Alvin and Chip KTLA 5 Morning News at 7 KTLA News Dr. Pol Dr. Pol Res Dog Dog Dog Save Vaca Dinner Animal ¨ ¨ KTLA KTLA News ≠ ≠ WGN-A Funny Videos Funny Videos Funny Videos Funny Videos Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Blue Bloods (:15) Premonition (11:55) Rumble Fish (:35) The Mission Da Ø Ø EA1 Mummy-Tomb (:05) North Country Punjab Sandli Sardari Suc Mu Quran Punjab Pyar Hi Pyar Udeek Sanjha Punjab ∂ ∂ VISN Paradise Now Re Gur Watno Dur 102 102 MM Playlist 105 105 SRC Pouic Ben

Playlist Playlist Com Tré Wings Super Geron fan

Com Code

The Flash Arrow Chass. Motel Oniva! Épi

Com TJ

Com Paranormal Activity La fac Enquête Remue

Saturday Afternoon/Evening Cbk. Kim.

Keep Time/ Judgment at Nuremberg Austin City # # KSPS-PBS Globe Trekker Steves Walk Royal Wives- L. Welk Theory Odd Mike Anger Saving Hope News News Key Kroll $ $ CFCN Marilyn Denis The etalk News--Calgary W5 Matter KXLY College Football Insider Ent. Tonight Rizzoli & Isles Scandal % % KXLY-ABC Football Ac. Hollywood News News News Tai Elementary NCIS 48 Hours 48 Hours News Up & & KREM-CBS Football News J’pard CSI: Miami Dateline NBC News SNL _ _ KHQ-NBC Eat Tai NASCAR Racing SportsCentre SportsCentre (10:55) Formula One Racing ( ( TSN CFL Football NASCAR Racing Plays MLB Baseball Sportsnet Sportsnet Sportsnet ) ) NET (3:30) MLB Baseball News News Hour Secu Secu NCIS Ex-Girlfriend Rookie Blue News SNL + + GLOBAL BC (3:30) The Amazing Spider-Man Death Valley Queen Garden Hope-Wildlife Atlantic Heartbeat Lynley Mysteries Grand Waterfront , , KNOW Waterfront Land One/ Na market High School This Life Kim Kim Gags CBC Romeo Section ` ` CBUT Mercer 22 Min Doc Zone News Global News Secu Secu Rookie Blue NCIS Ex-Girlfriend News Saturday Night Live 1 M CICT Amazing Spdr News Global News Secu Secu Rookie Blue NCIS Ex-Girlfriend Global Saturday Night Live 3 O CIVT Amazing Spdr Gremlins 4 6 YTV Game School Spong Spong Spong Spong Tricke Driving Funny Videos Addams Family Values Pre College Football From Autzen Stadium in Eugene, Ore. Star Theory Two Sea News Wante Hell’s Kitchen 6 . KAYU-FOX Bones CNN News Unfinished Business All Business: Donald Trump Anthony Anthony Anthony 7 / CNN Smerconish Cops Lip Lip 8 0 SPIKE Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Jail: Cops Cops Cops Four Brothers McGillivrays Bryan Inc. House Hunters Beachfront Hunt Hunt House Hunters Beachfront Property Bros. 9 1 HGTV Love It The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 : 2 A&E The First 48 Blue Collar Comedy Tour Bill Engvall: Confused Blue Collar Comedy Tour < 4 CMT Larry, Cable Them Idiots Whirled Tour Parental Guidance Blended Paren = 5 W Bach Bach Dirty Dancing Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit Star Trek ? 9 SHOW Star Trek Into Darkness Fast N’ Loud TBA How How Fast N’ Loud TBA Sacred @ : DISC How/ How/ How/ How/ Sacred We’re the Millers We’re the Millers Mean Girls A ; SLICE Mean Forgetting Sarah Marshall B < TLC Stories of ER Stories of ER Stories of ER Stories of ER Suddenly Rich Stories of ER Suddenly Rich Stories of ER Stories of ER Lethal Weapon 3 Lethal Weapon 4 Killer Elite C = BRAVO Lethal Lethal Weapon 2 Mummy: Dragon Emp. (7:50) North Country D.E.B.S. (:35) Klute D > ENC2 (:15) Premonition X-Men Titans Fugget Night The Goonies E ? TOON Bey Freak Freak Freak Johnny Johnny Shrek the Third De F @ FAM The X Factor The X Factor The X Factor The X The X Factor The X Factor Big Ticket Sum (:35) Music and Lyrics King King Daredevil Family Family Burg Burg Scary Movie 3 Mar G A WPCH Mod Sein Atlanta Eats Full Theory Theory Just/Laughs Theory King JFL Just/Laughs S Maniscalco JFL JFL H B COM Wedding Crashers Murphy’s Romance Crossing Delancey Dear Heart Zodiac Killer I C TCM (:15) Good-bye, My Lady Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Mantracker Myth Hunters Myth Hunters Liqui Liqui K E OUT Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Mantracker L F HIST Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn (:45) The Sorcerer’s Apprentice Reign of Fire (:05) Back to the Future Back-II M G SPACE Season of the Witch Aliens Alien 3 Alien Resurrection N H AMC (3:00) Alien UFC Prefight UFC 204 Prelims College Football FIFA 2018 Qualifying O I FS1 TBA Halloween Top Ghost Adv. Halloween Halloween Top Ghost Adv. P J DTOUR The Dead Files The Dead Files The Dead Files Halloween (6:55) Hyena Road Joy (:10) Outcast W W TMN1 (3:35) Hercules (:15) Home Sweet Hell News Person ¨ ¨ KTLA Coo On Star Thief Middle Middle News News Vaca Two Friend Friend Two Two News at 10 Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Rules Rules Rules Rules Rules Rules Parks Parks ≠ ≠ WGN-A Blue Bloods (:15) A.I.: Artificial Intelligence Come Ocean’s Eleven One Flew Over the Cuckoo Ø Ø EA1 (3:45) The Da Vinci Code Aikam Taur Lashkara Waqt 4 Vehra Sandli Youn ∂ ∂ VISN Punjab Pun Akaal Punjab Mu Sardari Des-Pardes Countdown

Simp Simp Semaine verte

Amer. Amer. Paranormal Activity TJ C.- Petite Univers Qui êtes-vous?

7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30

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Playlist Playlist Amer. Amer. Paranormal Activity Chirp Wings Rol Trans Noteryt Oniva! Jour/Seigneur Les coulisses

October 8 Sunday Afternoon/Evening

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

102 102 MM Alternative 105 105 SRC Hercule Poirot

Cbk. Kim.

Simp Simp Monsieur

Amer. Amer. South South TJ Info Dre Grey

October 9

Cbk. Kim.

The Voice TJ Semaine verte

Now & Then Regard Local

October 9

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

Presidential Debate Count Me In Frontline Murder Myster. # # KSPS-PBS Going Profile Frontline Sports News--Calgary Motive Criminal Minds Upon a Time Lucifer News News Key Kroll $ $ CFCN (2:30) NFL Football Upon a Time Funny Videos Minute Minute KXLY V’Impe % % KXLY-ABC Paid Paid Lucy Lucy News ABC Presidential Debate Whac News News Presidential Debate 60 Minutes Elementary Foren News Family & & KREM-CBS (2:25) NFL Football News Ninja Warrior Blue Bloods News Wheel _ _ KHQ-NBC CIZE! Tai Football Night/America (:20) NFL Football SportsCentre ATP Tennis ( ( TSN NFL Football Football Night (:15) NFL Football Sportsnet Plays Gotta Sportsnet Sportsnet ) ) NET MLB Baseball Gotta MLB MLB Baseball News News Hour Secu Simp NCIS: LA Madam Sec NCIS: N.O. News Block + + GLOBAL BC Decke Jack and Jill Work Tony Robinson Monster Moves Easter Island New Tricks Waking Dead Waking Dead Waterfront , , KNOW Verbier Festival 2014 Heartland High School This Life The National CBC fifth ` ` CBUT Dragons’ Den Back Exhibi WALL-E News Global News Secu Simp NCIS: N.O. NCIS: LA Madam Sec News Block Mack Paid 1 M CICT (3:30) Jack and Jill News Global News Secu Simp NCIS: N.O. Madam Secretary Global Block Mack Paid 3 O CIVT (3:30) Jack and Jill Free Birds Chuck Ride Ride Ride Goosebumps Haunt Haunt 4 6 YTV Game School (:15) Antz Burg Simp Son- Simp Theory News Livin’ Theory Paid 6 . KAYU-FOX NFL Football Paid OT Two Simp Presidential Debate Debate Night in America Presidential Debate Debate 7 / CNN Situation Room Debate Night Debate Night Presidential Debate Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue 8 0 SPIKE Jurassic Park Bar Rescue Bryan Inc. Property Bros. McGillivrays Bryan Inc. Hunt Hunt McGillivrays Bryan Inc. Tiny Tiny 9 1 HGTV McGillivrays : 2 A&E Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Larry/Cable Blue Collar Comedy Tour < 4 CMT Engvall Jokers Jokers Jokers Jokers Jokers Blue Collar Comedy Tour: The Movie The Lucky One Sister Act Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit Prop Lucky = 5 W (2:30) Julie & Julia The Avengers Rizzoli & Isles NCIS NCIS Rizzoli & Isles Man of Steel ? 9 SHOW Jack Ryan Last Frontier Dual Survival MythBusters Fast N’ Loud Alaska Dual Survival @ : DISC How/ How/ How/ How/ Alaska Tardy Tardy Housewives Man Man Mob Wives Housewives Man Man Never Kissed A ; SLICE (3:30) Never Been Kissed (:02) 90 Day Fiancé 90 Day Fiancé 90 Day Fiancé B < TLC Say Say 90 Day Fiancé 90 Day Fiancé 90 Day Fiancé Con Air The A-Team Miami C = BRAVO Lethal Wpn. 4 The A-Team (:25) Trading Places The Darjeeling Limited The Bone Collector Doom D > ENC2 Chaos August Rush E ? TOON Bey Freak Freak Freak Freak Freak Camp Camp Super Super X-Men Titans Fugget Night Chronicle F @ FAM (:10) The X Factor UK (:38) The X Factor UK (:15) The X Factor UK (:45) The X Factor UK Gilmore Girls Gil Gilmore Girls Dr. Major Crimes Major Crimes Pawn Pawn Pawn G A WPCH Theory Theory Theory Theory Mod Mod Pirates of the Caribbean JFL JFL Theory King Just/Laughs JFL Com Melt H B COM Miss Congenial Theory King Impas Gaffi Just/Laughs Ghost Frankenstein House of Frankenstein (:15) Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde House I C TCM Bringing Up Baby Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Mantracker Ghost Hunters Ghost Hunters Liqui Liqui K E OUT Liqui Liqui Liqui Liqui Mantracker L F HIST Forged in Fire Forged in Fire Forged in Fire Forged in Fire Forged in Fire Forged in Fire Mountain Men Forged in Fire Gangland Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest (:15) The Three Musketeers M G SPACE Reign of Fire Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse Carrie (:15) Thinner (:15) Dreamcatcher N H AMC Cujo Skateboarding Red Bull: Air Race Ultimate Fight UFC UFC 204 Prelims TMZ Football O I FS1 (3:00) NWSL Soccer Ghost Adv. Ghost Adv. Ghost Adv. Ghost Adv. Ghost Adv. Ghost Adv. Ghost Adv. Ghost Adv. P J DTOUR Ghost Adv. (5:55) Jessabelle The Peanuts Movie Shameless Masters of Sex Ratter Sham W W TMN1 The Hundred-Foot Journey Person-Interest Presidential Debate Last Elementary 5 News News at 10 News Elmn ¨ ¨ KTLA (3:30) Murder by Numbers Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Bones Bones Road to Perdition ≠ ≠ WGN-A Blue Bloods (:05) The Mexican (:10) Chaos Theory Come Ocean’s Thirteen (:05) Fatal Attraction Ø Ø EA1 (3:00) 10 ∂ ∂ VISN Be Hope Discov. V’Impe Jere Facts Cante Joyce Osteen Prince Mira Popoff Fellow Touch V’Impe Youn Super Tribal 102 102 MM Now & Then 105 105 SRC Gourmand

Now & Then Au suivant

Now & Then Esprit critique

Countdown The Voice TJ C.- Découverte Lafl

News News News News News News Tout le monde en parle TJ La divine


Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

Page 16 Tuesday, October 4, 2016

Weekday Morning/Afternoon

7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30

Cbk. Kim.

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

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October 10

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

Cbk. Kim.

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Cranbrook Townsman / Kimberley Bulletin

Tuesday, October 4, 2016 Page 17

SPORTS

Three ways the Ice could have won this weekend 5-4 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30

RECAP

Kootenay dropped both of their weekend games in tight affairs but were a few tweaks away from potentially picking up their first ‘W’ of the season BRAD MCLEOD

It was a tough weekend for the Kootenay Ice, as they lost to both the Lethbridge Hurricanes and the Saskatoon Blades in games that were each decided by a single goal. Despite the close final scores, the Ice didn’t even scrape together a point, and now find themselves in last place in the WHL’s Eastern Conference. However, while the games didn’t go their way in the standings, there was no shortage of excitement and promise that the results could come soon. A couple of slight adjustments could’ve made all the difference.

1. Better starts First period play was one of the Ice’s weakest attributes in their opening weekend, but they took it to a new low with the hole they dug against the Hurricanes on Friday. Before the game was a minute and a half old, Lethbridge had already scored two goals and driven their fans into a frenzy. The first ten minutes of the game might as well have been set to ‘Sweet Georgia Brown’, as the Hurricanes looked like the hockey equivalent of the Harlem Globetrotters, passing with absolute perfect precision through awestruck-looking Ice players. Although goalie Payton Lee recovered well from the opening onslaught, making 14 saves in the opening frame, the Ice went into the first intermission down 3-0, a horrible place to be in an opposition’s rink. Alternate captain Zak Zborosky put the blame for the slow start squarely on his own shoulders. “[Friday] night was my line’s fault for the most part,” Zborosky

said. “[We went] minus three in the first, that’s unacceptable for being a veteran.” While the Ice were better in the first period against the Blades on Saturday, it still couldn’t be described as a perfect start — even if it was partially out of their control. After looking energized in the first five minutes, a clearing attempt by Kaedan Taphorn went out of play and earned them a delay of game penalty and took the wind out of their sails. Although the resulting penalty kill was good, and Declan Hobbs — who was starting between the pipes for the first time this season — kept the door shut, the man advantage allowed the Blades to get back into the game. “I was really happy [with the first period against Saskatoon], I thought we had an outstanding start,” coach Luke Pierce said. “[The penalty] really hurt us [though], it was just an unfortunate play [and] it took a lot of momentum out of our game and gave them some life.”

As a result of the loss of momentum, it was the Blades who scored first. After another goal halfway through the second period, the Ice were forced to rally back from 2-0. Kootenay scored six goals over the weekend — that could’ve been enough to get at least one win. If they had taken early leads instead of falling behind, they might’ve grabbed a few points.

Kootenay Ice (L) @ Lethbridge Hurricanes (W)

FIRST PERIOD 1. LET - E. Babenko (1) (R. Lindgren, J. Zaharichuk) 0:56 2. LET - J. Bellerive (2) (E. Babenko, C. Kroeker) 1:29 3. LET - J. Zaharichuk (1) (R. Lindgren, B. Burke) 17:13

SECOND PERIOD 4. KTN - Ka. Taphorn (1) (R. Pouliot, F. Rudakov) 4:28 5. KTN - B. Sheen (1) (D. Stewart) 5:12 6. KTN - Z. Zborosky (2) 5:54

THIRD PERIOD 7. LET - B. Menell (1) (C. Kroeker, J. Zaharichuk) 6:43 (PP) 8. KTN - B. Sheen (2) 12:16 9. LET - R. Lindgren (2) (B. Burke, J. Zaharichuk) 18:47

BARRY COULTER PHOTO

Ice forward Max Patterson (#23, left) chips the puck into the zone against the Blades on Saturday.

2. Longer offensive stretches Although the Ice shot themselves in the foot early in Lethbridge, and didn’t score first against Saskatoon either, they almost made up for both delayed starts with their amazing resiliency. After being down 3-0 on the road in Friday’s game, Kootenay managed to even the score with Lethbridge thanks to a sudden burst of offensive inspiration midway through the night. In under a minute and a half, the Ice scored three unanswered goals by players on three different lines. The Ice continued to buzz momentarily after the dramatic goal spree and forced the ‘Canes goalie to make several huge stops, including foiling a clear cut Zborosky breakaway that forced him to cover the puck with his back. While it was a thrilling five minutes, the Ice couldn’t sustain a high wlevel of pressure long enough to beat Lethbridge.

It was the same story against Saskatoon, as well. Zborosky breathed life back into the Ice on Saturday when they were down 0-2, with goals in the second and third periods but they couldn’t break the stalemate. Despite managing to bring their weekend contests to ties at three separate points, the Ice never led against the Blades or ‘Canes. If they could’ve had longer stretches of offensive pressure they may have been able to put up enough goals to get to overtime and even win. After showing they have the ability to score three in just over a minute, it’s clear that there is potential for more scoring than we’ve seen so far, but they need to spend more time in the other team’s end.

3. More discipline Nothing sunk this Ice’s chances over the weekend more than their undisciplined penalties. They gave up powerplays in key moments of both games, and ended up squandering their im-

pressive comebacks due to an apparent lack of control. Against Lethbridge, the Ice had five minor penalty calls go against them while the Hurricanes only had three — two of which were called in the last 20 seconds of play. Luckily, the ‘Canes only scored on the powerplay once, but it was a big goal that put the Ice behind 4-3 in the third period. Although they tied the game back up after that, before ultimately losing 5-4, the time spent down a man didn’t help them throughout the course of the night. Against the Blades, lack of discipline was an even bigger issue. The Ice had eight minor infractions and five of them came in the third period, when they were in desperate need of a tying marker. While the crowd at Western Financial Place voiced their disagreement with the calls — which included a tripping minor for Matt Alfaro, a highsticking double-minor for Fedor Rudakov, and an interference minor for Zborosky — coach Pierce said he

couldn’t take issue with all of them. “You can’t take eight minor [penalties in a game], that’s not sustainable in any way,” he said. “You can talk about reffing all you want [but] when you take eight, some of them are definitely legitimate, so there’s no excuses.” Less than 30 seconds after Zborosky’s scored a heroic tying goal on his knees in the third period — moments after coming out of the penalty box, himself — Barrett Sheen was handed a charging penalty that led to the Blades’ game winning powerplay goal. “Our emotions got too high when we started taking penalties in the third and then we took more instead of working through it,” Pierce said. “Somehow that message has to get through, we’ve talked about it enough, there’s got to be a different approach now with how we handle that.” If the Ice could’ve spent more time at evenstrength or on powerplays of their own, they may have been able to celebrate on Saturday, and maybe even Friday too.

THREE STARS 1. Jesse Zaharichuk (LET) 2. Egor Babenko (LET) 3. Payton Lee (KTN)

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1

RECAP

3-2 Saskatoon Blades (W) @ Kootenay Ice (L)

FIRST PERIOD 1. SAS - L. Gingras (1) (B.Sayers, L. Hajek) 17:50

SECOND PERIOD 2. SAS - W. Sloboshan (1) (B.Sayers, L. Hajek) 10:33 3. KTN - Z. Zborosky (3) (V. Loschiavo) 13:20 (PP)

THIRD PERIOD 4. KTN - Z. Zborosky (4) 6:46 5. SAS - L. Christensen (2) 7:26 (PP)

THREE STARS 1. Zak Zborosky (KTN) 2. Brock Hamm (SAS) 3. Bryton Sayers (SAS)


Page 18 Tuesday, October 4, 2016

Cranbrook Townsman / Kimberley Bulletin

SPORTS

KIMBERLEY DYNAMITERS

Nitros take sixth straight game Kimberley erases three goal deficit in 4-3 comeback victory over KIJHL leading Creston Valley Thunder Cats JOSH LOCKHART

TAYLOR ROCCA PHOTO

John Swanson, head coach of the College of the Rockies women’s volleyball program, calls out a play during home action this past PACWEST season.

Avs display winning attitude in preseason COTR women’s volleyball coach thrilled with team’s chemistry in Red Deer tournament tune-up matches BR AD MCLEOD

Their season is still almost two weeks away, but the College of the Rockies women’s volleyball team is already winning. The defending PACWEST champions got some preseason action in this past weekend and won three of six matches against some of the best competition Alberta has to offer. The annual Wild Rose tournament, held in Red Deer, gave the Avalanche a chance to play around with their roster and start multiple different combinations of players, while also competing against some top class ACAC (Alberta Colleges Athletic Conference) teams. “[I] felt great about how we played, we were able to get a lot of players playing [and] I think the ladies competed well [and] never gave up,” said coach John Swanson. “It was a fantastic experience.” The Avalanche got off to a great start on Friday when they beat Ambrose College in three straight sets before defeating Lethbridge 2-1. Swanson said that what impressed him most about the team’s effort was how all of the players worked together effectively. “I appreciated [that]

whoever we had on the court, in any kind of combination, they all worked well together [and] they all supported each other,” he said. “I think collectively, I was really proud of the way the ladies played.” While the Avs split their Saturday games, losing to Red Deer 2-1 and beating the University of Alberta-Augustana 3-0, they did not fare as well in the elimination round. In the quarter finals on Sunday, the team lost to Red Deer 2-1 before being defeated by Ambrose 2-1 in the 5th/6th place match. For Swanson, however, the focus of the trip was not on the games the team won or lost, but on the experience and the opportunity to test out different player combinations. “We did work on what we think our core group will be [and] allowed them to play together and get used to each other on the court,” Swanson said. “But, we had other situations where everybody played and some would play different positions [and] it didn’t matter who was on the floor, we were always a competitive unit. “I think that’s a credit to the ladies that we have — whether you’re a third

year or a first year, you’re out there to do a job and to compete and work with your teammates.”

“I appreciated [that] whoever we had on the court, in any kind of combination, they all worked well together [and] they all supported each other.” John Swanson The Avalanche now have to wait until October 13 to play another game, when they kick off their PACWEST season on Vancouver Island. In the meantime they won’t be relaxing — they have five practices to fine-tune their game before they set out to defend their conference title. “What we’re going to focus on [in practice] is getting a cohesive unit and some continuity,” Swanson explained. “[We’ll be] polishing off

our offensive systems, defensive combinations and positioning [and] mentally and physically preparing for [what’s going to be] a very, very competitive league.” After allowing the entire roster to get playing time in Red Deer, Swanson said that throughout the coming weeks this year’s starters will begin to get more of the focus in practice situations. “As we prepare for our league matches, we’re going to have some players who are going to get a few more touches, and that’s just reality for what we have to do to prepare for our league,” he said. “But we feel pretty good about where we are going [into the season].” They may not have won this particular preseason tournament, but the Avalanche showed they were still winners with their teamwork and perseverance. The Avalanche have their first four league matches on the road against Camosun College and Vancouver Island University before returning home to face Douglas College on Friday, October 28 at what will be their newly renovated court at the College of the Rockies gymnasium.

The Kimberley Dynamiters took on the Creston Valley Thunder Cats on Saturday in their only game of the weekend. It was a clash of winning streaks as Kimberley entered having won five straight and Creston was undefeated in their first six games of the year. The Thunder Cats had control of the game for the first 30 minutes. Leading the prowl was Aiden Wong, who attended Dynamiters training camp, but then joined the Thunder Cats after a tryout with the Kindersley Klippers of the SJHL (Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League). He scored three goals for the Cats, capping off his hat trick with a short-handed effort. Head Coach and General Manager of the Cats, Jeff Dubois, praised Wong’s efforts. “[Wong] was excellent, just as he’s been since he joined us. He has a great skill set, but he also plays a very smart game defensively. “If there was any doubt that he could be an impact guy in our league, he erased it last night — he was clearly our top guy.” Dubois was also happy with the first part of the game. “We played a good first period, then took our foot off the gas after the 3-0 goal and let it become a game.” Derek Stuart, Head Coach and General Manager for the Nitro’s, felt that his team were bystanders at the start. “For some reason we had a slow start. I don’t know if we were a little bit in awe of them, puck watching,” he said. “Our feet weren’t moving in the first period.” The next 30 minutes of the game belonged to the Kimberley Dynamiters. “They have been dealing with pressure since day one,” Stuart

said of his Nitros squad. “They don’t panic under pressure. The character is good, the leadership has been outstanding. They are comfortable in [that] situation — if you are down, you don’t give up.”

Rookie forward Brandt Bertoia from Unity, SK, ignited the Nitros comeback as he scored the first goal — his first ever KIJHL marker. However, the Nitros were still trailing the Cats 3-1 at the end of the second period. “I think for us to shut down their team shot wise in the second period, gave us that confidence coming into the third,” Stuart said. “It was a really big thing regardless of the score after forty.” Newcomer Matt Davies, who was playing in his third game, scored his first KIJHL goal, getting the Dynamiters to within one. “It was good to finally get the first one behind me,” Davies said after the game. “After joining the team a couple of weeks ago, I wanted to get the first one in there. It felt really good, I got a little bit of stress off my back.” Brandt Bertoia deflected in his second of the game off a shot by George Bertoia, levelling the game with just under four minutes’ left in the game. The 590 people in the Civic Centre crowd celebrated the tying goal as if it was a playoff game. They were then treated to an additional two overtime periods. Four-on-four, while exciting, yielded no conclusion. It was during three-on-three that there was a lot of ice to work with. While Chase Miller was the

benefactor of a turn over for a breakaway, he was unable to beat Creston Valley’s keeper, Brock Lefebvre. Lefebvre couldn’t stop Davies though, who was the overtime hero, scoring his second goal of the game. “I thought [Miller] was going to tuck it in,” Davies said. “He kept battling and threw the puck at the front of the net, I was just lucky enough to put it home.” Mitch Traichevich turned aside 37 shots to earn his second win of the season. At the other end, Lefebvre stopped 33 of the 37 shots fired at him. “It was a great game for the boys,” Davies said. “The room has a lot of heart in there, we kept to our systems and to what coaches were telling us.” For Dubois however, the game was a missed opportunity. “You don’t win in Kimberley with a C+ effort and it was good to see the reaction from our guys after the game,” Dubois said. “They knew we played nowhere near our level. “You also have to give Kimberley credit for sticking around and capitalizing on the opportunities we gave them.” Stuart was pleased with his team’s performance. “It was a good first game out of the eight that we are going to see them [and] it was definitely entertaining,” he said. “It’s always a good feeling to beat Creston — whether they are in first or last — it is always good to beat Creston” MATCH STICKS: Franco Colapaolo was named the Kimberley Dynamiters September Player of the Month. For up-to-date Kimberley Dynamiter information visit: www.kimberleydynamiters.net/ blog. Also follow Josh on twitter @joshuaklockhart


Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

PUZZLE Because Every Day is Special

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Happy Thanksgiving

Tuesday, October 4, 2016 Page 19

Friday’s answer

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Page 20 Tuesday, October 4, 2016

COMICS Horoscopes

Eleventh Annual

Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

“The Magic of Autumn”

Door Prizes!

Artisan Market

Friday, October 21 • 3pm - 8pm Saturday, October 22 • 10am - 4pm at Bootleg Gap Golf Clubhouse, Kimberley An amazing collection of

Handcrafted Creations

Entrance fee $2.00 – donated to the Kimberley Food Bank.

Soup & Sandwich Buffet ~ Saturday 11am - 2pm This event is wheelchair accessible.

OVER THE LAST 10 YEARS WE HAVE DONATED $13,700.00 TO THE KIMBERLEY FOOD BANK!

CALL 426-3272 OR VISIT

www.tribute.ca

for this week’s movie listings

by Jacqueline Bigar

ARIES (March 21-April 19) You can afford to be spontaneous without being particularly concerned about the results. In fact, letting go a bit might help you to recharge your batteries. A sense of seriousness about doing what is appropriate could override your impulsiveness. Tonight: Get some exercise. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You have a strong sense of direction, but so does someone you often have to work with. Handle this person’s willfulness diplomatically, and know full well what your limitations are in this situation. You could opt to go solo more often. Tonight: Sort through invitations. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Your playfulness will be best expressed through your ability to deal with an overly serious and demanding associate. This person relaxes when he or she is with you. Getting a project or idea off the ground will demand his or her support. Tonight: Catch up on news.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Deal on a one-on-one level with someone you enjoy hanging out with. A friend or associate might have a big idea that involves you, and he or she could be quite pushy. See how much you can do. Once more, your imagination speaks. Tonight: Be ready to let go of worries. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You often view others as being stubborn and determined. Today is no different, though if you stop and look closely, you might find that you are the one who is giving the impression that it is your way or the highway. Loosen up, and you will like the result. Tonight. Head home. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You know how to communicate your intentions. You also might be seeking information in return. You prefer teamwork, but someone who feels as if he or she has all the answers might present a problem. Deal with this person as little as possible. Tonight: Cut a discussion short. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Slow down your spending. You easily could go overboard when

Tundra

buying a new item. A domestic or personal issue might be the stimulus behind this purchase. Use caution with a decision that someone else seems to be forcing on you. Tonight: Happiest at home. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You might have too much energy, and as a result, you could be pushing others too hard. Don’t assume that everyone thinks like you do. If you proceed with that attitude, you can expect to get some flak. Consider taking a step back for now. Tonight: All smiles. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Pull back, and allow someone who has similar leadership skills to yours to take the lead. Can you share the stage? More often than not, you steal the limelight. For now, let others enjoy being the center of attention. Observe, and you will learn a lot. Tonight: Get some extra R and R. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Your determination could become an incorrigible demand. You might not want to back off. You are likely to carry a banner that says: “Nothing is going to

stop me.” Ask yourself whether this attitude is necessary. Only you can answer that. Tonight: Hang out with a loved one. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You see life from a very different perspective than others. You can walk your own path without any support. That quality of independence often scares those around you, especially if they are more dependent or needy. Tonight: Wherever you are, you make an impact. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) While others are quick to react, you pull back and think through a problem first. Consider your alternatives carefully before you leap into action. Try identifying with others. Understand the dynamics involved, and you will make the right decision. Tonight: Follow the music. BORN TODAY Actress Dakota Johnson (1989), actor Charlton Heston (1923), basketball player Derrick Rose (1988)

By Chad Carpenter

Jane Eyre fever Continued from page 11 News to the contrary had to travel by boat across the Atlantic, sometimes not reaching America for an entire year. News that the books were written by three separate females took much longer. Officially, ‘Jane Eyre’ was published in multiple reprints in the United States by Harper & Row and by Wilkins Carter & Company (who secured American reprints while Harper was crying foul). Unofficial editions appeared by the above mentioned T. B. Peterson, as well as Ticknor & Company, H. B. Pearson, and Derby & Jackson. Even the German firm Tauchnitz flooded the States with its own English language edition. With so many publishers, competitive prices were a must, and ‘Jane Eyre’ could soon be purchased for less than a quarter. The cheapest book at this time was Fanny Fern’s ‘Fern Leaves,’ which cost a $1.25. ‘Jane’ was not only the most talked about book, but one that anyone could afford. The economics of this was to force Harper to issue their ‘Jane Eyre’ in a cheaply made “duodecimo” edition—today’s paperback. Of course it wasn’t just its affordability that made the novel such a stunning success. There was the conceit that it wasn’t a novel at all, helped along by the fact

that the British Currer Bell editions were titled ‘Jane Eyre: An Autobiography.’ Even when Charlotte Brontë was revealed as the author, many felt it was her thinly disguised life story. Then everyone’s favourite author suddenly dies, making ‘Jane Eyre’ more precious than ever. The almost immediate publication of Charlotte’s biography by Elizabeth Gaskell also boosted sales, with readers looking for a page by page comparison of events. While many argue for the feminist virtues, morality, anti-Christian, and frank sexuality of the book for its popularity, one often overlooked aspect is Brontë’s absolute gift to those who love to read: Jane’s own love—perhaps addiction—of reading. ‘Jane Eyre’ is a book filled with other books, and she uses books and reading to orient herself to each new world and each stage of life. More than its boarding schools, gothic setting, or even the madwoman in the attic, Jane’s observation of people she admired, thinking “I’d liked to read what they liked to read,” was enough to make both publishers and readers suffer from “Jane Eyre fever.” Mike Selby is Reference Librarian at the Cranbrook Public Library

Garfield

Hagar the Horrible

Baby Blues

Rhymes with Orange

By Jim Davis

By Dick Browne

By Kirkman and Scott

By Hillary B. Price

Dear Annie by Annie Lane

gone goodbye XX Dear Annie: My significant other and I were in a relationship for 15 years. One evening, I was feeling insecure and asked whether there was someone else. Very soon after that, my significant other completely cut off all contact with me. We were in a commitment and planning to get married, but now there is absolutely no communication, which just drives me to want to contact him even more than I would have in the past. I’m trying to stay anchored in optimism, hoping that this storm will pass, he will get back in touch and we will restore our relationship. How does a person shut down and not have any communication? This has spurred me to start obsessing. Without the ability to know when we will speak again, I feel paralyzed. It’s very irritating, and it makes me feel totally separate from this person. Wouldn’t it create a better outcome if there were a resounding “no” or if we talked it through? How long do I hold on? Maybe it’s too late. Or maybe even if he were to come back, I should be wary and concerned that he could have ever completely shut down like this. Thanks in advance for your input. -- Left Behind Dear Left: People often live in a state of open-ended anguish when a loved one goes missing or dies in a way that makes a body irretrievable. Denial is a stage of grief, and without concrete evidence of a person’s death, it can be very hard to move past it. Similarly, without a definite breakup from your partner, you’re stuck in a holding pattern. That’s what makes his cowardly behavior so unbelievably cruel and selfish. If he has made himself totally unreachable, then you need to decide once and for all that things are over between you. Truly over. Only then can you have closure, properly mourn the relationship and move on. Whatever you do, don’t blame yourself. One moment of your feeling insecure should not lead your significant other to cut off all ties after being in a relationship for 15 years. I would ask what prompted your suspicions in the first place. Trust your intuition. Dear Annie: Can you tell me a polite way to respond to a “friend” who constantly says mean things? For example, she’ll say, “What’s that line on your face?” “What happened to your arm? You have spots on it.” “Wow! You have a big nose.” She always does it while in the company of others, which embarrasses me. Often she doesn’t even address me but makes the comments to other people within my earshot. I’m not sure what I did to deserve this, as I’ve only tried to be nice to her. Does she do this because she is insecure? I don’t want to hurt her feelings, but I’ve reached a point where I don’t want to be in her company anymore. Hope you can help. -- Frustrated Friend Dear Frustrated: You were right to put “friend” in quotation marks. This woman is no friend; she is a frenemy. Forget being frustrated. You have my permission to be (SET ITAL)outraged(END ITAL). Shaming a person in front of others is a form of bullying. You sound like a sweet person, and she has probably chosen you as the object of her animosity because of that. She mistakes your kindness for weakness. So stand up for yourself the next time she insults you. I would suggest a harsh comeback, but if you’re not comfortable with that, then say something upbeat but firm -- for example, “Unless you’re my doctor, I don’t need you examining my skin.” If there is some reason you can’t or don’t want to distance yourself from this bully, you need to at least keep her in check. Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@creators.com. To find out more about Annie Lane and read features by other Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2016 CREATORS.COM


DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

Page21 21 Tuesday, October 2016 PAGE Tuesday, 4, October 4, 2016

To advertise in print:

Browse more at:

Call: 250-426-5201 Email: classifieds@dailytownsman.com Self-serve: blackpressused.ca Career ads: localworkbc.ca

A division of

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

AGREEMENT

It is agreed by any display or Classified Advertiser requesting space that the liability of the paper in the event of failure to publish an advertisement shall be limited to the amount paid by the advertiser for that portion of the advertising space occupied by the incorrect item only, and that there shall be no liability in any event beyond the amount paid for such advertisement. The publisher shall not be liable for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement. Used.ca cannot be responsible for errors after the first day of publication of any advertisement. Notice of errors on the first day should immediately be called to the attention of the Classified Department to be corrected for the following edition. Used.ca reserves the right to revise, edit, classify or reject any advertisement and to retain any answers directed to the Used.ca Box Reply Service and to repay the customer the sum paid for the advertisement and box rental.

DISCRIMINATORY LEGISLATION

Advertisers are reminded that Provincial legislation forbids the publication of any advertisement which discriminates against any person because of race, religion, sex, color, nationality, ancestry or place of origin, or age, unless the condition is justified by a bona fide requirement for the work involved.

COPYRIGHT

Copyright and/or properties subsist in all advertisements and in all other material appearing in this edition of Used.ca. Permission to reproduce wholly or in part and in any form whatsoever, particularly by a photographic or offset process in a publication must be obtained in writing from the publisher. Any unauthorized reproduction will be subject to recourse in law.

ON THE WEB:

Information CANCEL YOUR TIMESHARE. NO Risk Program STOP Mortgage and Maintenance Payments Today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. FREE Consultation. Call Now. We Can Help! 1-888-356-5248 CHEAP LAND LIQUIDATION! Humboldt County Nevada. 80 acre parcels only $ 200/acre! Great for investment, farm & recreational use. Limited availability! Call Earl 949-632-7066. wwwcheapruralproperty.com

GOT YOUR CASH BACK?

Education/Trade Schools INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT SCHOOL. Hands-On Tasks. Start Weekly. GPS Training! Funding & Housing Avail! Job Aid! Already a HEO? Get certiďŹ cation proof. Call 1-866-399-3853 or go to: iheschool.com

Personals

In Memoriam

MAKE A Connection. Real People, Flirty Chat Call FREE! 250-220-1300 or 1-800-2101010. www.livelinks.com 18+

Travel

Housesitting HOUSE SITTER AVAILABLE Retired professional seeking house sitting for fall and winter months. Kimberley/Cranbrook area. No pets. Quiet nonsmoker, very clean. Reliable and bondable with excellent references. Please reply to: Box ‘A’, c/o Cranbrook Townsman, 822 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook, BC V1C 3R9.

Employment Education/Trade Schools START A NEW CAREER in Graphic Arts, Healthcare, Business, Education or Information Tech. If you have a GED, Call: 855-670-9765

In Memoriam

In Memory of Marty Emmons

Lost & Found

Feb. 26, 1969 - Oct. 4, 2015 How lucky we were to have loved someone so special that makes saying goodbye so hard. Sometimes the smallest thing takes up most of the room in our hearts. We dream so that we don’t have to be apart so long. You are in our dreams so that we can be together all the time. My sweet Marty, there is a place within our hearts that forever holds the joy of having loved you, and the pain of having lost you. We love and miss you Marty. Mom, Scott, Tracey, Andrea, Pat, Cooper, Hudson, Brayden, Parker, Emily.

Career Opportunities

Career Opportunities

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES with Black Press (Kootenay)

Black Press is Canada’s leading private independent newspaper company with more than 170 community, daily and urban newspapers in Canada, Washington State, Hawaii, California and Ohio and has extensive digital and printing operations. Editor (Castlegar): The Castlegar News is a weekly newspaper, with associated web site, serving the vibrant communities of Castlegar. Post expires on Friday October 14th, 2016

Career Service / Job Search

Obituaries

Obituaries

Sympathy & Understanding Granite & Bronze Memorials, Dedication Plaques, Benches, Memorial Walls, Gravesite Restorations, Sales & Installations

2200 - 2nd Street South Cranbrook, BC V1C 1E1 250-426-3132

WILL SELL WHAT YOU WANT SOLD!

CALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202

Obituaries

Kootenay Monument Installations

CLASSIFIEDS

www.CashBackRRSP.com

FOUND: HEAVY black men’s coat at Jim Smith Lake. Call to identify (250)426-5371

Business Opportunities

1885 Warren Avenue Kimberley, BC V1A 1R9 250-427-7221 www.mcphersonfh.com

IN-HOME CONSULTATION OR VISIT OUR SHOWROOM

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

www.kootenaymonument.ca

96*20,: 3(> J V Y W V Y H [ P V U >PSSZ ,Z[H[L 7SHUUPUN 7YVIH[L ,Z[H[L (KTPUPZ[YH[PVU

*YHUIYVVR

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

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

2PTILYSL`

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Hands that Serve – Hearts that Care End of Life? Bereavement? May we help? We offer free and confidential services; Companionship, Resource Information, Respite & Bereavement Support. Donations gratefully accepted – Volunteers always welcome. Call (250) 417-2019 or Toll Free 1-855-2019 email hospice1@telus.net - www.ckhospice.com

MONUMENTS MEMORIALS HEADSTONES MARKERS VASES BRONZE MARKERS URNS MEMORIAL BENCHES

Let us be your first choice to create a lasting memory of your loved one with our custom design, in-house production and installation services.

250.426.6278

www.kootenaygranite.com

For more information on these vacancies and other regions throughout B.C. visit:

blackpress.ca/careers

We will invest your gift wisely. We will carry out your wishes. We will ensure your gift has lasting impact. We will honour your generosity. The loss of a loved one is a time of profound sadness. We offer our condolences. When the time is right, we would be honoured to help you to ensure the legacy of your loved one is felt in our community forever. 250.426.1119 www.cranbrookcf.ca

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


DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

Page 22 Tuesday, PAGE 22 Tuesday, 4, 2016 OctoberOctober 4, 2016

Employment

Services

Merchandise for Sale

Merchandise for Sale

Merchandise for Sale

Rentals

Legal

Help Wanted

Financial Services

Heavy Duty Machinery

Misc. for Sale

Misc. Wanted

Want to Rent

Legal Notices

STEEL BUILDING SALE...”BLOW OUT SALE ON NOW!” 21x23 $4,998 25x25 $5,996 27x27 $6,992 32x35 $9,985 42x45 $14,868. One end wall included. Pioneer Steel 1800-668-5422 www.pioneersteel.ca

WE ARE looking for Christmas decorations for our First Annual Christmas Village, in support of Cranbrook Boys and Girls Club. We need trees, stands, lights, etc., in good condition only please. Drop off to The Cranbrook Townsman office, 822 Cranbrook Street N. by Friday Oct. 14.

WANTED TO RENT

WILLIAMS MOVING & STORAGE

WANTED

1 temporary/full time, in-home care provider required for the care of 3 children in Cranbrook, BC. Wage = $11.00/hr. College certification and two years experience required. Send resume:

christia_molnar_martens @hotmail.com

FIND EVERYTHING YOU NEED IN THE CLASSIFIEDS Help Wanted

$750 Loans & More NO CREDIT CHECKS

Open 7 days/wk. 8am - 8pm

1-855-527-4368

Apply at:www.credit700.ca 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

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.,Custom Modifications Office / Home” Call for price. Ph Toll free 24 hours 1-866528-7108 or 1-778-298-3192 8am-5pm. Delivery BC and AB www.rtccontainer.com

CLASSIFIEDS HELP YOU SELL

CALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202

Help Wanted

Community Newspapers We’re at the heart of things™

Help Wanted

HARM REDUCTION COORDINATOR JOB SUMMARY: East Kootenay Addiction Services Society (EKASS) is looking for an experienced Addictions Counsellor to fill a temporary vacancy as the Harm Reduction Coordinator (HRC) based at our Cranbrook office. The HRC will be responsible for and oversee the Harm Reduction programs offered by EKASS, including the Opioid Replacement Program, the Take Home Naloxone Program and the Needle Replacement Program. In addition, the HRC will conduct individual and group counselling and psychoeducation to clients receiving services through the Harm Reduction programs and will work with community partners to promote and expand Harm Reduction services. Qualifications: • Minimum of a Bachelor’s Degree in an appropriate discipline suitable for addictions work such as Social Work, Counselling Psychology or Nursing, and minimum of three-years relevant addictions experience. • Knowledge and experience working from a Harm Reduction perspective and implementing Harm Reduction programming to diverse populations. • Knowledge of Opioid Replacement Therapies, including Methadone and Suboxone, Naloxone programs, and Needle Replacement programs. • Working knowledge of the mental health and addictions system of care, including a comprehensive understanding of current approaches to substance abuse and mental health treatment. Skills and Abilities: • Be flexible and use analytical and critical thinking to respond to changing work conditions • Provide therapeutic counselling services to individuals, groups and families • Communicate effectively, both verbally and in writing, and to maintain accurate and timely reports • Establish and maintain relationships based on trust and respect, and to maintain healthy interpersonal boundaries with work colleagues, community partners and clients • Develop and implement public education and prevention activities for various community groups with a Harm Reduction focus • Work with an inter-disciplinary team approach • Demonstrate adherence to professional ethical values • Maintain valid driver’s license. Must have own vehicle • Hold a Valid first aid/CPR certification • Provide a current Criminal Record Clearance Salary and Benefits: Temporary part-time position (30 hours/week), commensurate with HEABC Health Science Professional Collective Agreement, Social Worker I, Grid Level 8 Submit letter of application to: Dean Nicholson, Executive Director, East Kootenay Addiction Services Society 202, 1617 Baker Street, Cranbrook, BC V1C 1B4 Fax: 250-489-1020 • Email: dnicholson@ekass.com

Misc. Wanted Coin Collector Buying Coins Collections, Olympic Gold & Silver + Chad 1-250-499-0251

Columbia Tech Services serving the Kootenays since 1985

_______

TOM’S LAWN CARE SERVICES

~We have you covered~

General Fall Clean-up

(2 positions – 1.0 FTE Permanent & 0.6 FTE Casual)

CONCRETE WORKS!!

• Free estimates

*Start to finish for your flatwork concrete needs.

250-427-9896

For all your business or home office computer service needs, call Sandy for onsite service.

_______

Salary: Commensurate with HEABC Health Services & Support Community Subsector Community Health Worker 2, Grid Level 8A Submit letter of application and resume to: Dean Nicholson, Executive Director, East Kootenay Addiction Services Society 202, 1617 Baker Street, Cranbrook, BC V1C 1B4 Fax: 250-489-1020 • Email: dnicholson@ekass.com Closing Date: October 7, 2016. Only those short listed will receive a reply. Please no phone calls

* 20 years experience.

Neat Freak

Housekeeper

* Fully insured. Call Jason @

250-464-5595

for a free quote.

RV STORAGE Convenient Cranbrook location.

* Low rates. * Call Jason

@ 250-464-5595

Experienced. Bondable. Reliable.

Excellent references. $20./hr. You supply.

250-421-3160

*Cutting, Trimming, Raking. *Haul stuff to dump. Kimberley, Marysville, Meadowbrook only

Phone 250-427-5139

TRIPLE J

WINDOW CLEANING

“Enjoy your winter with clear windows.” This service is available ALL winter!! For a brighter outlook, call Jim Detta

250-349-7546

N

ewspapers are not a medium but media available for everyone whenever they want it. They are growing and evolving to meet the consumer’s interests and lifestyles and incorporating the latest technological developments. This is certainly great for readers and advertisers. SOURCE: NADBANK JOURNAL SEPT/08

Help protect our wildlife and forests by reporting illegal hunting, fishing, dumping waste and damage to natural habitat’s.

Report All Poachers and Pollutors (RAPP)

Call the annonymous tip line

Qualifications & Suitability Community Mental Health Worker or Human Service Worker Certificate, plus a minimum of two years working with clients experiencing substance use problems, or in a closely related health field. Experience with mental health/addictions. Familiar with legislation related to income assistance, residential tenancy and health services. Hold Food Safe Certificate. Ability to work as a team member in a case management setting involving multi-agency supports. Level 1 First Aid required. ASIST Training an asset. Satisfactory criminal record check. Must have access to vehicle in good working condition and possess valid driver’s license with relevant insurance in order to transport clients.

*Any finish available.

SHOP LOCALLY

The following goods will be sold at public auction in Lethbridge, AB.

1-877-952-7277 or #7277

Life Skills Workers

Specific Duties: • Provide life skills training and support which may include training in activities of daily living, psychosocial rehabilitation and education, preparation for independent living and support to access education and employment; • Strategies to manage substance use which occurs during the Program; • Provide linkages to counselling, financial, vocational, educational, and recreation programs, as well as information about transportation, emergency response, housing and transitional supports; • Promote opportunities for cultural activities relevant to the client’s individual Care Plan; • Assist Clients with transportation to counselling sessions, participating in case management review and making connections to community based support groups; • Support/foster healthy community reintegration; • Collaboration with the Program Coordinator for the purpose of aftercare planning emphasizing prevention of substance use; • Support Clients while transitioning (discharge) from the Program; • Working collaboratively with the Ministry of Social Development, Ministry of Children and Family Development, local bands, and BC Housing.

www.pitch-in.ca

KOOTENAY SHADE WORKS

Custom Shade Sails Retractable awnings and

Under the Warehouseman’s Lien Act:

KENNEDY, ROSEANN

To advertise using our “SERVICES GUIDE” in the Cranbrook Daily Townsman, Kimberley Daily Bulletin and The Valley, call us at 250-426-5201, ext. 202.

Adult Support Recovery Housing Program (Cranbrook) East Kootenay Addictions Services Society (EKASS) is looking for two motivated and enthusiastic individuals to work as Life Skills Workers in a new Adult Supported Recovery Housing Program. Using a Psychosocial Rehabilitation model, the Life Skills Workers will support the Program Participants in their recovery from substance use challenges and the development of skills that will provide participants the opportunity to move towards stable independent and reintegration into their community including securing long term housing.

Become a Green Shopper

Contact these business for all your service needs!

Phone/text (250)489-9212 columbiatech1985@shaw.ca

TRY A CLASSIFIED

Phone 250-866-5181

SERVICES GUIDE

replacement awnings Custom deck and privacy screens Window awnings Boat covers and repairs RV awning replacements RV Skirting Sewing repairs

Closing Date: October 7, 2016. No phone calls. Only those selected for interview will be contacted.

House or apartment in Kimberley. Wheel chair accessible.


Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

Tuesday, October 4, 2016 Page 23

Peace celebrated in Cranbrook’s Rotary Park Submit ted

To say that the Sixth Annual Celebration for Peace held on September 18 in Rotary Park was awesome, fantastic, energetic, and extremely entertaining while humbly honoring and celebrating United Nations International Day of Peace, would be an understatement! The audience would have many more words of praise for all who participated! The volunteers from the College of the Rockies’ international students and the committee members from Cranbrook Celebration for Peace Society were treated to fantastic accordion music from Clarence Uhil of Kimberley as they all worked to set up for the celebration. What a surprise treat to be party to this wonderful music from this humble person! It really and truly was a great showcase of terrific entertainers from around the Kootenays and abroad — from Megan Featherling, accomplished senior dancer from Stages School of Dance dancing to Instrument of Peace; to Jacqueline Henry’s interpretive dance to Song for Canada; to Amanda Casey’s beautiful voice; to Clarence Uhil’s toe tapping accordion; to the wonderful group, Note-AbleFolk and Janine leading O Canada; to Trilight Trio — Bill, Frankie, and Valerie; to the awesome foursome called Mismatched Socks; to Sofia Hoffman and IDEAL Choir; to Bud Abbott and Friends; to Audrey Stetski and JK and Friends; to Doug Mitchell; to Van Redecopp. A very special treat was the rhythmic gymnastics to Amazing Grace by International Student, Ms. Minami Wada from Japan. How would one find adequate words to convey this awe –inspiring performance! Thank you, Minami. And yet another spur of the moment acappella rendition of Let there Be Peace by Nataniah Ranjan, 10 years old! This young lady blew the crowd away for sure! What a powerful message from a powerhouse young lady! Well done! The audience was thrilled when Davidzon Javier ran and jumped up on the stage to join Van Redecopp in their

Courtesy Eileen Braaten

Peace poster participants

Minami Wada

Courtesy Eileen Braaten

Courtesy Eileen Braaten

Jam session.

Courtesy Eileen Braaten

Megan Featherling. rendition of Wonderful World by Louis Armstrong — absolutely brought the crowd down! Thank you guys! The opening prayer, Prayer for Mankind, was given by four International Students — Angie Cardenas, Daniela Garcia, Ernesto Sanchez, and Ivan Nikolov; the closing prayer was given by Fr. Andrew Applegate. May 2017 will see the start of the Peace Grove which will be established to honor the younger generation for their Contribution to Peace. Our Society will sponsor the trees which will total 13 at completion with a larger circle of ten trees circling the inner circle of three trees — all will be Autumn Blaze Maple Trees. The City of Cranbrook Leisure Services and our Society will join forces for the planting in Kinsmen Water Park near the College of the Rockies. The Peace Grove will be for all citizens near and far to enjoy. One tree will be for

the 2015 recipients: Anica Beaudoin, Cranbrook; Flynn Passey, Victoria; Sarah Metzler, Cranbrook; Conor Love, Cranbrook; Two trees will be for the 2016 recipients: Seren Berdusco, Cranbrook; Camryn Lucas,

Cranbrook; Elisha Pagsanghan, Edmonton; Flavio Gomez Faria, Brazil; Adina Switzer, Cranbrook; Ellie Brown, Cranbrook; Kylie Wilson, Calgary; Takumi Sawa, Japan and Andrea Passero, Italy The organizing committee for Cranbrook Celebration for Peace Society wishes to extend a huge thank you to all the participants from the Color Guard, Youth Ambassador Shanae Thompson, Councillor Norma Bissett, to the last performer, to all our sponsors, to everyone who spontaneously lent

us a helping hand on Sept. 18, and to you, the audience. Thank you for

making this celebration possible and memorable! See you next Sep-

tember!

WE ARE READY TO

Gino Bernava

In the early morning hours of Sunday, October 2, 2016, Gino Bernava passed away after a lengthy illness. He was born on November 19, 1927 in Valvasone, Italy. He left home at the age of 18 years to work in the coal mines in Belgium before finally making his home in Canada in 1950. Gino worked for CPRail for over 32 years and built up a lifetime of fond memories of people, places and their histories. He always had a ready smile for all children he encountered and was well known for his high fives. He loved his family, taught his grandsons many valuable lessons, enjoyed hunting, fishing, gardening, long walks and drives throughout our beautiful province. Left to mourn his passing are: Monica, his beloved wife of 56 years; his son Luigi (Rosetta) and grandsons Robert and Adrian, as well as several cousins, nieces and nephews both in Canada and Italy. A funeral service will be held on Thursday, October 6th at 1pm at Christ The Servant Parish with internment of ashes to follow at Westlawn Cemetery. All are welcome to attend and celebrate his life.

Grand Slam of Curling November 8th-13th Black Press will be publishing a special edition on November 3rd, welcoming all teams to Cranbrook. Call us today to find out how your business can participate and show your support. Space is limited. Deadline is October 20th. 250-426-5201 250-427-5333 250-489-3455


Cranbrook townsman / Kimberley bulletin

Page 24 Tuesday, October 4, 2016

Stewart Wilson photo

Almost 450 cubic metres of concrete will be poured on the footings and angled slope on the upstream side of the soon-to-be rebuilt dam at Idlewild Lake, on the approach to the new outflow. Crews are pictured preparing the ground for footings on the downstream side in preparation for fish ladders.

Sun, Sea& Hawaii.com and Sony Open in Hawaii want you to have the golf experience of a lifetime.

WIN A TRIP FOR TWO

Sony Open at the Waialae Country Club

to the famous

Enter to win at Hawaii.com Deadline to enter Nov. 12, 2016. INCLUDES:

• Round-trip airfare for two on Delta Air Lines • Five-night stay at the beautiful Sheraton Waikiki • Two season passes to Sony Open – valid Jan. 11-15, 2017 • Access to the Sony Open Champions Club (4-days) • Attend the private Sony Open Awards Celebration dinner at the Hawaii Convention Center with entertainment by Sony’s special surprise musical guest on January 12 • Two special Sony Open gift bags for you to take home Total Value: $8,000

Your complete source for island travel. *Must be 18 years of age or older to enter. No purchase necessary. Winner chosen by random draw. Odds determined by number of entries. Travel valid from any Delta Air Lines gateway in North America. Winner travel dates, times and package components subject to change & availability. Restrictions apply. Contest ends on November 12, 2016 at 11:59 p.m. HST. See website for complete details.


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