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Vol. 63, Issue 220 Proudly serving Cranbrook and area since 1951 www.dailytownsman.com FRIDAY NOVEMBER 14, 2014 TownsmanBulletin Like Us @crantownsman Follow Us $ 1 10 INCLUDES G.S.T. STETSKI For Mayor Re-Elect Wayne VOTE Sat, Nov 15 Laurie Middle School X Wayne did what he promised following the 2011 election, including downtown revitalization tax exemptions. Find out more at stetski.com Vision. Leadership. Heart. Committed. Authorized by Les Headrick Financial Agent - [email protected] See our special all-candidates section, Pages 9, 10, 11 @CranTownsman TownsmanBulletin www.dailytownsman.com Follow us on Election Night, Saturday, November 15 FOR THE TOWNSMAN The smell of smoke caused a Pacific Coastal flight to return to the Canadian Rockies International Airport Thurs- day morning. Around 8:10 a.m. Pacific Coastal flight 630 left the Canadian Rockies International Airport bound for Van- couver. Once airborne there was a no- ticeable smell of smoke. At 8:13 a.m. the pilots declared an emergency and immediately turned the aircraft around and returned to the airport. Once the aircraft was shut down the smoke dissipated. All passengers and crew deplaned safely by 8:17 a.m. No injuries were reported. The airport’s Emergency Plan was activated and both the BC Ambulance Service and Cranbrook Fire and Emer- gency Services responded. Fire crews inspected the entire aircraft for any potential hotspots but none were lo- cated. The aircraft has been removed from service pending an investigation by Pacific Coastal maintenance person- nel. All passengers affected by today’s event were rebooked on different air- craft and departed safely Thursday morning. Smoke causes flight to turn back to airport ARNE PETRYSHEN On top of the many local social service organizations that provided support for the 15 residents displaced temporarily due to the apartment fire on Nov. 6 there was one other. The city recently noted that Father Peter Tomkins and Bishop John Cor- riveau of the Catholic Diocese of Nel- son offered the use of Marywood as a temporary residence for the people displaced by the fire. “We’re grateful if our facility can be of help to those affected,” Bishop John Corriveau told the Townsman. Marywood is a former retreat cen- tre in Cranbrook that closed in Janu- ary 2012. Catholic Diocese lends hand for residents displaced by fire FOR THE TOWNSMAN Another great turnout for the third and final advance poll Wednesday in the 2014 municipal election in Cran- brook, where 819 registered and new voters cast their ballots. To date 2,038 advance votes have been cast compared to 1593 advance votes in 2011. There will be Special Voting at set times on Friday November 14, 2014 for residents only of Mountain View Vil- lage (5 p.m. to 5:45 p.m.), Joseph Creek Village (9 a.m. to 2 p.m.), Joseph Creek Care Village (2 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.), F.W. Green Memorial Home (10 a.m. to 11:45 a.m.) and Scott Villa (9 a.m. to 9:45 a.m.) as well as patients at the Re- gional Hospital (1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.). RDEK Area C electors who are patients at the Hospital may vote for School Trustee during those times as well. General voting is set for Saturday November 15, 2014. Voting runs from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. at the Laurie Middle School gym located at 1808 – 2nd Street South and is open for City of Cran- brook residents only. See DIOCESE , Page 4 See ADVANCE , Page 3 Turnout jumps for advance voting Win this cannon! > Janus looks at the history of a Cranbrook ‘war trophy’ | Page 2 FILE PHOTO Josh Dueck of Kimberley is pictured at the Sochi closing ceremonies last March. The Paralympic great on Thursday announced his retirement after an illustrious career in para-alpine skiing. See story, Page 3.

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Page 1: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

Vol. 63, Issue 220 Proudly serving Cranbrook and area since 1951 www.dailytownsman.com

FRIDAYNOVEMBER 14, 2014

TownsmanBulletin

Like Us

@crantownsman

Follow Us

$110INCLUDES G.S.T.

STETSKIFor Mayor

Re-Elect Wayne VOTE Sat, Nov 15

Laurie Middle SchoolX

Wayne did what he promised following the 2011 election, including downtown revitalization tax exemptions.

Find out more at stetski.comVision. Leadership. Heart.

Committed.

Aut

hori

zed

by L

es H

eadr

ick

Fina

ncia

l Age

nt -

lhea

dric

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lus.n

et

Stetski-Ad-01.indd 6 2014-10-28 9:08 AM

See our special all-candidates section, Pages 9, 10, 11

@CranTownsman TownsmanBulletinwww.dailytownsman.com

Follow us on Election Night, Saturday, November 15

FOR THE TOWNSMANThe smell of smoke caused a Pacific

Coastal flight to return to the Canadian Rockies International Airport Thurs-day morning.

Around 8:10 a.m. Pacific Coastal flight 630 left the Canadian Rockies International Airport bound for Van-couver. Once airborne there was a no-ticeable smell of smoke. At 8:13 a.m. the pilots declared an emergency and immediately turned the aircraft around and returned to the airport. Once the aircraft was shut down the smoke dissipated. All passengers and crew deplaned safely by 8:17 a.m.

No injuries were reported.The airport’s Emergency Plan was

activated and both the BC Ambulance Service and Cranbrook Fire and Emer-gency Services responded. Fire crews inspected the entire aircraft for any potential hotspots but none were lo-cated.

The aircraft has been removed from service pending an investigation by Pacific Coastal maintenance person-nel.

All passengers affected by today’s event were rebooked on different air-craft and departed safely Thursday morning.

Smoke causes flight to turn back to airport

ARNE PETRYSHEN On top of the many local social

service organizations that provided support for the 15 residents displaced temporarily due to the apartment fire on Nov. 6 there was one other.

The city recently noted that Father Peter Tomkins and Bishop John Cor-riveau of the Catholic Diocese of Nel-son offered the use of Marywood as a

temporary residence for the people displaced by the fire.

“We’re grateful if our facility can be of help to those affected,” Bishop John Corriveau told the Townsman.

Marywood is a former retreat cen-tre in Cranbrook that closed in Janu-ary 2012.

Catholic Diocese lends hand for residents displaced by fire

FOR THE TOWNSMANAnother great turnout for the third

and final advance poll Wednesday in the 2014 municipal election in Cran-brook, where 819 registered and new voters cast their ballots.

To date 2,038 advance votes have been cast compared to 1593 advance votes in 2011.

There will be Special Voting at set times on Friday November 14, 2014 for residents only of Mountain View Vil-lage (5 p.m. to 5:45 p.m.), Joseph Creek Village (9 a.m. to 2 p.m.), Joseph Creek Care Village (2 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.), F.W.

Green Memorial Home (10 a.m. to 11:45 a.m.) and Scott Villa (9 a.m. to 9:45 a.m.) as well as patients at the Re-gional Hospital (1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.). RDEK Area C electors who are patients at the Hospital may vote for School Trustee during those times as well.

General voting is set for Saturday November 15, 2014. Voting runs from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. at the Laurie Middle School gym located at 1808 – 2nd Street South and is open for City of Cran-brook residents only.

See DIOCESE , Page 4

See ADVANCE , Page 3

Turnout jumps for advance voting

Win this cannon! >Janus looks at the

history of a Cranbrook ‘war trophy’ | Page 2

FILE PHOTO

Josh Dueck of Kimberley is pictured at the Sochi closing ceremonies last March. The Paralympic great on Thursday announced his retirement after an illustrious career in para-alpine skiing. See story, Page 3.

Page 2: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

Page 2 Friday, November 14, 2014

featuresdaily townsman / daily bulletin

From the Cranbrook Herald, Aug. 12, 1920:

“The captured Ger-man gun, which was presented to the city of Cranbrook by the Do-minion Government, has arrived and is on exhibition on Baker Street, near the YMCA. It reached the city last Saturday afternoon, travelling on a flat car with two others of a similar type, which were presumably des-tined for another point.

“The gun is a dan-gerous looking weapon, and in the hands of those trained in its op-eration could soon de-stroy a city like Cran-brook. Just what havoc to our fighting forces this particular field piece, a 77 millimetre gun of the latest type, has done, will never be known of course, but it

Fields.”

A Letter to the Cranbrook Courier,

Sept. 3, 1920:The other day whilst

strolling along Baker Street with my family of three, my eyes fell upon

the recently arrived German gun. The thought struck me (as I presume it has most mothers who have lost sons in the war) just how much that death dealing weapon cost the country and how

long it will remain in its present position. We should either place it in position for the world to gaze at as a trophy of the war, or relegate it to the scrap heap at MacK-innon’s Foundry. As it stands today it is nei-ther useful nor orna-mental.

“[signed] A Cran-brook Mother.”

It may come as a sur-prise to many that Cran-brook even has a cap-tured World War I Ger-man field gun — or, more commonly “can-non.”

Doubtless, There were numerous local opinions concerning the cannon arrival in the community in Au-gust, 1920, but these are among the few that re-main. It represented different things to dif-ferent people at the time and, it’s safe to say, does so to this day.

Certainly, to those Canadians who fought in the war, the cannon was a hard-earned sym-bol of victory, meant to

The final guns of Augustwill never again fall into the hands of an enemy to destroy our young manhood.

“All who look upon the destructive instru-ment cannot help but experience a thrill, and swell with pride the more over the accom-plishments of our boys overseas.

“The gun sill bears the marks of some of the camouflaging in-dulged in by the enemy to shield the weapon from the observer’s eyes, and it is said to be of the type which threw the ‘whizz bang’ shells.

“It is said the gun was captured by a Ca-nadian battalion, whether or not any of our boys at home took part in this important event is not known, so many guns having been taken from Fritz [the Germans]. It shows the marks of the strenuous usage to which it was put, and will long be a relic to be admired by every patriotic Canadi-an, and an eyesore to any Germans who ven-ture our way.”

From the Cranbrook Courier, Aug. 13, 1920:

“War Trophy Has Reached Cranbrook.

“The German 77 millimetre gun, the first

of five pieces promised Cranbrook by the War Trophies board, arrived in the city Saturday and is placed near the pro-posed site of the memo-rial. It has been inspect-ed by number of re-turned men.

“It is known as the Whizz Bang type or a three-inch gun. Its ar-rival will help stimulate interest in the fund now being raised for the erection of a suitable memorial for the fallen men of the Cranbrook district. Renewed ef-forts will be put forth again in the drive for funds, when the city will be thoroughly can-vassed. Several persons anxious to contribute to the memorial were overlooked or not can-vassed on the previous drive.

“Unless we can raise three thousand dollars for a suitable monu-ment for our fallen, this German gun, which evi-dently cost that much money to land it here, might just as well be scrapped and the pro-ceeds devoted to help feed a few of the or-phans. The list of dead … paid dearly for the winning of this gun, over one hundred sleeping their last long sleep in Flanders

The first of a two-part series on Cranbrook’s First World War trophy

JaNUS: Then & Now

Jim Cameron

reside in a prominent place in the communi-ty. For those who lost friends and family it could well bring darker reminders, as demon-strated by the unsigned Cranbrook mother, al-though, it would seem, she was not totally against its presence. The promise of a war trophy for a Canadian town was such that, fol-lowing the war, the Fed-eral Government of-fered them as prizes to communities that raised the most money in Victory Bonds (keep-ing in mind that al-though the war was over, the national debt was far from paid).

The reference to “Fritz” — a common term for “German” at the time — is not neces-sarily overly derogatory as the Germans often referred to the English as “Tommy”.

The statement that the cannon might prove to be “… an eyesore to “any Germans who ven-ture our way,” merely serve as a reminder that German anti-sentiment was naturally very prev-alent at the time and a captured German any-thing would likely be cause for celebration.

Of course, Cran-brook was not the only community in Canada to receive a war trophy. Indeed, it appears that Kamloops won the prize offered in the ad-vertisement. The re-maining hundreds of cannons, et al, were awarded to communi-ties on the basis of how many native sons served their country.

There are, to the present day, numerous communities that boast such prizes, often dis-played with pride. Con-versely, there are many that have been lost, scrapped, stolen or van-dalized beyond repair. So, too, there are those which have lost their meaning and stand rusting and decaying, alone and forgotten and, of course, there is the Cranbrook cannon, which graced the public view in various places of honour for decades and now sits in a rear park-ing lot of a local hotel.

Next week: The Final Guns of August - Part II

The nationwide desire for community “war trophies’ was exploited by the government in order to assist fund-raising efforts – Herald, Nov.13 1919

CLASSIFIEDS HELP YOU SELLCALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202

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Page 3: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

Friday, November 14, 2014 Page 3

LocaL NEWSdaily townsman

The Townsman has contracted circulation sales representatives Chris & Dave to conduct a subscription drive.

Chris & Dave will be calling on you to offer subscription prices for the Townsman at tremendous savings over regular subscription prices!Call Karrie today, 250-426-5201, ext 208

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ENDING SOON! DON’T MISS

OUT!

C A RO LYN G R A N TThere is not much more

one athlete could accom-plish. Paralympic gold medalist, double silver medalist, world champion, X-Games champion, Josh Dueck has won them all.

And Thursday, he an-nounced his retirement from competitive ski rac-ing.

Dueck said it was a deci-sion he wrestled with.

“Using a Seinfeld analo-gy, I feel like I have a cou-ple more good seasons in me,” he said. “But I want to end on a positive note.

“Skiing is my lifeblood and you’ll still see me con-tributing to the sport.”

Dueck says he hopes to continue to work with Al-pine Canada in some ca-pacity, likely promotion and mentorship. What that role will look like has not yet been defined.

He says he will be work-ing on recertifying as a pa-ra-alpine coach among other things in the coming months.

“My success has been a product of what people have given to me, so I would like to give back,” he said.

Dueck says the decision was not an easy one.

“For the first time this year, I took a solid month a way. I went to Vancouver

Josh Dueck announces his retirementKimberley’s home town hero retires after illustrious career in para-alpine skiing

heart. I wanted to be in Pan-orama. I know that hill so well I could probably cheat it and still do fairly well, but that’s not what I want. It’s not safe. It’s not smart.”

Brianne Law, athletic di-rector for the Canadian Pa-ra-Alpine Ski Team, says they still hope Dueck will have a role in helping to ramp up excitement for the Panorama World Championships and that he will continue to work with Alpine Canada.

“He has been an unbeliev-able ambassador for the Paralympic movement.”

Dueck says he has a great deal of gratitude for the sup-port of friends, family, spon-sors and fans during his rac-ing career.

“The strength of a nation gave me the strength to do what I did,” he said.

Life post-ski racing won’t be void of adventure for Dueck, who is working on a book about redefining what’s possible, as told through his personal experiences. He also plans to stay involved as an ambassador for para-al-pine skiing through coach-ing, mentoring, and helping to test and develop equip-ment for upcoming athletes. Dueck will pursue his pas-sion for freeskiing as an ath-lete at the upcoming XGames, and by filming projects like the award-winning docu-mentary, The Freedom Chair.

“Really, I just want to con-tinue to share my story,” Dueck said. “I recognize that having been able to represent Canada on the world stage is a great honour and a privi-lege. The opportunity to con-vey the beauty and power of sport is not lost on me. I hope to continue to be able to do that moving forward, and show future generations that what you might think is im-possible, isn’t.”

Island to reconnect with Lacey (wife) and my daughter (Nova). When you are a competitive ath-lete your life is movement non-stop, it’s a crazy way to live.

“I watched my daughter take her first steps a few weeks ago — it made me a little jealous — but it lit up

my heart. I don’t want to miss these days with my daughter.

“I’m retiring with a pos-itive feeling for the sport. The decision is right for me.”

Asked if it was particularly difficult considering the world para-alpine champi-onships are coming to Pan-

orama this season, Dueck said definitely yes.

“It was devastatingly diffi-cult decision considering how much I wanted to be there. I will be there but I won’t be racing.”

The bottom line, Dueck says, is that he hasn’t been doing the training he would need to be doing in order to

be successful.“I can identify when I’m

not doing what it takes. If I’m not giving it my all every day, I’m putting myself at risk. I love to hammer down, I love revving. But if there is a seed of doubt in my mind....

“It wasn’t fair to the team, for the young guys to see my approach. It’s breaking my

MalcolM carMichael photo

Josh Dueck in competition at Panorama.

If you are not regis-tered on the List of Electors, please bring two pieces of Identifi-cation when you come to vote. Non-resident

property owners should contact the Chief Election Officer at 250-489-8739 to de-termine the documents needed to register.

As part of the elec-tions, City of Cran-brook electors will be asked to vote yes or no on the “Cease Fluori-dation Bylaw”. A ‘Yes’ vote means stopping

fluoridation; a ‘No’ vote means continuing fluo-ridation.

Once the polls close Saturday and once the preliminary results of the Mayoral, Council

and School Trustee elections are known by approximately 10pm, those results will be published to the City of Cranbrook website.

For more informa-

tion about the election or the Water Fluorida-tion Electoral Assent, please visit the City of Cranbrook website at www.cranbrook.ca.

Advance voter turnout skyrocketsCONTiNued from page 1

Page 4: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

Page 4 Friday, November 14, 2014

LocaL NEWSdaily townsman

Re-Elect Gerry Warner

Authorized by Financial Agent Sandra Warner

[email protected]

THE PEOPLE OF CRANBROOK!

• Honest• Independent• With one agenda...

NOTICE OF PROPOSED PROPERTY DISPOSITIONTake notice that the City of Kimberley intends to sell to TLH Log Homes Ltd. the unimproved land located at 200-316th Avenue in the City of Kimberley comprising approximately 6 hectares (14.8 acres) and legally described as Lot B, District Lot 2377 Kootenay District, Plan 13390 (PID: 010-937-391) for the consideration of $175,000 subject to:

• The Seller’s acceptance on or before November 28, 2014 of a charge to be registered against the property in favour of the Seller requiring the Buyer to construct an o ce/shop building and to subdivide the property; and

• The Seller will install one (50mm) water connection to the property.

For more information, please contact the Manager, Planning Services at 250-427-5311 or [email protected].

PUBLIC NOTICEA GOOD PLACE TO BE.

340 Spokane Street, Kimberley, BC V1A 2E8 I Tel: 250.427.5311 I Fax: 250.427.5252 I Kimberley.ca

A r n e P e t rys h e nEven at -13 degrees

the heaping piles of compost steam once Mathew Pocock, the city’s arborist, digs a small hole with his hand. That’s the magic of bacteria at work he explains.

The City of Cran-brook hosted a Public Works tour, detailing landscape mainte-nance, tree planting and the composting program on the cool Wednesday morning of Nov. 12.

Pocock said they are actually quite busy with pruning at Public Works. He said the cold weather is actually the perfect time to do the pruning on most decid-uous trees because the trees go dormant so the cuts are safer, and the trees are leafless, so the branch structure can be seen. He noted the maple trees are the ex-ceptions, as the cold makes them bleed.

The city also has a large portable trailer wood chipper which it uses to make mulch. Pocock said the mulch is used mostly around Elizabeth Lake and pro-vides insolation as well as feeding roots as it breaks down. In places where there is a path the mulch can be used as a barrier between the bath and the grass, so when the grass is cut,

Composting in the middle of winter

there is no danger of hitting rocks with the lawnmower.

The tour leads us through the Public Works yard and finally out to the city’s sewage lagoons, where the compost piles are locat-ed. The pile looks like any ordinary pile of dirt mixed with other or-

ganic materials, where the ground is covered in snow, the steam from the compost pile has melted most of it off the piles. Pocock ex-plained that the bacte-ria’s reaction in the centre of the heap is what causes the release of materials and nutri-ents that will make the

Arne Petryshen Photo

Mathew Pocock, City of Cranbrook arborist, shows the wood chipper in the Public Works yard on a media tour Wednesday morning.

dirt great for growing plants in. The piles are routinely mixed once a month to keep the bac-teria happy.

In fact the city is planning to use the nu-trient rich dirt mixed with sandy loam for the

landscaping around the clock tower that will be completed in the spring.

The sandy loam helps to give trees planted in the dirt a more stable ground to stand in.

Pocock said the compost pile is a rela-tively new endeavour for the city. It has been around for a number of years, but only really got going two years ago. Once the city saw how well it was working it

committed to it, he said. Pocock, who came from the Lower main-land a few years ago noticed that there weren’t many places to get compost in the area when compared to the Lower Mainland.

The Catholic Dio-cese of Nelson was joined by a number of other social service or-ganizations helping to find temporary accom-modations for the resi-

dents, as well as assist-ing them getting back on their feet. Those in-cluded the Emergency Social Services, Salva-tion Army, Ktunaxa Na-tion Street Angels, the

Canadian Red Cross and the Heritage Inn.

The Restoration Company worked on decontaminating the building and cleaning belongings damaged by smoke. That is expected

to take more time to complete.

Local emergency crews responded to a fire in a basement suite at a building located at 1504 1st Street South on the evening of Nov. 6.

Up to 21 members and two fire apparatus were on-scene and quickly contained the fire to just the lone basement suite of ori-gin, which had poten-tial to spread to the 15-unit apartment com-plex. There were no in-juries to the tenants or fire fighters.

Diocese, others lend a helping handContinued from page 1

RECYCL

E•

RECY

CLE • RECYCLE•

RECYCLE•

Page 5: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

Friday, November 14, 2014 Page 5

LocaL NEWSdaily townsman

DOUBLEDISCOUNT DAYS

Fabricland Sewing Club Membersreceive 20% Off regular price Fabrics, Sewing

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Cranbrook Kimberley

Cranbrook United Church#2 12 Avenue S.

(Corner of Baker St. and 12th Ave S.)

with Rev. Frank Lewis Ph: 250-426-2022 / Fax: 250-426-2085

Sunday Worship...10:00 amSunday School 1st & 3rd Sunday

www.cranbrookunited.com

KimberleyUnited Church

10 Boundary St. – 250-427-2428

Rev. Christine DudleySunday Worship at 10 am

www.kimberleyunited.ca

First Baptist ChurchPastor Kevin Ewaskow

Children’s MinistriesWorship Service

10:30 am334 - 14th Ave.250-426-4319

[email protected]

Pastor Grant McDowellSunday Service & Children’s Ministry

10:30 amwww.cranbrookalliancechurch.com1200 Kootenay St. N. 250-489-4704

Marysville Community Church

Sunday Service 10:30 am

730 - 302 Street, Marysville

NOW is the time to get with it!On-Line Advertising – call your advertising representative today.Townsman: 250-426-5201 Bulletin: 250-427-5333

Not sure about the whole

digital thing?

Steve HubrecHt Invermere Valley Echo

A survey of the financial state-ments disclosed under the First Nations Financial Transparency Act by all five First Nations in the East Kootenay (the four Ktunaxa member communities plus the Shuswap Indian Band) and the nine constituent First Nations of the Shuswap Nation Tribal Coun-cil (of which the local Shuswap Band is a member), which are lo-cated in the Kamloops-Salmon Arm area, found — with the Co-lumbia Valley’s Shuswap Indian Band being the one exception — that chiefs’ pay ranged from $7,200 to $81,000 a year, full-year councillor pay ranged from $7,200 to $72,500, while band revenues ranged from $2.31 million to $25 million.

As reported recently in The Pi-oneer and other media outlets, Shuswap Chief Paul Sam made $202,000 during the April 2013 to March 2014 fiscal year while his ex-wife and Shuswap councillor Alice Sam made $202,000 during the same period.

Their son Dean Martin, the CEO of the band’s corporate enti-ty, the Kinbasket Development Corporation, had a salary that av-eraged $536,000 from April 2010 to March 2013.

During that same period, the Shuswap Band posted revenue of $2.21 million, while the Kinbasket Development Corporation posted revenue of $340,000 and held as-sets of more than $5 million.

At the Akisqnuk First Nation, near Windermere, the chief and four councillors all make salaries of $18,200, and the band posted

revenues of $3.79 million for the last financial year.

For the other three Ktunaxa communities: the Lower Koote-nay Band near Creston paid its chief $60,000 and remuneration for the band’s councillors ranged from $27,000 to $17,000. The band had $5.53 million in revenue; at the St. Mary’s Indian Band (now known as aq’am), the chief and councillor make $9,050, and during the last financial year the band had revenue of $4.61 mil-lion; and the Tobacco Plains First Nation posted revenue of $2.31 million and the chief was remu-nerated $7,900 for the past finan-cial year. Councillors who served the whole year were remunerated $8,200 and $9,400; those who served only partial terms had re-muneration ranging from $8,700 to $2,300.

Among the First Nations of the Shuswap Nation Tribal Council, the Adams Lake Indian Band chief was remunerated $79,000, councillors’ remuneration was between $56,000 and $49,000 and the band had $15 million in reve-nue.

The Bonaparte Indian Band had $4.7 million in revenue, and all councillors and the chief are meant to be paid $7,200. Bona-parte chief Randy Porter, howev-er, chose to forgo his pay and in-stead donated it back to the band’s membership services de-partment. The band had revenue of $4.7 million.

At the Neskonlith Indian Band, the chief was paid $69,000, band councillor remuneration ranged from $29,000 to $60,000, and the band had $6.9 million in revenue.

The Simpcw First Nation had revenue of more than $8 million, its chief had $58,000 in pay, and its councillors between $15,000 and $29,000.

At the Skeetchestn Indian Band, the chief was paid $45,000, the councillors between $40,000 and $43,000 and the band’s post-ed revenue was almost $7.5 mil-lion.

The Splatsin First Nation paid its chief $52,000, its full-year-term councillors $43,000, its par-tial-term councillors between $13,000 and $30,000 and had $9.7 million in revenue.

At the Tk’emlups Indian Band, the chief had a salary of $81,000 the councillors had salaries of $72,500 and the band posted more than $25 million in revenue.

The Whispering Pines/Clinton Indian Band paid its chief $48,000 and its councillors more, with councillors paid between $50,000 and $55,000. The band had reve-nues of $5.9 million.

The Martin family has shot back against criticism of their sal-aries, pointing to the considerable economic growth on the band’s land in recent decades as justifi-cation, saying in a press release that the band has transformed from having “no economic (or) self-sustaining opportunity to a community that has achieved the development of lands from zero property tax base in 1998 to a de-velopment tax base in excess of $70 million in 2014.”

The press release also cited glowing reviews of the band’s fi-nancial success story by promi-nent indigenous Canadians.

Nearby chiefs’ pay pales next to ex-Shuswap Chief Sam’s

Trevor Crawley phoTo

The organizing committee for the 60-year reunion of Mount Baker Secondary School’s graduation class of 1954 had some leftover funds following an event to mark the anniversary this past August. On Thursday, the committee donated those funds—$757.98—to the Cranbrook Health Care Auxiliary, which was accepted by Bonnie Close, president of the organization.

CLASSIFIEDS HELP YOU SELLCALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202

Page 6: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

PAGE 6 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2014

If I sound like a broken record, I apolo-gize.

Okay, not really, but still, I’ve been covering and plugging this for the last few months.

I’m talking, of course, about the munici-pal election.

Advance voting is over, but the general election is set for tomorrow, Saturday, Nov. 15th.

For municipal residents voting for can-didates who are running for city council, mayor, and school district trustee, polls will be set up at Laurie Middle School from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. For people who live outside municipal boundaries under the jurisdiction of the RDEK, polls will be open at the RDEK board-room during the same timeframe, where area residents can vote for their electoral area director and school board trustee.

In addition to the LMS location, there will be special voting times for residents at care facilities in Cranbrook including: Mountain View Village, Joseph Creek Vil-lage, Joseph Creek Care Village, F.W. Me-morial Home, Scott Villa and patients at the East Kootenay Regional Hospital.

As part of Cranbrook’s municipal elec-tion, an assent question is on the ballot on the Cease Fluoridation bylaw. A ‘yes’ vote means stopping fluoridation, a ‘no’ vote means continuing fluoridation.

If you are not registered on the list of electors, bring two pieces of identification when you come to vote at either locations, and they can set it up and help you exercise your democratic right.

There have been many opportunities to get a look at the candidates.

The main event was the JCI Kootenay’s All-Candidates Forum that featured a jam-packed Key City Theatre, as residents came

out to hear from 16 council and three may-oral candidates.

It was encouraging to see so much inter-est from everyone, considering voter turn-out in the last election cycle, which was around 30 percent.

That’s awful and I think it’s fair to say that number should be much better.

The right to vote is one of the most pre-cious freedoms we enjoy in this country at any level of government, and from a global perspective, we are lucky to have that right when you see how people in other coun-tries are oppressed and don’t get a say about their future.

Voter turnout in Canada has been on the decline at the federal and provincial levels for many years. I think voter apathy plays a big part in that and the thinking that ‘nothing ever changes so my vote doesn’t matter.’

That, of course, is balo-ney.

Every vote matters, especially at the mu-nicipal level. Consider the numbers: Wayne Stetski needed only 1,329 votes to get elect-ed in 2011. That’s less than 10 per cent of Cranbrook’s population. Denise Pallesen, who ran for city council, managed to crack the 10 per cent threshold with 2,209 votes.

That criticism may be a little unwarrant-ed because I’m going off population rather than a number based on a list of eligible voters, but still, those totals can be much higher.

From covering the election, I’ve been encouraged by events like the All-Candi-dates Forum at the Key City Theatre. A full theatre shows that people care about the community, the issues and the course for the future.

And a tip of the hat to the candidates running for mayor, council and school dis-trict trustee as well. Regardless of being

Make good use of your right to vote

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All rights reserved. Contents copyright by The Cranbrook Daily Townsman and The Kimberley Daily Bulletin. Any reproduction of material contained in this publication in whole or in part is forbidden without the expressed written consent of the Publisher. It is agreed that The Cranbrook Daily Townsman and The Kimberley Daily Bulletin will not be responsible for errors or omissions and is not liable for any amount exceeding the cost of the space used and then only such portion where the errors actually appeared. We reserve the right to edit or reject any submission or advertisement that is contrary to our Publishing guidelines.

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TrevorCrawley

elected or not, it takes guts to put yourself out there and put yourself on display for the com-munity to scrutinize.

While a few common themes have emerged from the candidates (and resi-dents)—like the state of the infrastructure and the city budget—it’s been great to have the conversation touch on areas such as eco-nomic development, tourism and arts and culture, to name a few.

This election is just another in the munic-ipal cycle, but it’s one that will shape the city for the next four years.

And on Saturday, you will have the chance to have a say in that future.

Trevor Crawley is a reporter with the Daily Townsman.

Check out our special election coverage

The Cranbrook Daily Townsman/Kimberley Daily Bulletin is running a special supplement in today’s paper where candidates for mayor and council in both communities were given the chance to make their final case before voting day.

Mayoral candidates were given space for a 300-word article, while council candidates had a 200-word limit. Each article is written directly by the candi-date and only edited for grammar or to adhere to the word count.

In the Daily Townsman, the mayoral candidates are on Page 9, while the council candidates are on Page 10-11. In the Daily Bulletin, mayoral candidates are on Page 9, and council candidates are on Page 10.

After the polls close on Saturday, be sure to keep an eye on our Facebook and Twitter pages for real-time updates and the election results.

Page 7: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

Friday, November 14, 2014 Page 7

OpiniOn/EvEntsLetters to the editor

Non-profit supportThis Saturday being municipal election

day I would like to remind voters in Cran-brook and Kimberley of the importance of voting for candidates who will continue municipal support for the not-for-profit sector in each of our communities. In the current drive to hold the line on taxes es-poused by many candidates for election in both communities, there is a danger that, if elected, their bottom-line agendas may lead to a reduction in the support provid-ed by council for the operations of not-for-profit organizations.

Not-for-profit organizations are largely driven by volunteers who hold communi-ty interests above self-interest and who work to enhance the quality of life for res-idents by offering needed services or pro-grams and events that provide pleasurable involvement and entertainment, events that also attract tourists to the community, providing a spin-off economic benefit to local accommodators, restaurants and businesses.

For example, in Kimberley a total of 58 community events have been tabulated by the City’s economic development officer, Kevin Wilson, so far in 2014. Many of these were organized by not-for-profit volunteer organizations. They include 8 weekly vil-lage markets, 6 First Saturday celebra-tions, a week-long Kimberley Kaleido-scope festival, the Julyfest weekend sport-ing events and concert, the Dirtbag festi-val, 10 orienteering / running / biking events, 7 skiing-related events, Marysville Days and the Kimberley Fall Fair, Bullara-ma, McWhinnie Days, A Lillith Affair, a carnival, roller derby, and the list goes on. Add to these the 13 exhibitions and 6 to 10 concerts held at Centre 64 each year, Rota-ry, Lions Club, and Foodbank annual events, and it becomes evident that the fun of living in a community like Kimber-ley lies to a large extent in the programs and events provided by volunteer not-for-profit organizations. A similar list of Cran-brook events could be made pointing to the same conclusion.

It is essential to the future quality of life in our communities that these programs and events continue and that City Coun-cils continue to support them. Please con-sider this when marking your ballots on Saturday.

Mike RedfernCranbrook

on recent letters How you might help your City to Lower

Taxes.Thank you to everyone who contribut-

ed letters for the Monday edition, and to the Townsman for printing them. Taken together, they show that Cranbrook taxes are very high compared to other cities of its size, and also give us some suggestion as to why this is the case.

Firstly, I accept the Wheeldon’s facts, since they are using public sources, which anyone can look up. (Cranbrook taxes are about three times higher than we paid on the Coast.)

Regarding CUPE, Mr. Jensen is incor-rect about one point. CUPE is not primar-ily concerned about social spending. It is concerned about promoting the interests of its own members. It is perfectly legal for them to support candidates of their choos-ing. CUPE wrote letters to all us candi-dates asking our opinions, so we all had a fair chance to explain ourselves. Since I was an elected union executive, I know how and why this is done. Another influ-

ential group is the firefighters union, which phoned us all to invite us for per-sonal interviews.

Mr. Collins writes like a reviewer. I loved his vivid description of the political theatre. (Perhaps you could sign him up for your paper.)

Ms. Humphrey asks an excellent ques-tions, and answering requires some histo-ry. Because of my promise to not reveal sources, I have learned lots about why Cranbrook taxes have long been so high, and why so many roads are bad. Some Councillors years ago gave road contracts to relatives who were paid full price, but simply scraped off the topsoil and laid thin layers of gravel and pavement. There are many such examples.

Although I am much happier to hear about politicians serving union interests rather than personal ones, I think Cran-brook really needs more politicians who are dedicated to serving all its taxpayers. I believe those promoting financial re-straint are sincere and well informed, and that they have facts that would not nor-mally be revealed in Council Chambers.

As to their sincerity, I did mention that most of us could afford to give half our pay back to the city. Other new candidates told me that they would do the same as I had offered. Answering Ms. Love, I would put the facts in the paper about any public decisions that had lasting implications for taxpayers. Tax money is your money, and you should know where it goes.

Alan MacBeanCranbrook

democracy Ms. Humphrey; It’s nice to see you

share the same concerns, interests and passion in the community as the people running for council. This is clear by your letter to the editor. With dedication like this I must wonder why you have not al-lowed your name to stand for nomination. It is obvious by the large number of candi-dates that it is felt that our community needs change. Perhaps you shouldn’t come across as so bitter and show some engagement to them in a positive way.

You talk about costs such as policing and fire protection; why don’t you think positive and engage these people in dialog to see what solutions they may have in mind? You talk about Elizabeth Lake, the new sign to welcome people to Cranbrook and the improvement to the west en-trance; it is your opinion this is cost effec-tive beauty. In my opinion, it is not. (De-mocracy) You also talk about 14th avenue and the beautification; yes it looks better but the cost associated with it is not ac-ceptable to some. (Democracy) The de-partmental decision to double up the benches should have been overseen by council. It is council’s job if they feel it is an acceptable expense, if they choose that it is then stand behind the decision. This doesn’t mean that we will all agree but in my mind it is frivolous spending. Look at the recreation complex and the huge ex-pense it is to the tax payers at over $9,000 per day. I am a supporter of arts, culture and heritage, in which the Western Finan-cial Place falls under according to the presentation from the Arts Council on October 22. That being said, I would like to see every avenue investigated to reduce this cost.

Ms. Humphrey, the people running for council believe there are other options. We share the same passion you do but we are willing to allow our names to stand. If you do ever consider running for office, keep in

mind that you cannot please everyone and you may not have all the answers although I am sure you will do your best. I hope that you will be so kind as to extend your best wishes to the new council as there will be at least three new members that will bene-fit from your support of their best efforts to the same degree that you support the cur-rent council. Help them to lessen the bur-den on young families, senior citizens and businesses that pay taxes.

Bob FaiersCranbrook

Climate changeEnough is enough. I am getting thor-

oughly fed up with reading the right wing pro-corporate rantings of so-called jour-nalist Tom Fletcher.

His latest press release for the B.C. Lib-erals, otherwise known as an editorial, calls into question the existence of climate change. May I remind Mr. Fletcher that he is entitled to his opinion but he is not a climate scientist and therefore lacks any credibility whatsoever on this issue.

His article on carbon dioxide emissions in the Nov. 4 issue does raise some inter-esting points. To be fair, he does criticize the government to the extent that their targets for CO2 emissions will be seriously compromised in the event that LNG de-velopment proceeds according to cam-paign promises.

He describes himself as a climate change skeptic and mentions that global temperatures have not risen significantly in the last 18 years, as if this is proof of the non-existence of climate change. Informa-tion in recent periodicals such as the Guardian Weekly have pointed out that the Atlantic Ocean is absorbing much more heat than previously thought. This may explain the apparent lack of temperature rise but it is hardly good news. The oceans are also absorbing the massive quantities of carbon dioxide which causes a change in PH levels, which is already measurable. This will lead to massive disruption in the food chain, as it makes it difficult for calci-um-based creatures such as shellfish, and more importantly zooplankton (a critical base in the ocean food chain), to build shells and therefore survive.

This is just the beginning, and it is going to to get much worse unless we wake up and do something to reverse this trend.

There is not time or space enough to get into a discussion about the intricacies of climate change, but one thing is well agreed upon by the scientific community: Humans are altering the make-up of our atmosphere and this is exacerbating if not causing climate change. Future genera-tions (assuming there are any) will curse us for our obtuse response to this slow motion disaster.

It is beyond irresponsible for people like Mr. Fletcher to use his access to the media to spread the lie that there is a de-bate as to the existence of climate change. There is no debate. It is here and we have some stark choices to make.

I can only hope that readers of his col-umns do their homework and subject his rantings to the critical analysis that is so often lacking in the media. We are in seri-ous trouble if we let cranks like him influ-ence public opinion.

Jim CampbellWycliffe

daily townsman / daily bulletin

KIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK COMMUNITY CALENDARKIMBERLEY AND CRANBROOK What’s Up?

Place your notice in your “What’s Up?” Community Calendar FREE of charge. This column is intended for the use of clubs and

non-pro t 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-profi t organization.• All notices must be received by the Thursday prior to publication.

• There is no guarantee of publication. Notices will run subject to space limitations.

CRANBROOK TOWNSMAN & KIMBERLEY BULLETIN COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Drop off : 822 Cranbrook St. N. • Drop off : 335 Spokane StreetE-mail: [email protected] • Fax: 250-427-5336

ONGOING TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) non profi t 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 2642Cranbrook Writer’s Group meet on the 4th Monday of the month at the Arts Council. Engage in writing exercises, constructive critiques & share in information on upcoming literary events & contests. Cbk and District Arts Council, 104, 135-10th Ave S, CBK. info: 250-426-4223 www.cranbrookanddistrictartscouncil.comCanadian Cancer Society- if you have spare time and would like to volunteer, interested applicants can call 250-426-8916, drop by our offi ce at #19-9th Avenue S, Cranbrook or go to www.fi ghtwithus.ca and register as a volunteer.Parkinson’s Support Group are meeting at 2 pm on the third Wednesday of each month at the Heritage Inn. For more info. phone Linda @ 250-489-4252. No meetings July, Aug or Dec.Do you have the desire to stop eating compulsively? Overeaters Anonymous (a 12-Step Program) meets Wednesdays from 7-8pm at Cranbrook United Church, 2-12th St. S., downstairs. Contact: [email protected]‘Military Ames’ social/camaraderie/support group meetings are held in the Kimberley Public Library reading room the fi rst and third Tuesday’s of the month. All veterans welcome. For more information contact Cindy 250 919 3137 Dance/Practice: every Saturday. Practice from 7 to 8 PM, dancing until 11 PM. Dance With Me Cranbrook Studio, 206-14 A 13th Street, South, behind Safeway.North Star Quilters Society Meetings are held the 2nd & 4th Monday at 7:00 PM, basement of Centennial Centre, 100 4th Ave Kimberley. Welcoming all! Info call Heather 250 427-4906Volunteers are needed to assist staff with childminding while parents attend programs at the Kimberley Early Learning Center. Come play!! Weekly or monthly for 2 hours. Diana 250427-0716 Funtastic Singers Drop-In Singing group; free to attend-just for fun! No experience necessary! CDAC Offi ce&Gallery 135 10th Ave S, Tuesdays; 6.45-8.15pm 250-426-4223 / [email protected] / www.cranbrookanddistrictartscouncil.comCranbrook Phoenix Toastmasters meet every Thursday, noon -1:00 Heritage Inn. Toastmasters teaches communication & leadership skills. Roberta 250-489-0174. 1911.toastmastersclubs.org.The Canadian Orthopaedic Foundation invites anyone expecting bone and joint surgery to make contact with local volunteers for peer support. The free Ortho Connect program helps to ease the fear, stress and anxiety that go along with surgery and help patients prepare. 1-800-461-3639 ext 4, and ask for Lauralee.

UPCOMINGThe Cranbrook United Church Fall Tea and Bake Sale-Saturday, Nov 15 from 2:00 to 4:00 PM, in the upper level (Elevator access) of the United Church at #2 12 Ave S, corner Baker & 12th. Everyone welcome!Annual Minkha Sweater Sale, Saturday Nov. 15 from 10am-4pm, Anglican Church Hall, 46-13 Ave. S., Cranbrook. All proceeds from the sweaters go back to the Minkha women in Bolivia-proceeds of scarves go to projects in Guatemala. Info: Anne Beurskens 250-489-4528.Annual Tea & Bake Sale, Saturday Nov 15th, 11am - 2pm. Mt Zion Lutheran Church corner 11th St & 11th Ave. Everyone welcome.The Gifts That Give Hope Fair, Nov. 15, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Western Financial Place, the Fair features numerous free activities and entertainment for people of all ages, including a swim from noon-2 p.m., an all-day toddler play zone and kids craft table, a skate with Santa from 11 a.m. to noon, and much more. There is no cost for admission to the Fair, or related activities.The Kootenay Railway Pensioners Association Social Luncheon at 13:30 pm, Tuesday Nov.18, 2014 at Arthur’s Sports Bar & Grill (Day’s Inn) 600 Cranbrook St.N, Cranbrook. All Railway Retiree’s and Spouses are welcome. RSVP by Nov.14. Info: Secretary Frances Allen at 250-426-2720, Myrtle 250-426-2378, Jean 250-426-8338.Kimberley Nordic Club Masters Program info and registration meeting, Tuesday Nov. 18th, 7:30 pm in the KNC Lodge. For more info visit http://www.kimberleynordic.org/ or contact Corrinne 250.420.7123 [email protected] FREE FAMILY SWIM Wednesday, Nov. 19th, 6:00-7:00pm is sponsored by Dr. Craig Spowart. Persons 18 years & younger must be accompanied by an adult.Backcountry Avalanche Workshop–Learn about Avalanche Canada’s new website map and the Mountain Information Network with experienced avalanche forecasters. Thursday, November 20, 7 pm – 9 pm, College of The Rockies, Rm 250 (Lecture Theatre), 2700 College Way Cranbrook, Free Admission.Saturday, Nov. 22, 2014 - All Saints Anglican Church, Kimberley. Annual Christmas Tea. Bake sale, craft table, Purdy’s chocolates and Regal Gifts order forms. 1:00-3:00 PM (360 Leadenhall Street). Nov. 25, 2014, The Cranbrook Quilters Guild monthly meeting at the Seniors Hall, 125-17th Ave S, Cranbrook at 7.15 pm. All interested quilters and anyone interested in becoming a member is invited to join us for a fun evening. Info contact Donna at 250 426-7136 .

See more Letters to the Editor , Page 8

Page 8: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

Page 8 Friday, November 14, 2014

NEWSdaily townsman / daily bulletin

Letters to the editorPrevious minutes

I am glad that the mayor agrees that facts are important. He even goes so far as to recognize that some initial work was done by the previous council. What he fails to ac-knowledge is that the initial work was in fact the creation of the downtown economic development zone. This creation and vision for the downtown core was presented to council in October of 2011 and spelled out the area and parameters that formed the basis for the bylaw brought forward by the next council. A portion of the minutes follows;

(10) Business ArisingMoved by Councillor Wavrecan and seconded 405-11

That Council instruct staff to bring forward the creation of two (2) Economic Development Zones. These will be brought forward under the guidelines of The Community Charters’ Revitalization Program.

1. All property owners of residential lots within residen-tial zones where single family dwellings are permitted, who renovate their properties to develop legal, conforming sec-ondary suites, will be eligible for tax relief from the increased value of their properties, as a result of their renovations, for a period of 5 years.

2. All property owners whose property lay within what is called the Downtown Parking Area, who invest into renova-tions of existing buildings or construction of new buildings will be eligible for municipal property tax relief from the in-creased value of their properties as a result of their renova-tions or new construction, for a period of 5 years.

These (2) two Economic Development zones would be Subject to the guidelines of the Community Charter.

Carried Unanimously The prime function of a mayor and council is to provide

a vision and develop policies and procedures to move the city in the desired direction. I thank you and your council for sharing at least some of my vision.

Jim WavrecanCranbrook

deer Mr. HillsSorry, Bill, but you are working with only part of my

campaign promise and with old science.What I say in my brochure is “Promote non-lethal urban

deer management, harvesting as required for public safety”. While the final decision to harvest or not will rest with the next Council almost 70% of the respondents to Cranbrook’s deer survey support another cull, so I suspect that there will be one. However we can do better in the future…

I am part of a Committee that is looking to get transloca-tions underway because the new science out of the western USA tells us that it can be, and has been, done successfully. The Committee includes BC’s Provincial Veterinarian, local Fish and Wildlife staff, local Fish and Game Clubs, and mu-nicipalities. The translocation will be science based and serve as a model for other communities wrestling with the same problem – Cranbrook helping to lead the way once again!

Mayor Wayne StetskiCranbrook

Many questionsI have become extremely frustrated with some of our

elected officials and glad to see people finally taking a stand.

Watching this current council I can tell you that there has been lots of spending issues. The problem is to prove the facts you have to pay the city hundreds to thousands of dollars to obtain this information or you have to be a genius to interpret some of the categories in line items on the bud-get.

The west end sign by Elizabeth Lake from my under-standing was a budgeted item of $70,000 and apparently the costs for the final project were in the hundreds of thou-sands. I have tried to obtain an exact cost, budgeting pro-cess, council authorizations, and never received the infor-mation.

I have submitted a Freedom of Information Request to the City and was told that the cost to me would be almost $700 to receive this information. Legislation states that the first 3 hours of research and staff time to prepare the docu-ments are to be free. I’m pretty sure any business owner could produce documents within three hours or simply be

transparent and tell me.I was disappointed when I found out that the City had

paved the service road to the spray irrigation site at a cost of $125,000 to $250,000. I’m thinking the residents along 27A Avenue or countless other streets in Cranbrook would have rather had their roads paved.

I reviewed the 5 year financial plan and it warrants me to ask a lot of other questions. $15 million dollars in new borrowing which includes $300,000 for solar panels on Western Financial Place. Under special projects there is over 1 million dollars to be spent on just studies and plans alone in the next two years. This Mayor and council have another $500,000 in borrowing to re-purpose the old Fire-hall. Our Mayor advocating it to be a permanent home for the Arts Council. How many households or businesses do you know that are struggling to maintain a budget are throwing money around to purchase art. It is time for the City to think the same way.

The fact is taxes, Development Cost Charges, city fees and services cannot keep rising at the rate they are before you bankrupt the taxpayer both residential and business.

A vote for Wayne Stetski and this current council is a vote for “Higher Taxes.” Not voting at all is a vote for ‘High-er Taxes”.

Darcy WiebeCranbrook

response to lettersRe: Alex Jensen’s letter to the editor, Nov. 10.For the record, I did not suggest that we tax businesses

more. I stated my position clearly in my letter: “While prop-erty taxes are a deductible expense for businesses, and not for residents, many small businesses do struggle with prop-erty taxes. Some municipalities have different approaches for dealing with commercial taxes that might be worth opening up for discussion.”

As for your allegation that I am part of a slate, that is also incorrect. I stand on my record as being an independent thinker, not always having agreed with the mayor or other members of council.

The letter from CUPE Local 2090 actually lists six Coun-cillor candidates they endorse.

Re: Jason and Christie Wheeldon letter to the editor No-vember 10

It is unfortunate that the Wheeldons are trying to make something personal out of something that wasn’t. I never used his name in my letter to the Editor. There was no “counterattack”, nor was it personal.

The real issue is what we really pay in taxes, and how that compares with other municipalities.

According to the most recent figures from The Canadian Federation of Independent “municipal spending watch” (http://www.cfib-fcei.ca/cfib-documents/BC1004.pdf ) Cranbrook was ranked 81 out of 151 provincially (improved from 99) and 14 out of 28 municipalities in its regional cat-egory in spending per capita for 2012. Commendable, given we are almost twice as large as any of the regional communities we were compared to and, with a population greater than 15,000, the only one required to cover 90% of its policing costs.

Projected taxes are not the end result, only the starting point for budget discussions. Using the previous adminis-tration as an example, a property tax increase of 30.66% was projected for the five year period from 2010 to 2014. That increase never materialized.

We all struggle with tax increases.

Sharon Cross, Councillor

accessibilityThe People First Society of Cranbrook have appreciated

working with Mayor Stetski and City Council to make Cran-brook more accessible, such as with the automatic door opener at the RCMP building and the accessibility re-strooms at City Hall.

Mike GauthierCranbrook

slates, etcTime to set the record straight on an underhanded at-

tempt to smear four of the candidates running for Mayor and Council. Speaking only for myself, I was not inter-viewed by anyone from CUPE during this campaign nor have I knowingly spoke to any CUPE member though I certainly wouldn’t hesitate to do so the same as I’d speak to any Cranbrook citizen. I did fill out a CUPE questionnaire that I received in the mail and my good wife Sandra dropped it off at the CUPE office. That’s the total extent of my CUPE involvement and I certainly don’t apologize for it as I filled out a questionnaire from the Cranbrook Chamber of Commerce too. That’s what candidates do in elections. So what’s going on here?

Alex Jensen, who made the original slate allegation in the Cranbrook Townsman, ran in the 2002 civic election as an unabashed member of a slate along with lawyers Ron Miles and John Zimmer and local businessman Percy Davis. Except they didn’t call it a slate. They called it a “team” and at an all candidates meeting Nov. 14, 2002 Miles defended the team approach saying the team was just a group of friends and “friendship helps the decision-making process.”

No kidding! And how did the team fare in the 2002 elec-tion? Miles came in third out of three in the mayoralty contest and Jensen finished 10th out of 13 running for Council.

The people of Cranbrook saw very clearly through that “team” and I believe they will see just as clear-eyed through Jensen’s baseless allegation in the current campaign.

Councillor Gerry WarnerCranbrook

31st avenueWe moved to Cranbrook last July to a wonderful neigh-

bourhood on 31st Ave South. Behind our property, as well as the neighbours was a vacant lot, which was sold. We were told it was zoned RR-8 but was not of a size that could be built on with that zoning. The new owners of the prop-erty wanted to build a multi-family dwelling. A variance was applied for and subsequently denied. With no building permit in place, civil work still carried on with the dumping of fill until letters to the City caused them to issue a stop work order.

March 17, 2014, this property was rezoned to R-1, along with the many broken promises which are recorded in the City council minutes. We as well as our neighbours wrote many letters to the City in regards to the suite, civil work and drainage. We were assured all our concerns would be looked after. The City, then graciously repaired a berm, with tax payers dollars that was damaged by a private con-tractor during the installation of sewer and water to the concerned property.

Then it happened, used highway barriers as a make shift retaining wall, more fill, and finally, construction of the dwelling. All work, according to the City was completed within their bylaws. However it is these gray area bylaws, along with other bylaws which are in place that were not enforced by the City that have caused all the grief.

The house now looks nothing like the original plan; it is now just a giant rectangle box with garages up and down, dirt spilling into the Hydro easement, weeds between the highway barriers and existing fences. The house plans have changed, over and over again! All approved by only the City of Cranbrook building inspector! The drainage has now been completely changed! This has caused people, my self-included to look at and implement preventive action at my cost? How can this happen? The final straw in this whole charade was the approval from the City not to have stairs from the main floor to the basement! Would you go outside to get to your basement? Is it a suite? Not unless it has a stove! That is a quote from the City Building Inspec-tor!

The owners have built what they wanted, even though the zoning bylaw states no secondary suites in R-1! Will the City step up and do something about it? It appears any-thing goes in the City of Cranbrook. Drive by, take a look, it could happen next door to you!

James ClineCranbrook

Page 9: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

Friday, November 14, 2014 Page 9daily townsman

ELECTION 2014

Cranbrook has been my home for 65 years. I have been married to my wife Loopy for 44 years. We have a daughter and a son and with their spouses they have blessed us with 3 grandchildren. They all live in Cranbrook.

I bring to the table 45 years of successful business experi-ence in sales, management and ownership.

In my most recent career, I helped people manage their personal and business financial affairs. I personally man-aged close to 100 million dollars. I was also responsible for several other advisors and support staff managing over 600 million dollars.

My two highest priorities for change are financial respon-sibility and economic development. We have to stop the frivolous spending and costly unnecessary projects. Budgets must be set on a needs basis not a wants basis. Consider-ation must be given for the majority of the citizens of Cran-brook.

Economic development is all about growth. We need to broaden our tax base.

We have to promote the benefits and resources of Cran-brook such as the airport, College of the Rockies, Regional hospital, affordable housing, arts and cultural events and the sporting activities available at a reasonable cost.

City hall must work with the existing businesses, College of the Rockies, Columbia Basin Trust and the Provincial Government to recognize opportunities to attract additional residents and business interests which will add good paying jobs to keep our young families here.

If elected, I promise the citizens of Cranbrook I will put my strong work ethic, honesty and integrity, and strong de-cision making skills to work for them. I want to use my prov-en leadership, proven managerial skills and proven financial management to restore the confidence in a City Council that will make the right decisions in the spending of their tax dollars.

A clear choice for mayor 2014 to 2018.My thanks to John York and Lee Pratt for running for

Mayor – democracy is best served by having choices. Your choice is now very clear.

Together over the last three years we have moved Cran-brook forward in all aspects: the economy, roads and other infrastructure, recreation, arts and culture, youth and se-niors, the environment, improvements for people with dis-abilities and for those living in poverty, and for those needing a family doctor.

What we are seeing in this campaign is a coordinated push from a group who want to try to ensure that only “preferred” voices get heard at City hall. Mr. Pratt’s vision, according to his flyer, is limited to the economy, spending and potholes. Our city is so much more!

Contrary to some of the myths coming from Mayoral can-didates the Reality is:

• The city’s finances are in good shape. We finished 2013 with a $1,680,000 surplus and $13,872,276 in Reserve Funds.

• There will not be a 25% increase in taxes. Mayor Manjak’s 2010 Financial Plan predicted an 18.99% tax increase for 2012 through 2014, the term of this Council. We approved taxes totaling 12.65%, and the first 3% went directly to road im-provements.

• Every expenditure is debated by Council during a series of public budget meetings and every dollar benefits our com-munity. Mr. York and Mr. Pratt have never been to a budget meeting.

• Building permits, real estate sales, business licenses and airport usage are all on the upswing!

Your choice is very clear – choose an unproven candidate and go backwards to the old way of managing Cranbrook or embrace a progressive future where all of your interests mat-ter. Let’s continue to move our great city forward together. On November 15, Re-Elect Wayne Stetski for Mayor.

Look At All I’ve Done:1) Election Security Was Slack – I’ve been writing let-

ters to all levels of government or three years, trying to improve ballot counting security. Our last two Electoral Officers are now gone. And security has been tightened in most areas. But sadly, what goes on behind closed doors, could be improved.

2) RecPlex Is Sacred – Three years ago I was the only mayoral candidate who dared challenge this money pit. I’ve figured out that Every “DAY” City Hall is burning $ 9,431 of your tax dollars, to keep the RecPlex afloat.

3) Field Charges Were Automatic – I also stopped Lei-sure-services knee jerk response of demanding that anybody wanting to use a field for a casual game (such as soccer) had to book a field, and pay a fee. Now you can use any unoccupied field or school yard for a pick up game, without fear of penalty.

4) Transparency – I found out that city hall has no policy to disclose how the mayor or counselors voted, nor must they list, what they accomplished while in of-fice. Without accountability, how do we know who to re-elect and who to boot out of office.

5) Fluoride Is A Poison – I was the only mayoral can-didate to demand we remove fluoride from our drinking supply. I spent two years writing letters describing how deadly fluoride is. And now we can vote to remove it.

To learn more about my battles, plus:• How voters are manipulated. • Why Credit is a dirty

word.• Why we must all vote. • Who to vote for when you don’t like any of the choices, be it municipal, provincial or federal. • How to know who to kick out, etc.

Get ready for the Secret Shocking Details, by visiting my webspace on October 31.

http://york.shawwebspace.ca

Lee Pratt Wayne Stetski John YorkCandidate for Mayor of Cranbrook Candidate for Mayor of Cranbrook Candidate for Mayor of Cranbrook

People of Cranbrook, welcome to our Election 2014 All-Candidates feature. The Townsman has offered space to every candidate running for Mayor and for Cranbrook City Council, to say whatever they wish as a final message to voters on the eve of the Municipal Election, which is being held Saturday, November 15. Candidates are featured in alphabetical

order — Mayoral candidates on Page 9, Council candidates on Pages 10 and 11. We’d like to thank all the candidates for contributing, and indeed for running for office. Good luck to you all. Dear readers, make sure you vote. The voting station is at Laurie Middle School in Cranbrook, 1808 2nd Street South, and is open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Don’t forget to check

us out at www.dailytownsman.com, or at facebook.com/TownsmanBulletin after the polls close Saturday. Talk to you soon.

Page 10: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

Page 10 Friday, November 14, 2014 daily townsman

ELECTION 2014

I am a 4th genera-tion born and raised resident of Cran-brook. I have been married to my wife Terry for 28 years and I have on daugh-ter who was recently married, all living in the community. I have spent over 25 years in the forest in-dustry before open-ing my own small business True Flite Archery.

I have served with many non-profit organi-zations over the last 30 years, working in the fields of forestry, land-use planning, hunting and trapping.

I feel that my life experiences can offer a different point of view on City Council.

Cranbrook has many issues facing our community such as roads, spending, envi-ronment, wildlife, the water shed and local business.

My two main priorities if I am elected would be long term financial planning and infrastructure. It needs to be reflected that the community is open for business.

City Council needs to have more open debate. By having more open debate means more transparency and a council that will better understand the needs of the commu-nity.

I promise fair representation and I will stand up for what is right. I want to see a vi-brant community that is not afraid to grow but still retain the small town values.

Wesly Graham is seeking a seat on Cranbrook council. Graham has 9 years previous council ex-perience he is bring with him as he has moved back to his home town. Cran-brook has been home to Grahams’ family for 3 generations and where he was born and raised. Wesly says he got his appetite for municipal politics from sitting in his Grandpa Roys’ barbershop where so many conversations happened around politics.

Graham will focus on the issues of infra-structure, health care and safety, recreation and economic opportunities. “These are the factors that people look at when moving to a community.” “It’s time to stop the studies and get projects moving. I believe there is savings to be found in our current budgets that we can reinvest in our community to build it stronger and better than ever.”

Graham is also bringing his past work ex-periences to the table, which include 4 years working in the sawmill industry, 6 years office manager/ bookkeeper of a small business and now is employed with the Federal Govern-ment. Graham has learned how to stretch dollars and look to new fresh ideas for innova-tion and cost savings. Graham would love to answer any questions, also check out his web-site www.wesgraham.ca for contact informa-tion.

Cranbrook is a great city and as a member of council I will continue to build upon the strengths of our community while at the same time bring a fresh perspective to local government.

As a third genera-tion businessman, I want to see a commu-nity that encourages small business growth and reduces barriers for local businesses. I want to explore opportunities to expand our tourism base and implement strategies to fully utilize existing infrastructure, such as The Western Fi-nancial Place. I believe in financial accountabil-ity and will ensure responsible city spending and budgets that reflect priorities of the public. We have a wealth of artistic talent within our community and I want to implement strategies to increase opportunities to highlight arts and culture in our city.

My Name is Isaac Hockley and I am commit-ted to :

• reducing barriers for small business• increasing tourism• responsible city spending• increasing shows and events• increasing opportunities for the arts &

cultureVote Isaac Hockley November 15th

Anna Hudson (BA Honours, MPA, LL.B., LL.M.) is an educator, public ad-ministrator, legally trained researcher and advocate.

Anna has over 18 years experience teaching and re-searching public ad-ministration, de-mocracy, law and governance in different post-secondary institutions around the world, including the University of the Arctic, University of Saskatchewan, University of Victoria, Malaspina University-College, and Camosun College.

Anna is a mom, a dragon-boat racer, and an avid cyclist. Anna has a full-time adminis-trative position with a local child protection non-profit agency, and she also works in the Cranbrook tourism and hospitality industry. Working in the downtown core, it is easy to see a lot of visual improvements over the past year, but it is clear that Cranbrook City Council still has a lot of work to do in terms of capitalizing on our potential as a destina-tion city, instead of a pass through city.

Anna’s public policy priorities include improving Cranbrook’s infrastructure — particularly roads, water and sewage systems —while building our local economy. Most importantly she wants to increase the viabil-ity of the cycling system in this city. Her fa-vourite areas of economic development are tourism, cultural heritage, solar energy, and social entrepreneurship.

Sharon Cross, is a current City Coun-cillor. She engages with all sectors of the community, re-sponding to con-cerns in an inclusive manner.

Cross manages a small business and understands busi-ness sector issues. She supported the Downtown Business Revitalization Tax Exemption Bylaw, and works hard to maintain affordable tax rates for services and infrastructure renewal.

Cross walks the talk and brings people together to see projects through to comple-tion. She assists in Physician recruitment; helps to identify child care gaps so parents can work; volunteered for major events in-cluding the Gran Fondo and Orienteering; and supports the arts, culture and heritage.

For the future, Cross envisions a strong urban agricultural and greenhouse industry to create employment and provide a secure, reliable food source, so that more of our dol-lars circulate locally.

Finding a permanent home for the Arts Council is another important initiative. Arts and culture contributed $50B to the Canadi-an GDP in 2009. Cranbrook can also benefit economically.

Cross demonstrates her commitment to the community by doing her homework and having a 100% attendance record at Council meetings.

Re-elect Sharon Cross to ensure continui-ty and support a progressive approach to-wards a vibrant, inclusive future for Cran-brook.Wesly Graham

Candidate for City CounCil

I moved to Cran-brook whenI was young and been here most of my life.I raised my fami-ly here. I love this city.

I ran my cam-paign on a zero dol-lar budget. I chose this way. The mes-sage of lack of ac-countability, over spending trust and respect that has been non-existent in this council is now being echoed from voices of the great citizens of this city.

For 30 years I worked within the city of cranbrook. I gathered knowledge, experience and common sense. This needs to be shared with you the taxpayers. If it has been done before and failed, let’s not do the same thing again. We need an accurate budget and one that shows that we actually know what these items are and the precise costs involved. The direction council has taken is one that we can not afford to follow. The future of this great city depends of you. The future of our chil-dren depends on you. The direction the new council will follow depends of you. Your vote can change that direction.

I want to thank everyone for allowing me to voice my opinion and concerns how council is spending your tax dollar. The citi-zens of Cranbrook need to know their tax dollar is being spent wisely. We need a voice to say that enough is enough. I am that voice.

James ElliottCandidate for City CounCil

Cranbrook has been my home for the past 19 years. It has been a wonder-ful place to live and to raise my three children. Now that they have grown up and left the nest, I have time to devote to my community as a member of city council.

I’ve worked in the forest industry, taught a few thousand Cranbrook students, and spo-ken with hundreds of residents. I’ve also volunteered with many different organiza-tions including the Cranbrook Community Forest Society, Salvation Army and Cran-brook Minor Lacrosse. I am aware of the is-sues that are important to Cranbrook fami-lies.

My priorities will be improving our infra-structure and growing our local economy. We also need to implement the results of the deer survey, promote our public transit sys-tem, and do whatever we can to ensure that every Cranbrook resident has a family physi-cian.

I am practical, decisive and approach-able. No one can know it all. As a city coun-cilor I will consult with the experts, choose a course of action based on the best informa-tion available, and be open to new informa-tion as it arises.

You can count on me to listen and to act on behalf of the people of Cranbrook.

Norma BlissettCandidate for City CounCil

Isaac HockleyCandidate for City CounCil

Bob FaiersCandidate for City CounCil

Danielle Cardozo is a first time munici-pal candidate, but no stranger to commu-nity development. Danielle is the Busi-ness Development Coordinator for St. Mary’s Band (Aq’am) and their develop-ment corporation, Aq’am Community Enterprises (ACE). Her focus with the organizations is to build economic revenue, while maintaining the community culture and values.

Danielle plans to bring this community focused strategy to the City of Cranbrook, by being a Councilor who has current, first hand economic experience in community develop-ment. Revenue brought in through develop-ment can then be used to support infrastruc-ture growth, social programming, healthcare expansion; as well arts and culture initiative.

As a member of Council, Danielle will ded-icate her time to educating herself about the residents’ priorities. She believes in thinking outside the box and looks forward to bringing a new perspective and fresh solutions to infra-structure and social issues. Danielle will bring the same passion to the City, as she has in her position with Aq’am and ACE.

While not related to political policy and decision making, Danielle’s recent appear-ance on MasterChef Canada shows her ability to represent Cranbrook with integrity. It is also a shining example of her ambition, dedi-cation, and work ethic. She is willing to put herself out there in order to succeed.

Danielle CardozoCandidate for City CounCil

Sharon CrossCandidate for City CounCil

Anna HudsonCandidate for City CounCil

Page 11: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

Friday, November 14, 2014 Page 11daily townsman

ELECTION 2014

Diana J. Scott is running for her 3rd term as councillor for the City of Cran-brook. Of all the candidates running, she is the only one with more than one term under her belt in Cranbrook. “I think it is important to have that experi-ence, that history, especially as some of our key long-time staff either have retired or will be retiring soon”.

Looking back at her election platforms from 2008 and 2011, they both focused on economic growth and the importance of being business friendly. “I have advocated on behalf of business the entire time I have been in office”.

Having said that, Scott is not a one issue person. She believes council also has to invest in things that will give Cranbrook residents a great quality of life, like parks and trails. She also believes council needs to stay focused on council issues and not try to be everything to everyone.

Scott came to Cranbrook in 2000 to work as the morning news anchor at The Drive / B104 radio station. She currently runs two busi-nesses.

Scott is looking to turn her 6 years at coun-cil into 10, with your support. She asks for your vote November 15th.

I was born and raised by a family that has spanned five gen-erations in the Cran-brook area. I have also been involved with business in this community for the last nineteen years. With sixteen years of civil construction ex-perience, I feel that I am uniquely quali-fied to understand the issues and the solutions to Cranbrook’s infrastructure problems. This experience has also given me insight into the current drought of affordable housing in Cranbrook and what could be done to reduce housing costs.

In addition, I am very concerned with eco-nomic growth in our region. I believe that rather then putting up endless hurdles and roadblocks for new businesses or for existing business expansions, let’s be innovative and work towards solutions to increase business growth in our area. Increased business not only creates jobs but increases our business tax base, which in turn benefits the entire community. I feel strongly that our city needs to strive to be more efficient and embrace equality for all its citizens and businesses. I believe that honesty, hard work, and equality are the fundamentals for any successful en-deavor. Given the opportunity, it would be my honor and privilege to bring my experi-ence, values, and ethics to the council on be-half of the citizens of Cranbrook.

As a long term (4th Generation) Cranbrook resident and business owner for the last 33 years, I am a firm believer that Cranbrook has a bright future. Howev-er, we are now faced with making some of the most important decisions we will ever need to make as a com-munity that will ultimately drive forward the direction of future generations.

My approach to representing Cranbrook is one that includes transparency, accountabili-ty and involvement from all points of view that focus on these core issues:

• Attract skilled doctors and develop health programs.

• Grow tourism and promote what our beautiful city has to offer.

• Deal with the increasing problem with poverty and disadvantaged children.

• Execute an economic plan that will in-crease our tax base without increasing taxes.

• Support our local businesses in a way that will help our City to prosper in a fiercely com-petitive global marketplace.

• Fix and develop infrastructure (roads, sewer, water).

• Foster and grow a vibrant arts and enter-tainment culture.

If you have opinions and ideas and you want your voice heard about the future direc-tion of our great City, vote me, Tom Shypitka for Cranbrook City Council and your concerns and ideas will become part of the decision making process.

As an indepen-dent watchdog seek-ing re-election to City Council, I will continue to hold the City to account on every decision it makes whether it’s roads, urban deer, taxes or services. The same applies for the environment, arts and culture, the disabled, youth and the working poor. Good decision making is critical. We can’t have councillors that are partial to special interest groups, political parties or are afraid to say no to City staff when they make a wrong de-cision. That’s not in the best interests of the citizenry. I think our city government im-proved the past term. There was more dis-cussion and debate and less use of the rub-ber stamp. But I also think we can do better and I’m prepared to help Council to do bet-ter by scrutinizing every issue to ensure it will benefit as many or our citizens as possi-ble and help our city to prosper as a growing and caring community where everyone can achieve their potential through a caring gov-ernment at City Hall. On November 15 I urge you to put an “X” beside Gerry Warner and any others that you think will give Cranbrook the good government it deserves.

Citizens of Cran-brook, I have lived in Cranbrook for the past fourteen years raising my children. Over the years I have engaged many peo-ple in friendly con-versation and lis-tened to your issues. At this time in my life I would like to give back to the Cranbrook Community. I am a team player with innovative ideas.

My broad educational background in-cludes a diploma in Tourism, a diploma in Fish Wildlife and Recreation Management, and Associate of Art diploma in Social Sci-ence. My background would be valuable to the position as a councillor member with an understanding of the tourism industry, knowledge of the environmental and forestry issues and respect for social diversity.

Community events are what attract visitors to our city. Since our high school students need to graduate with community serve or work experience, I would like to create a vol-unteer day in which community groups can mentor youths. A lot of important work could be completed. This day would promote com-munity growth, safety, health, partnership, tourism and build future leaders.

Finally, I am committed to building on the positive work of previous councillors. Learn-ing from the mistakes of past councillors and admitting to my own mistakes. Please on Election Day take the time to vote for a council which best serves the city.

Brad ScriverCandidate for City CounCil

Business is the cornerstone to Cranbrook’s contin-ued growth.

Business pays a higher rate of prop-erty tax than resi-dents. So, if we want lower taxes, we need a broader business tax base. With new and prosperous business we will have sustainable jobs for our children. We can afford to grow our community with bet-ter roads and sidewalks, and support com-munity organizations.

Cranbrook has been home to Joanna and me for 25 years. During this time, we have raised two wonderful children, Laura and David. I have volunteered in their school and club activities.

With my long-term community involve-ment with Kinsmen and now Rotary, I am addressing our community’s greatest needs through leading special projects, fundrais-ing, collaborating with community agencies, and providing leadership on our Executive Boards.

As the Health Inspector, I work with local businesses and the City to make Cranbrook a safe and healthy community. As manager of the Kootenay region, I demonstrate lead-ership, strategic planning, budgeting, and labour relation skills. I know how govern-ment works and how to achieve success.

I have a broad perspective of what is Cranbrook today and where we need to grow in the future. Let me use my skills and expe-rience to work for you on City Council.

Ron PopoffCandidate for City CounCil

As an business-man and consultant, I have had an up close view of Cran-brook for 52 years.

The last few years, I’ve worked on safety issues with the city trying to make it a safer city for drivers and pedestrians. My position on Council would help this, making the city a better place to live for everyone.

I’ve found that there has been a bureau-cratic culture that allows for not getting things done. I set out to run for Council to help rem-edy this situation.

There are 1,000 accidents a year on our streets, costing us dearly for our insurance rates and liability to the city if they’re not in compliance with, for example, the sightline bylaw guidelines.

I feel these concerns are of paramount im-portance, and yet are not being addressed, neither by City Council or during the current election campaign.

In addition, I want to see a friendlier envi-ronment for businesses and citizens.

We need to get a positive program to fix our roads and make an acceptable tax base for business and citizens by creating an environ-ment for them to want to move to Cranbrook and to start new businesses.

On November 15, vote for Brian Kostiuk for a safer, better Cranbrook.

Brian KostiukCandidate for City CounCil

Tom ShypitkaCandidate for City CounCil

Diana J. ScottCandidate for City CounCil

“Help your City to Lower Taxes”.

When we moved here in 2010, we de-termined that Cran-brook offered the best deal in BC, relative to house prices. Against our realtor’s advice, we chose to live in-side the city bound-ary in order to pay more tax, since we thought we should con-tribute to the community. As you know, taxes in town are about twice those outside the city. They are about three times as high as we paid on the Coast.

Are they too high in any objective sense? I believe that is for you to decide. In terms of attracting people and businesses, Cranbrook competes with every other community. Bet-ter tax rates would be a factor in future job growth for our city, not just for your children and grandchildren, but also to expand the tax base for all the things that the city desires to do, including services for seniors, which I am counting on!

All of the candidates have interesting ideas, and I share many of them, but we have differ-ing opinions about taxation. I know that low-ering taxes is a choice. It should be your choice to make. Please consider making one vote in that direction.

Alan MacBeanCandidate for City CounCil

Lynn McIntoshCandidate for City CounCil

Gerry WarnerCandidate for City CounCil

Page 12: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

PAGE 12 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2014 DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

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S e t h B o r e n S t e i nASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON - Lightning strikes in the United States will likely increase by nearly 50 per cent by the end of the century as the world gets warmer and wetter, a new study says.

While those condi-tions were already known to promote thunderstorms in gen-eral, the new work fo-cused on lightning strikes themselves.

Researchers calcu-lated just how much lightning flashes in-crease as air warms, clouds fill with more energy from water va-pour and rainfall inten-sifies.

They concluded that for every degree Fahr-enheit the world warms in the future, lightning strikes will go up nearly 7 per cent. That’s 12 per cent for every degree Celsius.

Because scientists forecast that the world may get about 7 degrees warmer (4 degrees Cel-sius) by the end of the century, based on cur-

rent carbon dioxide emission trends, that comes to a 50 per cent increase in lightning strikes, said David Romps. He’s the atmo-spheric scientist at the University of California Berkeley who led the study.

“When you used to have two lightning strikes, now you’ll have three,” Romps said. “It’s a substantial increase.”

The researchers based their calculation on 2011 weather data from across the U.S. They presented their results in a paper re-leased Thursday by the journal Science.

Romps said the key is that warmer air holds more water vapour. Water vapour is fuel for thunderstorms, spark-ing more lightning. The energy that storms get from vapour is the big-gest driver in increasing lightning strikes in the future, Romps said.

The new study shows that at any given level of rainfall intensi-ty, there will be more lightning in the future.

J i l l l aw l e S SASSOCIATED PRESS

It took a set of ret-ro-looking images to reawaken the world’s sense of wonder about space exploration.

The black-and-white pictures of a rocky sur-face sent back from a comet hundreds of mil-lions of miles away are the product of an aston-ishing feat of science and some sophisticated imaging technology.

But for millions gaz-ing at them with excited awe, the response that the dusty grey rocks and pitch-dark shad-ows provoke is almost primal.

It’s space as we imagined it in earliest childhood - deep and dark, harsh and alien - and with the Philae lander, humanity has made a fragile foothold on it. That feeling is perfectly captured in one image, an inter-planetary selfie, in which one of the land-er’s three feet is visible in the corner of the shot.

To be sure, the sci-ence is impressive. These crisp images have come from 311 million miles (500 mil-

lion kilometres) away. The washing ma-chine-sized lander has a close-up camera on its underside and is also mounted with seven high-definition mi-cro-cameras, each weighing just 3.5 ounc-es (100 grams), de-signed to endure tem-peratures as low as minus 238 Fahrenheit (minus 150 Celsius), and arranged to cap-ture 360-degree pan-oramas of the comet’s surface. (Some of the pictures released by the European Space Agen-cy have been compos-ites of several images.)

But our reaction is about more than scien-tific appreciation. The stark and elegant pic-tures cut through the usual space-explora-tion imagery of rockets and gadgets and flash-ing lights and take us back to the early black-and-white sci-fi movies many of us remember seeing.

Scientists said Thursday that Philae appeared to have land-ed in the shadow of a cliff and may not be get-ting enough sunlight to recharge its solar pan-els.

Beautiful images from millions of miles away

Scientists figure warmer, wetter world increases lightning zaps

NOAA imAge

Scientists expect that an increase in global temperatures will mean an increase in lightning zaps as well.

Harold Brooks, a Na-tional Oceanic and At-mospheric Administra-tion severe storm mete-orologist, said the study makes sense and marks an advance over previ-ous work. The result is important mostly be-cause it means more natural sparks for dan-gerous wildfires, which are already forecast to worsen with man-made warming, Romps, Brooks and other mete-orologists said.

Lightning deaths have been falling from about 100 per year in the 1960s and 1970s to

33 per year in the last decade. So far this year 25 people have been killed, NOAA data shows. Brooks said the drop is because of peo-ple changing their be-haviour to be safer in storms and better med-ical treatment of light-ning victims.

Michael Mann, a Pennsylvania State Uni-versity climate scientist, said this study “is yet another reminder that there are likely some unwelcome surprises in store ... when it comes to the impacts of cli-mate change.”

Page 14: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

Page 14 Friday, November 14, 2014

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It’s a long way to the topKootenay Ice embark on five-game run looking to rock ‘n’ roll against Central Division competition

Friday, Nov. 14

Calgary HitmeN at KooteNay iCe

GAME TIME: 7 P.M. (MT)LAST MEETING: CGY 9 at KTN 2 (Oct. 24)

CALGARY HITMEN vs. KOOTENAY ICE (10-8-0-2) RECORD (6-13-0-0) Second (Central) DIVISION Sixth (Central) Fourth (Eastern) CONF. 12th (Eastern) 70 GF 45 56 GA 81 T-5th (22.2%) PP 20th (13.0%) T-7th (84.0%) PK 18th (76.1%) A. Tambellini (11-8-19) TOP SCORER J. Descheneau (8-8-16) M. Shields (2.57 GAA) TOP GOALIE W. Hoflin (3.79 GAA) OTL1 STREAK W3 2-1 OTL at BWK LAST GAME 3-2 W vs. SCB Nov. 16 vs. SAS NEXT GAME Nov. 15 at LET

Chris Pullen Photo/CranbrookPhoto.Com

Kootenay Ice forward Jaedon Descheneau tries to track down Calgary Hitmen defenceman Travis Sanheim during the last meet-ing between the two Central Division rivals. The Hitmen came away from Cranbrook with a 9-2 victory Oct. 24.

Taylor rocc aSports Editor

The last time the Cal-gary Hitmen visited Western Financial Place, it wasn’t a pretty sight.

Despite the returns of sniper Tim Bozon and blue-liner Rinat Valiev to the Kootenay Ice line-up, the visitors walked all over the hosts en route to a 9-2 victory.

“Last game, it was like 2-1 with eight min-utes [to play] in the sec-ond [period],” said Koo-tenay Ice alternate cap-tain Jaedon Deschene-au Thursday afternoon prior to practice. “I don’t know what happened but, we’ll be fine. We’ve just got to play our game plan and do what we’ve been doing the last three games when we’ve been winning and things will turn out.”

In fact, the Ice trailed the Hitmen 2-1 up until the 15:38 mark of the second period. With less than five minutes to go

in the period, Calgary forward Adam Tambel-lini scored, kick-starting a three-goal run for the Hitmen over the course of 1:53 and the visitors took a 5-1 advantage to the dressing room at the second intermission.

Hitmen forward Greg Chase led the onslaught with two goals and two assists the last time around, but he won’t be a factor after requesting a trade out of Calgary Nov. 6. Russian import Radel Fazleev chipped in with a goal and two assists.

The loss to the Hit-men marked the fourth in what eventually stretched to a sev-en-game skid for the Kootenay Ice. Since breaking the losing run with a 6-5 overtime win over the Lethbridge Hurricanes Nov. 1, the Ice have turned a cor-ner, rattling off three consecutive victories as they try to claw their

way back into the WHL’s competitive Central Di-vision conversation.

Though the hole may have been deep, it isn’t insurmountable. While the Medicine Hat Tigers (14-3-1-0, 29 points) have a healthy lead on the rest of the competi-tion in the Central Divi-sion, the Hitmen (10-8-0-2, 22 points), Edmon-ton Oil Kings (10-8-0-2, 22 points), Red Deer Rebels (9-8-2-1, 21

points) and Lethbridge Hurricanes (5-10-3-1, 14 points) are well with-in striking distance with 53 games remaining on the slate for the Ice.

“Every game is im-portant right now,” said forward Luke Philp fol-lowing last Saturday’s shootout victory over the Swift Current Bron-cos. “Our division is re-ally tough this year, it usually is.”

Starting Friday

against the Hitmen, the Ice play five consecutive games against Central Division opponents, a critical opportunity to get back into the mix.

“We have to shoot the puck and we have to score [by] getting re-bounds,” Valiev said prior to practice Thurs-day afternoon. “We didn’t score on a lot of our chances last game [against Calgary]. Right now, we have a better

team with a lot of guys back from injury and Sam [Reinhart] back. We’re all in.”

After hosting the Hit-men Friday night, the Ice travel across the Al-berta border to take on the Lethbridge Hurri-canes Saturday night before returning home for a Nov. 19 date with the Medicine Hat Tigers.

The Ice are expected to get centre Kyle O’Con-nor back into the lineup

this weekend. The 6-foot-2 Calgary product missed both outings last weekend with a low-er-body injury.

Still on the mend is right-winger Jon Martin, who is expected to miss another one to two weeks with an up-per-body injury. Bruis-ing defenceman Tanner Faith also remains out for the next two to four weeks with an up-per-body injury.

Hit the open roadDynamiters set out on three-game swing through Interior

Taylor rocc aSports Editor

The Kimberley Dyna-miters are hoping a little road trip will help them get back into the win col-umn this weekend.

After dropping con-secutive games to the Fernie Ghostriders and Princeton Posse last weekend, the Nitros hit the highway for a three-game swing through the Interior, beginning Fri-day night in Kelowna,

before moving along to Princeton and wrapping up Sunday afternoon in Summerland.

The Dynamiters will make the trip without their bench boss Jerry Bancks, who will miss the weekend festivities due to personal reasons. He will be back behind the bench when the Dy-namiters return home to host the Spokane Braves Thursday, Nov. 20. In the meantime, as-

sistant coach Jeff Keiver will take over.

“We have to have ev-eryone playing to the best of their ability, es-pecially when you play three [games] in three [nights],” Bancks said Thursday afternoon. “We’re going to be short a few players this week-end, so it’s going to re-quire other players step-ping up. Some players are going to get a chance to play a bigger role and

they need to step up to the plate.”

While it remains to be seen who will be the one to grab the prover-bial bull by the horns this weekend, goalten-der Tyson Brouwer re-turns to anchor the Dy-namiters between the pipes. He is expected to start Friday night against the Kelowna Chiefs.

Brouwer last played Oct. 29 in Creston Valley where he suffered an MCL sprain in overtime against the Thunder Cats. The 19-year-old Lethbridge native post-ed stellar numbers prior to getting hurt, going 10-4-0 with a 2.98 goals-

against average and one shutout in 14 games.

While Brouwer re-turns, it appears as though defenceman James Jowsey (undis-closed) and forward Jesse Wallace (strep throat) will join forward Jordan Roy (collar bone) and defenceman Tristan Pagura (shoulder) on the shelf this weekend.

“The biggest thing is staying focused and tak-ing it shift by shift,” Bancks said of the chal-lenges his team will face this weekend. “If you show up on Friday and you look at the big pic-ture and you look be-yond your next shift,

you’re probably going to find yourself in trouble.

“You just have to get yourself focused for every shift, know what your responsibilities are and go out there and do

your job. If we get every-body doing that, it tends to lead to success.”

The last time Kimber-ley and Kelowna met, the Dynamiters spanked the Chiefs 10-3 Oct. 12.

Friday, Nov. 14

KiMBErLEy dyNaMiTErS aT KELowNa ChiEFS

GAME TIME: 8 P.M. (MT) KIMBERLEY DYNAMITERS vs. KELOWNA CHIEFS (12-6-0-2) RECORD (7-12-2-1) Second (Eddie Mountain) DIVISION Fourth (Okanangan) 92 GF 62 63 GA 82 Third (22.6%) PP 14th (12.8%) Fifth (87.8%) PK T-14th (81.6%) T. Klingspohn (20-9-29) TOP SCORER J. Lee (13-17-30) T. Brouwer (2.98 GAA) TOP GOALIE C. Turner (3.04 GAA) L2 STREAK L2 5-1 L vs. PRI LAST GAME 2-1 L vs. OSO Nov. 15 at PRI NEXT GAME Nov. 15 at 100 Mile House

Page 15: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

Friday, November 14, 2014 Page 15

SportSdaily townsman / daily bulletin

Taylor rocca PhoTos

Cut the cake!The Cranbrook Knights of Columbus put on an appreciation brunch for the Kootenay Ice at Christ the Servant Catholic Church, Sunday, Nov. 9. Above: Don Sharp (red apron) serves up some roast beef to Kootenay Ice forward Ryan Chynoweth. Below: Alternate captains Austin Vetterl (left) and Luke Philp (right) have a little fun cutting the cake.

International impressionsDescheneau & Valiev hope to have left marks ahead of World Juniors

Taylor rocc aSports Editor

Though many view the CHL Subway Super Series as a bit of a throw-back to the legendary days of lore when the Soviet Union’s Red Army and Team Canada battled for international hockey supremacy, it meant a lot more than just nostalgia for Koote-nay Ice forward Jaedon Descheneau and de-fenceman Rinat Valiev.

“It’s a lot of fun play-ing with the best players from your league,” De-scheneau said prior to Kootenay Ice practice Thursday afternoon. “You really get to see what other players do and learn from them.

“It’s a good experi-ence.”

With the 2015 IIHF World Junior Champi-onship on the horizon, the CHL Subway Super Series provides one last gasp for major junior hockey players to get their name into the con-versation, if it isn’t al-ready there.

Descheneau, a 19-year-old fifth-round selection (124th overall,

2014) of the St. Louis Blues, was left off the Team Canada develop-ment camp roster this past summer. After a 98-point campaign in 2013-14, the 5-foot-9 spitfire has put up eight goals and 16 points through 17 games this season in hopes of landing his name on the radar of Team Canada brass.

“I played more phys-ical and made sure I was better in my [defensive] zone,” Descheneau said. “I think I did the best I could and hopefully I get an invite to camp in December.”

The Edmonton na-tive suited up in both games for Team WHL this past Monday and Tuesday. In a 3-2 shootout loss to the Rus-sians in Saskatoon, the shifty Descheneau was looked to in the shootout by head coach Dave Lowry, ahead of the likes of 2014 first-round picks Conner Bleackley and Jake Virtanen.

“They gave me an op-portunity and they upped my ice through-out both games,” De-scheneau said. “I started playing more in the sec-ond game, played a little power-play time and I was on the ice with a minute left trying to score to tie the game up.”

With 11 eligible re-turners from Team Can-ada’s entry at the 2014 World Junior Champi-onship, including Koo-tenay Ice teammate Sam Reinhart, getting

an opportunity to don the Maple Leaf remains a difficult one for De-scheneau, but it’s alive nonetheless.

On the other side of the ice, 6-foot-2 de-fenceman Rinat Valiev hopes he did enough to convince Team Russia general manager Alexei Kochetkov that he is worthy of joining the Russians in search of in-ternational glory this December.

“It’s last chance to show my game before the world juniors,” Va-liev said Thursday after-noon prior to Kootenay Ice practice. “Coach will decide [if ] he will invite me to the camp or not.

“I think I played okay, but I know I can be better.”

Valiev, a 2014 third-round pick (68th over-all) of the Toronto Maple Leafs, participated in Team Russia’s summer development camp, so he has a bit more of a leg up on the situation than Descheneau.

That being said, the Russians invited 11 de-fencemen to the Super Series, including Bran-don Wheat Kings stud Ivan Provorov, who is eligible for the 2015 NHL Entry Draft. With that many blue-liners in the mix, nothing is a given for the 19-year-old Valiev, who is focused on getting up to speed in hopes his play with the Ice over the coming weeks will help solidify his position.

“I have to work hard, play every game hard, show myself,” Valiev added.

After missing the first 12 games of the year due to a lower-body injury, the native of Nizh-nekamsk has impressed since his return to the Kootenay Ice lineup. With two goals and eight points in seven games, Valiev has helped steady both the transition game and power play for the Kootenay Ice.

“It was a little bit tough for me,” Valiev said of the pace at the Super Series. “The speed was really high. I just started playing [after recovering from injury] so it was a little bit tough to get going, but I’m happy to win two games.”

Valiev suited up for Team Russia in both games against Team WHL, registering zero points and a minus-1 rating.

Team Canada’s se-lection camp roster for the 2015 edition of the annual junior champi-onship is expected to be announced in early De-cember.

Toronto and Montre-al play host to the 2015 IIHF World Junior Championship.

A Canadian holiday tradition, the tourna-ment fires up Dec. 26, when Team Russia opens the tournament against Denmark while Team Canada faces off against Slovakia.

Cranbrook plays host to Bantam aa hockey tourney this weekendFor The Townsman

Cranbrook Bantam AA hockey is in action at Memorial Arena and Western Financial Place this weekend.

The Cranbrook Ban-tam CPC AA Hornets will be hosting tourna-ment festivities, wel-coming the Medicine Hat AA Venom, Red Deer AA Steele Kings, Spokane AA Chiefs, Cal-gary AA Royals (Blue), Calgary AA Northstar Canucks, Lloydminster AA Blazers and Leduc AA Roughnecks.

Volunteers from the AA Hornets will be set up with a raffle table at

Memorial Arena, hop-ing to raise funds in sup-port of hosting the B.C. Provincial Bantam AA Tournament in March 2015. There are plenty of great prizes to be won through the raffle.

Come out and sup-port your young, local hockey talent.

Schedule:Friday, Nov. 14:Cranbrook vs. Cal-

gary Royals (Memorial Arena, 1:15 p.m.)

Calgary Northstar Canucks vs. Medicine Hat (Western Financial Place, 4:15 p.m.)

Leduc vs. Spokane (Memorial, 5:45 p.m.)

Red Deer vs. Lloyd-minster (Memorial, 8 p.m.)

Saturday, Nov. 15Medicine Hat vs. Red

Deer (WFP, 8:45 a.m.)Lloydminster vs. Cal-

gary Northstars (Memo-rial, 9:15 a.m.)

Spokane vs. Cran-brook (Memoriala, 11:30 a.m.)

Leduc vs. Calgary Royals (WFP, 12:15 p.m.)

Lloydminster vs. Medicine Hat (Memori-al, 1:45 p.m.)

Calgary Northstars vs. Red Deer (WFP, 2:45 p.m.)

Leduc vs. Cranbrook (Memorial, 4 p.m.)

Calgary Royals vs. Spokane (WFP, 5 p.m.)

Sunday, Nov. 16Playoff 1: 1st Pool A

vs. 2nd Pool B (Memori-al, 7 a.m.)

Playoff 2: 1st Pool B vs. 2nd Pool A (WFP, 7:45 a.m.)

Consolation: 3rd Pool A vs. 3rd Pool B (Memorial, 9:15 a.m.)

Consolation: 4th Pool A vs. 4th Pool B (WFP, 10 a.m.)

Loser Playoff 1 vs. Loser Playoff 2 (Memo-rial, 11:30 a.m.)

Winner Playoff 1 vs. Winner Playoff 2 (WFP, 12:15 p.m.)

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Sens’ gM Murray diagnosed with Stage 4 colon cancerc anadian PressOttawa Senators

general manager Bryan Murray revealed that he has Stage 4 cancer in an interview on TSN that aired Thursday night.

Murray had said that he had cancer in a state-ment on July 7, but the severity of his illness was not made public at that time. The statement is-

sued through the Sena-tors said he would begin treatment immediately.

“There is no cure at this point for me,” Mur-ray told TSN on Thurs-day. “The word is that we’ll keep doing chemo and hopefully reduce the tumours and the ef-fect and I’ll get some time out of that.”

Murray said he was

diagnosed on June 23, though doctors believe he has been living with the disease for years.

“The doctor told me very matter of factly that I had cancer. I had colon cancer within my liver and I had some in my lung. That it was very serious and that I had to get into treatment right away,” said Murray.

Page 16: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

PAGE 16 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2014

TV GUIDEDAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

Sunday Morning/Afternoon November 16 Cbk. Kim. 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:30 12:0012:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30# # KSPS-PBS Rogers Word Super Space Georg Cat in Sci Impact Inside Olympia Moy Focus Health Matt. Shelter Me Northern Rail$ $ CFCN Marilyn Denis Chil etalk Question Op. Celeb NFL Football Cash The Social% % KXLY-ABC Paid Paid Good Morning This Week Res Wild Out Ex Sub-D Derm Paid Space Made Holly Bskball Hour& & KREM-CBS Paid Paid CBS News Sunday Nation NFL NFL Football NFL NFL Courage_ _ KHQ-NBC Today News Invest Meet the Press Larry No Paid Auto Racing Spartan Race Figure Skating From Moscow.( ( TSN Sports Re SportsCentre SportsCentre CFL Pregame CFL Football CFL CFL Football) ) NET Sportsnet Sportsnet Sports (:45) Soccer Mis Soccer NHL Classics+ + GLOBAL BC In a World Sunday Morning News Block Con Osteen Skin News Hour Ice Pilots NWT Simp Simp, , KNOW Ceorge Rob Kate Upside PAW Georg Dino Arthur Wild Little Little Anne. Ani Ani Waterfront Park Our ` ` CBUT Super Poko News Art Cor Cor Cor Cor Cor Market Our Vancouver Land One/ Smartest Figure Skating1 M CICT Weekend Morning News Block Con Osteen Paid 16x9 Ice Pilots Simp Simp Simp Three3 O CIVT Sunday Morning News Block Con Osteen Paid 16x9 Simp Simp Simp Three Weeks4 6 YTV Side Kid Squir Pet Pet Nicky Sam & Henry Max Haunt Haunt Thun Thun 4Count Under. Chuck Alpha-Omega6 . KAYU-FOX Paid Bod Wild David Fox News Sun. NFL Sunday NFL Football (:25) NFL Football7 / CNN State/Union Fareed Zakaria Rel’ble Source State/Union Fareed Zakaria Newsroom Newsroom Newsroom Newsroom8 0 SPIKE Off Engine Truck Muscle 2 Fast 2 Furious (:31) Mission: Impossible III Res Bar Rescue9 1 HGTV Income Prop. Income Prop. Income Prop. Holmes Makes House Hunters Hunt Hunt Bryan Bryan Res Res Income Prop.: 2 A&E Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Godfather-Pitt. Growing-Gotti The Firm Dogs of War< 4 CMT Top 20 CMT Music CMT Music Tori Me Gags Gags Ship Ship Ship Ship Deal Deal Gags Gags= 5 W Buying-Selling Property Bro Will Will Will Will Will Will He’s Just Not That Into You Love It-List It? 9 SHOW Paid Paid Haven Deck the Halls How the Grinch The Polar Express How Grinch@ : DISC Mighty Ships Highway Thru Cold Water Game Stones Licence to Fast N’ Loud Worst Driver River Monsters MythBustersA ; SLICE Million Dollar Million LA Su Su Su Su Friend Friend Friend Friend Friend HitchB < TLC Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Gypsy Gypsy Gypsy Gypsy GypsyC = BRAVO Twice/Lifetime Flashpoint Missing Castle Forever Cheaper by the Dozen Cheaper by the Dozen 2D > EA2 How (:35) Loser (:15) The Breakfast Club (10:55) Overboard (12:50) Richie Rich Dudley DoRght AmerE ? TOON Matt Alien Loone Johnny Spies! Day Shark Tale Dolphin Tale Happy Feet TwoF @ FAM Win Slug Wiz Gravity ANT Good Austin I Didn’t Dog Jessie Liv- Girl High School Musical Gravity Phi The 7DG A WPCH K. Ur Paid Payne Atl. Office Paid Tangled Shark Tale EnvyH B COM Just/Laughs Cash Cash Match Match Just/Laughs Sein Sein Theory Theory Patton Oswalt: Cash Cash Match MatchI C TCM China Seas Song of the Thin Man Oliver! (:45) A Star Is BornK E OUT Dirt Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Dynamo: Mag. Dynamo: Mag. Dynamo: Mag. Dynamo: Mag. Dynamo: Mag. Dynamo: Mag.L F HIST Truckers Paid Bald Paid Paid Paid Paid Pawn Pawn Amer. Pickers Cnt. Cnt. The Curse of The Curse ofM G SPACE Panic Button Mind Games Z Nation Carriers (:45) The Darkest Hour House at EndN H AMC Missing in Action 2 The Core The School of Rock Fast & FuriousO I FS1 NFL Fntsy NASCAR NFL Kickoff NASCAR RaceDay Pre Soccer MLB BasP J DTOUR Fishful Paid Border Border Border Border Border Border Border Border Border Border Extreme RVs Ghost Adv. The Dead FilesW W MC1 Fir The Conspiracy (8:55) R.I.P.D. (:35) Pacific Rim Walking-Dino. (:20) Escape Plan¨ ¨ KTLA KTLA News KTLA 5 Morning News at 7 In Touch Cooker Paid K. Ur Paid Anti- Larry Flip AAA SAF3≠ ≠ WGN-A Heat of Night Heat of Night Heat of Night Heat of Night Heat of Night Heat of Night Heat of Night Heat of Night Heat of NightØ Ø EA1 Nur (:35) Michael Clayton (:35) The Client (:40) Erin Brockovich (1:55) Insomnia∂ ∂ VISN Creflo Peter Cope Facts Islam Hour of Power Con Living Truth Faith Food Study ICEJ Peter David Arise Tom 102 102 MM VideoFlow Prince Prince Prince Men- Just Friends Prince Prince Prince Men- Just Friends 105 105 SRC Book Waf Arthur Boule Ga Gar Anne Oniva Jour/Seigneur Les Coulisses TJ Semaine verte Regard Enquête

Sunday Afternoon/Evening November 16 Cbk. Kim. 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:30 12:0012:30# # KSPS-PBS Finding-Roots Lark Rise Lark Rise The Midwife Masterpiece Masterpiece Contemporary Poirot Profile$ $ CFCN Gas Santa Parade News--Calgary Theory Theory CSI: Cri. Scene Once Upon a Time News News (12:05) Castle% % KXLY-ABC World of X Entertainment News ABC News Estate Funny Videos Once Upon a Time (:01) Revenge KXLY V’Impe& & KREM-CBS Paid Paid Back Edition News News News 60 Minutes Madam Sec The Good Wife CSI: Cri. Scene News Family_ _ KHQ-NBC Poppy Noodle Football Night/America (:20) NFL Football Mark TMZ Blue Bloods News Pain ( ( TSN (2:30) CFL Football Sports (:15) NFL Football SportsCentre Sports SportsCentre SportsCentre) ) NET Sportsnet NBA Basketball Mis Sportsnet NHL Classics Euro Poker Sportsnet UEFA Euro+ + GLOBAL BC Simp Three Weeks, Three Kids News News Hour Mula Secu Madam Sec The Good Wife Simp Family News Block, , KNOW Hope-Wildlife Victorian Farm The Quest for Architects Wild Prairie Monarch/Glen Hinterland Secrets of the` ` CBUT Figure Skating Speed Skating The Little Mermaid Heartland Smartest Janet King The National News fifth 1 M CICT Three Weeks News News Hour Mula Simp Family Secu Madam Sec The Good Wife News Block Paid Paid3 O CIVT Three Weeks News News Hour Mula Simp Family Secu Madam Sec The Good Wife News Block Paid Paid4 6 YTV Alpha (:45) Happy Feet Happy Feet Two Under. 4Count Max Young Boys Haunt Haunt6 . KAYU-FOX (2:25) NFL Football OT Bod. Livin’ Mod Simp Two Mike Simp Brook Family Burg News Bones Anger7 / CNN Newsroom Special Report Anthony Anthony This Is Life This Is Life Anthony This Is Life CNNI8 0 SPIKE Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Contractor Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Contractor Bar Rescue9 1 HGTV Holmes Makes Tackle Tackle Hunt Hunt Alaska Alaska Jennie Jennie Holmes Makes Alaska Alaska Jennie Jennie House Hunters: 2 A&E Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Dogs of War Godfather-Pitt. Duck Duck Duck Duck Dogs of War< 4 CMT I Love You, Beth Cooper Videos Billy Billy Ship Ship Ship Ship Billy Billy Ship Ship Ship Ship= 5 W Love It-List It What to Expect When Prop Property Bro Love It Larry Crowne Pres? 9 SHOW How Grinch Rookie Blue Paper Angels Satisfaction Haven NCIS Satisfaction How Grinch@ : DISC Cash Cash Mighty Cruise River Monsters River Monsters Last Frontier MythBusters River Monsters River Monsters Last FrontierA ; SLICE See No Evil Fatal Vows Ex- Ex- Housewives Man Man Ex- Ex- Housewives Man Man Friend FriendB < TLC Gypsy Gypsy 90 Day Fiance 90 Day Fiance My Five Wives 90 Day Fiance My Five Wives 90 Day Fiance GypsyC = BRAVO Northpole Angels and Ornaments City of Angels (:20) Addicted to Love AngelsD > EA2 (3:45) American Graffiti (:40) Loser The Breakfast Club Overboard GreedyE ? TOON Happy Feet 2 Ever After High Spies! Rocket Johnny Dr. Di Camp Drama Drag Stoked Fugget Ftur Awe Family Amer. FuggetF @ FAM Good Next ANT Dog Jessie Austin Good Liv- Girl Austin Dead Dead Next Win Jessie Good Wiz DerekG A WPCH Theory Theory Theory Theory Mod Mod Collateral The Closer The Closer The Spy Next DoorH B COM Sein Sein Theory Theory Patton Oswalt: Just/Laughs Match Match Theory Theory JFL Just/Laughs Comedy Now!I C TCM Show Boat Sweet Charity (:45) The Yellow Rolls-Royce Dr. Jack I VitelloniK E OUT Liqui Liqui Liqui Stor Mantracker Liqui Stor Liqui Liqui Mantracker Ghost Hunters Ghost Hunters Dog and BethL F HIST The Curse of Cnt. Cnt. Pawn Pawn Amer Amer Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Mountain Men The Curse of TruckersM G SPACE House at End Mind Games The Darkest Hour Boogeyman Dinocroc vs. SupergatorN H AMC Fast & Furious Walking Dead Walking Dead Walking Dead Talking Dead Walking Dead Comic Walking Dead Talking Dead ComicO I FS1 College Basketball NAS UFC UFC Unleash Ultimate Fight FOX Sports FOX Sports FOX Sports FOX SportsP J DTOUR Treasures Treasures Museum Se Mysteries at Secrets- Lege. Museum Se Mysteries at Secrets- Lege. Extreme RVsW W MC1 Es Everything or Nothing Red 2 Transporter Transporter The Affair Rogue Dono The ¨ ¨ KTLA Cos Family Bringing Down the House News News Celeb Celeb Friend Friend 5 News News at 10 News Ben≠ ≠ WGN-A Heat of Night Heat of Night Batman Bones Bones Mother Mother Mother Mother Mad...Ø Ø EA1 (3:55) Michael Clayton (5:55) The Client Miami Vice (:15) Runaway Bad Boys II∂ ∂ VISN Be Hope Discov. V’Impe Jere Facts Lead Meyer Osteen Prince Study Popoff Israel Armor V’Impe Tom Super Tribal 102 102 MM VideoFlow VideoFlow VideoFlow MuchCountdown Just Friends Gar Men- Bunk Bunk 105 105 SRC Les Muppets Air de famille TJ C.- Découverte Lafl Tout le monde en parle TJ Precious Jones

Sunday Morning/Afternoon November 16 Cbk. Kim. 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:30 12:0012:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30# # KSPS-PBS Rogers Word Super Space Georg Cat in Sci Impact Inside Olympia Moy Focus Health Matt. Shelter Me Northern Rail$ $ CFCN Marilyn Denis Chil etalk Question Op. Celeb NFL Football Cash The Social% % KXLY-ABC Paid Paid Good Morning This Week Res Wild Out Ex Sub-D Derm Paid Space Made Holly Bskball Hour& & KREM-CBS Paid Paid CBS News Sunday Nation NFL NFL Football NFL NFL Courage_ _ KHQ-NBC Today News Invest Meet the Press Larry No Paid Auto Racing Spartan Race Figure Skating From Moscow.( ( TSN Sports Re SportsCentre SportsCentre CFL Pregame CFL Football CFL CFL Football) ) NET Sportsnet Sportsnet Sports (:45) Soccer Mis Soccer NHL Classics+ + GLOBAL BC In a World Sunday Morning News Block Con Osteen Skin News Hour Ice Pilots NWT Simp Simp, , KNOW Ceorge Rob Kate Upside PAW Georg Dino Arthur Wild Little Little Anne. Ani Ani Waterfront Park Our ` ` CBUT Super Poko News Art Cor Cor Cor Cor Cor Market Our Vancouver Land One/ Smartest Figure Skating1 M CICT Weekend Morning News Block Con Osteen Paid 16x9 Ice Pilots Simp Simp Simp Three3 O CIVT Sunday Morning News Block Con Osteen Paid 16x9 Simp Simp Simp Three Weeks4 6 YTV Side Kid Squir Pet Pet Nicky Sam & Henry Max Haunt Haunt Thun Thun 4Count Under. Chuck Alpha-Omega6 . KAYU-FOX Paid Bod Wild David Fox News Sun. NFL Sunday NFL Football (:25) NFL Football7 / CNN State/Union Fareed Zakaria Rel’ble Source State/Union Fareed Zakaria Newsroom Newsroom Newsroom Newsroom8 0 SPIKE Off Engine Truck Muscle 2 Fast 2 Furious (:31) Mission: Impossible III Res Bar Rescue9 1 HGTV Income Prop. Income Prop. Income Prop. Holmes Makes House Hunters Hunt Hunt Bryan Bryan Res Res Income Prop.: 2 A&E Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Godfather-Pitt. Growing-Gotti The Firm Dogs of War< 4 CMT Top 20 CMT Music CMT Music Tori Me Gags Gags Ship Ship Ship Ship Deal Deal Gags Gags= 5 W Buying-Selling Property Bro Will Will Will Will Will Will He’s Just Not That Into You Love It-List It? 9 SHOW Paid Paid Haven Deck the Halls How the Grinch The Polar Express How Grinch@ : DISC Mighty Ships Highway Thru Cold Water Game Stones Licence to Fast N’ Loud Worst Driver River Monsters MythBustersA ; SLICE Million Dollar Million LA Su Su Su Su Friend Friend Friend Friend Friend HitchB < TLC Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Gypsy Gypsy Gypsy Gypsy GypsyC = BRAVO Twice/Lifetime Flashpoint Missing Castle Forever Cheaper by the Dozen Cheaper by the Dozen 2D > EA2 How (:35) Loser (:15) The Breakfast Club (10:55) Overboard (12:50) Richie Rich Dudley DoRght AmerE ? TOON Matt Alien Loone Johnny Spies! Day Shark Tale Dolphin Tale Happy Feet TwoF @ FAM Win Slug Wiz Gravity ANT Good Austin I Didn’t Dog Jessie Liv- Girl High School Musical Gravity Phi The 7DG A WPCH K. Ur Paid Payne Atl. Office Paid Tangled Shark Tale EnvyH B COM Just/Laughs Cash Cash Match Match Just/Laughs Sein Sein Theory Theory Patton Oswalt: Cash Cash Match MatchI C TCM China Seas Song of the Thin Man Oliver! (:45) A Star Is BornK E OUT Dirt Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Dynamo: Mag. Dynamo: Mag. Dynamo: Mag. Dynamo: Mag. Dynamo: Mag. Dynamo: Mag.L F HIST Truckers Paid Bald Paid Paid Paid Paid Pawn Pawn Amer. Pickers Cnt. Cnt. The Curse of The Curse ofM G SPACE Panic Button Mind Games Z Nation Carriers (:45) The Darkest Hour House at EndN H AMC Missing in Action 2 The Core The School of Rock Fast & FuriousO I FS1 NFL Fntsy NASCAR NFL Kickoff NASCAR RaceDay Pre Soccer MLB BasP J DTOUR Fishful Paid Border Border Border Border Border Border Border Border Border Border Extreme RVs Ghost Adv. The Dead FilesW W MC1 Fir The Conspiracy (8:55) R.I.P.D. (:35) Pacific Rim Walking-Dino. (:20) Escape Plan¨ ¨ KTLA KTLA News KTLA 5 Morning News at 7 In Touch Cooker Paid K. Ur Paid Anti- Larry Flip AAA SAF3≠ ≠ WGN-A Heat of Night Heat of Night Heat of Night Heat of Night Heat of Night Heat of Night Heat of Night Heat of Night Heat of NightØ Ø EA1 Nur (:35) Michael Clayton (:35) The Client (:40) Erin Brockovich (1:55) Insomnia∂ ∂ VISN Creflo Peter Cope Facts Islam Hour of Power Con Living Truth Faith Food Study ICEJ Peter David Arise Tom 102 102 MM VideoFlow Prince Prince Prince Men- Just Friends Prince Prince Prince Men- Just Friends 105 105 SRC Book Waf Arthur Boule Ga Gar Anne Oniva Jour/Seigneur Les Coulisses TJ Semaine verte Regard Enquête

Sunday Afternoon/Evening November 16 Cbk. Kim. 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:30 12:0012:30# # KSPS-PBS Finding-Roots Lark Rise Lark Rise The Midwife Masterpiece Masterpiece Contemporary Poirot Profile$ $ CFCN Gas Santa Parade News--Calgary Theory Theory CSI: Cri. Scene Once Upon a Time News News (12:05) Castle% % KXLY-ABC World of X Entertainment News ABC News Estate Funny Videos Once Upon a Time (:01) Revenge KXLY V’Impe& & KREM-CBS Paid Paid Back Edition News News News 60 Minutes Madam Sec The Good Wife CSI: Cri. Scene News Family_ _ KHQ-NBC Poppy Noodle Football Night/America (:20) NFL Football Mark TMZ Blue Bloods News Pain ( ( TSN (2:30) CFL Football Sports (:15) NFL Football SportsCentre Sports SportsCentre SportsCentre) ) NET Sportsnet NBA Basketball Mis Sportsnet NHL Classics Euro Poker Sportsnet UEFA Euro+ + GLOBAL BC Simp Three Weeks, Three Kids News News Hour Mula Secu Madam Sec The Good Wife Simp Family News Block, , KNOW Hope-Wildlife Victorian Farm The Quest for Architects Wild Prairie Monarch/Glen Hinterland Secrets of the` ` CBUT Figure Skating Speed Skating The Little Mermaid Heartland Smartest Janet King The National News fifth 1 M CICT Three Weeks News News Hour Mula Simp Family Secu Madam Sec The Good Wife News Block Paid Paid3 O CIVT Three Weeks News News Hour Mula Simp Family Secu Madam Sec The Good Wife News Block Paid Paid4 6 YTV Alpha (:45) Happy Feet Happy Feet Two Under. 4Count Max Young Boys Haunt Haunt6 . KAYU-FOX (2:25) NFL Football OT Bod. Livin’ Mod Simp Two Mike Simp Brook Family Burg News Bones Anger7 / CNN Newsroom Special Report Anthony Anthony This Is Life This Is Life Anthony This Is Life CNNI8 0 SPIKE Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Contractor Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Contractor Bar Rescue9 1 HGTV Holmes Makes Tackle Tackle Hunt Hunt Alaska Alaska Jennie Jennie Holmes Makes Alaska Alaska Jennie Jennie House Hunters: 2 A&E Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Dogs of War Godfather-Pitt. Duck Duck Duck Duck Dogs of War< 4 CMT I Love You, Beth Cooper Videos Billy Billy Ship Ship Ship Ship Billy Billy Ship Ship Ship Ship= 5 W Love It-List It What to Expect When Prop Property Bro Love It Larry Crowne Pres? 9 SHOW How Grinch Rookie Blue Paper Angels Satisfaction Haven NCIS Satisfaction How Grinch@ : DISC Cash Cash Mighty Cruise River Monsters River Monsters Last Frontier MythBusters River Monsters River Monsters Last FrontierA ; SLICE See No Evil Fatal Vows Ex- Ex- Housewives Man Man Ex- Ex- Housewives Man Man Friend FriendB < TLC Gypsy Gypsy 90 Day Fiance 90 Day Fiance My Five Wives 90 Day Fiance My Five Wives 90 Day Fiance GypsyC = BRAVO Northpole Angels and Ornaments City of Angels (:20) Addicted to Love AngelsD > EA2 (3:45) American Graffiti (:40) Loser The Breakfast Club Overboard GreedyE ? TOON Happy Feet 2 Ever After High Spies! Rocket Johnny Dr. Di Camp Drama Drag Stoked Fugget Ftur Awe Family Amer. FuggetF @ FAM Good Next ANT Dog Jessie Austin Good Liv- Girl Austin Dead Dead Next Win Jessie Good Wiz DerekG A WPCH Theory Theory Theory Theory Mod Mod Collateral The Closer The Closer The Spy Next DoorH B COM Sein Sein Theory Theory Patton Oswalt: Just/Laughs Match Match Theory Theory JFL Just/Laughs Comedy Now!I C TCM Show Boat Sweet Charity (:45) The Yellow Rolls-Royce Dr. Jack I VitelloniK E OUT Liqui Liqui Liqui Stor Mantracker Liqui Stor Liqui Liqui Mantracker Ghost Hunters Ghost Hunters Dog and BethL F HIST The Curse of Cnt. Cnt. Pawn Pawn Amer Amer Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Mountain Men The Curse of TruckersM G SPACE House at End Mind Games The Darkest Hour Boogeyman Dinocroc vs. SupergatorN H AMC Fast & Furious Walking Dead Walking Dead Walking Dead Talking Dead Walking Dead Comic Walking Dead Talking Dead ComicO I FS1 College Basketball NAS UFC UFC Unleash Ultimate Fight FOX Sports FOX Sports FOX Sports FOX SportsP J DTOUR Treasures Treasures Museum Se Mysteries at Secrets- Lege. Museum Se Mysteries at Secrets- Lege. Extreme RVsW W MC1 Es Everything or Nothing Red 2 Transporter Transporter The Affair Rogue Dono The ¨ ¨ KTLA Cos Family Bringing Down the House News News Celeb Celeb Friend Friend 5 News News at 10 News Ben≠ ≠ WGN-A Heat of Night Heat of Night Batman Bones Bones Mother Mother Mother Mother Mad...Ø Ø EA1 (3:55) Michael Clayton (5:55) The Client Miami Vice (:15) Runaway Bad Boys II∂ ∂ VISN Be Hope Discov. V’Impe Jere Facts Lead Meyer Osteen Prince Study Popoff Israel Armor V’Impe Tom Super Tribal 102 102 MM VideoFlow VideoFlow VideoFlow MuchCountdown Just Friends Gar Men- Bunk Bunk 105 105 SRC Les Muppets Air de famille TJ C.- Découverte Lafl Tout le monde en parle TJ Precious Jones

Saturday Morning/Afternoon November 15 Cbk. Kim. 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:30 12:0012:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30# # KSPS-PBS Amer Fly Motor Gree Wood Rough Home Old House Kitche Jazzy Cook Cook’s Gar Antiques How We Got$ $ CFCN (6:00) Juicebox A.M. Weekend Marilyn Denis Sick Kids Written Living SportsCentre Gas Gas Junk Raiders Cash Cash % % KXLY-ABC Paid Paid Good Morning Hanna Ocean College Football Foot College Football& & KREM-CBS This Morning Lucky Dr. Inno Recipe All In Chan Lucas Oil Off Open Season Foot College Football_ _ KHQ-NBC (6:30) Today News Noodle Paid Triathlon Pre College Football( ( TSN SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre College Football Sports Pre- NASCAR Racing) ) NET Sportsnet Sportsnet Sports (:45) Soccer Mis Soccer NHL Classics+ + GLOBAL BC Ances Fishful Saturday Morning News Fish’n Fishing Boat Driving News Hour Simp Simp Simp Dark , , KNOW Ceorge Rob Kate Dino PAW Georg Magic Doki Wild Wild Maker Martha Dogs Dogs Hope-Wildlife Bagpipes` ` CBUT News Poko Mon Busy Animal Super Our Vancouver Absolutely Gymnastics Figure Skating From Moscow. Speed Skating1 M CICT Weekend Morning News Fish’n Fishing Boat Driving Trashopolis Simp Simp Simp The Dark Knight3 O CIVT Saturday Morning News Fish’n Fishing Boat Driving Trashopolis Simp Simp Simp The Dark Knight4 6 YTV Side Kid Squir Nerds Chuck Spong Spong Par Rab Bread Turtles Sanjay Journey 2-Mysterious Isl. Nim’s Island6 . KAYU-FOX Stop Butt 21 Day Pain Bod No Paid Paid Paid Butter Kds Derm Pre College Football7 / CNN Smerconish CNN Newsroom Newsroom CNN Newsroom Gupta Newsroom8 0 SPIKE Auc Auc Auc Auc Auc (:32) 2 Fast 2 Furious Cops Cops Cops Jail Cops Cops Cops Cops9 1 HGTV You Live-What You Live-What You Live-What House House House House Hunt Hunt Beach Beach Hawaii Hawaii Rehab Rehab: 2 A&E Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Dogs of War The Recruit XXX< 4 CMT Number 1s CMT Music CMT Music Top 20 Countdown The Notebook LeAnn LeAnn= 5 W Love It Love It-List It Will Will Will Will Will Will The Adjustment Bureau Pressure Cook. Critic? 9 SHOW Paid Paid Lost Girl Goodnight for Justice Mrs Mrs Brown’s Mrs Mrs Brown’s Mrs Mrs Brown’s Mrs @ : DISC Highway Thru Dangerous Mayday Bering Gold Mayday The Challenger Worst Driver Highway ThruA ; SLICE True Crime See No Evil Fatal Vows Vanderpump Housewives Man Man Ladies-London Matchmaker MatchmakerB < TLC Lottery Lottery Lottery-Life Lottery-Life Lottery-Life Biggest Biggest Biggest BiggestC = BRAVO Twice/Lifetime Flashpoint Missing Criminal Minds The Fugitive Garage Sale MysteryD > EA2 White (:45) Frost/Nixon Cops and Robbersons (:25) Breach (:15) State of Play KinE ? TOON Matt Alien Loone Leg Tom/ Adven Annoy Drag The Nutty Professor Po Power Yu-Gi- Res Bey TeenF @ FAM Win Slug Wiz Gravity ANT Good Austin I Didn’t Dog Jessie Liv- Girl Pants on Fire Gravity Phi RebelsG A WPCH On Coo P. Aff Atl. Office Paid My Best Friend’s Girl Anchorman: Legend of Ron Just Like HeavenH B COM Just/Laughs Cash Cash Match Match Just/Laughs Sein Sein Theory Theory JFL Cash Cash Match MatchI C TCM Days of Wine Carson Dr Gillespie (:15) Kismet (:15) A Hard Day’s Night PoltergeistK E OUT Can Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Dynamo: Mag. Dynamo: Mag. Dynamo: Mag. Dynamo: Mag. Dynamo: Mag. Dynamo: Mag.L F HIST Ice Pilots NWT Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Pawn Pawn Truckers Ice Pilots NWT Ancient Aliens Ancient AliensM G SPACE Atlantis Atlantis Atlantis Atlantis Atlantis Atlantis Atlantis Atlantis AtlantisN H AMC Support Your Local Sheriff! (:15) Rooster Cogburn (:45) The Shakiest Gun in the West Rio GrandeO I FS1 Countdown MLB NASCAR Racing NASCAR NASCAR Racing NAS College FootballP J DTOUR Live Paid Secu Secu Border Border Border Border Border Border Secu Secu Border Border Border Border Border BorderW W MC1 Dan (:40) Veronica Mars American Hustle (11:50) Bad Country (:35) Hours The Last Stand¨ ¨ KTLA KTLA News KTLA 5 Morning News at 7 Dog Dog Dr. Pol Dr. Pol B. Barr B. Barr Expe Expe Rock- Reluc Animal State≠ ≠ WGN-A Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue BloodsØ Ø EA1 (6:00) Clean Fil It Could Happn (:05) The Family Man (:15) Rachel Getting Married (:10) Georgia Rule∂ ∂ VISN Asian Inter Be Gur Watno Dur Punjab Mehak Pun Lamia Virasat Quran Peace Words Asian Sardari Tehlka Sardari 102 102 MM VideoFlow Servitude Get Him to the Greek Servitude Get Him to the Greek 105 105 SRC Mon Max, Arthur Schtro Animo Erky Spirou Magi Tintin Motel Oniva Épi TJ La fac Football universitaire

Saturday Afternoon/Evening November 15 Cbk. Kim. 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:30 12:0012:30# # KSPS-PBS Globe Trekker Steves Crafts Wine Wait... L. Welk Keep Time/ The Maltese Falcon Front Center Austin City$ $ CFCN Marilyn Denis The etalk News--Calgary W5 Theory Anger Saving Hope Criminal Minds News News Nat’l Treasure% % KXLY-ABC Football McCar KXLY College Football Insider Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End& & KREM-CBS Football Access H. News News News Johnny White Collar 48 Hours Criminal Minds 48 Hours News Closer_ _ KHQ-NBC Football Tree Lazy News KHQ News Million. The Good Wife Dateline NBC Sat. Night Live News SNL( ( TSN (2:30) NASCAR Racing Foot College Football Sports SportsCentre Sports SportsCentre) ) NET Sports Hocke NHL Hockey From the Bell Centre in Montreal. Sportsnet Euro Poker Game Mis Sportsnet UEFA Euro+ + GLOBAL BC (3:30) The Dark Knight News News Hour 16x9 The Perfect Neighbor Parenthood News SNL, , KNOW Waterfront Easter Island British Murder Hope-Wildlife Secrets of the Heartbeat A Touch of Frost Waterfront` ` CBUT Na Hocke NHL Hockey NHL Hockey Post News Doyle1 M CICT (2:30) The Dark Knight News News Hour 16x9 The Perfect Neighbor Parenthood News Saturday Night Live3 O CIVT (2:30) The Dark Knight News News Hour 16x9 The Perfect Neighbor Parenthood News Saturday Night Live4 6 YTV Nim’s Island Nicky Nicky Nicky Nicky 4Count Under. Funny Videos Gulliver’s Travels Young Boys Haunt Haunt6 . KAYU-FOX Football Extra College Football Con Theory Two Theory News Wante Animation Dom7 / CNN Smerconish News Spot Somebody’s Somebody’s This Is Life This Is Life Somebody’s This Is Life This Is Life8 0 SPIKE Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Bellator MMA: Tito Ortiz vs. Stephan Bonnar Cops Cops Jail Jail Jail Jail9 1 HGTV Jennie Jennie Bryan Bryan Hunt Hunt Income Prop. Bryan Bryan Tackle Tackle Beach Beach Hawaii Hawaii Hunt Hunt : 2 A&E Bounty Hunter Dog Dog Bounty Hunter Dog Dog Bounty Hunter Bounty Hunter Bounty Hunter Dog Dog Bounty Hunter< 4 CMT Gags Gags Deal Deal Reba Reba Wife Swap Wife Swap Reba Reba Wife Swap Wife Swap Reba Reba= 5 W Critic Baby Mama He’s Just Not That Into You What to Expect When Prop? 9 SHOW Mrs Brown’s Lost Girl Goodnight for Justice Very Harold & Kumar 3D Very Harold & Kumar 3D Deck the Halls@ : DISC How/ How/ How/ How/ Fast N’ Loud Worst Driver River Monsters Dude Worst Driver River Monsters Fast N’ LoudA ; SLICE Prin Prin Prin Prin Mob Wives Horrible Bosses Hitch Horrible BossesB < TLC Biggest Biggest Stories of ER Stories of ER Sex Sent Me Sex Sent Me Stories of ER Sex Sent Me Stories of ERC = BRAVO Garage Sale Mystery Northpole Castle Forever Myst-Laura The FugitiveD > EA2 Kindergarten Cop (:20) Frost/Nixon Cops and Robbersons Pure Luck (:40) See No Evil, Hear No Evil FaE ? TOON Camp Camp Camp Shark Tale Dolphin Tale Disaster Movie Fugget DatingF @ FAM Rebels Next ANT Dog Jessie Austin Good Liv- Girl Next I Didn’t ANT Next Win High School Musical 2G A WPCH 1st Box Com Com Middle Middle Invincible Family Family Sein Sein King King Nothing LikeH B COM Theory Theory JFL Sein Sein Just/Laughs Theory Theory JFL Just/Laughs Patton Oswalt: Comedy Now!I C TCM Soylent Green On the Waterfront Dead Ringer The Hanging Tree It’s a SmallK E OUT Liqui Liqui Stor Liqui Mantracker Stor Liqui Liqui Liqui Mantracker Ghost Hunters Ghost Hunters Dog and BethL F HIST Ancient Aliens Amer. Pickers Pawn Pawn Treasures Ice Pilots NWT Truckers GladiatorM G SPACE Atlantis Atlantis Atlantis Atlantis House at the End of the Street (:15) Sorority Row HalN H AMC Rio Big Jake Hell on Wheels Hell on Wheels The Fast and the Furious Hell on Wheels The O I FS1 Foot Foot UFC Prefight UFC 180: Prelims College Football FOX Sports SportsP J DTOUR Lost-- Lost-- Secu Secu Border Border Ghost Adv. The Dead Files Ghost Adv. Ghost Adv. The Dead Files The Dead FilesW W MC1 The Last Stand (:05) Iron Man 3 (:20) The LEGO Movie The LEGO Movie Incredible Burt Wonderstone Iron ¨ ¨ KTLA Coo On Three Kings News News Two Two Operat. Smile Two Two News at 10 News WWD≠ ≠ WGN-A Blue Bloods Parks Bulls NBA Basketball Rais Batman Rules Rules Mad...Ø Ø EA1 (:05) It Could Happen to You (5:50) The Family Man The River (:05) The River Wild Munich∂ ∂ VISN Punjab Pun Sanjha Punjab Mu Made Des-Pardes Aikam Taur Lashkara Waqt 4 Suc theZoomer 102 102 MM MuchCountdown Simp Simp Simp Simp Get Him to the Greek Chil Simp Simp Simp South South 105 105 SRC Football uni. Bean Sau Semaine verte TJ C.- Petite Univers Downton A. Dre Grey TJ Info Numéro quatre

Saturday Morning/Afternoon November 15 Cbk. Kim. 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:30 12:0012:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30# # KSPS-PBS Amer Fly Motor Gree Wood Rough Home Old House Kitche Jazzy Cook Cook’s Gar Antiques How We Got$ $ CFCN (6:00) Juicebox A.M. Weekend Marilyn Denis Sick Kids Written Living SportsCentre Gas Gas Junk Raiders Cash Cash % % KXLY-ABC Paid Paid Good Morning Hanna Ocean College Football Foot College Football& & KREM-CBS This Morning Lucky Dr. Inno Recipe All In Chan Lucas Oil Off Open Season Foot College Football_ _ KHQ-NBC (6:30) Today News Noodle Paid Triathlon Pre College Football( ( TSN SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre College Football Sports Pre- NASCAR Racing) ) NET Sportsnet Sportsnet Sports (:45) Soccer Mis Soccer NHL Classics+ + GLOBAL BC Ances Fishful Saturday Morning News Fish’n Fishing Boat Driving News Hour Simp Simp Simp Dark , , KNOW Ceorge Rob Kate Dino PAW Georg Magic Doki Wild Wild Maker Martha Dogs Dogs Hope-Wildlife Bagpipes` ` CBUT News Poko Mon Busy Animal Super Our Vancouver Absolutely Gymnastics Figure Skating From Moscow. Speed Skating1 M CICT Weekend Morning News Fish’n Fishing Boat Driving Trashopolis Simp Simp Simp The Dark Knight3 O CIVT Saturday Morning News Fish’n Fishing Boat Driving Trashopolis Simp Simp Simp The Dark Knight4 6 YTV Side Kid Squir Nerds Chuck Spong Spong Par Rab Bread Turtles Sanjay Journey 2-Mysterious Isl. Nim’s Island6 . KAYU-FOX Stop Butt 21 Day Pain Bod No Paid Paid Paid Butter Kds Derm Pre College Football7 / CNN Smerconish CNN Newsroom Newsroom CNN Newsroom Gupta Newsroom8 0 SPIKE Auc Auc Auc Auc Auc (:32) 2 Fast 2 Furious Cops Cops Cops Jail Cops Cops Cops Cops9 1 HGTV You Live-What You Live-What You Live-What House House House House Hunt Hunt Beach Beach Hawaii Hawaii Rehab Rehab: 2 A&E Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Dogs of War The Recruit XXX< 4 CMT Number 1s CMT Music CMT Music Top 20 Countdown The Notebook LeAnn LeAnn= 5 W Love It Love It-List It Will Will Will Will Will Will The Adjustment Bureau Pressure Cook. Critic? 9 SHOW Paid Paid Lost Girl Goodnight for Justice Mrs Mrs Brown’s Mrs Mrs Brown’s Mrs Mrs Brown’s Mrs @ : DISC Highway Thru Dangerous Mayday Bering Gold Mayday The Challenger Worst Driver Highway ThruA ; SLICE True Crime See No Evil Fatal Vows Vanderpump Housewives Man Man Ladies-London Matchmaker MatchmakerB < TLC Lottery Lottery Lottery-Life Lottery-Life Lottery-Life Biggest Biggest Biggest BiggestC = BRAVO Twice/Lifetime Flashpoint Missing Criminal Minds The Fugitive Garage Sale MysteryD > EA2 White (:45) Frost/Nixon Cops and Robbersons (:25) Breach (:15) State of Play KinE ? TOON Matt Alien Loone Leg Tom/ Adven Annoy Drag The Nutty Professor Po Power Yu-Gi- Res Bey TeenF @ FAM Win Slug Wiz Gravity ANT Good Austin I Didn’t Dog Jessie Liv- Girl Pants on Fire Gravity Phi RebelsG A WPCH On Coo P. Aff Atl. Office Paid My Best Friend’s Girl Anchorman: Legend of Ron Just Like HeavenH B COM Just/Laughs Cash Cash Match Match Just/Laughs Sein Sein Theory Theory JFL Cash Cash Match MatchI C TCM Days of Wine Carson Dr Gillespie (:15) Kismet (:15) A Hard Day’s Night PoltergeistK E OUT Can Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Dynamo: Mag. Dynamo: Mag. Dynamo: Mag. Dynamo: Mag. Dynamo: Mag. Dynamo: Mag.L F HIST Ice Pilots NWT Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Pawn Pawn Truckers Ice Pilots NWT Ancient Aliens Ancient AliensM G SPACE Atlantis Atlantis Atlantis Atlantis Atlantis Atlantis Atlantis Atlantis AtlantisN H AMC Support Your Local Sheriff! (:15) Rooster Cogburn (:45) The Shakiest Gun in the West Rio GrandeO I FS1 Countdown MLB NASCAR Racing NASCAR NASCAR Racing NAS College FootballP J DTOUR Live Paid Secu Secu Border Border Border Border Border Border Secu Secu Border Border Border Border Border BorderW W MC1 Dan (:40) Veronica Mars American Hustle (11:50) Bad Country (:35) Hours The Last Stand¨ ¨ KTLA KTLA News KTLA 5 Morning News at 7 Dog Dog Dr. Pol Dr. Pol B. Barr B. Barr Expe Expe Rock- Reluc Animal State≠ ≠ WGN-A Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue BloodsØ Ø EA1 (6:00) Clean Fil It Could Happn (:05) The Family Man (:15) Rachel Getting Married (:10) Georgia Rule∂ ∂ VISN Asian Inter Be Gur Watno Dur Punjab Mehak Pun Lamia Virasat Quran Peace Words Asian Sardari Tehlka Sardari 102 102 MM VideoFlow Servitude Get Him to the Greek Servitude Get Him to the Greek 105 105 SRC Mon Max, Arthur Schtro Animo Erky Spirou Magi Tintin Motel Oniva Épi TJ La fac Football universitaire

Saturday Afternoon/Evening November 15 Cbk. Kim. 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:30 12:0012:30# # KSPS-PBS Globe Trekker Steves Crafts Wine Wait... L. Welk Keep Time/ The Maltese Falcon Front Center Austin City$ $ CFCN Marilyn Denis The etalk News--Calgary W5 Theory Anger Saving Hope Criminal Minds News News Nat’l Treasure% % KXLY-ABC Football McCar KXLY College Football Insider Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End& & KREM-CBS Football Access H. News News News Johnny White Collar 48 Hours Criminal Minds 48 Hours News Closer_ _ KHQ-NBC Football Tree Lazy News KHQ News Million. The Good Wife Dateline NBC Sat. Night Live News SNL( ( TSN (2:30) NASCAR Racing Foot College Football Sports SportsCentre Sports SportsCentre) ) NET Sports Hocke NHL Hockey From the Bell Centre in Montreal. Sportsnet Euro Poker Game Mis Sportsnet UEFA Euro+ + GLOBAL BC (3:30) The Dark Knight News News Hour 16x9 The Perfect Neighbor Parenthood News SNL, , KNOW Waterfront Easter Island British Murder Hope-Wildlife Secrets of the Heartbeat A Touch of Frost Waterfront` ` CBUT Na Hocke NHL Hockey NHL Hockey Post News Doyle1 M CICT (2:30) The Dark Knight News News Hour 16x9 The Perfect Neighbor Parenthood News Saturday Night Live3 O CIVT (2:30) The Dark Knight News News Hour 16x9 The Perfect Neighbor Parenthood News Saturday Night Live4 6 YTV Nim’s Island Nicky Nicky Nicky Nicky 4Count Under. Funny Videos Gulliver’s Travels Young Boys Haunt Haunt6 . KAYU-FOX Football Extra College Football Con Theory Two Theory News Wante Animation Dom7 / CNN Smerconish News Spot Somebody’s Somebody’s This Is Life This Is Life Somebody’s This Is Life This Is Life8 0 SPIKE Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Bellator MMA: Tito Ortiz vs. Stephan Bonnar Cops Cops Jail Jail Jail Jail9 1 HGTV Jennie Jennie Bryan Bryan Hunt Hunt Income Prop. Bryan Bryan Tackle Tackle Beach Beach Hawaii Hawaii Hunt Hunt : 2 A&E Bounty Hunter Dog Dog Bounty Hunter Dog Dog Bounty Hunter Bounty Hunter Bounty Hunter Dog Dog Bounty Hunter< 4 CMT Gags Gags Deal Deal Reba Reba Wife Swap Wife Swap Reba Reba Wife Swap Wife Swap Reba Reba= 5 W Critic Baby Mama He’s Just Not That Into You What to Expect When Prop? 9 SHOW Mrs Brown’s Lost Girl Goodnight for Justice Very Harold & Kumar 3D Very Harold & Kumar 3D Deck the Halls@ : DISC How/ How/ How/ How/ Fast N’ Loud Worst Driver River Monsters Dude Worst Driver River Monsters Fast N’ LoudA ; SLICE Prin Prin Prin Prin Mob Wives Horrible Bosses Hitch Horrible BossesB < TLC Biggest Biggest Stories of ER Stories of ER Sex Sent Me Sex Sent Me Stories of ER Sex Sent Me Stories of ERC = BRAVO Garage Sale Mystery Northpole Castle Forever Myst-Laura The FugitiveD > EA2 Kindergarten Cop (:20) Frost/Nixon Cops and Robbersons Pure Luck (:40) See No Evil, Hear No Evil FaE ? TOON Camp Camp Camp Shark Tale Dolphin Tale Disaster Movie Fugget DatingF @ FAM Rebels Next ANT Dog Jessie Austin Good Liv- Girl Next I Didn’t ANT Next Win High School Musical 2G A WPCH 1st Box Com Com Middle Middle Invincible Family Family Sein Sein King King Nothing LikeH B COM Theory Theory JFL Sein Sein Just/Laughs Theory Theory JFL Just/Laughs Patton Oswalt: Comedy Now!I C TCM Soylent Green On the Waterfront Dead Ringer The Hanging Tree It’s a SmallK E OUT Liqui Liqui Stor Liqui Mantracker Stor Liqui Liqui Liqui Mantracker Ghost Hunters Ghost Hunters Dog and BethL F HIST Ancient Aliens Amer. Pickers Pawn Pawn Treasures Ice Pilots NWT Truckers GladiatorM G SPACE Atlantis Atlantis Atlantis Atlantis House at the End of the Street (:15) Sorority Row HalN H AMC Rio Big Jake Hell on Wheels Hell on Wheels The Fast and the Furious Hell on Wheels The O I FS1 Foot Foot UFC Prefight UFC 180: Prelims College Football FOX Sports SportsP J DTOUR Lost-- Lost-- Secu Secu Border Border Ghost Adv. The Dead Files Ghost Adv. Ghost Adv. The Dead Files The Dead FilesW W MC1 The Last Stand (:05) Iron Man 3 (:20) The LEGO Movie The LEGO Movie Incredible Burt Wonderstone Iron ¨ ¨ KTLA Coo On Three Kings News News Two Two Operat. Smile Two Two News at 10 News WWD≠ ≠ WGN-A Blue Bloods Parks Bulls NBA Basketball Rais Batman Rules Rules Mad...Ø Ø EA1 (:05) It Could Happen to You (5:50) The Family Man The River (:05) The River Wild Munich∂ ∂ VISN Punjab Pun Sanjha Punjab Mu Made Des-Pardes Aikam Taur Lashkara Waqt 4 Suc theZoomer 102 102 MM MuchCountdown Simp Simp Simp Simp Get Him to the Greek Chil Simp Simp Simp South South 105 105 SRC Football uni. Bean Sau Semaine verte TJ C.- Petite Univers Downton A. Dre Grey TJ Info Numéro quatre

Page 17: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

Friday, November 14, 2014 Page 17

Featuresdaily townsman / daily bulletin

Weekday Morning/Afternoon Cbk. Kim. 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:30 12:0012:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30# # KSPS-PBS Clifford Arthur Wild Wild Georg Georg Peg Tiger Sesame Street Dino Be Fit Charlie Rose Var. Programs Thom Se$ $ CFCN CTV Morning Live Calgary Marilyn Denis Live With Kelly The View News--Calgary The Social Dr. Oz Show Dr. Phil% % KXLY-ABC Morning NW Good Morning America Live With Kelly The View Paid Paid The Chew Gen. Hospital The Doctors& & KREM-CBS KREM 2 News CBS This Morning The 700 Club Price Is Right The Young News Bold The Talk Make a Deal_ _ KHQ-NBC News Today Hot Varied Programs Days of Lives TMZ Minute( ( TSN SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre Record Varied Hocke Varied SportsNation Hocke Varied) ) NET Sportsnet Sportsnet Sports Varied Sports Varied Sportsnet Hocke Varied Programs+ + GLOBAL BC Morning News Morn Hunt Rachael Ray Sugar Debt News Days of Lives The Talk, , KNOW Ceorge Rob Kate Wild PAW Georg Space As Ceorge PAW Jelly Dino PAW Kate As Dragon Dino Georg` ` CBUT CBC News You & Arthur Bo On/ Tiger Super Napkin Book Doodle Heartland CBC News Reci Ste Steven-Chris1 M CICT (6:00) Morning News Morn Hunt Rachael Ray Sugar Debt Noon News Days of Lives The Talk Meredith Vieira3 O CIVT (6:00) Morning News Morn Hunt Rachael Ray Sugar Debt Nn Nws Hour Days of Lives The Talk Meredith Vieira4 6 YTV Kid Almost Squir Chuck Spong Way Side Almost Splice Kid Monstr Almost Chuck Nerds Squir Rated Monstr Side6 . KAYU-FOX Cope Wom Var. Programs Office Varied Mother Varied Rais Varied Fam Fam Law & Order Law & Order Fam Fam7 / CNN CNN News CNN News At This Hour Legal View Wolf CNN News CNN News Jake Tapper Situation Room8 0 SPIKE Varied Programs Res Varied Programs Cops Cops9 1 HGTV Disas Disas Var. Programs Disas Bryan House Hunters Hunt Hunt Holmes/Home Varied Programs Holmes: 2 A&E Dog Varied Criminal Minds Criminal Minds CSI: Miami CSI: Miami Criminal Minds Criminal Minds The First 48 The First 48< 4 CMT Number 1s CMT Music CMT Music CMT Spotlight Wide Open CMT Social CMT Music CMT Music CMT Spotlight= 5 W Prop Colour Colour Cand Cand Love Property Bro Love It-List It Love It-List It Love It-List It Property Bro Movie? 9 SHOW Movie Movie Movie Musketeers Paradise NCIS@ : DISC Varied Programs Daily Planet Mayday Varied ProgramsA ; SLICE Debt Debt Prop Prop Prop Prop Varied Programs 48 Hours Myst. Matchmaker Varied ProgramsB < TLC Preg Preg Hoard-Buried Gypsy Four Weddings 19 19 19 Varied Couple Couple Say Say Var. ProgramsC = BRAVO The Listener Cold Squad Due South Criminal Minds Person-Interest Twice/Lifetime Cold Squad Flashpoint Criminal MindsD > EA2 Movie Varied Movie Movie Varied Programs (:35) Movie Var. Programs Movie Varied Programs MovieE ? TOON Matt Spies! Varied Gum Teen Rocket Jim Alien Spies! Ska Deten Johnny Rocket Camp Johnny Spies! Spiez Day F @ FAM Justin ANT Jessie Austin Dog Wiz Doc Henry Pirates Sofia Lala ANT Win, Wiz Wiz Good Phi ANT G A WPCH Com Com Law & Order Law & Order Million. Million. Divor. Divor. Judge Judge Hot Hot King King Middle MiddleH B COM Just/Laughs Red... Red... Match Match Gags Gags Just/Laughs Frasier Frasier Theory Theory Gas Match Match LaughI C TCM Movie Varied Programs Movie Varied Programs Movie Var. ProgramsK E OUT Descending Departures Stor Stor Mantracker Repo Repo Stor Stor Liqui Liqui Var. Programs Stor StorL F HIST Museum Se Pickers Var. Programs Yukon Gold Museum Se Pickers MASH MASH Var. Programs Pawn PawnM G SPACE Star Trek: Voy. Star Trek: Next Stargate SG-1 Stargate Atl. Scare Inner Stargate SG-1 Castle Star Trek: Next Star Trek: Voy.N H AMC Stoog Varied Programs Movie Varied Programs MovieO I FS1 Varied Programs College Basketball The Mike Francesa Show NASCAR HubP J DTOUR Gotta Eat St. Reno Urban Live Live The Dead Files Varied Programs Eat St. Gotta The Dead Files Var. ProgramsW W MC1 Movie Var. Programs Movie Var. Programs Movie Varied Programs¨ ¨ KTLA KTLA News KTLA 5 Morning News at 7 KTLA News Steve Wilkos Jerry Springer Maury News at 1pm Celeb Celeb≠ ≠ WGN-A Texas Ranger Texas Ranger Heat of Night Heat of Night News Law & Order Law & Order Blue Bloods Blue BloodsØ Ø EA1 Movie Movie Varied Programs (:25) Movie∂ ∂ VISN Robi Cope Meyer 700 Varied My Mass Varied Tribal Varied Wind at Back Heartland Marcus Welby Poirot 102 102 MM VideoFlow VideoFlow VideoFlow VideoFlow VideoFlow VideoFlow VideoFlow Jimmy Kimmel Tonight Show 105 105 SRC Robin Varied Schtro Toc Caillou Dany Quelle Varied Entrée prin Ric’do Union TJ Pour le plaisir Avonlea

Monday Afternoon/Evening November 17 Cbk. Kim. 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:30 12:0012:30# # KSPS-PBS Georg Cat in Word Wild News Busi PBS NewsHour The Steves Antiques Antiques Independent Charlie Rose$ $ CFCN Ellen Show News--Calgary News--Calgary etalk Theory (:01) Castle Gotham Forever News News Daily Mey% % KXLY-ABC Rachael Ray Queen Latifah News ABC News News Ent Insider Dancing With the Stars (:01) Castle KXLY Kim& & KREM-CBS Dr. Oz Show Dr. Phil News CBS News Inside Ac Broke Millers Scorpion NCIS: LA News Late _ _ KHQ-NBC Ellen Show Judge Judge News News News Million. J’pard Wheel The Voice State of Affairs News J. Fal( ( TSN Monday Night Countdown (:15) NFL Football SportsCentre Sports SportsCentre SportsCentre) ) NET Sportsnet Hockey From Kingston, Ont. Sports Sportsnet NHL Classics Mis NHL Sportsnet UEFA Euro+ + GLOBAL BC Meredith Vieira The Young News News News Hour Ent ET NCIS: LA Sleepy Hollow State of Affairs News, , KNOW Olly Jelly Kate Magic Jack Wild Architects Hope-Wildlife Stonehenge Marilyn Apocalypse Hope-Wildlife` ` CBUT Republic-Doyle Dragons’ Den CBC News CBC Cor Murdoch Myst. Murdoch Myst. Empire The National News Mercer1 M CICT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent State of Affairs NCIS: LA Sleepy Hollow News Hour Fi ET Doctor3 O CIVT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent State of Affairs NCIS: LA Sleepy Hollow News Hour ET Doctor4 6 YTV Way Chuck Spong Bread Par Spong Sam & Haunt Haunt Thun Funny Videos Wipeout Gags Boys Haunt Haunt6 . KAYU-FOX Steve Harvey Meredith Vieira Celeb Celeb Two Mod Theory Theory Gotham Sleepy Hollow News Mod Mike Mike7 / CNN Situation Room E. B. OutFront Anderson Cooper 360 CNN Tonight CNNI CNNI CNNI8 0 SPIKE (1:30) Gladiator Troy Gladiator Res9 1 HGTV Bryan Bryan Prop Prop Hunt Hunt House Hunters Bryan Bryan Hunt Hunt House Hunters Bryan Bryan House Hunters: 2 A&E The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 Godfather-Pitt. The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 Godfather-Pitt.< 4 CMT Cash, Cash, Gags Gags Best Best Funny Videos Funny Videos Funny Videos Funny Videos Funny Videos Funny Videos= 5 W Web of Lies Love It-List It Property Bro Love It Love It-List It Property Bro Property Bro Love It-List It Love It-List It? 9 SHOW NCIS Lost Girl The Christmas Switch A Fairytale Christmas NCIS Hawaii Five-0 NCIS@ : DISC How/ How/ Daily Planet How/ How/ River Monsters Worst Driver How/ How/ River Monsters Worst Driver How/ How/A ; SLICE Fatal Vows Handsome Money Money Million Dollar Million LA Handsome Friend Friend Million Dollar Million LAB < TLC 90 Day Fiance 90 Day Fiance 90 Day Fiance 90 Day Fiance 90 Day Fiance 90 Day Fiance 90 Day Fiance 90 Day Fiance 90 Day FianceC = BRAVO Person-Interest The Listener Blue Bloods Criminal Minds Kingdom The Listener Person-Interest Criminal Minds Blue BloodsD > EA2 The Buddy Holly Story (5:55) License to Wed Killer Hair The Pink Panther Weekend at Bernie’s II Who LoveE ? TOON Leg Po Drama Drama Drama Drama Adven Gum Johnny Camp Day Total Family Amer. Archer Robot Ftur FuggetF @ FAM ANT Good Phi Dog Austin Austin Liv- Jessie Jessie Gravity Rebels Par Dead Win Good Win, Wiz DerekG A WPCH Sein Mod Theory Theory Brown Payne Brown Payne Mod Sein Family Family Amer. Amer. Jeffer. Gimme Just MarriedH B COM Laugh Gas Frasier Frasier Theory Theory Match Match Just/Laughs Gags Gags Gas Simp Theory Theory Daily KimI C TCM (3:45) Something of Value The Last Command Sunrise (:45) The Rag Man Captain Jan Baby PeggyK E OUT Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Dog and BethL F HIST The Curse of Mountain Men MASH MASH Truckers The Curse of Mountain Men Restoration Cnt. Cnt. RestorationM G SPACE Inner Scare Castle Stargate SG-1 Z Nation Grimm Inner Scare Castle Star Trek: Voy. GrimmN H AMC (3:00) Van Helsing Fantastic Four: Silver Surfer Fantastic Four: Silver Surfer Déjà Vu GodO I FS1 Pregame College Basketball College Basketball FOX Sports FOX Sports FOX Sports FOX SportsP J DTOUR Reno Urban Ghost Adv. Live Live Reno Reno Urban Urban Buy Buy Border Border Holy Land Secrets- Lege.W W MC1 Snitch The World’s End (:20) No Clue Jim Rome, Sho Rogue Masters of Sex The Affair Transporter¨ ¨ KTLA Cunningham Steve Wilkos Maury News News Two Two The Originals Jane the Virgin KTLA 5 News News Friend≠ ≠ WGN-A Funny Videos Funny Videos Funny Videos Funny Videos Funny Videos Mother Mother Rules Rules Parks Parks Rais RaisØ Ø EA1 Game (:35) Arlington Road (:35) The Entrance Jakob the Liar (:05) RV (:45) Desperado∂ ∂ VISN Road-Avonlea Murder, She... Columbo theZoomer BruceCockburn Mes Mes Emile Un Popoff 102 102 MM VideoFlow MuchCountdown Simp Cleve Bang! Parks Com Simp At Conan Cleve Bang! Parks 105 105 SRC Castle Entrée prin Mange Union TJ C.-B. 30 vies Parent Auberge-chien Nouvelle adr Le Téléjournal TJ C.-B.

I was appalled and horri-fied this past week when I read a story that came out

of Fort Lauderdale. It ap-pears that 90–year–old homeless advocate Arnold Abbott and two South Flori-da ministers were accused of breaking a new ordinance passed by the city which se-verely restricts publicly feed-ing homeless people in Fort Lauderdale.

The city believes the sight of the homeless is affecting tourism, nearby businesses and tarnishing the city’s image. So they passed an or-dinance against feeding homeless people.

Abbott runs a nonprofit group called Love Thy Neigh-bour, Inc. He and his charity have fed the homeless at a beachfront location for over 20 years. The two ministers, Dwayne Black and Mark Sims, were working with Ab-bott as they handed out food to homeless people in a Fort

Lauderdale park. All three face up to 60 days in jail, and a $500 fine.

Abbott told a television re-porter, “One of the police of-ficers said, ‘Drop that plate right now,’ as if I were carry-ing a weapon. It’s man’s in-humanity to man is all it is.”

All three have said that they will continue to feed the homeless, both in local churches and in public areas. “I don’t do things to purpose-fully aggravate the situation,” said Abbott. “I’m trying to work with the city. Any human has the right to help his fellow man.”

The city’s mayor, Jack Seiler, explains that they have been trying to clean up a park which is adjacent to the city library which has become a haven for dozens of home-less people.

Fort Lauderdale isn’t alone in trying this kind of tactic. The National Coalition for the Homeless in the USA

reports that in the past two years, more than 30 cities have tried to introduce simi-lar laws. In addition to ban-ning public feeding, laws also ban people from leaving their belongings unattended and outlaw panhandling at medi-ans.

Abbott, and other advo-cates for the poor and the homeless, agree that there is a problem which needs to be addressed, but that legal steps like this simply don’t work. They have the effect of further victimizing the poor-est of the poor, who have nothing and who have no-where to go.

The situation is made worse in that many of the

homeless are military veter-ans whose lives have been shattered by their service to their nation in conflict zones around the world.

I am reminded of an ac-tion taken in Cranbrook by the Ministerial several years ago. There had been an out-cry about the number of homeless people on our streets. The homeless were being rousted from places they found to sleep at night.

In an effort both to under-stand the plight of those who are homeless, and to create a deeper awareness through-out our city, local ministers and pastors and church members stayed overnight in Rotary Park on an April night. I acknowledge that our effort was a tiny thing, but even so it was a humbling experience for all who took part in it.

When I hear stories like this, it makes me appreciate more deeply the profound responsibility and privilege

we have to elect people to serve us in government. In every election, we have an opportunity to shape the kind of community in which we wish to live.

Gandhi reminded us that “the true measure of any so-ciety can be found in how it treats its most vulnerable members.” Others have said similar things. In his last speech, Hubert Humphrey said that “the moral test of government is how that gov-ernment treats those who are in the dawn of life, the chil-dren; those who are in the twilight of life, the elderly; those who are in the shadows of life; the sick, the needy and the handicapped.”

The problems of home-lessness and economic in-equality are huge problems. There are no easy solutions. But the kind of attack shown in the passing of bylaws such as this shows a lack of com-passion for the most vulnera-

ble among us. They don’t even come close to address-ing the deep underlying is-sues of such a huge problem.

We have an opportunity this weekend to cast our vote. Our vote says what kind of city we wish to create in this place. For me, economic issues are important, but they are not the only import-ant issues. How we treat peo-ple, how we deal with those who have nothing, how we live together with compas-sion and grace are equally important issues in shaping the future of this city we all love.

The people whom we elect are called to serve us. They serve all of us, not just those with money and power and influence. This weekend, I will cast my vote for the ones I think will serve us best.

Yme Woensdregt is Pastor at Christ Church Anglican in

Cranbrook

Why I will vote this weekendRev. YmeWoensdregt

Practicarum quaes-tionum circa leges regias Hispaniae

(Practical Questions about the Laws of the King of Spain) is one of the older books residing in Harvard’s Law Li-brary, having been pub-lished in 1605. Although Harvard has over 200,000 items in its Law Library’s rare book room, this one is of par-ticular interest, due to an inscription found on the book’s last page:

“The bynding of this booke is all that re-mains of my dear friende Jonas Wright … it being one of poore Jonas chiefe posses-sions, together with ample of his skin to bynd it. Requiescat in pace.”

That’s right, this 400-year-old book of Spanish law was so dear to Jonas Wright, that his friend had it bound in Wright’s own skin. Gruesome, to say the least.

But is it true?A n t h r o p o d e r m i c

bibliopegy is the scien-tific name of binding books in human skin. While numerous books throughout history have been thought to have been bound this way, many academics thought (or at least hoped) this practice was a myth. Modern DNA evidence has re-cently proven that cer-

tain books are indeed covered in human epi-dermis. Yuk.

One is A True and Perfect Relation of the Whole Proceedings Against the Late Most Barbarous Traitors, Garnet a Jesuit and His Confederates, which details Father Henry Garnet’s role in the 1605 Gunpowder Plot. Executed in 1606, Gar-net’s skin was used to bind a book about his crimes. A pattern of wear spots on this books cover resemble Father’s Garnet’s face, which only makes this creepy item creepier.

The Boston Athe-naeum (an indepen-dent public library) has a copy of Narrative of the Life of James Allen, alias Jonas Pierce, alias James H. York, alias Burley Grove, the High-wayman, Being His Death-bed Confession to the Warden of the Massachusetts State Prison, another book

bound in human skin. James Allen himself re-quested that after his execution in 1837 a copy of his memoirs be bound in own skin. Re-quest granted.

Exeter’s Westcounty Studies Library owns a copy of The Poetical Works of John Milton, bound in the what used to be George Cudmore’s skin, before he was exe-cuted for poisoning his wife in 1852. Below the title page of this book a note states whose skin was used to bound this work, and why. Re-cords show Cudmore’s body was sent to a med-ical school for use; it is unknown how his skin came to adorn a book.

Around the same time and place, a teen-ager named John Hor-wood threw a rock at his ex-girlfriend, hitting her in the the right tem-ple. Taken to the hospi-tal, she was examined by a senior surgeon named Richard Smith. Dr. Smith felt the only treatment was to drill a hole into her skull to relieve the swelling. After the poor girl died, Horwood was hung for her murder. Smith re-fused to let Horwood’s family bury him, decid-ing to bind a book of his own poetry with Hor-wood’s skin instead. (This book, which still contained the tanner’s invoice in it, was kept at

the Bristol Records Of-fice until 2011, when Horwood’s great-great-great-grandniece was allowed to bury his re-mains.)

Which brings us

back to Jonas Wright and his book of Spanish laws. Just to be sure, Harvard submitted the book to cutting edge peptide mass finger-printing analysis last

April. The results con-firmed that their copy of Practicarum quaes-tionum circa leges re-gias Hispaniae is in-deed bound by the skin of Jonas Wright.

Providing Jonas Wright was a sheep.

Mike Selby is Reference Librarian

at the Cranbrook Public Library

There’s more than one way to skin a book

BOOKNOTeS

Mike Selby

Page 18: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

PAGE 18 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2014

COMICSANNIE’S MAILBOX

by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar

HOROSCOPESby Jacqueline Bigar

DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

Tundra By Chad Carpenter

Garfield By Jim Davis

Hagar the Horrible By Dick Browne

Baby Blues By Kirkman and Scott

Rhymes with Orange By Hillary B. Price

ARIES (March 21-April 19) You know you could handle a difficult encounter, but you might prefer to avoid it. If you can, leave work early in order to maximize the moment. Your fun and lively personality is likely to make others look forward to greeting the weekend. Tonight: Play the night away. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Recognize how much you need to do and how much you are willing to do. Your awareness of a loved one’s desire for your help might encourage you to be more available. Someone you deal with regularly could be difficult. Help this person figure out a solution. Tonight: Head home. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Your words this morning will make others smile. Do not start a deep conversation with someone who seems relatively depressed. You could find it diffi-cult, but know that it’s necessary to let this person work through his or her problem without your help. Tonight: TGIF!

CANCER (June 21-July 22) You have much more going for you than you might realize. Listen to someone’s ideas about your finances. You might want to take a gamble, but you also could be concerned with the risk. Remain direct in your deal-ings. Tonight: Treat a friend to munchies. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You’ll get what you want, but part of what you receive could be disappointing. Perhaps your expectations have been too high. Regardless, you quickly will see the right path, so you aren’t likely to experience a let-down. Tonight: Your charm and magnetism attract many peo-ple. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Continue to maintain a low pro-file if you want to keep the peace while gaining information. Someone who says little might make you and others feel un-easy. Be direct in what you say, but try to avoid any conflicts at this point. Tonight: Follow your instincts. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)

You will want to brainstorm with a creative friend who tends to think outside the box. This person might not come up with a conclusive statement or idea immediately, but just give him or her some time. You’ll be pleased with the outcome. To-night: Find a reason to celebrate. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Your determination helps you plow a path to success. Others could find you to be somewhat distant at the moment. Don’t be surprised if you get some odd responses from friends. Hold up the mirror to understand their reactions. Tonight: Someone is delighted to see you! SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Make a point of finding an ex-pert. You might benefit from speaking with a source who often is filled with suggestions. However, you also could be over-whelmed by the seemingly end-less chatter. Be grateful for the ideas. Tonight: Consider taking off for the weekend. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Those close to you might be overwhelming in how they want

to run the show. Free yourself up for a less demanding pace. One key person will let you know that you are indispensable by the end of the day! Tonight: Out with a favorite person. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You’ll accept a lot of responsibil-ities, but the pressure might be very difficult to handle. Friends will want to help, but they are likely to need some direction from you. Rarely are others so available to be at your beck and call. Enjoy the moment! Tonight: Clear your desk first. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You could be blocked when reaching out to someone. Watch a tendency to take this person’s unavailability personally, as it could be a communication problem. Remain confident and direct. Tonight: Off to the gym, then decide. BORN TODAY Former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice (1954), former U.S. first lady Mamie Eisenhower (1896), pianist Yanni (1954) ***

Dear Annie: Our neighbor “Ellen” is hav-ing an 80th birthday party for her husband. She has invited about 40 people, including my husband and me and the “Smiths,” an-other couple who are neighbors. We’ve had many disagreements in the past where the Smiths have yelled and sworn at us. Now we ignore them. Ellen told me we could come over to her home for the party anytime, but had to leave by 2:00 because the Smiths would be com-ing over then. Mr. Smith plays guitar and will be entertaining. Is it right for her to ask us to leave? We are mature and reasonable people, and we could certainly leave on our own if we felt the need. My husband and the birthday celebrant are friends, whereas Mr. Smith is an acquaintance. But Mrs. Smith is friends with Ellen. What should we do? My heart tells me to make an excuse not to attend, but common sense tells me it would cause more prob-lems if we did that. What do you think of such an invite? Should we go? -- Unwanted Friends Dear Friends: What nerve. Ellen was rude to tell you that you have to leave the party when the Smiths arrive. Does she perhaps think they will cause a scene? Did they ask that you not be there? No guest should be telling the hosts whom to invite. Ellen should have invited both of you, without restrictions, and let the chips fall. It would show tremendous grace on your part to show up at this party. Dear Annie: We are writing to ask what we can do about the way our son’s fami-ly talks. They have foul mouths. Whenever we phone, we can hear them in the back-ground yelling about something and using the F-word rather liberally. Even our high-school-age grandson speaks the same way. We’ve asked our son and his wife wheth-er they try to correct the kids, and he says everybody talks this way and to get used to it. How do we speak up and let them know we have had enough of their toilet mouths? -- Ohio Dear Ohio: What they do in their own home is not your business, even if you can hear them in the background when you call. And if Mom and Dad have potty mouths, it is expected that their children will, as well. They don’t realize the handicap they are giving their kids by not teaching them how to control their language. All you can do is ask, as a sign of respect, that they not use such vulgarities when speaking directly to you. We hope they can manage at least that much. Dear Annie: This is in response to the letter from “Stressed and Nervous,” the stepmoth-er who has no relationship with her adult stepchildren. Here is the flip side: Our stepmother, a lovely woman, came into our family after my siblings and I were grown. While we never had a close bond, we included her in all of our life events. Most importantly, our children considered her to be their grandmother. When Dad died, we all mourned together. For the next couple of years, we regularly in-vited “Grandma” to all family events. How-ever, she soon began saying it was inconve-nient for her to come and would rebuff any attempt we made to make it easier, such as picking her up or having her stay with us. She hasn’t invited her grandchildren over since my father died. She didn’t attend graduations or send birthday greetings. At first, our children were hurt, but five years later, they no longer care. I still call several times a year, but it’s like dropping a coin down a well. She has a large extended fam-ily of her own, and when I call them to ask whether she’s OK, they say I need not worry. It’s sad she has distanced herself. She is part of 20 years of family memories. -- Dis-missed Stepdaughter Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitch-ell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to [email protected], or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. To find out more about Annie’s Mailbox and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.cre-ators.com.COPYRIGHT 2014 CREATORS.COM

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Page 19: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2014 PAGE 19

PUZZLESDAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

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Weekday Morning/Afternoon Cbk. Kim. 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:30 12:0012:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30# # KSPS-PBS Clifford Arthur Wild Wild Georg Georg Peg Tiger Sesame Street Dino Be Fit Charlie Rose Var. Programs Thom Se$ $ CFCN CTV Morning Live Calgary Marilyn Denis Live With Kelly The View News--Calgary The Social Dr. Oz Show Dr. Phil% % KXLY-ABC Morning NW Good Morning America Live With Kelly The View Paid Paid The Chew Gen. Hospital The Doctors& & KREM-CBS KREM 2 News CBS This Morning The 700 Club Price Is Right The Young News Bold The Talk Make a Deal_ _ KHQ-NBC News Today Hot Varied Programs Days of Lives TMZ Minute( ( TSN SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre Record Varied Hocke Varied SportsNation Hocke Varied) ) NET Sportsnet Sportsnet Sports Varied Sports Varied Sportsnet Hocke Varied Programs+ + GLOBAL BC Morning News Morn Hunt Rachael Ray Sugar Debt News Days of Lives The Talk, , KNOW Ceorge Rob Kate Wild PAW Georg Space As Ceorge PAW Jelly Dino PAW Kate As Dragon Dino Georg` ` CBUT CBC News You & Arthur Bo On/ Tiger Super Napkin Book Doodle Heartland CBC News Reci Ste Steven-Chris1 M CICT (6:00) Morning News Morn Hunt Rachael Ray Sugar Debt Noon News Days of Lives The Talk Meredith Vieira3 O CIVT (6:00) Morning News Morn Hunt Rachael Ray Sugar Debt Nn Nws Hour Days of Lives The Talk Meredith Vieira4 6 YTV Kid Almost Squir Chuck Spong Way Side Almost Splice Kid Monstr Almost Chuck Nerds Squir Rated Monstr Side6 . KAYU-FOX Cope Wom Var. Programs Office Varied Mother Varied Rais Varied Fam Fam Law & Order Law & Order Fam Fam7 / CNN CNN News CNN News At This Hour Legal View Wolf CNN News CNN News Jake Tapper Situation Room8 0 SPIKE Varied Programs Res Varied Programs Cops Cops9 1 HGTV Disas Disas Var. Programs Disas Bryan House Hunters Hunt Hunt Holmes/Home Varied Programs Holmes: 2 A&E Dog Varied Criminal Minds Criminal Minds CSI: Miami CSI: Miami Criminal Minds Criminal Minds The First 48 The First 48< 4 CMT Number 1s CMT Music CMT Music CMT Spotlight Wide Open CMT Social CMT Music CMT Music CMT Spotlight= 5 W Prop Colour Colour Cand Cand Love Property Bro Love It-List It Love It-List It Love It-List It Property Bro Movie? 9 SHOW Movie Movie Movie Musketeers Paradise NCIS@ : DISC Varied Programs Daily Planet Mayday Varied ProgramsA ; SLICE Debt Debt Prop Prop Prop Prop Varied Programs 48 Hours Myst. Matchmaker Varied ProgramsB < TLC Preg Preg Hoard-Buried Gypsy Four Weddings 19 19 19 Varied Couple Couple Say Say Var. ProgramsC = BRAVO The Listener Cold Squad Due South Criminal Minds Person-Interest Twice/Lifetime Cold Squad Flashpoint Criminal MindsD > EA2 Movie Varied Movie Movie Varied Programs (:35) Movie Var. Programs Movie Varied Programs MovieE ? TOON Matt Spies! Varied Gum Teen Rocket Jim Alien Spies! Ska Deten Johnny Rocket Camp Johnny Spies! Spiez Day F @ FAM Justin ANT Jessie Austin Dog Wiz Doc Henry Pirates Sofia Lala ANT Win, Wiz Wiz Good Phi ANT G A WPCH Com Com Law & Order Law & Order Million. Million. Divor. Divor. Judge Judge Hot Hot King King Middle MiddleH B COM Just/Laughs Red... Red... Match Match Gags Gags Just/Laughs Frasier Frasier Theory Theory Gas Match Match LaughI C TCM Movie Varied Programs Movie Varied Programs Movie Var. ProgramsK E OUT Descending Departures Stor Stor Mantracker Repo Repo Stor Stor Liqui Liqui Var. Programs Stor StorL F HIST Museum Se Pickers Var. Programs Yukon Gold Museum Se Pickers MASH MASH Var. Programs Pawn PawnM G SPACE Star Trek: Voy. Star Trek: Next Stargate SG-1 Stargate Atl. Scare Inner Stargate SG-1 Castle Star Trek: Next Star Trek: Voy.N H AMC Stoog Varied Programs Movie Varied Programs MovieO I FS1 Varied Programs College Basketball The Mike Francesa Show NASCAR HubP J DTOUR Gotta Eat St. Reno Urban Live Live The Dead Files Varied Programs Eat St. Gotta The Dead Files Var. ProgramsW W MC1 Movie Var. Programs Movie Var. Programs Movie Varied Programs¨ ¨ KTLA KTLA News KTLA 5 Morning News at 7 KTLA News Steve Wilkos Jerry Springer Maury News at 1pm Celeb Celeb≠ ≠ WGN-A Texas Ranger Texas Ranger Heat of Night Heat of Night News Law & Order Law & Order Blue Bloods Blue BloodsØ Ø EA1 Movie Movie Varied Programs (:25) Movie∂ ∂ VISN Robi Cope Meyer 700 Varied My Mass Varied Tribal Varied Wind at Back Heartland Marcus Welby Poirot 102 102 MM VideoFlow VideoFlow VideoFlow VideoFlow VideoFlow VideoFlow VideoFlow Jimmy Kimmel Tonight Show 105 105 SRC Robin Varied Schtro Toc Caillou Dany Quelle Varied Entrée prin Ric’do Union TJ Pour le plaisir Avonlea

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PAGE 20 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2014 DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN Friday, November 14, 2014 PAGE 13

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Katelyn is smiling with her nephew

Jaxx!

On November 12, 2014, Garry made his last trip as a Locomotive Engineer with CP Rail.

He hired on as a trainman in Cranbrook in 1978.

CongratsGarry Osachoff

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We love you.

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Donald MacFarlane(1923-2006)

In MemoriamRita Cimolai

July 31, 1931 – November 14, 2012

We hold you tightly in our heartsAnd there you will remain...Life has gone on without youBut it will never be the same.

Remembering you is easyWe do it every day...

But losing you is the heartacheThat never goes away.

In loving remembrance,Your Family

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

Sympathy & Understanding

2200 - 2nd Street SouthCranbrook, BC V1C 1E1

250-426-3132

1885 Warren AvenueKimberley, BC V1A 1R9

250-427-7221www.mcphersonfh.com

Kootenay Monument Installations

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

Granite & Bronze Memorials, Dedication Plaques,

Benches, Memorial Walls, Gravesite Restorations,

Sales & Installations

www.kootenaymonument.ca

IN-HOME CONSULTATION OR VISIT OUR SHOWROOM

End of Life?Bereaved?

May We Help?

250-417-2019Toll Free 1-855-417-2019

Investing in community for good and forever.250.426.1119 www.cranbrookcf.ca

Gifts That Give Hope Free Family event this Saturday,

10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Western Financial Place.

Step outside the holiday gift-wrapped box and make a donation to a local

community organization in the name of a friend or loved one.

INDEX IN BRIEFFAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTSTRAVEL

CHILDRENEMPLOYMENT

BUSINESS SERVICESPETS & LIVESTOCK

MERCHANDISE FOR SALEREAL ESTATE

RENTALSAUTOMOTIVE

ADULT ENTERTAINMENTLEGAL NOTICES

AGREEMENTIt 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.

bcclassified.com 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.

bcclassified.com reserves the right to revised, edit, classify or reject any advertisement and to retain any answers directed to the bcclassified.com Box Reply Service and to repay the customer the sum paid for the advertisement and box rental.

DISCRIMINATORY LEGISLATIONAdvertisers 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.

COPYRIGHTCopyright and/or properties subsist in all advertisements and in all other material appearing in this edition of bcclassified.com. 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:

AreYou New to theArea?

We’d like to

Welcome you and your

family with various gifts and local

information!Cranbrook

& Kimberley:778-517-4106

[email protected]

KOOTENAY’S BEST ESCORTS

Introducing:

**NEW** Leaha - 24Tall, Slim, Norwegian

Blonde

Lily - 24, Curvy, blonde beauty, G.F.E.

Brianna - 45, Busty, best legs, pleaser

Enjoy quality relaxations by our hand-picked beauty’s

Swedish relaxation/massage.

Spoil yourself today!!!

(250)417-2800in/out calls daily

Hiring

Daycare CentersFULL-TIME or PART-TIME

spot available in Registered Daycare

for children aged 0-5 years. Please call

(250)581-1328

Celebrations

ChildcareFULLY LICENSED

Early Childhood Educator. Bondable, class 4 unrestricted

driving ability, fi rst aid and available to care for your child(ren) in your home.

25 years experience in eld. 778-517-1073

or 250-421-6282 ~Cranbrook~

In Memoriam

Celebrations

Education/Trade Schools

APARTMENT/CONDOMANAGER TRAINING

• Certifi ed Home Study

Course• Jobs

RegisteredAcross Canada• Gov. Certifi ed

35 Years of Success!www.RMTI.ca

Obituaries

Help WantedAn Alberta Oilfi eld Company is hiring experienced dozer and excavator operators. Meals and lodging provided. Drug testing required. 1-780-723-5051.

HELP WANTED. Under New Ownership. All positions. Part/Full time. Apply in person with resume to:

Cranbrook Super 8 2370 Cranbrook St. N.

Obituaries

Help WantedPRO VISION OPTICAL in Cranbrook has a part-time opening available for an indi-vidual with excellent customer service skills and a friendly, positive attitude. Experience in the optical fi eld is an asset, but we are willing to train the right person. Please drop off resume at the store in the Tamarack Shopping Centre or email us at: [email protected]

Obituaries

Personals

In Memoriam

Page 21: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2014 PAGE 21DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETINPAGE 14 Friday, November 14, 2014 DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN

First Steps Day Care in Kimberley is seeking an E.C.E person, preferably with Infant Toddler

certification, immediately.

Please contact Gina Blake at 250-427-3876.

SUMMIT COMMUNITY SERVICES SOCIETY

“promoting community well-being”

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY

CERTIFIED MILLWRIGHTATCO Wood Products, a leading Forest Products com any in the Southern nterior, is seeking a uali ed millwright with a valid interprovincial Journeyman ticket. The ideal candidate will be a self starter with good interpersonal communication skills, and excellent millwright skills. Hours will vary and will include shift & weekend work. Consideration given to 3rd/4th year Apprentices

Please Forward your resume to:

Veneer Plant Maintenance Foreman c/o Kris Harvey PO Box 460V0G 1L0 Fruitvale, BC Fax: 250-367-6210 Email: [email protected]

POSITION TITLE: District Clerk(s)

EMPLOYER: Ministry of Transportation & Infrastructure

Job Description: As a District Clerk, you provide a range of administrative and financial services to support district operations.

Job Qualifications:Secondary School graduation or equivalent

A combination of three (3) years clerical/administrative support experience preferably gained in an office setting), education and/or training.

Solid knowledge of MS Office (Outlook, Word, Excel & PowerPoint)

Experience using social media tools

Ability to keyboard with speed and accuracy at 40 words per minute

How to Apply:If you are interesting in applying for this position please request a copy of the job description & posting by emailing [email protected] or calling 250-426-1500

Ministry of Transportation & Infrastructure 129 10th Avenue Cranbrook, BC

Youth Worker

Afterschool Program working with 5-8 year oldsRecreational and/or Early Childhood Education certification is preferred. Applicants must have a background and experience working with youth. A current first aid certificate and a BC Class 4 Drivers License are required.

The position runs Monday to Friday (20-30 hours per week.)

To Apply:Please bring resume in person to, 1404 – 2nd Street N; attention to Lori McNeill or email cover letter and resume to [email protected]

For more information call Lori at 250-426-3830

Help Wanted Help Wanted

Employment Employment Employment

Help Wanted

GOLD CREEK MARKET

$13.00/hr.FULL TIME & PART TIME

M - F 3pm to 11pmSat/Sun 7am to 5pm

Available Immediately

Must be 19 years of age. Gold Creek Market offers lottery tickets, propane, fuel, alcohol, beer, wine, cigar-ettes, produce, pizza and fresh baked items every day.

Apply in person with resume

2455 - 30th Ave S., Cranbrook BC. V1C 6Z4

Employment

Help WantedSEASONAL FARM laborers to carry out fi eld work from mid-April to Oct., 2015, in Cranbrook area (approx. 22-28 weeks) for Monsanto Canada Inc., 710 Industrial Road #3, Cranbrook.Valid BC Drivers Licence an asset; Farming background; $14.50/hr; approx. 8hr/day and 5 days/wk; plus 4% vacation pay.

Please fax application to 250-426-4215

Employment

Volunteers

We have a BIG wait list

Do you have a Big Heart?1 HOUR A WEEK Kimberley / Cranbrook

Big Brothers Big Sisters

250-489-3111

Big Brothers Big Sisters

Services

Financial ServicesGET 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

TAX FREE MONEYis available, if you are a homeowner, today! We can easily approve you by phone. 1st, 2nd or 3rd mort-gage money is available right now. Rates start at Prime. Equity counts. We don’t rely on credit, age or income.

Call Anytime1-800-639-2274 or

604-430-1498. Apply online www.capitaldirect.ca

Contractors

• Construction • Renovations • Roofing • Drywall-large or small• Siding • Sundeck Construction

• Aluminum Railings We welcome any restorational work!

(250) 426-8504

GIRO

Merchandise for Sale

Firewood/Fuel

FIREWOODLogging truck load

Larch - $2,500.Pine/Larch mix - $1,800.Pine - $1,400Cord of Larch - $220.

250-421-3750

Heavy Duty Machinery

A-STEEL SHIPPING DRY STORAGE CONTAINERS

Used 20’40’45’53’ and insulated containers all

sizes in stock. Trades are welcome.

40’Containers under $2500!DMG 40’ containers under $2,000 each. Also JD 544 & 644 wheel Loaders & 20,000 lb CAT forklift.

Wanted to buy 300 size hydraulic excavator.

Ph Toll free 1-866-528-7108 Delivery BC and AB

www.rtccontainer.com

Misc. for SaleFOR SALE

1-Double mattress & box-spring

1-Mattress cover(used / clean)1-Set of sheets (used / clean)1-Set of sheets (brand new)

All in perfect condition$150.00 fi rm

Call 250-489-2725

Merchandise for Sale

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

Misc. WantedPrivate Coin Collector BuyingCollections, Accumulations,Olympic Gold & Silver Coins +Chad: 778-281-0030. Local.

WANTED: TREADMILL 250-427-4988.

Ask for Gus.

Acreage for SalePRIVATE 150 ACRES

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

250-489-9234

BEAR NECESSITIESHOME WATCH SERVICE

•Planning a holiday and need your home

checked for insurance?

•Snow removal, mail p/u,plants, cat care & more.

BONDED & INSURED

For Peace of Mind Travelcall 250-464-9900

www.thebearnecessities.ca

GLEN’S SNOW REMOVAL

•Side x Side with front end plow

(ideal for driveways)

•Backpack blower•Shovel

Commercial/Residential

(250)426-8604

Book Now

LEAKY BASEMENT

• Foundation Cracks

• Damp Proofi ng

• Drainage Systems

• Foundation Restoration

Residential / CommercialFree estimates

250-919-1777

HANDYMAN to the

*SENIOR STARS*

Carpenter, Plumber, Installer, Repairs,

Bathroom makeovers, Laminate ooring, Painting, Fence,

Decks.

Cranbrook/Kimberley

~Steve~ 250-421-6830

PLAN DESIGNNew construction,

Additions, Renovations, Electrical, Landscape

Start with a good set of plans and be assured your investment will

FEEL, FUNCTION and LOOK GREAT!

Jody ~ 250-919-1575www.CHARLTONHOMES.CA

SONNY & CHRIS NOMLAND

We rebuild Electrolux vacuums to

like-new condition.

We also repair all other brands.

Phone 250-489-2733

SHARPENING

Do you need something sharpened, like;

Carbide Blades, Router Bits, Planer Blades, Scissors,

Knives etc.?

We can do this!

We are in business for 18 years:

GL Sharpening Service in Creston, BC

Any questions?

Please call 250-428-5542

We are open from Monday to Friday

9:00am to 4:30pm

Service and SalesBox 905, Creston BCFax: 250-402-6473

[email protected]

TIP TOP CHIMNEYSERVICES

“Sweeping the Kootenay’s Clean”

Chimney SweepingFireplace & Woodstove

ServicingVisual Inspections and

InstallationsGutter Cleaning Available

Call for Free Estimatefrom a W.E.T.T Certifi ed

Technician

Richard Hedrich250-919-3643

[email protected]

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.

SERVICES GUIDEContact these business for all your service needs!

CLASSIFIEDS HELP YOU SELLCALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202

1-800-222-TIPS

Moving Sale, camping gear, tools, toys, books, knick knacks, etc. Sat, Nov 15, 9am-12noon, 1205 13th St S, Cranbrook

FIND EVERYTHING YOUNEED IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

POSITION TITLE: District Clerk(s)

EMPLOYER: Ministry of Transportation & Infrastructure

Job Description: As a District Clerk, you provide a range of administrative and financial services to support district operations.

Job Qualifications:Secondary School graduation or equivalent

A combination of three (3) years clerical/administrative support experience preferably gained in an office setting), education and/or training.

Solid knowledge of MS Office (Outlook, Word, Excel & PowerPoint)

Experience using social media tools

Ability to keyboard with speed and accuracy at 40 words per minute

How to Apply:If you are interesting in applying for this position please request a copy of the job description & posting by emailing [email protected] or calling 250-426-1500

Ministry of Transportation & Infrastructure 129 10th Avenue Cranbrook, BC

Page 22: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

PAGE 22 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2014 DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN Friday, November 14, 2014 PAGE 15

Open HousesSaturday November 15

Sunday November 16

2 bedroom, 2 bath mobile, fenced yard, covered deck, under deck storage, wired shed & mud room addition, 2 parking spaces, fence opens to access of back yard.2401436 $97,000Hosted by: Melanie Walsh

3 bedroom, 2 bathroom, log veneer home on 8.7 acres, 15 minutes from town, fenced yard, fenced acreage, fabulous views, gas fireplace, new windows, tiled bath & utility room, separate basement entry. 2400237 $399,700Hosted by: Melanie Walsh

11:00am - 12:30pm 5122 Highway 3/95

$369,000Take a look at this one! On 3.11 acres

just 8 kms from town. Beautiful 3 bdrm home on full basement.

2401336 Jeannie Argatoff

12:00 - 1:00pm #27, 2424 Industrial Rd. 2

$97,500Great new price on this 3 bdrm home,

fenced & landscaped yard, backing onto greenspace.

2399408 Joy

3:00 - 4:30pm 805 - 11 St. S.

$279,9002+2 bdrms, 2 baths, plus den, gorgeous kitchen with stainless appliances, new windows, garage & private back yard.

2400653 Jeannie Argatoff

11:00am - 1:00pm 320 - 17 St. S.

$439,000Brand new home that is feature packed. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, hardwood & tile flooring,

open concept, vaulted ceilings, gas fireplace – this is a must see!

2394631 Joe Amatruda

1:00 - 2:30pm 2701 - 37 St. S.

$675,000On 4.03 acres in Gold Creek. Backing onto

Crown land, 6 bdrms, 3 baths, double garage, shop, too many features to list - must see!

2399834 Jeannie Argatoff

12:30 - 2:00pm 514 - 6 St. S.

$279,900Gorgeous, totally updated home, inside & out. 3+1 bdrms, oak flooring, great kitchen with

stainless appliances – must see!2401113 Brian Burch

1:00 - 2:00pm #48, 1401 Willowbrook Dr.

$299,9002 bdrm, 2 bath, feature packed home, located in gated community, full use of community centre; pool, club room, etc.

2400240 Brian Rhodes

1:00 - 2:00pm #144, 2100 - 13 St. S.

$329,900Gated community, built in 2007 with

1367 sq ft per floor. 2 bdrms, 2 bath, double garage. Includes all appliances.

2398916 Sonia Mama

E a c h o f f i c e i n d e p e n d e n t l y o w n e d a n d o p e r a t e d .BLUE SKY REALTY

250-426-87001111 Cranbrook St. N. www.blueskyrealty.ca

www.realtor.ca

OPEN HOUSES Saturday Nov 15

Janis Caldwell-SawleyMortgage SpecialistRoyal Bank of Canada

[email protected]/janis.sawley

Serving the East Kootenays Tel.: 250-417-1336

Updated home in desirable location in Marysville. Great views and walking distance to elementary school. 4 bdrms with 2½ bths, attached garage, lrg

enclosed back yard and covered rear deck. Remodeled kitchen inc. matching stove, microwave, refrigerator, also dishwasher. Central vac for house and garage. W/D also inc. Beautifully remodeled entrance way complements

newer windows and siding and new roof. Extra storage under the deck and a 12x10 tool shed. UG sprinklers system.

Priced to sell at $355,000 For viewing, call 250-427-3228

HOUSE FOR SALE

2008 CHEVY EQUINOX SPORT

Only 122,000 kms, Auto, A/C, Sunroof, Power Windows &

Locks, Keyless Entry. Excellent Condition

$11,000 250-349-5306

Great truck, minor rust, runs great,

380 000km, canopy and winter tires included.

$1,000 OBO250-581-0461

FOR SALE92 GMC SIERRA

Become a Snowbird and Go South for the Winter!

In your own25ft Class ‘C’Motor Home

Winterized, Solar pan-els on roof, Hardware for towing passenger

vehicle or trailer.Telephone:

(250) 489-4490

Real Estate

LotsProposed Future

3 LOT SUBDIVISIONGreat View

8th Ave. & 16 St. SCranbrook B.C.

For more information call

250 489 9502Mobile Homes

& Parks

QUICK SALE by owner. Completely renovated

mobile home.

$24,500./obo. Will do rent to own

with deposit

~250-417-3373~

Rentals

Apt/Condo for Rent2BDRM, 1 1/2 BATH apart-ment for rent, in Canal Flats. Great view, 2parking spac-es, F/S, D/W, full size W/D, microwave. $750 + utilities

& D.D. Available immediately. Call (250)349-5306 or

(250)489-8389.

Commercial/Industrial

FOR LEASE in Cranbrook.Two commercial spaces in prime location, next to Joey’s only. One space is 1270sq. ft., the other is 2367sq. ft. Price per sq. ft. is negotiable, open to offers.

Phone 250-992-2048

Suites, Upper

HUGE 890 sq ft UPPER BACHELOR

SUITE on quiet street in Kimberley

Free wifi, f/s, convection oven, dishwasher. References required.

Available immediately. Unfurnished. Looking for quiet tenant.

$650 month, gas & elec included.

250-427-1022 or cell 250-432-5773

Kimberley Studio Suite. Furnished, $495./mo. in-cludes utilities, hydro, gas, basic cable and internet. Laundry available on-site. Sorry, no pets. References required.

Call Peter at East Kootenay Realty ~ 250-908-0045 ~

For Sale By Owner

Mortgages

Transportation

Auto Financing

Cars - Domestic

2008 BUICK ALLURE 6cyl. auto.

Lots of power but good on gas.

Only 34,000 kms.

$10,800./obo

Phone: 778-517-5014 (Mike)

Extra set of tires on wheels.

Recreational/Sale

Mortgages

Sport Utility Vehicle

Transportation

Trucks & Vans

Transportation

Open Houses Open Houses

For Sale By Owner

CranbrookKimberleyCrestonFernie

MarysvilleWardnerWasa…

Sell Your Home in the

Classi eds. It Has

Never Been Easier!

Use 25 words to describe it.

Stop by or mail $55 + tax

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

2.3.4.

250-426-5201ext 202

250-427-5333

Take a photo of your house.1.

$55 + tax includes 25

words, and photo.Extra words $1.00

each. Enclose photo. If you require your photo back, please include

a self-addressed, stamped envelope. ALL ADS MUST BE PREPAID – Visa and Mastercard accepted. Your ad will

run up to 2 weeks in the

Cranbrook Daily Townsman (10 times),

Kimberley Daily Bulletin (10 times), and the

Valley (2 times). Ad can be cancelled at any

time. Sorry, no refunds.

Ten Reasons to Advertise on a Newspaper Website

1. Frequency: The online newspaper Web site user accesses the Internet almost twice as much as the general user.

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

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

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

5. Content: After e-mail, the most preferred Web content is news, sports, financial information, entertainment news, and shopping – in that order. Sixty-two percent of Internet users visit online newspapers for local news, compared with 39 percent for the local TV station Web site and 23 percent for the local radio station site. Not even Yahoo! or AOL’s Digital City can top this.

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

7. High profile: Research.net reports that, among top executives (CEO, CIO, CFO or owner/partner), Internet advertising ranked above over all other media measured for: “Where I prefer to find our about new products,” “Where I prefer to receive information about companies,” and “Where modern, up-to-date brands advertise.” At the same time, these early adopters of technology also skew younger than the traditional newspaper audience. Forty percent of online newspaper users are aged 18-35.

8. Reinforcement: Seventy-six percent of online newspaper users also read the newspaper in the past seven days, and repetition increases awareness. The Internet Advertising Bureau found that, by increasing the number of online banners from one to two per week, branding results on three key metrics increased 42 percent making online a great, inexpensive way to increase the branding lift of traditional campaigns.

9. Quality: Seventy-five percent of advertisers generally said newspaper Web sites’ advertising was as good or better than other Internet sites.

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

SOURCE: Newspaper Association of America

250-426-5201822 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrookdailytownsman.com

250-427-5333335 Spokane St., Kimberley

dailybulletin.ca

Call today and start online advertising.

SOLD

Page 23: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2014 PAGE 23

NEWSDAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

CELEBRATING

Run Date: Thur, Nov. 13, 2014 ComoxRun Date: Fri, Nov. 14, 2014 Campbell River / Duncan / Cranbrook / Vernon / Penticton / Kamloops / KelownaFile Name: SS.Wk47.1114.LowerMainland.NoCashLane

Size: Tab — 10.25” X 13.6”

Typesetter: QL

Thanks to all our vendors for up to 35 years of support.Quantities and/or selection of items may be limited and may not be available in all stores. No rainchecks. No substitutions on clearance items or where quantities are advertised as limited. Advertised pricing and product selection (flavour, colour, patterns, style) may vary by store location. We reserve the right to limit quantities to reasonable family requirements. We are not obligated to sell items based on errors or misprints in typography or photography. Coupons must be presented and redeemed at time of purchase. Applicable taxes, deposits, or environmental surcharges are extra. No sales to retail outlets. Some items may have “plus deposit and environmental charge” where applicable. ®/™ The trademarks, service marks and logos displayed in this flyer are trademarks of Loblaws Inc. and others. All rights reserved. © 2014 Loblaws Inc. * we match prices! Applies only to our major supermarket competitors’ flyer items. Major supermarket competitors are determined solely by us based on a number of factors which can vary by store location. We will match the competitor’s advertised price only during the effective date of the competitor’s flyer advertisement. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES (note that our major supermarket competitors may not). Due to the fact that product is ordered prior to the time of our Ad Match checks, quantities may be limited. We match identical items (defined as same brand, size, and attributes) and in the case of fresh produce, meat, seafood and bakery, we match a comparable item (as determined solely by us). We will not match competitors’ “multi-buys” (eg. 2 for $4), “spend x get x”, “Free”, “clearance”, discounts obtained through loyalty programs, or offers related to our third party operations (post office, gas bars, dry cleaners etc.). We reserve the right to cancel or change the terms of this program at any time.Customer Relations: 1-866-999-9890.

Prices are in effect until Thursday, November 20, 2014 or while stock lasts.

FREE Spend $250 or more before applicable taxes in a single transaction at any Real Canadian Superstore location and receive a free

Energizer Max Batteries & Flashlight Value Pack. Excludes purchase of tobacco, alcohol products, prescriptions, gift cards, phone cards, lottery tickets, all third party operations (post office, gas bars, dry cleaners, etc.) and any other products which are provincially regulated. The retail value of up to $29.99 will be deducted from the total amount of your purchase before sales taxes are applied. Limit one coupon per family and/or customer account. No cash value. No copies. Coupon must be presented to the cashier at time of purchase. Valid from Friday, November 14th until closing Thursday, November 20th, 2014. Cannot be combined with any other coupons or promotional offers. No substitutions, refunds or exchanges on free item.20840607

Spend $250 and receive

Energizer Max Batteries & Flashlight Value PackIncludes AA12, AAA12, 9V1 and 2 in 1 LED Light

4 10000 05386 7

up to $29.99 value

898 ea

Frank’s Red Hotselected varieties, 354 mL20187632001

Bref 4 in 1 toilet careselected varieties, 50 g2075458

Tetley orange pekoe tea216’s20025699

High Liner pan sear fi lletsselected varieties, frozen, 540 g20638254

Snuggle liquid fabric softener180 washloads, 4.43 L20216145

Viva paper towels6=8 rolls20803279

VH Steamers entreesselected varieties, frozen, 283-298 g20331916

Peek Freans or Dad’s Cookiesselected varieties, 256-320 g20680329

Uncle Ben’sFast & Fancyside dishselected varieties, 165 g20299465001

Minute Maid, Five Alive, Fruitopia or Nesteanon-carbonated beveragesselected varieties, 12 X 341 mL20323687001

Eggo waffl esselected varieties, frozen, 1.68 kg20296503

Old Dutch potato chipsselected varieties, 270 g

20574988003

Lipton soup mixselected varieties, 4’s20315085002

Club House dry mix35-47 g1733927

698 eaSchneiders Pepperettesselected varieties, 375-450 g20580329

Maple Leaf bacon or Schneiders bolognaselected varieties, 375-500 g20732366

Pampers or Huggies club size plus diapers

20707471size 1-6, 92-186’s

798 ea

496 ea

Jarlsberg cheese slices300 g20001310

Farmer’s Market™ gala apples6 lb BAG

product of British Columbia Canada, Canada extra fancy grade20630288001

2967 eaLIMIT 4AFTER LIMIT

44.99

347 eaLIMIT 4AFTER LIMIT

4.69 297 eaLIMIT 2AFTER LIMIT

3.98798 eaLIMIT 4AFTER LIMIT

9.32

798 eaLIMIT 4AFTER LIMIT

12.97

1098 eaLIMIT 4AFTER LIMIT

11.98 598 eaLIMIT 4AFTER LIMIT

9.88

297 eaLIMIT 6AFTER LIMIT

4.27

197 eaLIMIT 4AFTER LIMIT

3.67

.97 eaLIMIT 4AFTER LIMIT

1.59333eaLIMIT 2AFTER LIMIT

6.49

248 eaLIMIT 4AFTER LIMIT

3.47

197 eaLIMIT 4AFTER LIMIT

2.75

100 eaLIMIT 4AFTER LIMIT

1.74

448 ea

Page 24: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, November 14, 2014

PAGE 24 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2014 DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

1. Offers available until December 31, 2014, to residential customers who have not subscribed to TELUS TV or Internet in the past 90 days. Offer not available in all areas. Call now for eligibility. Cannot be combined with other offers. Offerincludes Optik TV Essentials & Internet 25. Offer not available with Internet 6. Regular prices apply at the end of the promotional period. TELUS reserves the right to modify channel lineups and packaging, and regular pricing, without notice.HDTV-input-equipped television required to watch HD. Minimum system requirements apply. Final eligibility for the services will be determined by a TELUS representative. Offer subject to change without notice. A cancellation fee applies tothe early termination of a service agreement and will be $10 multiplied by the number of months remaining in the term. TELUS reserves the right to substitute an equivalent or better product without notice. Rental equipment must be returnedin good condition upon cancellation of service, otherwise the replacement cost will be charged to the account. PVR capabilities subject to and limited by applicable laws. Speed and signal strength depends on location, usage within the homenetwork, Internet traffic, applicable network management and server configurations. Based on a medium sized structure using standard building materials. Wi-Fi signal reception may vary based on the number of active Wi-Fi devices and avail-able Wi-Fi signals. Wi-Fi Plus may be required for full coverage, charged separately. The TELUS logo and Optik TV are trademarks of TELUS Corporation, used under licence. © 2014 TELUS

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35-1500 Cranbrook St Nin the Tamarack Shopping Centre