16
WEDNESDAY APRIL 16, 20 14 www.facebook.com/ TownsmanBulletin Like Us and keep up to date with all the breaking East Kootenay news. THE BULLETIN $ 1 10 INCLUDES G.S.T. TownsmanBulletin Like Us @kbulletin Follow Us SPRING FRESHET WATER QUALITY All of Kimberley under Advisory, parts Boil Water. See LOCAL NEWS page 3 ONLINE VIRUS HEARTBLEED What you need to know to protect yourself from the latest bug. See LOCAL NEWS page 3 PROUDLY SERVING KIMBERLEY AND AREA SINCE 1932 | Vol. 82, Issue 69 | www.dailybulletin.ca In a 4-3 decision, Council turns down car wash CAROLYN GRANT Bulletin Editor After considerable discus- sion, a public hearing and staff reports, Kimberley City Council has decided that they will not proceed with a zon- ing change to allow a car wash to be built on Marsden Street. The lot in question is just to the north west side of the Marsden Street bridge, across the creek and a small road from the Baptist Church. While the lot is already zoned commercial, a car wash was not allowed under the cur- rent zoning, so the proponent applied for a change. Council has decided that a car wash is not appropriate in the mostly residential neigh- bourhood, though not with- out a lot of discussion. Council was presented with a staff report from the planning department offer- ing three options. 1; refuse to proceed with the bylaw, 2; defer pending submission of further information or 3; ap- prove it. The report recom- mended that Council give second and third readings and adoption to the zoning change. However, Council was not prepared to do so. Coun. Al- bert Hoglund led off by saying he would vote against the re- zoning. He said he was disap- pointed in the staff report be- cause it failed to mention a petition that had been brought forward by residents. “In my mind, enough resi- dents of that area showed they didn’t want the lot re- zoned,” he said. Coun. Darryl Oakley also said he wouldn’t support it. He said he had been down to the neighbourhood several times and felt that the neigh- bours were comfortable with the current commercial zon- ing. Coun. Jack Ratcliffe said he would support it. “There have been so many cases in the past where what was forecast to happen didn’t happen,” he said, pointing out that years ago when the Bau- ernhaus Restaurant was seek- ing a development permit neighbourhood residents had been greatly concerned. “People were against it,” he said. “If we’d gone with that, the Bauernhaus wouldn’t be there. Then there was a daycare on St. Mary Avenue that the neighbours didn’t want. Again, we went ahead and it worked fine. The neighbours later came back to Council and apologized for causing a fuss. That’s the only time I’ve seen that in my 29 years on Council.” Coun. Don McCormick also said he’d support it. He said he felt there were enough regulations in place that would make sure the car wash was not a detriment. See COUNCIL Page 4 Council says no to car wash; turns down rezoning request SALLY MACDONALD Townsman Staff Cranbrook and Kimber- ley were treated to a spec- tacular sky show overnight between Monday, April 14 and Tuesday, April 15 when a “blood moon” graced the spring sky. The moon turned red for about one hour and 18 min- utes during the full lunar eclipse, when the moon, Earth and sun were com- pletely lined up. The reflec- tion of the sun on Earth cast a red-orange glow on the moon as it was shielded from the sun’s direct light. To the moon and back PHOTOS COURTESY RICK NOWELL/COLLEGE OF THE ROCKIES A lunar eclipse turned the moon red in the early morning hours of Tuesday, April 15. A telescope at the College of the Rockies captured the eclipse in pictures as it progressed from midnight until 3:50 a.m. Top left and then clockwise: The earth’s shadow crosses and eclipses the moon, causing it to turn red. Centre: The “blood moon” at its height. Top row, second from right, and then clockwise: The earth’s shadow passes, and the moon returns to normal “full” state. A lunar eclipse turned the full moon red for just over an hour overnight on the morning of Tuesday, April 15 Rick Nowell, an astrono- mer at the College of the Rockies in Cranbrook, cap- tured the eclipse using the college’s telescope, the Ce- lestron Schmidt-Cassegrain, with an 11-inch primary mirror. “It’s meant for higher magnifications, so I had to attach a focal reducer to just barely fit all the moon in the picture,” said Nowell. In Cranbrook, the eclipse began at about 11 p.m. when the full moon was still visible to the south. Mars was closest to Earth on Monday also, so it was very bright in the sky nearby, Nowell said. “The moon moved slowly easterly in the sky, and en- tered the Earth’s shadow at midnight.  The black part of the shadow cut a curved line into the moon’s edge and gradually crept along for an hour, until the last bright edge narrowed and went dark at 1 a.m.,” said Nowell. “Unfortunately, a thin haze to the south started to cover the moon, and a lot of the photos became fuzzy after this. The dim orangey moon faded in and out be- hind clouds, but the camera was able to compensate somewhat.” While Earth was com- pletely obscuring the sun, the sunlight passing through the Earth’s atmosphere made the moon glow a reddish or- ange, Nowell went on. “It took about three hours for the moon to move through the Earth’s shad- ow. In the photos you can see that the moon was not evenly illuminated, since its orbit was a bit north of (above) the shadow cone.” The moon came out of the shadows at about 2:30 a.m., Nowell said, and it was back to a normal full moon at about 3:50 a.m. “If you missed this one, the next lunar eclipse is on October 8, 2014,” he added. “This year we get to see a solar eclipse too: There will be a partial solar eclipse in Cranbrook on October 23 at 3:45 p.m.”

Kimberley Daily Bulletin, April 16, 2014

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Page 1: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, April 16, 2014

WEDNESDAYAPRIL 16, 2014

www.facebook.com/TownsmanBulletin Like Us and keep

up to date with all the breaking

East Kootenay news.

THE BULLETIN$110 INCLUDES

G.S.T.

TownsmanBulletin

Like Us

@kbulletin

Follow Us

SPRING FRESHET

WATER QUALITYAll of Kimberley under Advisory, parts Boil Water.

See LOCAL NEWSpage 3

ONLINE VIRUS

HEARTBLEEDWhat you need to know to protect yourself from the latest bug.

See LOCAL NEWS page 3

PROUDLY SERVING KIMBERLEY AND AREA SINCE 1932 | Vol. 82, Issue 69 | www.dailybulletin.ca

In a 4-3 decision, Council turns down

car wash

C AROLYN GR ANTBulletin Editor

After considerable discus-sion, a public hearing and staff reports, Kimberley City Council has decided that they will not proceed with a zon-ing change to allow a car wash to be built on Marsden Street.

The lot in question is just to the north west side of the Marsden Street bridge, across the creek and a small road from the Baptist Church. While the lot is already zoned commercial, a car wash was not allowed under the cur-rent zoning, so the proponent applied for a change.

Council has decided that a car wash is not appropriate in the mostly residential neigh-bourhood, though not with-out a lot of discussion.

Council was presented

with a staff report from the planning department offer-ing three options. 1; refuse to proceed with the bylaw, 2; defer pending submission of further information or 3; ap-prove it. The report recom-mended that Council give second and third readings and adoption to the zoning change.

However, Council was not prepared to do so. Coun. Al-bert Hoglund led off by saying he would vote against the re-zoning. He said he was disap-

pointed in the staff report be-cause it failed to mention a petition that had been brought forward by residents.

“In my mind, enough resi-dents of that area showed they didn’t want the lot re-zoned,” he said.

Coun. Darryl Oakley also said he wouldn’t support it. He said he had been down to the neighbourhood several times and felt that the neigh-bours were comfortable with the current commercial zon-ing.

Coun. Jack Ratcliffe said he would support it.

“There have been so many cases in the past where what was forecast to happen didn’t happen,” he said, pointing out that years ago when the Bau-ernhaus Restaurant was seek-ing a development permit neighbourhood residents had been greatly concerned.

“People were against it,” he said. “If we’d gone with that, the Bauernhaus wouldn’t be there. Then there was a daycare on St. Mary

Avenue that the neighbours didn’t want. Again, we went ahead and it worked fine. The neighbours later came back to Council and apologized for causing a fuss. That’s the only time I’ve seen that in my 29 years on Council.”

Coun. Don McCormick also said he’d support it. He said he felt there were enough regulations in place that would make sure the car wash was not a detriment.

See COUNCIL Page 4

Council says no to car wash; turns down rezoning request

S A L LY M AC D O N A L DTownsman Staff

Cranbrook and Kimber-ley were treated to a spec-tacular sky show overnight between Monday, April 14 and Tuesday, April 15 when a “blood moon” graced the spring sky.

The moon turned red for about one hour and 18 min-utes during the full lunar eclipse, when the moon, Earth and sun were com-pletely lined up. The reflec-tion of the sun on Earth cast a red-orange glow on the moon as it was shielded from the sun’s direct light.

To the moon and back

PHOTOS COURTESY RICK NOWELL/COLLEGE OF THE ROCKIES

A lunar eclipse turned the moon red in the early morning hours of Tuesday, April 15. A telescope at the College of the Rockies captured the eclipse in pictures as it progressed from midnight until 3:50 a.m. Top left and then clockwise: The earth’s shadow crosses and eclipses the moon, causing it to turn red. Centre: The “blood moon” at its height. Top row, second from right, and then clockwise: The earth’s shadow passes, and the moon returns to normal “full” state.

A lunar eclipse turned the full moon red for just over an hour overnight on the morning of Tuesday, April 15

Rick Nowell, an astrono-mer at the College of the Rockies in Cranbrook, cap-tured the eclipse using the college’s telescope, the Ce-lestron Schmidt-Cassegrain, with an 11-inch primary mirror.

“It’s meant for higher magnifications, so I had to attach a focal reducer to just barely fit all the moon in the

picture,” said Nowell.In Cranbrook, the eclipse

began at about 11 p.m. when the full moon was still visible to the south. Mars was closest to Earth on Monday also, so it was very bright in the sky nearby, Nowell said.

“The moon moved slowly easterly in the sky, and en-tered the Earth’s shadow at

midnight.  The black part of the shadow cut a curved line into the moon’s edge and gradually crept along for an hour, until the last bright edge narrowed and went dark at 1 a.m.,” said Nowell.

“Unfortunately, a thin haze to the south started to cover the moon, and a lot of the photos became fuzzy after this. The dim orangey

moon faded in and out be-hind clouds, but the camera was able to compensate somewhat.”

While Earth was com-pletely obscuring the sun, the sunlight passing through the Earth’s atmosphere made the moon glow a reddish or-ange, Nowell went on.

“It took about three hours for the moon to move

through the Earth’s shad-ow. In the photos you can see that the moon was not evenly illuminated, since its orbit was a bit north of (above) the shadow cone.”

The moon came out of the shadows at about 2:30 a.m., Nowell said, and it was back to a normal full moon at about 3:50 a.m.

“If you missed this one, the next lunar eclipse is on October 8, 2014,” he added.

“This year we get to see a solar eclipse too: There will be a partial solar eclipse in Cranbrook on October 23 at 3:45 p.m.”

Page 2: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, April 16, 2014

Page 2 Wednesday, aPRIL 16, 2014

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C a r t e r G u l s e t hListen, people. There are worse

things you could do than enter “The 607.”

Oh, you don’t know what it is? Well, it’s quite simple, really. It’s a film festival for students, more spe-cifically, students from Grades 7 to 12. The point is: if you can pick up a camera, you ought to enter.

I mean, there’s incentive, right? It’s a festival, and where there’s a festival to be entered, there are prizes to be won: fabulous prizes of jewels, and Mercedes Benzes! Okay, maybe not, but certainly prizes of money.

Perhaps I’m not being clear enough. Mount Baker Wild Theatre is putting on a film festival. Every-one else is doing it, so they thought they might get in on the action.

The festival is a regional one, which means that the films are going to be flooding in from all over the Kootenays. The festival is enter-able by students from Grades 7 to 12, and entries will be accepted until May 14.

You’re asking yourself what the catch is, right? What kinds of guide-lines come with the fabulous chance to make a movie on your own dime? Well, a film festival wouldn’t be any good without a rule, so here it is: no shorter than one minute, no longer than 20 min-utes. That’s it. That’s all, honestly.

Of course you’ve got to adhere to copyright rules (we don’t want your version of Ben Hur in 20 minutes) but that’s all fine print.

Now, I’m sure you can recall that

earlier I had mentioned fabulous prizes. So here’s the deal with those: if you’re any good, you might win something. The way the festival works is this:

You submit a film by May 14; that is step one.

Step two is that your film is re-viewed by a panel of semi-experi-enced, semi-competent judges, who will criticize your work as a group. When all of the films have been reviewed, the part you’re ex-cited about — the money — comes into play.

Winners will be chosen based on merit, skill, and close personal rela-tions with the adjudicators. The prizes of money are exciting, don’t you worry. The grand prize is $1,000, with a first runner-up of $500, and a second runner-up of $250. Exciting, right? Finally, at the end of the whole thing, prizes will be awarded to the most deserving and ingratiating films at the Key City Theatre in what is sure to be a gala bash.

Yes, that’s right, a gala bash. On June 11, at the Key, the 607 is put-ting on a screening of its winning films. There will be movies shown, awards handed out, and a meeting of young aspiring filmmakers. Okay, maybe it’ll just be a whole bunch of kids who want to get their hands on prize money, but that’s beside the point. The screening will be open to the public for the low price of $5, and we would like to encourage the general population to get dressed in their best, and come out for an evening of fun.

The fantastic 607: Get those cameras rolling

Mount Baker Wild Theatre launching film festival for filmmakers in Grades 7 through 12

Jerelynn Macneil

Grade 4 students Caydence, Maddie, Hayleigh, and Auzzie show-off the new sports jerseys purchased by St. Mary’s Catholic School. The school is very appreciative of the Cranbrook Rotary Club, the St. Mary’s Parent Support Group and the Knights of Columbus for their financial support toward the pur-chase of these jerseys in support of school sports programs. 

courtesy JiM Ferguson

The Cranbrook Lions Club donated $1,000 to the Cranbrook Public Library in support of its large print program. Left to right: Lion Doug Shipp, Deanne Perreault and Lion Bob Duthie.

Cost of PROMOTING a little more than you planned for?

Try us! We have something the competition doesn’t – daily coverage!

Need help? Call and speak to one of our ad representatives...✓ Cranbrook Daily Townsman (250) 426-5201✓ Kimberley Daily Bulletin (250) 427-5333

Page 3: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, April 16, 2014

WEdnEsday, aPRIL 16, 2014 Page 3

LocaL NEWSdaily bulletin

For the Bulletin

Celebrate Earth Week with Wildsight at an eve-ning featuring Edward Burtynsky’s film Water-mark and a Ktun

axa speaker on water. Following the success of Manufactured Land-scapes, Edward Burtyn-sky is back with this beautiful new project, a three-year exploration of our relationship with water around the world.

Before the film, a speaker from the Ktu-naxa Nation will share Ktunaxa history and cul-ture through a water lens. Come learn about the historic Columbia River salmon run and gain an understanding of the Ktunaxa spiritual con-nection to water.

Wildsight and the Ca-nadian Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fisheries Commission present the evening on April 24, 7:30pm at Key City The-atre in Cranbrook and on April 25, 7:00pm at Cen-tre 64 in Kimberley. Tick-

©Edward Burtynsky

Xiaolangdi Dam, Yellow River, Henan Province, China 2011.

ets for the evening are available in advance for $10 online at wildsight.ca/watermark or for $13 at the door.

Watermark is a fea-ture documentary film that brings together di-

verse stories from around the globe about our relationship with water: how we are drawn to it, what we learn from it, how we use it and the consequences of that use. See massive floating

abalone farms off Chi-na’s Fujian coast and the construction site of the biggest arch dam in the world – the Xiluodu, six times the size of the Hoover.

See Page 5

Earth Week with Wildsight

Pat Mckinlay Photo

In 2012 and 2013 nine hikers from Kimberley decided to do the West Highland Way and the Great Glen Way along the west coast of Scotland. Come to Centre 64 on April 22nd at 7.30 pm and join them on their jour-ney. Experience a wide variety of scenery ---- heather covered hills, bleak moors, famous lochs, and forests carpeted in moss and bluebells. Share with them some of the mystique that makes this fascinating country so popular.

TRAvEloGuE

As 900 Canadians have had their social insur-

ance numbers stolen, the Better Business Bureau is providing guidelines on

how to protect the personal information you

send online

Sally MacDonalDTownsman Staff

The Canada Revenue Agency is this week notifying 900 taxpayers who it believes had their social insur-ance numbers stolen as a result of the Heart-bleed bug that has affected hun-dreds of promi-nent websites.

The tax agency shut down public ac-cess to its online ser-vices on Tuesday, April 8 after it discov-ered that the Heart-bleed encryption vulnera-bility had affected people using the CRA’s website.

The social insurance numbers were stolen over a six-hour period by someone exploiting the vulnerability in many supposedly se-cure websites that used an open-source encryption system.

The agency is sending registered letters to those taxpayers who are af-

fected, rather than emailing because it doesn’t want fraudsters to use phishing schemes to further exploit the privacy breach.

The CRA website was brought back online on Sunday, April 13 after the CRA patched and re-launched its online services, including the E-file and Netfile online income tax por-tals.

People who were not able to file their income tax last week because of the website shutdown have been given an extra week to make the tax deadline. CRA has extended the filing deadline to May 5, 2014 before penal-ties apply.

The Heartbleed bug – which had made websites vulnerable for up to

two years before it was discovered

last week – gave hackers access to passwords, credit card numbers and

other informa-tion at many

websites. Websites that

were vulnerable to the bug include Google, Face-

book, YouTube, Pinterest, Netflix and Blogspot. Users of those websites are being asked to change their pass-

words.The Better Business Bureau

of East Kootenay is going one step forward and suggesting that

consumers change their passwords on all sites they use, particularly those that retain personal identifying information.With files from Jeff Nagel, Black Press

How to protect yourself from the Heartbleed bug

Water quality advisory for

Kimberley, Marysville, Forest Crowne; Boil Water for Kimberley

Golf Course, Riverside Campground, River Bend Lane, River Bend Road, River

Ridge Way, Tamarack Lane and Sunflower

Drive

c arolyn Gr antBulletin Editor

The freshet has begun and although Mark Creek through Kimberley is not running any-where near as quickly as it will at peak melt, turbidity is already an issue.

Interior Health regulations require that municipalities put out water quality advisories or boil water notices when turbidity reaches certain thresholds.

Particles stirred up as rivers

and streams run more quickly can carry disease.

Right now all of Kimberley, Marysville and Forest Crowne are under a water quality adviso-ry and a boil water notice is in effect for Kimberley Golf Course, Riverside Campground, River Bend Lane, River Bend Road, River Ridge Way, Tamarack Lane and Sunflower Drive. The latter areas are those that are not switched over to the Mark Creek system.

A water quality advisory means the City and Interior Health recommend that chil-dren, the elderly, people with weakened immune systems and

anyone seeking additional pro-tection drink boiled water or a safe alternative. For these at-risk populations, water intended for drinking, washing fruits and veg-etables, making juice or ice, or brushing teeth should be boiled for one minute. Boiled water should then be refrigerated in a clean, covered container. Cus-tomers could also choose to use bottled or distilled water, or water that has been filtered through a well-maintained treat-ment device.

During a Boil Water Advisory, Interior Health recommends that all customers drink boiled water or a safe alternative until further notice. Water intended for drinking, washing fruits and vegetables, making juice or ice, or brushing teeth should be boiled for one minute. Water should then be cooled and stored in a clean, covered con-tainer in the fridge. Customers may also choose to use bottled or distilled water, or water that has been filtered through a well-maintained treatment de-vice.

You can keep up with the lat-est turbidity levels at kimberley.ca

Turbidity becoming an issue in Kimberley/ Marysville water

SPRInG fRESHET

Turbidity in your tap water increases with the freshet.

Page 4: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, April 16, 2014

Page 4 Wednesday, aPRIL 16, 2014

LocaL NEWSdaily bulletin

From Page 1“The current zoning is commercial

and there are things a lot worse than a car wash that would be allowed.”

He added that the owners bought the lot as a commercial property and should expect that a commercial venture would be allowed.

Coun. Kent Goodwin said he had been to the neighbourhood and had even been down to the Marysville car washes and observed them for quite some time.

“I think there would be significant

noise and bother to the immediate neighbours,” he said. He also pointed out that Kimberley Official Community Plan said that commercial areas spot zoned in a mainly residential area must maintain residential form and character, and he believed that applied in this case.

Coun. Bev Middlebrook said she sup-ported the rezoning. She also spent some time observing the Marysville car wash-es, and in fact lives near them, and said there was never a time where she found traffic to be an issue. She did note that homes near those car washes dealt with

noise with higher fences and shrubs.“There is no car wash in Kimberley

and we are supposed to be encouraging business. I find it hard to say no.”

With Council deadlocked, it was down to Mayor Ron McRae.

“I’ve thought long and hard about this and I’m torn,” he said. “Because I’m torn, I won’t support second reading. I would urge residents of the neighbourhood and the owners of the property to come to-gether and find a way past this impasse. There is still potential for commercial development on that lot.”

Council says no to car wash

A review by Mike Redfern of Lorne Elliott’s

comedy show at Centre 64 on

April 13.

Sunday night in the theatre at Centre 64, 100 expectant people in the audience, house lights dim, stage lights illumi-nating a tall figure at the microphone, baggy black slacks and loose, open-necked white shirt, sleeves rolled up to his elbows, shaggy grey hair like a mane, a wry expression on his mobile features and a small guitar clutched in one hand. He looked at us and we looked at him and anticipation height-ened even before he spoke. And then for the next two hours, inter-rupted only by a 20 min-ute intermission, Lorne Elliott held us in convul-sions of laughter.

Currently on tour through small towns in the BC Interior, comedi-an, songwriter, and nov-elist Lorne Elliott made a stop in Kimberley and reminded us of why we hung onto his every word for a decade or more during his weekly CBC Radio show, ‘Madly Off In All Directions’. And he made us realize how much of his hu-mour we had missed back then by only hear-ing him, for in person, larger than life on stage, his physical humour and facial expressions proved to be a delight in themselves.

On Sunday night, as he illustrated the diffi-culty of trying to hold his socks up with a bungy cord threaded

through holes in his trouser pockets, well, you had to see the body language to truly appre-ciate the farcical nature of the story.

There seem to be few aspects of life that Lorne Elliott cannot find hu-mour in. From the prime minister’s smile to death by carnivorous wild animals, from po-lygamists in Creston to Bavarian ideologists in Kimberley, Elliott slyly mocked everyone and everything, much to the delight of his audience.

And when he picked up his guitar and sang us some of his songs, his lyrics were as funny as his patter. I’ll never look at an orca the same way again after hearing his Killer Whale song. And as for his moose call song, well, you just had to be there, I suppose, to see those honks and brays emerge from the moose-like contortions of his elastic mouth.

Often seeming to lose track of where he was going with a sub-ject, he called on mem-bers of the audience to remind him and the in-teractions that some-times followed became a comedy routine in themselves. “He was very clever,” comment-ed one audience mem-ber. “Intentionally ‘get-ting lost’ and asking for help gave him scope to wander but to always make a fresh start when brought back.”

Looking back on his performance I am both awed and bemused by the way in which this brilliant comedian held our attention and kept us laughing  for so long by just standing on stage in a relaxed manner, prattling on about this and that in conversa-tional mode, mak-

ing  off-hand observa-tions about the things that people say and do seem extraordinarily funny. It was all in the delivery which, I sup-pose, is why  most of us are not comedians.

“I prefer his relaxed, somewhat dry delivery to a loudmouth, slap-stick approach (to com-edy),” commented an audience member. A preference shared by 99 others on Sunday night, it appeared, judging from the continuous laughter.

Sitting in the lighting

booth at the back of the theatre, Kimberley play-wright, composer, musi-cian, and lighting tech-nician Terry Macham has probably seen more shows at Centre 64 than anyone else. On Sunday night, he told me, he was highly amused and entertained. “It’s not often I come home from a show raving about it but that was certainly the case last night,” he said. “A very funny fel-low indeed.”

Coming next to the Theatre at Centre 64 are Indian tabla musicians,

The Mishras, returning for a third or fourth ap-pearance here on May 24. They will be followed on May 31 by boo-gie-woogie blues pianist Kenny ‘Blues Boss’ Wayne who will per-form in a cabaret-style evening in the dance studio at Centre 64. Tickets for both events are available at Centre 64 and on line at www.kimberleyarts.com.

Lorne Elliott; a very funny fellow

John SylveSter photo

Lorne Elliott had them in stitches at Centre 64 last Sunday.

Almanac

YellowknifeWhitehorseVancouverVictoriaSaskatoonReginaBrandonWinnipegThunder BayS. Ste. MarieTorontoWindsorOttawaMontrealQuebec CityFredericton

sunny -5/-13 sunny 1/-7p.cloudy 6/-1 cloudy 6/-4rain 11/9 rain 11/7rain 11/8 rain 12/7p.sunny -3/-8 p.cloudy 1/-5flurries -3/-9 flurries 0/-4p.cloudy -3/-13 m.sunny -2/-9p.cloudy -2/-10 p.cloudy -1/-10p.cloudy 0/-5 snow 2/-7flurries 0/-2 flurries 4/-1m.sunny 3/-1 p.cloudy 8/4sunny 4/2 p.cloudy 14/6sunny 1/-3 p.cloudy 8/-1sunny 1/-2 p.cloudy 6/1flurries -2/-8 p.cloudy 5/-1showers 4/-5 sunny 8/-3

TemperaturesHigh Low

Normal ..........................12.6°.................0.6°Record .......................25°/1984.........-3.6°/1999Yesterday......................11.1°.................0.2°

Precipitation Normal..............................................1.2mmRecord.....................................8.4mm/1992Yesterday ........................................0.2 mmThis month to date...........................2.6 mmThis year to date............................99.6 mmPrecipitation totals include rain and snow

Canada today tomorrow

Castlegar14/4

Calgary2/-1

Banff4/-1

Edmonton4/-1

Jasper6/-2

�The Weather Network 2014

WeatherWeatheroutlook outlook

Cranbrook10/2

�tlantaBuenos �ires�etroit�eneva�avana�ong �ong�iev�ondon�os �ngelesMiamiParisRomeSingaporeSydneyTokyoWashington

sunny 15/3 p.cloudy 18/9sunny 23/12 cloudy 24/15p.cloudy 8/2 cloudy 17/6sunny 15/2 sunny 17/3tshowers 29/19 tshowers 30/20p.cloudy 24/21 showers 24/22cloudy 12/3 p.cloudy 15/6sunny 15/3 p.cloudy 18/6sunny 20/13 cloudy 18/14cloudy 27/23 tstorms 27/23p.cloudy 18/1 cloudy 21/0p.cloudy 17/3 sunny 18/3p.cloudy 34/27 p.cloudy 34/27showers 20/17 p.cloudy 21/17p.cloudy 21/12 m.sunny 21/12sunny 11/1 p.cloudy 14/3

The World today tomorrow

Tomorrow10

2POP 60%

Tonight

0POP 20%

Saturday16

3POP 20%

Friday12

-1POP 80%

Sunday17

3POP 20%

Monday15

5POP 40%

�pr 22 �pr 29 May 6 May 14

Revelstoke9/3

Kamloops13/4

Prince George7/0

Kelowna14/3

Vancouver11/7

Across the Region Tomorro w

Tomorrows�unrise� 6�46 a.m.�unset� 8�39 p.m.�oonset� 8�12 a.m.�oonrise� 11�42 p.m.

Page 5: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, April 16, 2014

WEdnEsday, aPRIL 16, 2014 Page 5

LocaL NEWSdaily bulletin

Weekly Sunday Services:...................10:30 amFellowship lunch and Sunday School to follow

HOLY WEEK & PASCHAL SERVICES - Fr. Andrew Applegate serving:Holy Wednesday - Bridegroom Matins.......................7:00 pmHoly Thursday - Matins with the 12 Gospels..................7:00 pmHoly & Great Friday - Royal Hours.............................10:00 am Vespers.....................................5:00 pm Matins with the Shroud...............7:30 pmHoly & Great Saturday - Vesper Divine Liturgy..........10:00 amPaschal (Easter) Liturgy & Candlelight Procession....11:30 pm Basket Blessings and Refreshments to followResurrection Sunday - Agape Service........12:00 noon Basket Blessings & traditional Lamb B’BQ Feast to follow Service. All are welcome to join us for Services and FeastFr. Andrew at 403-554-0193 Email: [email protected]

St. Aidan Orthodox Church201-7th Ave. S. Cranbrook BC , Tel: 250-489-8006

www.saintaidan.ca

It’s your voIce - let It be heard!learn about advanced care planning.

choose what health treatment you want, even if you can’t speak.

thursday, april 24, 20147:00 to 9:00 pm

cotr Kimberley campus1850 Warren avenue

Kimberley

call toll free 855-250-417-2019or go to www.ckhospice.com

presented by Cranbrook Kimberley Hospice Society

Kootenay tailor Shop

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(250)426-2933

Taco Time Centre

Nelson Defreyman and Thomas Punty are on a long

walk through the mountains

Arne PetryshenTownsman Staff

One month ago two French friends began a four-month journey to travel the Rockies north to south. This weekend they made their way from Wasa through Bull River to-wards Jaffray, ultimate-ly hoping to make Eu-reka in the next couple days. Thomas Punty and Nelson Defreyman wanted to get a real sense of the landscape of Canada and the U.S. so they decided to do the trip on foot, sup-plemented by ski tour-ing and paragliding along the way.

“We want to cross all the Rockies without any motors, without anything, just paraglid-ers and our feet,” said Punty, who is in busi-ness school back in France. Defreyman, who is also his cousin, is a skiing and para-gliding instructor.

Punty said they de-cided to embark on the Rockies trip after a trip to Central Asia.

“We were coming back from Kyrgistan,” he said. “We wanted to climb those big moun-tains. It was fun, but the thing is we didn’t see that much land-scape.”

That trip was more about summiting, but because of that they didn’t get immersed into the culture and landscape. They want-ed see a mountain range in its entirety and meet people along the way.

“So that’s why we wanted to do another trip like this,” he said. “That’s why we took four months.”

They began their journey in MacKenzie, B.C., ski touring until Jasper where they sent their ski equipment to their end destination: Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Arne Petryshen Photo

Nelson Defreyman and Thomas Punty stopped by the roadside for a photo near Bull River townsite on Saturday. The travellers, from Barcelonette, France are just completing the Canadian portion of their north to south 3,000 km traverse of the Rocky Mountain range and were headed towards Jaffray, before crossing the U.S. border.

French travellers head south on epic Rockies traverse

On skis they fol-lowed along the high-way or logging roads, with the goal to take the shortest route. Punty said they some-times got lost on the back roads, but still had a great time, even with the weather being what it was.

“It was very cold,” he said, adding that those were some of coldest nights they’ve ever felt. “You are al-ways cold. It’s some-times hard, but always very interesting.”

He said it is also tir-ing, because when out in the wilderness, they don’t eat much. It’s only when they get to a town that they have a big meal.

He said traveling here is a lot different than in Europe as well. There if you’re on a mountain and have trouble often you can just descend into the

valley and there will be a town or village. Here everything is much more secluded, but they seem to enjoy that.

“It’s very nice to see the wilderness,” he said. “Compared to Eu-rope it makes you adapt a lot.”

Punty said the two of them make a good team. He’s good with the planning and logis-tics part of the journey. Defreyman has the hands on knowledge

and training. Both of them have been para-gliding since they were teenagers.

Punty said they are very complimentary in that way, rather than both having the same set of skills.

“That’s why it’s al-ways worked,” he said. “We’ve done a lot of ex-

peditions together.”They update their

website from the field by way of a video cam-era and a iPhone con-nector. They post the updates and videos along the way so you can follow along at www.xrockies.com or at www.facebook.com/XRockies.

From Page 3We visit the barren

desert delta where the mighty Colorado River no longer reaches the ocean, and the wa-ter-intensive leather tanneries of Dhaka.

Witness how hu-mans are drawn to water, from the U.S. Open of Surfing in Huntington Beach to the Kumbh Mela in Al-lahabad, where thirty million people gather for a sacred bath in the Ganges at the same time. Listen to scien-tists who drill ice cores two kilometers deep into the Greenland Ice Sheet, and roam the sublime pristine water-sheds of Northern Brit-ish Columbia.

Every living thing requires water. Hu-mans interact with it in a myriad of ways, nu-merous times a day. But how often do we consider the complexi-ty of that interaction? And, unless confronted by scarcity, when do we meditate on its ubiquity in creating, sustaining and enrich-ing life?

Shot in stunning 5K ultra high-definition video and full of soar-ing aerial perspectives, this film shows water

as a terraforming ele-ment and the scale of its reach, as well as the magnitude of our need and use. This is bal-anced by forays into the particular: a haunt-ing memory of a stolen river, a mysterious fig-ure roaming ancient rice terraces, the cru-cial data hidden in a million year old piece of ice, a pilgrim’s pri-vate ritual among thousands of others at the water’s edge.

Watermark is direct-ed by multiple award-winning film-maker Jennifer Baic-hwal and renowned photographer Edward Burtynsky, and is the third part of Burtyn-sky’s Water project, which includes a book Burtynsky: Water and a major photographic exhibition. Filmed and produced by Nicholas de Pencier and three years in the making, it is a logical extension of the trio’s previous col-laboration, Manufac-tured Landscapes. In Watermark, the viewer is immersed in a world defined by a magnifi-cent force of nature that we all too often take for granted - until it’s gone.

Join Wildsight for Earth

Week event

Page 6: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, April 16, 2014

PAGE 6 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014

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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.

DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

Why would anyone believe Seymour Hersh? True, he’s the Pulitzer Prize-winning investiga-tive reporter who broke

the story of the massacre committed by US Army troops at My Lai in 1968 during the Vietnam War, and revealed the torture and sexual humiliation of Iraqi prisoners by US military police at Abu Ghraib prison in 2004. But he’s getting old (77), and he’s a freelancer, and he won’t even disclose the name of his key informant.

Whereas the US government has hun-dreds of thousands of people working for it just gathering and analys-ing intelligence, and the American media are famed worldwide for their brave defence of the truth no matter what the cost. Be-sides, has the US govern-ment ever lied to you in the past?

So we obviously should not give much credence to Hersh’s most recent story. It alleges that the poison gas attack in Da-mascus last August that killed more than a thousand people, and almost triggered a massive US air attack on Syria, was not re-ally carried out by Bashar al-Assad’s tyran-nical regime (which the US wants to over-throw)

It was, Hersh says, a false-flag operation carried out by the rebel Al-Nusra Front with the purpose of triggering an Ameri-can attack on Assad. If you can believe that, you would probably also believe his

allegation that it was the Turkish govern-ment, a US ally and NATO member, that gave the jihadi extremists of al-Nusra the chemicals to make sarin (nerve gas) and the training to carry out the mass attack in Damascus.

Hersh even says that it was General Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, who told President Barack Obama just days before the Ameri-can strikes on Syria were due to start that the evidence was not strong enough to justify an American attack on the Syrian regime.

The rest of the story we already know. Obama postponed the at-tack by deciding, quite sud-denly, that he had to get Congressional support for it. Then he cancelled it en-tirely once the Russians gave him the face-saving al-ternative of getting Assad to hand over all of his chemi-

cal weapons for destruction. There is no chance of an American attack on Syria now. But could Hersh’s back-story be true?

By last August it was clear that Assad’s regime would eventually win the civil war unless there was some radical change in the situation (like an American bombing campaign against it). So Assad’s survival depended on not giving the United States any reason to attack him.

Barack Obama had already said that any use of poison gas by the Syrian regime would cross a “red line” and trigger an American attack. In mid-August there

were United Nations inspectors in Damas-cus to look into two much smaller attacks earlier in 2013 that seemed to involve poi-son gas. And we are asked to believe that at that precise moment Assad thought it would be a neat idea to kill one or two thousand innocent civilians in the city with poison gas.

So who did it? The obvious question to ask was: Who stands to benefit from this attack? – and the answer was certainly not Assad. He would not have done this unless he was very stupid, and being wicked does not make you stupid. Whereas the rebels had every reason to do it, in order to suck American firepower in on their side.

Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey’s prime minister for the past eleven years, has backed the Islamist rebels in the Syrian civil war from the start, and he will be in deep trouble if they lose. They WILL lose, unless either Turkey or the United States comes to their aid militarily. Erdogan would obviously rather have the US Air force do it rather than his own armed forc-es. So he had a good motive for giving the rebels the poison gas.

Hersh says that he has been told by a former senior official in the US Defense Intelligence Agency that that is what hap-pened. You can read the details on the website of the London Review of Books. And yes, he’s old, but that just means he has been getting it right about a lot of dif-ferent things for a long time.

Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist based in London.

Seymour Hersh strikes again

LETTERS TO THE EDITORLetters to the Editor should be a maximum of 400 words in length. We reserve the right to edit, condense or reject any contri-bution. All letters must include the name and daytime phone number of the writer for verification purposes. The phone number will not be printed. Anonymous letters will not be published. Only one letter per month from any particular letter writer will be published. Email letters to [email protected]. Mail to The Daily Townsman, 822 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook, B.C. V1C 3R9. In Kimberley, email [email protected]. Mail to The Daily Bulletin, 335 Spokane Street, Kimberley, BC V1A 1Y9.

Gwynne Dyer

Page 7: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, April 16, 2014

WEdnEsday, aPRIL 16, 2014 Page 7daily townsman / daily bulletin

features

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 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: 250-426-5003

ONGOING Royal Canadian Legion Branch 24; Friday Meat Draw: 4:30- 6:30, Saturday Meat Draw: 3:30-5:30. Mark Creek Lions meet 1st and 3rd Wednesday at the Kimbrook. Meet & Greet from 6:00-6:30pm, supper 6:30-7:00, meeting 7:00-8:00pm. Contact 250-427-5612 or 250-427-7496. New members welcome - men and ladies!Seniors Autobiographical Writing for those aged 60 or wiser at the Kimberley Library. No writing experience necessary. It’s free. Tuesdays 10:00 - Noon. Register: Kim Roberts CBAL Coordinator 250-427-4468 or [email protected] Cellar Thrift Store Open Mon. to Sat., noon to 4:30 p.m. Our revenues support local programs and outreach programs of Cranbrook United Church. Baker Lane Entry at 2 – 12th Ave. S. Cranbrook, B. C. Donations of new or gently used items welcome.Creating a bridge between Cranbrook’s Art scene and Sport scene, The Cranbrook and District Arts Council is holding an Art Exhibition for the month of March titled “Slapshot – Sport in Art”. Local artists submitted their “Sport Themed” work to the Gallery; on display to Friday Mar 28th. Canadian Cancer Society- if you have spare time and would like to volunteer, interested applicants can call 250-426-8916, drop by our o� ce at #19-9th Avenue S, Cranbrook or go to www.� ghtwithus.ca and register as a volunteer.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] Bridge–Senior Center in Cranbrook. Mon & Wed 7pm, Thurs & Fri 1pm at Scout Hall, Marysville. Info: Maggie 250-417-2868.Mark Creek Lions meet 1st and 3rd Wednesdays at the Kimbrook. Meet & Greet from 6:00-6:30pm, supper 6:30-7:00, meeting 7:00-8:00pm. Contact 250-427-5612 or 250-427-7496. New members welcome – men and ladies!Funtastic Singers Drop-In Singing group; free to attend-just for fun! No experience necessary! CDAC O� ce&Gallery 135 10th Ave S, Tuesdays; 6.45-8.15pm 250-426-4223 / [email protected] / www.cranbrookanddistrictartscouncil.comCranbrook Branch of the Stroke Recovery Association of BC. Meetings are from 10:00am-1:00pm the 2nd and 4th Wed. in the lower level of the Senior Citizen’s Hall, 125-17th St. S. Bring bag lunch. Tootie Gripich, 426-3994. Cranbrook 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.

UPCOMING2014 FREE FAMILY SWIM Wednesday, April 16th, 6:00-7:00pm is sponsored by Kimberley Healthcare Auxiliary. Persons 18 years & younger must be accompanied by an adult.Prostate Cancer Support Group, Wed April 16, 7 pm, meeting at the Heritage Inn to hear a talk by Glenda Standeven, author of “What Men Won’t Talk About . . And Women Need to Know” about her husband’s prostate cancer. We need to be sure there is enough space for us so please RSVP to Kevin 427-3322 or Dennis 489-5249.Learn about advanced care planning, choose what healthcare you want and don’t want even when you can’t speak for yourself. Learn how by attending an information session presented by the Cranbrook Kimberley Hospice Society at the Cranbrook Health Unit 1700 – 4th st. S. On wed apr 16th from 7 to 9 pm. INFO: 250-417-2019 toll free 855-417-2019 or go to www.Ckhospice.ComSaturday April 19th, 2014 from 1-3:30pm Cranbrook United Church, 2-12th Ave S. will be hosting an Easter Egg Hunt for any children under 10. Admission by donation. Bring your friends and family.Learn about advanced care planning, choose what healthcare you want and don’t want even when you can’t speak for yourself. Attend an info session presented by the Cranbrook Kimberley Hospice Society at the College of the Rockies, Kimberley Campus 1850 Warren Avenue, Wed. Apr. 24th from 7 to 9 pm. It’s your voice, let it be heard. Info; call 250-417-2019 toll free 855-417-2019 or go to w ww.ckhospice.comHave Camera Will Travel.... Join Jim Webster & Ian McKinlay - travelogue “Wet & Dry” - Hiking Across Scotland at Centre 64 on Tuesday, April 22 at 7:30 pm. Admission by donation. Proceeds to Kimberley Arts Council & Expansion Project.DANCE to ‘The Pacemakers’ APRIL 26 at the Cranbrook Seniors HALL at 7 pm, following the afternoon ‘JAM Session’ & Ice-cream Social, at 1:30 PM. All are welcome to come out to both events. Info: Flo 250.489.2720.East Kootenay Historical Assoc Meeting Sunday, April 27th, 12:00 noon at Heritage Inn. Guest Speaker: Joe Pierre. Dues $10.00. Please phone Marilyn 426-3070 or Skip 426-3679.

CAROLYN GRANTentertainment@

dailytownsman.com

Easter weekend is

approaching and the local entertainment scene is quiet as most will enjoy time with their families. But it picks right up again after the holiday.

This month at the Cranbrook Library, in honour of Easter, the dis-play case is presenting a stunning egg collection owned by Kathy Simon.

Dance With Me cranbrook

Dance classesFor you ladies who

don’t have a partner, but would like to learn all the basic steps, spins and turns in most dance genres. Come and check out our Dance Style Fit-ness Classes. These are, or can be, high energy exercises incorporating and improving balance and movement in as many as 12 different dance styles. These classes are held on Mon-day evenings from 7 to 8 p.m. and Thursday day-time, 12:15 to 1:15 p.m. The price is $10 per per-son drop in. If you are looking for something a bit less energetic, but still a lot of fun, come and check out our line dancing class, Wednes-day Daytime 12:15 to 1:15 p.m. Salsa classes for ages 4 to adult re-sumed on Friday April 4th after Spring break. If you are interested in having these classes continue in the future, we will need a larger turn out (at least four people per class.

cDac Presents: the art grouP 75

exhibition

On display now at the Cranbrook and Dis-trict Arts Council is the Art Group 75 Exhibition. This show features work from a local seniors painting group and in-cludes beautiful land-scapes and still life piec-es. The artwork will dec-orate the Gallery walls from Tuesday April 1 to Friday May 2. For more information contact Marisa Phillips – CDAC Administrator at: 250-426-4223 or email: [email protected]

WeD. aPril 16, 2014ashley Macisaac

A renowned fiddle

player, piano player and step dancer, Ashley Ma-cIsaac, is one of the most celebrated Cana-dian roots musicians of all time. Ashley Ma-cIsaac will be playing at the Key City Theatre on Wednesday, April 16 at 7:30. Tickets are $35/$30 for members and are on sale now at the Key City Box office or call 250-426-7006 to order by phone.

thurs. aPril 17banD concert

Start the Easter holi-day with the sounds of the Kimberley Commu-nity Band. Along with their special guests, the Selkirk High School Band, they will be per-forming at the McKim Theatre in Kimberley on Thursday, April 17 at 7:30 pm. Admission is by donation with the pro-ceeds going towards the Music Scholarship fund.

tues. aPril 22have caMera Will

travel

Join Jim Webster & Ian McKinlay - travel-ogue “Wet & Dry” - Hik-ing Across Scotland at Centre 64 on Tuesday, April 22 at 7:30 p.m. Ad-mission by donation. Proceeds to Kimberley Arts Council & Expan-sion Project.

WeD. aPril 24thurs. aPril 25

WaterMark

Wildsight and the Ca-nadian Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fisheries Commission present the film Watermark and a Ktunaxa speaker on water. The events are on April 24, 7:30 p.m. at Key City Theatre in Cran-brook and on April 25, 7 p.m. at Centre 64 in Kim-berley. Tickets are $10 in advance at wildsight.ca/watermark or for $13 at the door.

sat. aPril 26garage sale

The Friends of the

Cranbrook Public Li-brary will be holding a garage sale on Saturday, April 26 from 9 am to 1 pm. Donations for the sale will be gratefully ac-cepted on Friday, April 25 from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. All proceeds from the sale go to support li-brary programs and ser-vices.

sat. aPril 26beginners henna

WorkshoP

On Saturday April 26th, CDAC will be put-ting on a Beginners Henna Workshop by local Artist Raylene. Price for this workshop is: $35/person (all sup-plies included). To reg-ister for this workshop, please phone 426-4223 and talk to Marisa or email: [email protected]. The Beginners Henna Workshop will be held at the CDAC Gallery, lo-cated at: Room #104, 135 10th Avenue South, Cranbrook.

sat. aPril 26roller Derby

If you feel like hitting the road for a short road trip,why not take in the opening bout in the sea-son’s Roller Derby bat-tles? East Kootenay Roll-er Derby Leage kicks off it’s Summer 2014 sea-son with a double-head-er bout in Canal Flats Arena. This is a fami-ly-friendly event ... fun for all ages! First Bout: 6 p.m. (Kimberley’s “Ba-varian Barbarians” vs. Calgary’s “Cut Throat Car Hops”). Second Bout: 8 p.m. (Inver-mere’s “Killer Rollbots” vs. Elkford’s “Wildcat Brawlers”)Beer Garden will be open. 50/50 tick-ets will be sold. Adults: $10; Kids: $5; Five and under free. Tickets avail-able at the door. Please bring an item for the Food Bank. www.east-kootenayrollerderby.com

sat. aPril 26locals coffee

house at stuDio stage Door in

cranbrook.Tickets: Advance

Tickets ($8) available at Lotus Books (across from City Hall) in Cran-brook. Tickets will also be available at the door if the show is not sold out. Line-Up: Daze of Grace, Erin & Ferdy, Doug Mitchell, Josh Norgard, Tom Bungay, Robin Sudo & Jim Cam-

eron The Good Ol’ Goats.

sat. aPril 26hoMe groWn

The final coffee house of the season, will be held at Centre 64, 8 pm sharp, doors open at 7:30 p.m. Tickets avail-able at the Snow Drift Cafe $7 or at Centre 64. Line up to date; Stacy Decosse, Fraser Arm-strong, Stuart Campbell, Ray Gareau, and Barry Garland is MC

sat. aPril 26social Dance

Dance to ‘The Pace-makers’ April 26 at the Cranbrook Seniors Hall at 7 p.m., following the afternoon ‘Jam Session’ & Ice-cream Social, at 1:30 p.m. All are wel-come to come out to both events. Info: Flo 250.489.2720.

sun. aPril 27Marysville Pub

Elena Yeung and the Kootenay Special will play the Marysville Pub Sunday April 27, 3 p.m.

WeD. aPril 30tribune at the

byng

The band Tribune is on their Canada Slays Tour in promotion of their latest album ‘Tales’, a concept album in-spired entirely by litera-ture and features a wide array of influences, from Homer to Mary Shelley to H.P. Lovecraft, to more extreme music influenc-es such as Carcass, Death and At The Gates.

May 8 to 11Mount baker WilD theatre

Mount Baker pres-ents Urinetown the Mu-sical. Book and lyrics by Greg Kotis, and music and lyrics by Mark Holl-man. 7:30, and at 2 p.m. on the 11th. The show is performed at the Key City theatre, and tickets are $15 for adults, and $18 for students and se-niors. They are available online, and at the Key City box office.

saturDay, May 17cranbrook PriDe

Dance

10 p.m. at Dewey’s Pub. Cranbrook Pride seeks to celebrate strength through diver-sity by staging a day of fun and excitement, in-cluding family-oriented activities in the after-noon, and a dance, with live entertainment, at Dewey’s, on the 17th of May. If you’re a per-former and want to help, contact Megan Madison at the_ [email protected] for more information.

sat. May 24Dance With Me

cranbrook

Dance With Me Cranbrook will be host-ing a dinner dance at the Royal Alexandra Hall in the Railway Mu-seum on Saturday May 24. Catering by Heidi of the Heidout. Tickets will be available after April 15 and will be limited to 60 people. Let us know early if you would like to reserve a ticket.

The Know It All

A short Easter break in entertainment

Roller derby is getting underway. The season’s first bout is in Canal Flats on April 26.

Page 8: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, April 16, 2014

PAGE 8 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014

TRE VOR CR AWLEYSports Editor

Local members of the Kimberley Alpine Team took to the hills in the Lower Main-land to race at the Whistler Cup over the weekend.

Emma Damm, Ethan Blair, Jamie Cas-selman and Zoe Chore all represented their club while competing against 400 other races from 27 different countries.

Casselman took the top honours of the group by ending the weekend as the sec-ond overall Canadian based on perfor-mance. He took a bronze medal in U14 slalom and finished 4th in giant slalom and 9th in the second round of dual giant slalom.

““I thought the dual slalom was a cool idea,” said Casselman. “It was especially fun riding backup to the start behind the snowmobiles. I was a bit nervous before my first run of the slalom race because of the high level of competition and I really

hoped to do well this year. I got 7th in my first run and was afraid the podium was out of reach.

“I was more comfortable before my second run so I skied more aggressively with the second fastest afternoon run and ended up on the podium in third. This was my third Whistler cup and I have had a lot of good experiences. I always look forward to the breakfasts at the Roundhouse even though I have to wake up really early.”

Fellow U14 teammate Ethan Blair fin-ished 32nd in slalom, 58th in giant slalom and 40th in the first round of dual slalom.

In the U14 female category, Emma Damm raced to 31st out of 109 competi-tors in giant slalom and 20th in the first round of dual slalom.

In the U16 category, Zoe Chore placed 31st in super-G and 42nd in giant slalom in a group of 80 athletes.

“These young athletes have had very successful seasons both regionally and

provincially,” said KAT coach Jon Blair. “Zoe Chore and Jamie Casselman will fin-ish off their season by attending a BC Al-pine Talent ID camp in Whistler April 16-20th.”

The event is a pretty big affair, which simulates an Olympic atmosphere with the top 11-15 year old talent, coaches and volunteers in different cultures coming to-gether to compete. Friends are made through banquets, 7 a.m. breakfasts at the top of the mountain, live music and a pa-rade where Olympic athletes and Whistler Cup athletes proudly represent their coun-try.

Kimberley Alpine Team has been in operation since 1987. The club provides fall and winter programs for developing the love of skiing in children from the ages 4 to 19 with operations based at the Kim-berley Alpine Ski Resort. For more infor-mation go to www.KimberleyAlpineTeam.ca

SPORTS

Local racers compete at Whistler Cup

KIMBERLEY ALPINE TEAM

SUBMITTED PHOTO

Coach Jon Blair, Ethan Blair, Jamie Casselman, Zoe Chore and Emma Damm take a break in the action for a picture at the Whistler Cup this past weekend.

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DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

Ice, Tigers set for epic playoff series finaleTRE VOR CR AWLEY

Sports Editor

Sometimes it’s hard to give credit when cred-it is due, but in this case, the Medicine Hat Tigers deserve some props.

Facing a 3-1 series deficit, they came back and won the following two outings to tie every-thing up and force the first Game Seven in the 2014 WHL playoffs.

Needing only one win, the Ice were shel-lacked 9-2 in Medicine Hat in Game Five before dropping a tight 2-1 de-cision at home in Game Six.

It’s now or never to-night in Alberta.

Ice forward Jon Mar-tin, who scored the lone goal on Monday night, brushed aside any ques-tions of confidence, after the team suffered back-to-back losses.

“We’re good,” Martin said. “We did a lot of good things in the third period and we talked about that, so we just got to carry that into Game Seven here and we’ll be fine.”

The third period Martin refers to is the final 20 minutes of the 2-1 loss on Monday. The two teams held each other without a shot on goal six minutes into the frame, with Kootenay

eventually gaining some traction and pressure in Tigers territory.

“It was the best peri-od of the series by us, by far, so I think we just need to carry that mo-mentum into the next Game Seven here, do all the good things we’ve been doing,” added Martin.

The Medicine Hat Arena is a notoriously tough building to play in.

The Tigers had the second best home re-cord in the Eastern Con-ference in the regular season, and they beat the Ice in all three meet-ings in Medicine Hat.

Kootenay bucked that trend to open the second round of the playoffs, picking up their first win in Medicine Hat for an early series lead.

“It’s probably one of the toughest rinks to play in and I think we just have to keep it sim-ple and do the little things like we’ve been doing here in the third period,” said Martin.

One key to the game will be the powerplay. After decimating the Hitmen with the man-advantage, Koote-nay has scored once in 21 powerplay opportu-nities in this series with

the Tigers.“I think we need to

simplify things, get pucks to the net,” said Ice captain Sam Rein-hart. “It’s pretty cliche, but when you’re having troubles, for the most part, it resolves when you’re keeping things simple and we definitely had success, maybe not on the scoresheet, on our powerplay through-out the series, but Game Seven is a perfect op-portunity for them to go in for us.”

If Kootenay pulls out the win, they’ll book a spot in the conference championship against the Edmonton Oil Kings.

Florida Panthers win � rst overall pick in NHL Draft

TORONTO - The Florida Panthers won the NHL Draft lottery on Tuesday, granting the team the first overall pick in the 2014 NHL Entry Draft.

Florida had an 18.8 per cent chance of winning the draft lottery, second only to the Buffalo Sabres’ 25 per cent odds.

Barrie Colts defenceman Aaron Ekblad is the top-ranked prospect heading into the draft.

The draft will be held June 27th and 28th in Phil-adelphia.

Five Canadian teams had entries in the lottery, but none moved up in the draft.

The Edmonton Oilers will select third, the Cal-gary Flames fourth, the Vancouver Canucks sixth, the Toronto Maple Leafs eighth and the Winnipeg Jets ninth.

The Ottawa Senators would have selected 10th, but they traded their pick to the Anaheim Ducks.

Montreal was not entered in the draft lottery as the Canadiens are the only Canadian team in the NHL playoffs.

Canadian Press

Abbotsford cuts losses, severs deal with AHL’s Heat

ABBOTSFORD, B.C. - The Abbotsford Heat of the American Hockey League is leaving the City of Ab-botsford.

Mayor Bruce Banman announced Tuesday that the termination of the tenancy agreement with the team is in the best financial interests of the city.

The team, which has spent five seasons in the city, has been a money loser, and Abbotsford has agreed to pay more than $5 million to end its deal with the franchise five years early.

The team is in the Calder Cup playoffs and will leave the city after that run is complete.

The Heat is the farm team for the Calgary Flames.The Flames said there is a plan in place for the

Heat in the 2014-15 season and it will announce the team’s new location later

Canadian Press

Toronto Raptors insist they have preferable

post-season opponentTORONTO - If the Toronto Raptors have a prefer-

able post-season opponent, they’re not saying.The Raptors wrap up their record-breaking regu-

lar season Wednesday night at New York, and won’t know until post-game who’ll they’ll face in the play-offs.

And they insist they don’t care.“We’re just worried about ourselves,” Amir John-

son said after Monday’s victory over the Milwaukee Bucks. “We just want to clean up on our mistakes. Whoever’s in front of us, we’re going to play the same way we’ve been playing all season.”

The Raptors, who set a franchise record with their 48th win of the season Monday night, will face either the Brooklyn Nets, Washington Wizards or Charlotte Bobcats when the opening round begins this weekend.

The Raptors are tied with the Chicago Bulls for third in the Eastern Conference, but control their own destiny. They’ll clinch the No. 3 seed if they ei-ther beat the Knicks on Wednesday, or the Bulls lose at Charlotte. They’ll finish fourth if they lose and Chicago wins.

Raptors coach Dwane Casey has been resting his starters - all-star DeMar DeRozan got the night off Monday. Casey said he would consider resting DeRozan again Wednesday, despite what outcome that might have on the game, and their conference seeding.

Canadian Press

Page 9: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, April 16, 2014

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014 PAGE 9DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

Run Date: Tue, April 15, 2014 Kamloops / KelownaRun Date: Wed, April 16, 2014 Campbell River / Cranbrook / Comox / Vernon / PentictonFile Name: SS.Wk17.0416.LowerMainland.NoCashLane

Size: Tab — 10.25” X 13.6”

CHOOSE 1 OF 2 FREE OFFERS!

Typesetter: QL

Prices are in effect until Sunday, April 20, 2014 or while stock lasts.Quantities and/or selection of items may be limited and may not be available in all stores. No rainchecks. No substitutions on clearance items or where quantities are advertised as limited. Advertised pricing and product selection (flavour, colour, patterns, style) may vary by store location. We reserve the right to limit quantities to reasonable family requirements. We are not obligated to sell items based on errors or misprints in typography or photography. Coupons must be presented and redeemed at time of purchase. Applicable taxes, deposits, or environmental surcharges are extra. No sales to retail outlets. Some items may have “plus deposit and environmental charge” where applicable. ®/™ The trademarks, service marks and logos displayed in this flyer are trademarks of Loblaws Inc. and others. All rights reserved. © 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.

MB and ON stores closed these days.See online or in-store for your particular store’s hours.

MOST stores openGood Friday and Easter Sunday.

247

100 297

196 396

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Weston dinner rolls

Oasis juice PC® ice cream shop fl avours

Farmer’s Market™ mini carrots

2 lb BAG Dole salad kits

no name® pineapple 540 mLor cranberry sauce 348 mL

no name® Aristocrat or Black Forest ham

ea

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/lb6.57/kg

white or 100% whole wheat, pkg of 20

selected varieties, 960 mL selected

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product of USA

selected varieties, product of USA, 234-351 g

selected varieties

boneless

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product of Costa Rica butt and shank portion grade Awhile quantities last

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selected varieties, 120 g selected varieties, 750 g

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pineapples Cooks ham portions fresh PC® turkeys

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in-store

Egg Dye ColorCups972224

Cabury Caramilk or Creme Eggs3 pack650215

Kinder Surprise chick2 pack, 40 g937193

Play-Doh Grab’n Goassorted, 3 pack

726122

Volcano Eggsplosion egg dye kit326192

licensed sticker fi lled eggs6 countselection may vary by store696800

Hershey’s Easter chocolate bagsselected varieties, 185-340 g145294

Lindtmini eggs100 g706974

Peepsselected varieties, 85-95 g785841

Jelly Belly bubbles4 oz.650659

Hot Wheels basic carassorted634760

Cadbury Mini Eggs39 g888758

TO

ONE HOP$1 or less

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$2 or less

u Spend $175 or more before applicable taxes at any Real Canadian Superstore location and receive a free Anchor Hocking 14 piece Bake and Store Set. 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 $19.99 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 Thursday, April 17th until closing Thursday, April 24th, 2014. Cannot be combined with any other coupons or promotional offers. No substitutions, refunds or exchanges on free item.232100

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Page 10: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, April 16, 2014

Page 10 Wednesday, aPRIL 16, 2014

NEWSdaily townsman / daily bulletin

Bill Gr avelandCanadian Press

CALGARY — The suspect in the stabbing deaths of five young people in Calgary is the son of a senior officer with the city police force.

Chief Rick Hanson says the arrested man is a student at the University of Calgary and was an invited guest at a house party celebrating the end of the school year.

Hanson says the young man arrived at the party early Tuesday morning, got his hands on a large knife and began stabbing the victims one by one.

Three men died at the scene, while another man and a woman died in hospital.

“This is the worst murder — mass murder — in Calgary's history,” Hanson said. “We have never seen five people killed by an individual at one scene. The scene was horrific.”

Hanson says the dead were all “good kids” who were in their twenties.

He says first-degree-mur-der charges are pending and the name of the suspect will be released after they are laid.

Police were called to the northwest residential neigh-bourhood of Brentwood, not far from the University of Cal-gary campus, at about 1:20 a.m.

The suspect was arrested with the help of the police ca-nine unit about 40 minutes after the stabbings. He was taken to hospital for treatment of dog bites.

Hanson says the suspect worked at a grocery store and his father had worked with the force for 33 years. There was no immediate word about a possible motive.

The blue-sided house where the stabbing took place is on a quiet, tree-lined resi-dential street. It was surround-ed with yellow police tape as medical examiner staff brought three bodies out on stretchers.

Neighbours in the area say the house was being rented by University of Calgary students and the party stemmed from the student union's annual Bermuda Shorts Day, which was held Monday.

The event, shortened by students to BSD, is an annual

outdoor party on campus fea-turing live music and beer gar-dens to celebrate the end of classes.

The school's student news-paper, The Gauntlet, wrote about the tradition two weeks ago in a story titled “BSD: It'll be a bloodbath.”

The university posted a short statement about the deaths on its website, saying counselling would be offered to anyone needing it.

“The University of Calgary is mourning the loss of five young people killed early this morning in Brentwood,” the

statement reads. “The identities of the de-

ceased have not yet been con-firmed by Calgary Police Ser-vices. Once details are con-firmed by Calgary Police Ser-vices, the university will pro-vide a further statement.”

Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi took to Twitter to offer condolences.

“Thoughts and prayers of all Calgarians are with the young people we lost this morning, their families, friends, and university com-munity,” the mayor said.

Cranbrook United Church

2 - 12th Avenue South, Cranbrook(on the corner of Baker & 12th)

with Rev. Frank Lewis

Maundy ThursdayA “Last” Supper Service, we serve each other soup/buns/refreshments

April 17th @ 6pm.

Good Friday ServiceApril 18th @ 9:00am

Joining the “Cross”walk @ Baker St. Clock Tower 10:00am.

Easter Egg HuntSaturday, April 19th 1-3:30pm for children 10 and under. Come one, come all. Admission by donation.

Easter ServiceApril 20th 10:00am

Fellowship to follow.

Ph: 250-426-2022www.cranbrookunited.com

Kimberley United ChurchCorner of Wallinger & Boundary

Phone 250-427-2428Rev. Christine Dudley

Good Friday: April 18th, 10:00 amEaster Sunrise: Details on website

Easter Sunday: April 20th, 10:00 am

www.kimberleyunited.ca

St. Mary & Christ the Servant ChurchCatholic Church Easter Liturgy

Holy Thursday April 17, 7:30pm, Christ the Servant Church

Good Friday April 18, 12:00 noon at St. Mary Church and

3:00 pm at Christ the Servant Church

Holy Saturday - Easter Vigil MassApril 19, 8:00pm at St. Mary Church

Easter Sunday April 20, 8:00 & 11:00am at St. Mary Church,

9:30 am at Christ the Servant Church, and 2:00pm at St. Eugene Church

St. Mary Church: 39 - 10th Ave. S., CranbrookChrist the Servant Church: 1100 - 14th Ave. S., Cranbrook

St. Eugene Church: at the Native Reserve, Cranbrook

Christ ChurchRev. Yme Woensdregt

April 17, Maundy Thursday, worship at 7 pmApril 18, Good Friday CrossWalk at

Clock Tower at 10 amApril 19, Vigil of Easter, 6 pm

April 20, Easter Sunday, 9:15 am & 11 am

46 - 13 Ave S, Cranbrook250-426-2644

Pastor Grant McDowell

10:30 - 2:00 Good Friday Service

and Community Lunch(Please bring a dessert to share)

10:30 - NoonEaster Sunday Service

1200 Kootenay St. N. 250-489-4704 www.cranbrookalliancechurch.com

Corner Victoria & 3rd St. S. 250-426-7165

Senior Pastor: Dr. Ron FoubisterPastor to Young Families: Al Brouwer

Good FridayJoint Service, 11:00 am

First Baptist Church Friday April 18th

Easter Sunday ServiceKnox Presbyterian,

10:00 am Sunday April 20th

Easter ServiceFort Steele Presbyterian

Church, 1:00 pm

KNOX PRESBYTERIAN

CHURCHEas er

SACRED HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH502 Church Ave, Kimberley

250-427-2585Holy Thursday,

April 17 • 7:00pm – Mass of the Lord’s Supper followed by Adoration until 11:00pm

Good Friday, April 18 • 3:00pm – Celebration of the Lord’s Passion

Holy Saturday, April 19 • 8:00pm –

Easter Vigil begins at duskEaster Sunday,

April 20 • 9:30am – Easter Mass

Alleluia! Christ the Lord is Risen Today! Alleluia!

AllSaints

AnglicanChurchKimberley,invites you to join us for the

following services:

Good Friday(in Church hall)

10:00 am

Easter Sunday10:00 am

followed by an Easter Egg Hunt!

360 Leadenhall St.ELCIC Pastor Kim Staus

Easter Services

Calgary stabbing suspect son of officer B.C. report urges tougher rules for

police checksC anadian PreSS

VICTORIA — British Columbia’s privacy commissioner says tougher rules are need-ed to stop police from releasing sensitive per-sonal information about people beyond criminal convictions to their prospective em-ployers.

In a report released today, Elizabeth Den-ham says government and police boards should immediately stop providing mental health information to employers as part of the information released in information checks.

The Information and Privacy Commissioner has called this report on the use of police infor-mation checks in B.C. her most important ever.

Denham says thou-

sands of police infor-mation checks are used by employers and vol-unteer groups every year in the hiring pro-cess and the informa-tion in these checks, which often goes be-yond criminal records, can have lasting and profound impacts on a person’s privacy.

Her report says the government should adopt legislation pro-hibiting the release of non-conviction infor-mation for employment positions outside of those working with children and other vul-nerable people.

Denham’s report says B.C.’s police infor-mation checks reveal more information about individuals than most other jurisdic-tions.

NatioNal Post Photo

This street in northwest Calgary was the scene of five stab-bing deaths early Tuesday morning.

Page 11: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, April 16, 2014

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014 PAGE 11

PUZZLESDAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

Fill in the grid so that every row (nine cells wide), every column (nine cells tall) and every box (three cells by three cells) contain the digits 1 through 9 in

any order. There is only one solution for each puzzle.

PREV

IOU

S PU

ZZLE

AN

SWER

Thursday Afternoon/Evening April 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 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30 # # KSPS-PBS Sid Peg Wild Word News Busi PBS NewsHour Health Matt. Father Brown Foyle’s War Your Inner Fish Charlie Rose $ $ CFCN Ellen Show News News CTV News etalk Surviv Motive Theory Theory Grey’s Anat. News News Daily Mey % % KXLY-ABC Rachael Ray The Doctors News ABC News News Ent Insider Grey’s Anat. Grey’s Anat. Scandal KXLY Kim & & KREM-CBS Dr. Phil Dr. Oz Show News CBS News Inside Ac Theory Theory Crazy Ones (:01) NCIS News Late _ _ KHQ-NBC Ellen Show Judge Judge News News News Million. J’pard Wheel Com Parks Game Night Parenthood News J. Fal ( ( TSN SportsCentre Hocke NHL Hockey NHL Hockey Sports SportsCentre SportsCentre ) ) NET Curling Sportsnet Con. Curling Sportsnet Con. Hocke 2013- Party Poker Sportsnet Con. Hocke Blue + + GLOBAL BC Queen Latifah The Young News News News Hour Ent ET Fisher Engels Parenthood Elementary News , , KNOW Olly Jelly Maya Arthur Martha Wild Canada Mega Builders Tipping Points Sand Wars People-Live Mega Builders ` ` CBUT Cor Ste NHL Hockey CBC News To Be Announced The National CBC News 1 M CICT The Young News News News News ET Ent Elementary Fisher Engels Parenthood News Hour Fi ET The 3 O CIVT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent Elementary Fisher Engels Parenthood News Hour ET The 4 6 YTV Side Squir Spong Rab Par Spong Thun Haunt Cache Japan My Babysitter Haunt Haunt Gags Gags My Babysitter 6 . KAYU-FOX Steve Harvey Bethenny Two Two Simp Mod Theory Theory Hell’s Kitchen Amer Surviv News Mod Arsenio Hall 7 / CNN Situa Cross E. B. OutFront Cooper 360 Chicagoland Chicagoland Cooper 360 Chicagoland Chicagoland Foren Foren 8 0 SPIKE Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops iMPACT Wrestling Ink Master Cops Cops Jail Jail Jail Jail 9 1 HGTV Prop Prop Carib Carib Hunt Hunt Flip It to Win It Income Prop. Hunt Hunt Flip It to Win It Income Prop. Homes Homes : 2 A&E The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 Beyond Scared Beyond Scared The First 48 The First 48 Beyond Scared < 4 CMT Piz. Burger Deal Deal Gags Gags Jim Jim Fear Factor J. J. Jim Jim Fear Factor Gags Gags = 5 W Too Young Undercover Property Bro Love It-List It Property Bro Be the Boss Undercover Undercover Be the Boss ? 9 SHOW Aladdin and the Death Lamp Pegasus vs. Chimera NCIS NCIS NCIS Hawaii Five-0 NCIS @ : DISC How/ How/ Daily Planet Cold Water Rods, Wheels Rat Rods How/ How/ Cold Water Rods, Wheels Rat Rods A ; SLICE Lost-- Lost-- Eat St. Eat St. Big Brother Big Brother Side Matchmaker Collec Big Brother Matchmaker Big Brother B < TLC Gypsy Tat Tat Gypsy Gypsy Tat Tat Gypsy Tat Tat Gypsy Tat Tat C = BRAVO The Listener Flashpoint Blue Bloods Missing Missing The Listener Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Missing D > EA2 Multiplicity Moon Over Parador ReGenesis Events Leading-Death Greedy Brewster’s Millions Stir E ? TOON Loone Gum Jim Rocket Johnny Johnny Adven Pack Pack Groj. Total Ulti Robot Robot Robot Archer Fugget Fugget F @ FAM Shake ANT Phi Dog Jessie Jessie Austin Austin Win, Next Good ANT Win Next Good Jessie Wiz Derek G A WPCH Middle Mod Theory Theory Brown Payne Brown Payne Mod Sein Family Family Amer. Amer. Jeffer. Jeffer. Confess-Shop H B COM Sein Sein Gas Theory Parks Theory Match Match Just/Laughs Simp Gags Gags Theory Theory Sirens JFL I C TCM Good Lassie Come Home Flesh and the Devil Grand Hotel Mutiny on the Bounty Ninotchka K E OUT Mantracker Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Liqui Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Liqui Stor Stor Quantum-Kitch L F HIST Swamp People Amer Amer MASH MASH Outlaw Bikers Yukon Gold Swamp People Amer. Pickers Vikings Battle Castle M G SPACE Inner Scare Castle Stargate SG-1 The Unquiet Inner Castle Star Trek: Voy. The Unquiet N H AMC (2:30) Speed Forrest Gump (:01) Forrest Gump Friday Night Lights O I FS1 Pregame UFC’s Road The Ultimate Fighter MLB FOX Sports FOX Sports FOX Sports FOX Sports P J DTOUR Disas Disas Museum Se Pickers Back. Back. RIDE. RIDE. Sturgis Raw Ghost Adv. RIDE. RIDE. Sturgis Raw W W MC1 (2:40) Safe House (:05) The Toyman Killer (:35) Magic Mike White House Down (:45) Safe House ¨ ¨ KTLA Cunningham Maury Family Family News News Two Two Vampire Reign KTLA 5 News Arsenio Hall ≠ ≠ WGN-A Funny Videos Funny Videos Witch Mother Mother Mother Mother Mother Mother Mother Parks Parks Parks Rock Rock Sunny Ø Ø EA1 (2:15) Malcolm X (:40) Mulligans (:10) Due South Repo Man The Breakfast Club (:15) St. Elmo’s Fire ∂ ∂ VISN Road-Avonlea Murder, She... Eas Mi Columbo Mor The Shroud Jesus in India Super Popoff 102 102 MM VideoFlow Trial Trial Top 10 Simp Cleve MuchCountdown Conan Com Prince Countdown 105 105 SRC Terre Terre Cap sur l’été Union TJ C.-B. 30 vies Info Prière Pénélope TJ Nou TJ C.-B.

Friday Afternoon/Evening April 18 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 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30 # # KSPS-PBS Sid Peg Wild Word News Busi PBS NewsHour Wash Moy The Midwife Peter Pan From Milwaukee Charlie Rose $ $ CFCN Ellen Show News News CTV News Cana Theory Blue Bloods Spun Kirstie Law & Order News News Theory Mey % % KXLY-ABC Rachael Ray The Doctors News ABC News News Ent Insider Last Last Shark Tank (:01) 20/20 KXLY Kim & & KREM-CBS Dr. Phil Dr. Oz Show News CBS News Inside Ac Unforgettable Hawaii Five-0 Blue Bloods News Late _ _ KHQ-NBC Ellen Show Judge Judge News News News Million. J’pard Wheel Dateline NBC Dateline NBC (:01) Hannibal News J. Fal ( ( TSN SportsCentre Hocke NHL Hockey NHL Hockey Sports SportsCentre F1 Racing ) ) NET Hockey Central MLB Baseball OHL Hockey Sportsnet Con. Hocke Blue + + GLOBAL BC Queen Latifah The Young News News News Hour Ent ET Nightmares Hawaii Five-0 Builders News , , KNOW Olly Jelly Maya Arthur Dino Wild Mega Builders Coast New Tricks Lewis Our Architects ` ` CBUT Cor Ste NHL Hockey CBC News To Be Announced The National CBC News 1 M CICT The Young News News News News ET Ent Builders Nightmares Hawaii Five-0 News Hour Fi ET The 3 O CIVT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent Builders Nightmares Hawaii Five-0 News Hour ET The 4 6 YTV Missing Lynx Madagascar Cloudy With Meatballs Mr. Young Cache Japan Japan As Young Boys 6 . KAYU-FOX Steve Harvey Bethenny Two Two Simp Mod Theory Theory Kitchen Nightmares News Mod Arsenio Hall 7 / CNN Situa Cross E. B. OutFront Cooper 360 CNN Tonight Spot Un Anthony Smerconish Cross Un Anthony 8 0 SPIKE Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Bellator MMA Live Cops Cops Cops Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo 9 1 HGTV Timber Kings Timber Kings Timber Kings Timber Kings Timber Kings Timber Kings Timber Kings Timber Kings Timber Kings : 2 A&E The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 < 4 CMT CMT’s Hottest: Deal Cash Wife Swap Funny Videos Parenthood Deal Funny Videos Parenthood = 5 W Love It Love It-List It Love It-List It Love It-List It Love It-List It Love It-List It Hairspray Mind ? 9 SHOW Capt. America Continuum Fire Serpent Captain America: The First Avenger Green Lantern @ : DISC How/ How/ Daily Planet Sons of Guns: Sons of Guns Mayday Mayday Sons of Guns: Sons of Guns Mayday A ; SLICE (3:30) Just Go With It The Blind Side Big Brother Just Go With It Blind B < TLC Say Say Bor Bor Randy Say Say Randy Bor Bor Say Randy Bor Bor Randy Say Bor Bor C = BRAVO Perception Perception Perception Criminal Minds The Fall (:25) The Fall (10:50) The Fall (12:15) The Fall D > EA2 Along Came Polly (:20) Sydney White (:10) Jesus Christ Superstar The Trigger Effect (:35) Hollow Man Last E ? TOON Res Gum Jim Pack Nin Nin Ben 10 Ben 10 Ben 10 Ben 10: Destroy Aliens The Batman vs. Dracula Fugget Dating F @ FAM Austin Austin Phi Good Austin Jessie Dog Liv- I Didn’t Next High School Musical 2 Jessie (:08) Camp Rock Derek G A WPCH Middle Mod Theory Theory Brown Payne Brown Payne Mod Sein Family Family Amer. Amer. Jeffer. Jeffer. Almost H B COM Sein Sein Gas Theory Parks Theory Match Match Just/Laughs Simp Gags Gags Theory Theory JFL Comedy Now! I C TCM (2:15) Doctor Zhivago Meet Me in St. Louis Postman Rings Twice Singin’ in the Rain Ben-Hur K E OUT Dog and Beth Stor Stor Stor Stor Ghost Hunters Stor Stor Stor Stor Ghost Hunters Stor Stor Quantum-Kitch L F HIST Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn M G SPACE Harry Potter Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 The Sorcerer’s Apprentice (:40) Timeline N H AMC Memphis Belle Forrest Gump Forrest Gump (:01) Alien vs. Predator O I FS1 Pregame Motorcycle Racing From Seattle. Boxing FOX Sports MLB FOX Sports P J DTOUR You Only Live Twice On Her Majesty’s Secret Service Diamonds Are Forever You Only Live W W MC1 Dark Shadows (4:55) Beautiful Creatures Mortal Instruments (:15) The Purge (:45) Django Unchained ¨ ¨ KTLA Cunningham Maury Family Family News News Two Two Whos Whos Hart of Dixie News Sports Arsenio Hall ≠ ≠ WGN-A Funny Videos Funny Videos Witch Mother Mother Mother Mother Mother Mother Mother Parks Parks Parks Rock Rock Sunny Ø Ø EA1 (3:45) The Mummy (5:50) The Mummy Returns The Mask of Zorro (:20) The Shadow Ghostbusters ∂ ∂ VISN Road-Avonlea Murder, She... Eas Yes... Gaither Gospel Time- God’s theZoomer The Jesus Discovery Naked Super Popoff 102 102 MM VideoFlow MuchCountdown Simp Cleve Get Him to the Greek Chil South South South South South 105 105 SRC Brunetti Cap sur l’été Union TJ-Mtl Trem Paquet voleur C’est ma toune Broadchurch TJ Cap sur l’été Nativ

CALL 426-3272OR VISIT

www.tribute.cafor this week’s movie listings

Key City Answering ServiceCommunication Center for the Kootenays!

Talk to a Real Person 24/7. • Work Alone Check-In Service

• Emergency Service

• Basic Answering Service

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218-B 1525 Cranbrook St. N., Cranbrook, BC V1C 3S7

P: 250-426-2201 • F: 250-426-4727 •TF: 1-800-665-4243

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The Cranbrook Daily Townsman and the Kimberley Daily Bulletin are delivered to over 5000 households, 5 days a week and over 300 businesses. In town and rural!

Home Delivery in Cranbrook: 250-426-5201 ext 208.

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1109a Baker St. CranbrookTRENDS N’ TREASURES1109a Baker Street, Cranbrook

250-489-2611 [email protected]

new for spring

250.426.6671www.kootenaywinecrafters.com

44 - 6th Ave. South,Cranbrook, BC

Behind Integra Tire on Van Horne

KOOTENAYW I N E C R A F T E R SKO O T E NAYW I N E C R A F T E R S

GREAT SELECTION OF WINE KITS,

WINE MAKING ACCESSORIES

AND GIFTWAREGift Certi� cates

Available!

Baker St. Mall 250.489.8464

Isotoner Slippers

Bras & Briefs

Camies by “Arianne”

Cotton Nighties

Available in Assorted Styles, Sizes & Colours

NEW SPRING ARRIVALS

250-426-5201www.dailytownsman.com

250-427-5333www.dailybulletin.ca

Something’s been puzzling me.Q. How can I get advertising for my business so it’s covered in both newspaper and online media for one great price?A. If you live in Cranbrook area, call 250-426-5201, then press ext. 214 and speak with Erica.

She has all the pieces to your puzzle!

Page 12: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, April 16, 2014

PAGE 12 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 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) Your intensity might be height-ened by a night of vivid dreams. A personal or domestic matter will loosen you up. You could see a white rabbit pop out of a black hat. Stay centered in your ap-parent good fortune, and don’t let anyone get to you. Tonight: Togetherness counts. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Others seek you out, as they have plans or a project that they would like to include you in. You might have different plans. How you explain this could define your interactions for a while. Take an overall look at a situation. Tonight: Sort through invitations. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Focus on a project, rather than allow others to be distracted. You will be optimistic when it comes to an investment. A part-ner surprises you with a differ-ent perspective. You could feel awkward about a personal crisis. Tonight: Take your time heading

home. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Your creativity emerges, and you seem to find answers quickly. On the other hand, others easily could be stumped by a problem. Be careful with a roommate who might decide to cause some up-roar. Maintain a sense of humor. Tonight: Ever playful. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You need to focus on the here and now, as well as on what di-rection you want to head in. You need to be determined, or else you will be distracted too easily. Count on your inner voice. You might be receiving an odd yet valid message. Listen carefully. Tonight: At home. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You could tumble into a snafu, but you will bounce right out. Use care with spending, as it could cause a problem. Tempers might flare regarding some-thing that seems more import-ant than it really is. A meeting could be more instrumental than you think. Tonight: Where the action is. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)

Patience doesn’t appear to be very evident right now, as tem-pers are close to the surface. Respect differences instead of viewing others as being wrong. Unexpected developments involving a partner or close as-sociates will land in your lap. To-night: Take a break from routine. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You could choose to bypass a frustrating situation. If you would like to maximize your en-ergy, detach. Instability comes from an associate and/or a change in schedule. News sheds light on a decision. First, digest the information. Tonight: Alone does not work. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Listen to others’ complaints. You might be inclined to start a discussion and get to the bottom of a problem. You might be sur-prised by the anger that arises. Keep your opinions to yourself for now. Tonight: Your popularity is about to soar! CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Zero in on your priorities while you can. A boss or a personal situation has the capacity to

distract you. Decide how to han-dle this issue, especially if you have a lot to get done. Realize that you have options. Tonight: Loosen up with a friend. Say “goodbye” to tension. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You are full of playfulness, while others seem to be pulling out their hair. If you stop, you will see that a situation has evolved that forces your hand. You need to respond to someone who really could use your support. Tonight: Out till the wee hours. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Allow your imagination to wan-der. How you deal with someone could change radically once you detach and can understand his or her actions, ideas and thoughts. You might not have seen this dimension of this per-son before. Tonight: Be where there is great music. BORN TODAY Aviation pioneer Wilbur Wright (1867), basketball player Ka-reem Abdul-Jabbar (1947), actor Charlie Chaplin (1889) ***

Dear Annie: My stepson, “Louis,” is 45 years old, has been unemployed for the past 10 years (he never gets along with his bosses or co-workers) and got busted for DUI, for which he underwent court-ap-pointed treatment and had his license re-voked for five years. When his dad and I married, we moved into my home, and Louis moved into his father’s place with the stipulation that he would get a job and pay rent and utilities. We are still paying the mortgage and taxes. Louis moved his girlfriend (now wife) into the house. She works full time. Annie, my husband still pays all of Louis’ bills, including the cable movies Louis buys online. Louis feels entitled to this. When he found out we were selling our old car and didn’t give it to him, he went on a raging tirade and started throwing stuff. I almost called the police. My husband has discussed the situation with Louis many times, but no money is forthcoming. I don’t understand why his wife doesn’t help pay the bills. When I bring up kicking him out or putting a For Sale sign in front of the house, my husband agrees something should be done, but gen-erally gets angry with me and gives Louis a free pass. I know he feels bad about Louis’ lack of ambition and self-centered behav-ior, but he won’t do anything. In another year, we will have paid off that house. My husband and I are in our late 70s, and he is not in the best of health. If he should die, I don’t know what happens to the house. What legal recourse do I have? I refuse to pay the freeloaders’ way through life. -- Upset Landlord, Not Wicked Step-mother Dear Upset: Is your name on the deed to the house? Do you and your husband have legal wills? Who is your husband’s benefi-ciary? Please seek legal advice immediate-ly, and make sure things are settled the way you want. In the meantime, we hope you can impress upon your husband that Lou-is will someday have to fend for himself, and the longer he postpones growing up the harder it will be. Dad is doing him no favors. Dear Annie: Seven years ago, my husband walked out on our 9-month-old son and me. He’s been mostly out of the picture since. For the past four years, there has been no contact from him whatsoever. Throughout all this time, his brother has kept in touch through texts and occasion-al visits. Lately, there seems to be a spark when we are together. I know his family would approve. When my ex and I sepa-rated, his mom told me she thought I was a better match for her other son. Is it wrong to have a relationship with my ex’s brother? -- Confused Dear Confused: There is no reason why you cannot have a relationship with your ex-brother-in-law if you are willing to deal with whatever consequences occur as a result. Would it mean more contact with your ex? Would that be difficult? Tempting? Would your ex try to punish you in some way? If you can handle the fallout, it’s fine with us. Dear Annie: This is in response to “Sick of Xenophobes,” who says she speaks excel-lent English and wants to know why people are rude to her. I agree with you that her accent might be difficult to understand. I run into this prob-lem at least once a week and have to ask the person to slow down and speak more clearly. It’s especially difficult when they are reading from a script and I interrupt for clarification, and they apologize repeated-ly. I’d rather they skip the apologies and get to the point. All that blather is annoying to listen to. Maybe better headsets would help. -- Just a Thought 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 Cre-ators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, vis-it the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.COPYRIGHT 2014 CREATORS.COM

2104B - 2ND ST. S , CRANBROOK • 250-489-1901

Selene

SELENE IS STAYING!

Dagny

We offer a full esthetics

menu. Come get

pampered!

Wedding & Party Supply Rentals

Ph: 250-426-5254Fax: 250-426-4531

Toll Free: 1-800-561-52542450 Cranbrook St. N.

Cranbrook, BC, V1C [email protected]

• Tents• Tables/Chairs• Table Linens• Dinnerware• Patio Heaters• Chafing Dishes• BBQ’s/Grills• Wedding Arch• Cutlery/Glasses• Wall Light Decorations• Dunk Tank & Bouncy Castle• Dance Floor, Karaoke Machine• Punch Fountains & Liquor Dispensers• Meat Grinder, Slicer, Sausage Stuffer

and Dance!Saturday May 3rd

– starts 6:00 pm –Kimberley Civic Centre

Bull Riding Tickets: Adults $20, Kids 5-12 $10, 4 & under Free!

Dance at 9pm with the Ken McCoy Band.Dance Tickets: Adults $15 • Combo Bull-A-Rama & Dance $32

Tickets at: Sprout Grocery, Kimberley & Hillbilly Hardwear, Cranbrook.

BULL-A-RAMACRANBROOK DODGE PROUDLY SPONSORS

DOORS OPEN 5:00!

KIMBERLEY DYNAMITER’S

Bull Riding Tickets: Adults $20, Kids 5-12 $10, 4 & under Free!

Tickets at: Sprout Grocery, Kimberley & Hillbilly Hardwear, Cranbrook.

BULL-A-RAMACRANBROOK DODGE PROUDLY SPONSORS

KIMBERLEY DYNAMITER’S

–– Sponsors of the Bull-A-Rama ––Hytech Production • Columbia Basin Trust

Lantz Farms • Weimer ConstructionWasa Country Pub • Tourism Kimberley

Read the DAILY newspaper for

local happenings!

250-426-5201

250-427-5333

Need help with current events?

Page 13: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, April 16, 2014

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014 PAGE 13DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETINDAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN Wednesday, April 16, 2014 PAGE 13

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:

bcclassifi ed.comfax 250.426.5003 email classifi [email protected]

250.426.5201 ext 202

Your community. Your classifi eds. Share Your Smiles!

Drop off your photo and name(s) of subject at the Cranbrook Townsman

or Kimberley Bulletin offi ce or email your high-resolution jpeg to [email protected]. Photographs will appear in the

order they are received.

Hunter is smiling e use e s g ing n

ti n

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

Your community foundation.

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

We build endowment funds that benefit the community forever and

help create personal legacies

Black Press has a very

unique opportunity for the right person.

We currently have an opening for a sales person to help us with our paid distribution newspapers across B.C. This position means getting out in the community and talking to subscribers about our newspapers and working to build stronger relationships with existing readers of our newspapers. It also includes finding new subscribers for our newspapers and helping introduce them our award winning host of community newspapers. This is not a year-around position and will run from March to October each year. We offer a spectacular compensation package and bonus incentives. Your own vehicle is required, but we cover all travel expenses. This is really a great opportunity for the right person. It is a different type of job, but definitely has different types of rewards. If you feel this position would be the perfect fit for you, then we would love to hear from you. Please email all enquiries to Michelle Bedford at [email protected].

Unique Opportunity

6459539

Help Wanted Help Wanted

Personals

DAZZLING BLONDE

Busty, blue-eyed beauty

Leanne, 40

*** 250-421-0059 ***

KOOTENAY’S BEST ESCORTS

*For your safety and comfort call the best.

*Quality and V.I.P Service Guarantee

*Licensed studio

~New Location~

Calendar Girls

New: Chyanne - 35, French & Native, petite brunette

Scarlett - 21, Strawberry

blonde, sweet treat

Lily - 25, Sandy-blonde, blue-eyed bombshell

Danielle - 25, French seductress, slim, athletic

“Spice up your life”

(250)417-2800in/out calls daily

Hiring

Lost & FoundLost:

LOCKING-HEART CHARM for a Pandora-type bracelet. Lost on Sat. April 12, in the vicinity of Tamarack Mall.

Please call 250-489-9216

Travel

TravelCRIMINAL RECORD? PardonServices Canada. Established

1989. Confi dential, Fast, &Affordable. A+BBB Rating. RCMP Accredited. Employment & Travel Freedom. Free Consultation 1-8-

NOW-PARDON (1-866-972-7366)RemoveYourRecord.com

Employment

Drivers/Courier/Trucking

DRIVERS WANTEDAZ, DZ, 5, 3 or 1 w/ Airbrake

• Guaranteed 40hr. WorkWeek & Overtime

• Paid Travel & Lodging• Meal Allowance

• 4 Weeks Vacation• Excellent Benefi ts Package

Must be able to have extended stays away from home. Up to 6 months. Must have valid AZ, DZ, 5, 3 or 1 with airbrake license and have previous commercial driving experience.Apply at:www.sperryrail.com,

careers & then choosethe FastTRACK Application.

Education/Trade Schools

APARTMENT/CONDOMANAGER TRAINING

• Certifi ed Home Study

Course• Jobs

RegisteredAcross Canada• Gov. Certifi ed

www.RMTI.ca / 604.681.5456 or 1.800.665.8339

Help Wanted

Meadowbrook Motors in Kimberley is looking to fill one Full Time and one

Part Time position.Individuals who are mature and mechanically inclined will be given preference. Please hand in a detailed cover letter and resumé, including references, to Pat or Doris at Meadowbrook Motors.Sundays and Statutory Holidays off.

LEIMAN HOMES is currently looking to fi ll the

position for a carpenter. This is a full apprentice position.

Please send resumes to Box ‘K’,

c/o Daily Townsman,822 Cranbrook St. N.

Cranbrook, BC.

Help Wanted

GRAPHIC ARTIST Full-time or part-time. Ener-getic person with an eye for detail. Must be able to work independently as well as part of a team. Experience preferred, using CorelDRAW or Adobe Illustrator. Experi-ence with sign fabrication is an asset but training is provided. Please apply in person with resume, including references and portfolio, at:

Wolfpack Signs and Printing,

103A 7th Ave S., Cranbrook, BC.

No phone calls please.

WHERE DO YOU TURN

YOUR NEWSPAPER:The link to your community

TO LEARNWHAT’S

ON SALE?

www.pitch-in.ca

Become a GREEN

SHOPPER!

Communications ManagerWildsight is seeking a highly motivated individ-ual to work on our communications team. We’re looking for a team player who is interested in Wildsight’s work and in advancing a career in communications and advocacy-oriented work.

Applications should be received no later than April 30, 2014, however we will continue to en-tertain applications until the position is filled.

For more info. go to www.wildsight.ca/news/were-hiring

We’re hiring!

Page 14: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, April 16, 2014

PAGE 14 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014 DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN PAGE 14 Wednesday, April 16, 2014 DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN

ReporterThe Trail Times has an opening for a reporter/photographer. As a member of our news team, you will write news stories and take photos of Greater Trail events, cover city council and other public meetings and respond to breaking news stories. You must work well under pressure, meet daily deadlines and be a fl exible self-starter with a reliable digital camera and vehicle.This union position is for four days a week, with the potential for full-time work during holiday relief periods. This is a temporary position, covering maternity leave. Computer literacy is essential, experience with layout in InDesign an asset, newspaper experience or a diploma in journalism preferred. Some weekend and evening work is involved. The Times offers a competitive salary and benefi ts. The successful candidate will be required to become a member of the Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union, Local 2000.Qualifi ed applicants should apply in writing no later than May 11, 2014 to:Guy Bertrand, managing editorTrail Times1163 Cedar Ave.Trail, BCV1R [email protected]: 250-368-8550Only qualifi ed candidates will be contacted; no phone calls please.

Janis Caldwell-SawleyMortgage SpecialistRoyal Bank of Canada

[email protected]/janis.sawley

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

Real EstateReal Estate

Help Wanted

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

Contractors

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

• Aluminum Railings We welcome any restorational work!

(250) 426-8504

GIRO

SERVING ALLTHE KOOTENAYS

POWERPAVING

NOTICE

BLACKTOPNOW!

NO JOB TOO SMALL

Driveways & Parking Lots

1-888-670-0066CALL 421-1482FREE ESTIMATES!

CALL NOW!

Merchandise for Sale

FurnitureFor sale:

OAK DINING room suite. Table, 6 chairs, 2 extra leaf’s.

Excellent condition. $1500./obo

250-426-8349

Merchandise for Sale

Heavy Duty Machinery

Used DC 60HP Motor

$550 obo

Phone Russell250.426.5201 ext. 217

Misc. for Sale

BUY 2 GET THE 3RD INSERT

FREE Offer valid April 1-30, 2014

Call Marion at250-426-5201, ext. 202

and your ad will run in the Cranbrook Daily Townsman, Kimberley

Daily Bulletin and the East Kootenay VALLEY!!

Help Wanted

Merchandise for Sale

Misc. WantedCollectors Currently Buying:Coin Collections, Antiques,Native Art, Old Silver, Paint-ings, Jewellery etc. We Dealwith Estates 778-281-0030

Real Estate

Acreage for SaleBEAUTIFUL 35 ACRES

with a mixture of timber and fi elds. Less than 5 minutes from Walmart and zoned RR60. Backs onto crown land-creek runs through

corner of property. $535,000.

Serious inquiries only. 250-489-9234

Commercial/Industrial Property

FOR RENT or LEASE: 2360 sq.ft. commercial space in Cranbrook. Excellent loca-tion on the strip next to Joey’s Only. Price negotiable. Phone 250-992-2048

SEEKING EQUITY partners for investment grade retail and offi ce properties in Calgary up to 2 million.

Blackstone Commercial Shane Olin

[email protected] 403 708-9086

For Sale By Owner

This little gem will be list-ed May 1 so check it out now & save thousands in

Real Estate fees. Unique well maintained, back to back, very private 1/2 duplex in Cranbrook. New shingles, fl ooring & water heater. Finished up and down at time of con-

struction in 1988. Large master bedroom, full bath, kitchen, DR & LR up. 2-bdrms, full bath, laundry room & large family room

w/wet bar down. Features carport, covered

deck w/spectacular views of sunsets, F/S, DW, W/D, full

size basement fridge & mini blinds.

2 blocks from golf course & near hospital,

College, schools. Must be seen to be

appreciated. $224,900.

For appt to view, call (250)417-6841

Rentals

Apt/Condo for RentKIMBERLEY, Chapman Camp - 2 BR apt for rent. Upper unit, quiet location, newer paint and carpets. Cov-ered parking, storage space, on-site laundry. Rent $650 / month. Includes heat and common util. Ref. req’d N/S, no pets. Avail May 1. Call Bob 427-5132 to view. .

Mobile Homes & Pads

For Sale:

1973 2 BEDROOM MOBILE HOME.

Totally renovated, including: roofi ng, plumbing, fl oors and thermal windows.

Large shed, garden and patio. In-town trailer park, close to hospital/shopping.

$30, 000./obo

250-417-9717

Homes for Rent

BC Housing Cranbrook has exciting rental

opportunities for families looking for affordable

housing. The 3-bedroom units we offer are spacious

with 1.5 bathroom stove fridge and washer/

dryer hook-ups. One small pet is allowed, with BC Housing approval. No

smoking is allowed. Tenants pay 30% of their gross

monthly income for rent. For applications please call

250-489-2630 or 1-800-834-7149 or go on-line to

www.bchousing.org

TransportationAuto

Accessories/Parts

SET OF 4 SUMMER TIRES ON RIMS. P225/60R17 on 6 bolt rims. $400 obo. Call (250)489-8389.

Help Wanted

Transportation

Recreational/SaleFOR SALE:

2006 30’ OKANAGAN

5th wheel.

2 slides, 1 super slide.

Like new!

Too many extras to list.

$24,000.

To view, call: 250-426-8941

For information, call:

250-428-0700

Mortgages Mortgages

Canadianscontinue to turn to DAILY NEWSPAPERS for breaking news, analysis of the day’s top events and entertaining content, according to the latest NADbank data. “Increased media compe-tition, besides raising the editorial bar at dailies, doesn’t change one crucial fact”, says media buyer Bruce Claassen, CEO of Genesis-Vizeum (Toronto) and chair of Aegis Media Canada. “Daily newspapers offer the same benefi ts they always have: the ability to reach customers quickly. Only with a daily paper are you able to choose to do an ad and run with it in two days, and reach a sizable portion of the population, in a fairly mass, fairly broad and fairly fast way. That’s a set of qualities very few other media can match.”

FOR DAILY DELIVERY OF YOUR LOCAL NEWSPAPER

CALL US!

250-426-5201

250-427-5333SOURCE: NADBANK JOURNAL SEPT/08

B8MAN’sHandyman Service

**Yard and Lawn care

**Rototilling

**Fences and Decks

**Dump runs

**Odd jobs

Serving Cranbrook and Kimberley

250-422-9336

GLEN’S GRASS CUTTING

• Dethatching (includes lawn vacuum)

• Aerating• Gutters• Grass cutting

Residential/Commercial

10% Senior Spring Discount

250-426-8604

~Book Now~

IS YOUR COMPUTER SLUGGISH OR HAVING

PROBLEMS?

It’s time for a tune-up! Why unplug everything, send away & wait when

SuperDave comes into your home?

Specializes in: *Virus/Spyware Removal,

*Troubleshooting, *Installations,

*PC Purchase Consulting.

SuperDave offers affordable, superior service

& most importantly; Honesty. SuperDave works Satur-

days & evenings too!

Call SuperDave (250)421-4044

www.superdaveconsult-ing.ca

TRIPLE J WINDOW CLEANING

~residential~

For a brighter outlook, call Jim Detta

250-349-7546

LEAKY BASEMENT

• Foundation Cracks

• Damp Proofi ng

• Drainage Systems

• Foundation Restoration

Residential / CommercialFree estimates

250-919-1777

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

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]

TREE PRUNINGSpring is here.

*Time to get

your trees pruned.

*Shade trees, fruit trees, and some tree removal.

*For quotes, call Mike:

250-426-3418

TOM’S LAWNCARE SERVICES

“The Lawn Man”

LicensedResidential & CommercialTrimming, Dethatching &

Aerating.

Clean up stuff to dump.Free estimates.

Seniors discountKimberley, Meadowbrook,

Wycliffe only.

Phone 250-427-5139Leave Message

TREES • LAWNS GARDEN • LANDSCAPE

Weiler Property Services

• Professional Tree Pruning

• Lawn: Aerate, Dethatch, Fertilize, Soils

• Garden Rototill• Landscaping & Stone

Work repair

Forest technologist (School of Natural Resources - Fleming College), with over 25 years experience, are fully insured and enjoy what we do.

David & Kimberly Weiler

[email protected]

Cranbrook, Kimberley and surrounding areas.

Read the DAILY newspaper for

local happenings!

250-426-5201

250-427-5333

Need help with current events?

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

Newspapers are not a medium but media available for

everyone whenever they want it. They are growing and evolving to meet the consumer’s interests and lifestyles and incorporating the latest technological developments . This is certainly great for readers and advertisers.SOURCE: NADBANK JOURNAL SEPT/08

FIND EVERYTHING YOUNEED IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

Lets You Live Life.

Page 15: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, April 16, 2014

WEdnEsday, aPRIL 16, 2014 Page 15daily townsman / daily bulletin

NEWSDAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN Wednesday, April 16, 2014 PAGE 15

Transportation

Recreational/Sale

2001 40FT. MONACO DYNASTY MOTOR

COACHincludes:

• 400hp Cumins diesel engine

• 66,000 miles• 2 slideouts• remote control awning• washer/dryer• Aqua hot heating

system• many more features

$122,500

FOR SALE

2008 EQUINOX SPORT TOWING VEHICLE

(122,000 kms)

$12,500 OR TOGETHER

$130,000250-349-5306

GREAT DEAL!!!!2009 Trail Sport 27.5’

Great family unit. Well appointed, a small slide

with kitchen and couch expanding out for great use

of space. Queen walk around bed, rear bunks (double and wide single)

both with windows. Dinette, 3 pce bath, fridge, stove, microwave, furnace,

air conditioning - sleeps seven comfortably.

Large awning. Lightweight - halfton

towable. Very well maintained.

Fully transferable warranty valid until august 2015

Priced to sell at $14,000. Call 250-464-0712

for more information.

Boats

Sell Your Boat

$30 for 2weeks includes 20 words Valid April 1-30, 2014

Call Marion at250-426-5201, ext 202.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — A women’s media group has created a new award for courage honouring Associated Press pho-tographer Anja Nied-ringhaus, who was killed on assignment in Af-ghanistan, the group announced Tuesday.

The International Women’s Media Foun-dation said the award will be given out every year to a female photo-journalist whose work “follows in the footsteps of Anja Niedringhaus.’’

It is funded with a $1 million gift from the

Howard G. Buffett Foun-dation, a private family foundation that seeks to improve the lives of the world’s poor and mar-ginalized — often the subjects of Niedring-haus’ photographs.

“It is heartening to see Anja’s memory hon-oured in a way that will recognize the work of future generations of fe-male photojournalists,’’ said Santiago Lyon, AP’s director of photography. “She set a wonderful ex-ample to so many in our profession through her compassion, courage and resilience.’’

Niedringhaus started her career as a freelance photographer when she was 16, working for a local newspaper in her native Germany. Her coverage of the fall of the Berlin Wall led to a staff position with the European Pressphoto Agency in 1990. She was based in Frankfurt, Sa-rajevo and Moscow, and spent much of her time covering the brutal con-flict in the former Yugo-slavia.

She joined the AP in 2002 and worked throughout the Middle East as well as Afghani-

stan and Pakistan. She was part of the AP team that won the 2005 Pulit-zer Prize for Breaking News Photography for coverage of Iraq, among many journalistic awards and honours for her work.

Niedringhaus was killed April 4 in the east-ern city of Khost, when an Afghan police unit commander walked up to the car where she was sitting in the back seat and opened fire.

Reporter Kathy Gan-non, who was with her, was wounded in the at-tack.

AP / Peter Dejong

Associated Press photographer Anja Niedringhaus poses for a photograph in Rome, April 2005.

Women’s media group names courage award after photographer killed in Afghanistan

ASSOCIATED PRESS

KINGSTON, Jamaica — Jamaica has appointed its first poet laureate in 50 years in a bid to revitalize the arts and preserve the Caribbean country’s literary history.

At a Tuesday gathering at Jamai-ca’s national library, Tourism Min-ister Wykeham McNeill named poet Mervyn Morris to the honor-ary position.

Morris has published several volumes of his own poetry and authored and edited a wide range

of anthologies and essay collec-tions.

He most recently wrote a book about Louise Bennett-Coverley, a beloved Jamaican poet and folk-lorist who brought the island’s unique patois to the world.

He is a retired literature profes-sor at Jamaica’s campus of the Uni-versity of the West Indies.

Morris says bringing poetry to the wider public will be a “major service to Jamaican culture.’’

The post lasts for three years.

Jamaica appoints island’s first poet laureate in 50 years

MERVYN MORRIS

ASSOCIATED PRESS

LONDON — Staff at a Lon-don hair salon say they had a close shave with North Kore-an officials after using the country’s leader, Kim Jong Un, to promote discount hair-cuts.

M&M Hair Academy says it received a visit by two men from the nearby North Kore-an embassy after putting up a poster last week featuring a picture of Kim — who sports a distinctive undercut — and the slogan “Bad Hair Day?’’

Barber Karim Nabbach said the manager refused to remove the poster and re-ported the incident to police.

London’s Metropolitan Police confirmed Tuesday that officers had spoken to both sides of the dispute and concluded “there were no of-fences for us to investigate.’’

Embassy officials could not immediately be reached for a comment.

London salon gets visit from North Korean officials over Kim Jong Un ‘bad hair’ poster

M&M HAir AcADeMy

Karim Nabbach with the Kim Jong-un poster at M&M Hair Academy in west London.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

SKOWHEGAN, Maine — A Maine ani-mal shelter has so many carrots it doesn’t know what to do.

The Somerset Humane Society in Skowhegan received the carrots last week from a trucking company that wanted to get rid of them after a supermarket man-ager turned them away because some were bruised.

The carrots were still edible and the trucking company didn’t want to waste them.

Shelter Director Hattie Spaulding esti-mates they got three to four tons of carrots.

She tells the Morning Sentinel she’s do-nated them to area food pantries and home-less shelters, the county jail, and offered them for 50 cents a bag to the public.

Most of the dogs and cats at the shelter aren’t particularly interested in carrots, but Spaulding says a local horse owner has of-fered to take some.

Maine animal shelter gets 4 tons of carrots as donation

ASSOCIATED PRESS

EVERETT, Wash. — The death toll from the mudslide that hit the Washington town of Oso has risen to 37.

The Snohomish County medical exam-iner’s office said Tuesday it has received one more victim. The person’s name has not been released.

The sheriff’s office says seven other peo-ple are still listed as missing.

A search for bodies continues in the debris left when the March 22 landslide raced across the North Fork of the Still-aguamish River and buried dozens of homes in the riverfront community about 55 miles (90 kilometres) northeast of Seat-tle.

Death toll in Oso mudslide reaches 37;

another 7 missing

Page 16: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, April 16, 2014

PAGE 16 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014 DAILY BULLETIN

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