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Section Z of the November 09, 2014 edition of the Vernon Morning Star
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Sunday, November 9, 2014 - The Morning Star Z1www.vernonmorningstar.com - The Morning Star Z1
November 11th, 2014
For a full schedule ofRemembrance Dayevents go to Pg. Z8
A SpecialSupplement to
EMEMBRANCEDAY
EMEMBRANCEEMEMBRANCEEMEMBRANCE
The Remembrance Day Service will be held at:Kal Tire Place, 3445 - 43rd Avenue
Tuesday, November 11th Doors open at 9:30 a.m. (Disabled access available) CONCESSION IN KAL TIRE PLACE WILL BE OPEN
REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED AT THE ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION BRANCH #25
The Royal Canadian Legion5101 25th Avenue (Eagles Hall), Vernon BRANCH #25 Tel: 250-545-3295
Z2 Sunday, November 9, 2014 - The Morning Star www.vernonmorningstar.com
BAZELL Raymond WWII
DAYEMEMBRANCE
Lest We Forget
ValleyMonuments
4316 - 29th St., VernonPhone/Fax: (250) 542-6411
Toll Free: 1-877-511-8585Email: [email protected]
“Take the Time to
Remember Our Brave
Men & Women
MEMORIALS OF DISTINCTION
Honouring all Veterans
3309 - 39th Avenue, Vernon, BCwww.silverspringsvernon.ca250-545-3351
DoddsAUCTION 3311-28th Ave. in Vernon1-866-545-3259 • 250-545-3259
Remembrance DayOn November 11 at 11 A.M.we stand silent and remember
3905 32nd St 250-260-3533
14 - 2601 Hwy 6 250-260-7740
5205-25th Ave 250-260-5922
2501 58th Ave 250-260-6583
Keep them close to your heart.
2101 Harding Road • 250.546.8088 • ArmstrongVernon Vernon Vernon Vernon
KAIGO RETIREMENT COMMUNITIESCREEKSIDE LANDING • 6190 Okanagan Landing Rd., VernonHERITAGE SQUARE • 3904 - 27th Street, VernonPIONEER SQUARE • 2865 Willowdale Dr., Armstrong
LEST WE FORGET
“...Beneath the crossesrow on row...”
~ In Flanders FieldsJohn McCrae
3105 29 StreetVernon, BC V1T 5A8
Honour the bravery of our men and women in uniform
CHASTKAVICH Emil WWII
ATKINS ErnieWWII
ATKINS PeteWWII
ALLAN Robert Thomas WWII
ADAIR WilliamWWI
ATKINS GeorgeWWII
CALLAS Winifred WWII
BERGUM JohnWWII
BERUBE Lou L.WWII
CALLAS Charles E WWII
BODNARUK Nestor WWII
BAZELL TedWWII
BAZELL William Edward WWI
BAZELL Johnson Rosemary WWII
AUSTROM Harold WWII
BAZELL Edward Henry WWI
CHRISTIEN William Rodrick WWII
CHUDYK Nicholas WWII
CHRISTIEN Charles Joseph WWI
CRAIG Alexanders WWII
DEGNER LeoWWII
DIRK CecilWWII
FINCH AlbertWWII
FINSTEAD HarryWWII
Proudly Remembering Our Veterans
Sunday, November 9, 2014 - The Morning Star Z3www.vernonmorningstar.com
GARBUTT FredWWII
GARBUTT WallyWWII
FRENETTE MollyWWII
FLEMING Stuart A WWII
GARBUTT Robert WWII
GOFF Don Edward WWII
GUENARD AbelWWII
GLEN SamualWWII
GATES GlenWWII
GOLDENTHAL Joe WWII
HANSEN EllisWWII
HAY BillWWII
HANNAH Earl EWWII
HAIRSINE JackWWII
HATFIELD Ambrose WWI
HENNESSY George J WWII
HOFFMAN George WWII
HEADINGTON Leo WWII
HAZELWOOD Donald Edward VietnamWar
HIGGINS WalterWWII
JOHNSON WesWWII
KING George William WWII
JOHNSON HerbWWII
HURST John “Jack” WWII
KELLY LesterWWII
DAYEMEMBRANCE
SCH
OO
L DISTRICT #22 (VE
RN
ON
)
“All we have of freedom, all we use or know - This our fathers bought for us long and long ago”
Rudyard Kipling1401 - 15 Street, Vernon, BC
250-542-3331
www.wigglewagglepethotel.com
250.542.88327432 Pleasant Valley Road,
Vernon
For ALL our heroes,Remember
We must always remember the men & women who fought for our freedom.
Dr. Phebe-Jane PoolePsychotherapist and Hynotherapist
ARMSTRONG
We often take for granted the very things that most deserve our gratitude
V. Charlette Lavik250-307-5588 • 250-546-3119 www.vcharlettesweb.com • [email protected]
Lest We Forget!Remember the Sacri� ce for the Gift of Freedomfrom Mayor Rob Sawatzky & Council on behalf of the City of Vernon
Z4 Sunday, November 9, 2014 - The Morning Star www.vernonmorningstar.com
DAYEMEMBRANCE
“Who kept the faith and fought the � ght;The glory theirs, the duty ours.”
~ Wallace Bruce
OTTER LAKE CROSS RD.ARMSTRONG, BC
250.546.9438
We WillRememberThem
ARMSTRONGREGIONALCOOPERATIVEServing the North Okanagan since 1922
May we never forget the sacri� cesARMSTRONG PHARMACY
5 - 3300 Smith Drive250-546-3169
ENDERBY PHARMACY513 Cliff Avenue
250-838-6469
NOVEMBER 11, 2014
Lest We
Forget
250-545-72643109 - 32nd Avenue, Vernon
Phone: 250-545-8220
Email: [email protected]
WE REMEMBER THEIR SACRIFICE
Schubert Centre(250) 549-4201 3505 30th Avenue, Vernon
Schubert Centre
We Remem� r...
FRATERNAL ORDER OF EAGLES #3557
5101 -25th AvenueVernon
With the tears a land hath shed their graves should ever be green.
Thomas Bailey Aldrich
SCHURTER Wilfred WW2
MACKIE Geoffrey WWII
MACKIE Patrick “Paddy” WWII
LONG FrancesWWII
KURBIS WillWWII
MACKIE JohnWWII
PASSMORE JackWWI & WWII
PLUMRIDGE JimWWII
PRIMROSE VeraWWII
POPOFF Margaret WWII
PASSMORE Ernie WWI & WWII
REID Ross AWWII
PUSHKARENKO Mike Korean War
ROBERTSON Archie “Slim” WWII
ROTH MichaelWWII
RITZEMA JohnWWII
NUYENS TedWWII
MONTEYNE Joseph WWII
MACNIVEN D H Korean War
NUYENS GeorgeWWII
MALLETTE Victor WWII
Sunday, November 9, 2014 - The Morning Star Z5www.vernonmorningstar.com
DAYEMEMBRANCEHours: Mon.-Fri. 10am-6pm • Sat. 10am-5pm • Sunday 11am-5pm
www.homefordinner.info
250-549-3145 VAC
HEALTH CARDS
ACCEPTED.
300B 3101 48th Avenue (located in the André’s Strip Mall)
We Shall Not Forget
Home Dinnerfor
6285 Hwy 97 N Vernon, BC • 250-260-2791www.swanlakemotors.com
All Makes All Models of Pre-Owned Vehicles
We Salute and Honour our
Veterans
2725A Patterson Ave.Armstrong, BC
250-546-3005
Kindale Developmental Association
P.O. Box 1000, 702 Railway Street, Enderby, BC V0E 1V0Telephone: 250-838-6727 | Fax: 250-838-0123
www.enderbychamber.com | [email protected]
Honouring
Those Who Served
Honouringthose who
fought for our freedom.Eric Foster,
Government Caucus Whip MLA Vernon-Monashee250-503-3600
SELLARS JimWWII
STARK EdwinWWII
SWANSON DonaldWWII
STANDEN Goeffrey WWII
WOOD John AWWII
WARD Harold FWWII
TRUMBLEY CR “Smokey” WWII
Dear DaddyA Remembrance Day Poem
by Kyleigh Lampard
Dear Daddy, why must you carry a gun?Why is it that the house shakes and the ground quakes and mother cries for you like you're gone forever? Are you coming home soon?Will you be here for birthdays, Easter, Thanksgiving, Christmas?Do I put your present under our tree or label it with stamps and wrap it in brown paper to protect it from the ash and tears, send it wrapped in my love? I hope it stays under the tree.
Dear Daddy,why must we hide underground?Why has hide and seek become mother's favorite game and why does she get so
happy when we can come out and say we won the game for today?Why do bright lights shine in my window while I sleep, and men with straight faces pass me in the streets, and men with big boots drive by in jeeps, and why does mother listen to the radio and weep?And daddy do I put your present under our tree or label it with stamps and wrap it in brown paper to protect it from the ash and tears,send it wrapped in my love? I hope it stays under the tree.
Dear Daddy, why can't I play with the sun anymore? Why can't I go out and run anymore?Why can't we have any fun anymore?Why am I to go to school and come home without getting sweets from the shop or jumping rope with the other girls and boys?Where did they all go?And daddy, you really must tell me, do I put your present under our tree or label it with stamps and wrap it in brown paper to protect it from the ash and tears, send it wrapped in my love?I hope it stays under the tree.
Dear Daddy, why hasn't Santa written back this year?I wrote a letter with a return address and have spent my time waiting for a reply. I've been a good girl,a smart girl, a patient girl,a loving girl. I only had one wish this year.But daddy one more thing, do I put your
present under our tree or label it with stamps and wrap it in brown paper to protect it from the ash and tears, send it wrapped in my love?I hope it stays under the tree.
Dear Daddy, I had a dream last night.The wonderful kind of dream where everyone smiles and I can smell motor oil, tobacco, musky cologne and maple syrup.I miss the way you smell daddy.I miss the way you smile, laugh loud at my jokes while mother shakes her head, kiss me goodnight and send me to bed.I miss the way you hold my hand as we cross the street not because there is a car in sight but because you know you won't be able to hold on forever.I miss the way you sneak sugar into my cereal and stare out the window every morning with one eye closed and switch because "Anyone can be an eye doctor but only I know if I can see."I had a wonderful dream that smelled like your memory.I dreamed that I put your present under our tree and labeled it not with stamps but with hugs and kisses and wrapped it in green paper to protect it from peeping eyes and impatience, wrapped in my love.I hope it stays under the tree.
Dear Daddy, come home and open your present under the tree.Wrapped in my love, for you from me.
pass me in the streets, and men with big boots drive by in jeeps, and why does mother listen to the radio and weep?And daddy do I put your present under our tree or label it with stamps and wrap it in brown paper to protect it from the ash and tears,send it wrapped in my love? I hope it stays under the tree.
Dear Daddy, why can't I play with the sun anymore? Why can't I go out and run anymore?Why can't we have any fun anymore?Why am I to go to school and come home
WILSON JackAir Force WWII
WILSON Claire John (Jack) RCAF WWII
WILSON Cyrus WilfredLord StrathCona’s Horse
Royal CDNS WWI
Z6 Sunday, November 9, 2014 - The Morning Star www.vernonmorningstar.com
DAYEMEMBRANCE
SMITH John RankinMedical Branch of the
Royal Canadian NavySTEWART Margaret Jean
RN
A hero is someone who has given his or her life to something bigger than oneself.
Greg Kyllo, MLA250-833-7414
A Salute to Those Who Have Served.
24 HOUR SERVICELIGHT & HEAVY DUTY TOWING
We Don’t Want An Arm And A Leg ...Just Your Tows!
VERNON AUTO TOWING LTD.4617B - 34th STREET, VERNON
250-545-2311
Who Have Served.
ANAF spells a proud history
1007 Belvedere Street, Enderby250-838-9985
We Salute ourVeterans
A SALUTE TOOUR VETERANS
ARMSTRONG
Honouring our Veteransand those who serve
ARMSTRONG SPALLUMCHEENCHAMBER OF COMMERCE
3550 Bridge St., Armstrong • 250-546-8155
November 11, 2014
CHASERS
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK250-503-1311
“FAMILY OWNED & OPERATED”
4702 31ST Street, Vernon BC
LestWeForget
LestWeForget
LEST WE FORGETRegular Hours:
Open at 1pm
Dinner Every Friday: 6:00 pmCost: Only $10.00
Meat Draw to FollowPlus MEGA MEAT DRAW
3rd Sunday Each Month
Call for Hall Rental: 250-558-0876
Vernon Elks Lodge #453102 - 30th St., Vernon
Remember the efforts of these special Canadians on
November 11th
Tel: 250-546-3013Fax: 250-546-8878
Toll Free: 1-866-546-3013
4144 Spallumcheen WaySpallumcheen, BCV0E 1B6
www.spallumcheentwp.bc.ca
LOUISA COCHRANE, Realtor® 250.550.6561
Soldier’s hands, veterans hands,These hands have kept us free.
~ Roger W Hancock
® 250.550.6561 250.550.6561 250.550.6561
DOWNTOWN REALTY
CARA BRADY
The Army Navy Air Force Veterans (ANAF) is the the oldest veterans’ association in Canada. It received a charter from Queen Victoria in 1840 when there were only army and navy veterans. Some people think that units existed well before that time, as ear-ly as the Conquest of New France in the 1700s. Remnants of colonial reg-iments were left behind and banded together to exchange information and were known as the Army Veterans in Canada.
They were later joined by War of 1812 navy veterans and the name changed to The Army and Navy Veter-ans in Canada. Following the Second World War, the name was changed to The Army Navy Air Force Veterans in Canada with the short form ANAVETS.
Vernon Unit #5, established in 1917, is the oldest unit in B.C. and became more active in 1970. The unit leased space in the old Bulman’s Fruit Can-nery on 28th Avenue which burned down. Fortunately, all the official doc-
uments were rescued. The present building at 2500-46th Ave-nue was officially opened Oct. 9, 1982. The Ladies Auxiliary started April 28, 1982. The scale model of the Spitfire on top of the build-ing was dedicat-ed Oct. 25, 1993. The not-for-profit service club has almost 300 mem-bers in Vernon.
“My job is to make sure that the club is here for veterans and non-veterans, any-one over 19 can now join,” said presi-dent Alan Pothecary.
“We also do as much as we can to help veterans get the information and services they need, like the veterans’
meal program and help with pensions and other issues.”
Alan McMahon, a Korean War veteran, is the Veterans’ Outreach Service Officer.
“Sometimes veterans find it hard to get the information they need. We help them find out where to start,” he said. He also organizes a Korean War Veterans Association lunch meeting once a month at the club. All Korean War veterans are welcome, whether they are ANAF members or not.
The ANAF and Ladies Auxiliary are active in the community supporting local cadet groups, sports teams and providing bursaries for members’ chil-dren. The group donated more than $30,000 in the community last year.
“The members are like family. You can be very busy here volunteering if you want to,” said Susan Ingraham, public relations officer.
“Remembrance Day is one of our busiest days with people going to services, then coming here for beef stew lunch (by donation) and to hear entertainment. Accompanied minors are welcome that day, children with parents or grandparents.”For more information about member-
ship and public events at the ANAF club and veterans’ benefits and ser-vices, call 250-542-3277.
PHOTO SUBMITTED:
ANAF member Alan McMahon, while serving in Korea, 1951.
Always ready. Always there.
250.542.3470 Vernon24 HOUR EMERGENCY • 1.888.665.6775
VERNON • KELOWNA • PENTICTON
SMOKE B&EMOLDFIRE WINDWATER
Cara BradyMorning star Staff
Life at sea was a boy-hood fantasy for Dick Green.
“We didn’t know any-thing about it, it was a dream, something we read about and heard on the radio,” he said.
He was born in Wigan, Lancashire and left England with his family in 1927 when he was five years old. His father worked coal mining in Luscar, Alta. and by the time Green was 18, he had moved to Vancouver and was working in the shipyards building freighters.
When the Second
World War started in 1939, he and his younger twin broth-ers all joined the Royal Canadian Navy. Green was sent to join Anti-Submarine Detection Incorporated Corps (ASDIC) and spent six months patrolling on the HMS Courtenay from Prince Rupert.
Then it was on to Halifax for more train-ing.
“One night we were put on a train not knowing where we were going and three days later we were in South Carolina where we picked up a British cruiser, HMS Arethusa, and were on our way to Scotland,” said Green.
He was put on duty on the HMCS Algonquin, a destroyer that was 360 feet long with a crew of 250. The Algonquin was part of a convoy of 48 ships bringing tanks, oil and supplies to Russia in 1944.
“There was constant danger from submarines and planes because the Germans had air bases in Norway,” he said, adding that one good thing was that he was able to visit his grand-parents and other fam-ily members in England while he was there.
The Algonquin was one of the ships that took Canadian troops to Normandy on D-Day, June 6, 1944.
“We were in England and it was all very secre-tive. All of a sudden, on June 5, we were told to get our gear together and we knew we were going to France. When we got there at 4:30 a.m. it was still dark. We were about a block from the beach maybe
and laying gunfire on the beach ahead of the soldiers landing. We shot every shell we had after about four hours. So many died,” he said.
“I would never want to see anything like that again. All those people killed.”
The ship stayed in the area until August to patrol then went to Scapa Flow, a naval base in the north of Scotland, and took part in a sec-ond convoy to Russia in September.
Green received a medal of recogni-tion from the Russian government in hon-our of his service on the Murmansk Run, bringing supplies 4,000 miles across the top of Scandinavia from Great Britain to Russia during
the war. He also received the Government of Russia Ushakov Medal for his convoy duty.
Green had signed up for duty in the Far East and returned to Canada to prepare but was not needed there. He was on leave in Vancouver on VE Day May 8, 1945.
“It was exhilarat-ing. Everyone was very happy and it was a big celebration. My twin brothers also made it through the war. I think people should know more about the war so they don’t make those mistakes again. I wouldn’t want to do it again.”
Green and his wife, Evlyn, worked in the hospitality industry until they retired to Vernon in 1993.
LifeA veteran remembers D-Day
Cara Brady/Morning Star
Dick Green with medals received recently from the Russian government in apprecia-tion of his service on the Murmansk Run with the Royal Canadian Navy (1941-1945).
Dick Green in his Royal Canadian Navy uniform.
GREEN DickRoyal Canadian Navy
Sunday, November 9, 2014 - The Morning Star Z7www.vernonmorningstar.com
Remembering D-Day
CARA BRADY
It was June 6, 1944. the day history re-members as D-Day. Gunner Mike Roth, one of more than 155,000 Allied Forces servicemen, waited while minesweepers cleared the water and aircraft dropped bombs on the enemy onshore.
“The Germans were firing back all the time. We had trained for this day, but when the bullets started flying, we learned a lot more. The infantry waded ashore. The tanks were waterproof so we could drive them on shore,” Roth re-called. “There were so many men going ashore that we didn’t get off the ship until the next day. I was very scared. Every-one was.”
There were 5,000 ships, 50,000 vehi-cles of all kinds and 11,000 planes in the operation with servicemen from Canada, Great Britain, United States, French Re-sistance and Polish Army. The Canadians were to take Juno Beach, an eight-kilo-metrre stretch of the shore in the middle of action, near Caen, France, inland.
Roth, 97, who was married and had a year-old son, joined the Canadian Army. Fourth Division, Fourth Armoured Bri-gade, C Company, C Platoon, Section C, in 1941 in North Battleford, Sask., and spent three years training in England.
About five years ago, he started to compile a history of his experiences from personal memories, photos and maps, photos and information from the Canadi-an war archives.
“I’ve had to work on this over time. I couldn’t go too deep or I would break. I know how to keep away from that,” he said.
He has one souvenir that he will nev-er forget — a groove on the top of his head from a German shell that pierced his helmet.
“I gave them back better than I got,” he said. “We always had to be alert for the different sounds of each plane and gun and we learned how to dig a hole really quick. And how to get the tanks out when they got stuck. The civilian population had fled and everything was destroyed. We lived on rations, a kind of chocolate bar with vitamins in it and kept going. German soldiers were surrendering from
the start of the in-vasion and we’d just send them be-hind us and push ahead. We saw that we were mak-ing a difference from the start. We were part of the spearhead.”
HIs photos show the daily life of the troops as they kept fighting — someone found a guitar and took time to play it, the men took a break to smoke, they walked through deserted villages, surrounded by rich fields lying untended.
Roth’s company took part in the Falaise Gap tank battle, in the area that came to be known as death row by the Germans. On July 25, 1944, the tanks were bombed three time by Americans.
“We lost men and equipment. You can expect some error but it sure slowed us down. Some days we made progress and other days nothing moved. The Ger-mans would go back and then set up a little scrap of some kind to slow us down.”
By September, they were in Belgium.“Things went pretty fast in Belgium and
prisoners were easy to get.”They made Nimegen, Holland a winter
base and fought from there. A bridge was built across the Rhine in April.
“The German cities were well-built and clean but there were few civilians. We went back to Holland and people came out on the streets to welcome us. They climbed on the tanks. They celebrated even though they had nothing to cele-brate with. We left our rations for them.”
The soldiers had their own celebration when they dug a hole for a latrine and found cases of wine buried.
“We had a good time until the officers came and took the wine away,” said Roth.
The ceasefire was signed at Waa-
geningen, Holland, May 5, 1945 and Roth was on his way back to Canada in September, after a holiday in Paris with French-Canadian comrades.
“I stepped off the train at home and there was my wife and my son I hadn’t seen in four years and other relatives.”
He stayed on as a military engineer and retired as a staff sergeant, then went to university and became an industrial arts teacher. He found better offers of work in industry, moved to B.C. in 1968 and retired from B.C. Hydro later.
Roth is pleased that his great-grandaughter, Lara Hayward of Ab-botsford, is interested in learning about his experiences and did an interview with him for her local paper.
“I hope that all this material, how I’ve put together the information and what happened to me personally, will be used in schools somehow, somewhere. I want teachers and anyone else who is inter-ested to have this.”
He collects information and photos of new veterans who move into his building so that they can be honoured on a wall in the lobby.
For more information about D-Day and all Canadian war history, see www.can-adaatwar.ca.
DAYEMEMBRANCE
4400 - 32nd St.,Vernon, BC
250.503.3800
K9Kind and Gentle Care
Care & GroomingK9K9Boarding Available
#B - 2813, 35th St., Vernon, BC250-545-8054
Joy & Stu
In war, there are no unwounded soldiers
Joe Narosky
3103 28th St.Vernon
Serving Vernon for over 18 years
Your Realtor® for life250.549.3944 • [email protected]
Lest we forgetCpt. Colin MooneyRoyal Fusiliers, 1946
DISTRICT OF COLDSTREAM
Coldstream residents are invited to honour our local veterans at the Coldstream and
Lavington Cenotaphs on Remembrance Day.Refreshments to follow
250-545-5304
“May we never forget those who have given so much for our freedom.”
Remembrance Day November 11, 2014Doors open 10:00 am
Kalamalka
Highlanders
Pipe Band
Live music byCheaper Than
a Porsche
Accompanied Minors Welcome
ARMY NAVY & AIR FORCE SPITFIRE #5Vernon’s BEST Meat Draws • Wednesdays at 7:30 & Saturdays at 2:30
By “Donation”“LA’s Traditional Stew”
starting at 11:30am
Spit� re Grillafter 3:00pm
PHOTO SUBMITTED:
Roth was one of the gunners at the D-Day invasion.
Z8 Sunday, November 9, 2014 - The Morning Star www.vernonmorningstar.com
BRAUN DENTURE CLINIC
250-549-4745114-3400 Coldstream Ave, Vernon, BC
Now and Forever,We Remember
5011 Bella Vista Rd., Vernon
250-542-8088OPEN ALL YEAR
4703 - 27 St, Vernon BC • bannisters.com • 250-545-0606“A Family Business, with Family Values ”
BANNISTER
We shall not forget.
DL#9133
4411 - 27th St., Vernon250-545-7515
200 - 5601 Anderson Way250-545-7516
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Yesterday’s Sacri� ces are Today’s Freedoms
VERNONThe Remembrance Day Service will be held at Kal Tire Place at 3445 - 43 Avenue.9:30 am Doors open to the public (disabled access is available). Kal Tire Place concession will be open.9:50-10:15 am Musical Prelude Vernon Community Band10:20 am Sentries Fall In10:25 am Parade of Veterans10:35 am Service begins11:00 am Last Post Two Minutes of Silence11:05 am Placing of the Wreaths Colours march off Sentries march off Parade dismissedRefreshments will be served at the Royal Canadian Legion Branch #25 (New location inside the Eagles Hall, 5101 25th Ave.) and the Army, Navy and Air Force Veterans Unit #5.
COLDSTREAMThe Coldstream Women’s Institute and the District of Coldstream welcome everyone to the Remembrance Day Service at the Coldstream Cenotaph, 9901 Kalamalka Road, commencing at approximately 10:45 am. Extra parking is available courtesy of the Coldstream Elementary School across from Cenotaph.
LAVINGTONThe Lavington Service will be held at the Cenotaph on School Road in Centennial Park commencing approximately 10:45 am.Refreshments to follow courtesy of the Lavington Fire Hall.
LUMBY 10:30 am March to Cenotaph
10:50 am O Canada By Melanie Wenzoski
Last Post by Bugler Mike Cowan
11:00 am 2 Minutes of Silence Lament by Piper Kerry Parks
Reveille by Bugler Mike CowanReading of the Honor RollInvocation by Padre Kim Taylor Scripture "Address "Address by Mayor Kevin ActonAddress by Director Rick FairbairnLaying of Of� cial WreathsLaying of Individual Wreaths
Closing Prayer by Padre Kim Taylor
The Queen by Melanie Wenzoski
Members will proceed to the cemetery for a short service, placing wreaths and poppies on the graves of our fallen comrades.
LAKE COUNTRYGeorge Elliot Secondary School,10241 Bottom Wood Lake Road.Organized by the Royal Canadian Legion,Oyama Branch #189Please be seated inside George Elliot SecondarySchool by 10:30 am.Following the ceremony a Public Open House will be held at the Legion Branch, 15712 Oyama Road.
November 11, 2014
ARMSTRONGHassen Memorial Arena10:45 am Sgt at Arms, March on the Colours10:55 am Penny Kirk sings our National Anthem10:58 am Playing of the Last Post11:00 am 2 minutes silence11:02 am Lament11:05 am Reveille11:06 am Chaplain will say a prayer11:10 am Honour Roll read11:15 am Laying of wreaths begins11:45 am Penny Kirk sings our Royal Anthem
ENDERBYEnderby Cenotaph10:35 am Parade march off10:45 am Honour Guard and Colour Party advance Of� cial Party will advance to podium10:50 am O Canada Call to Worship - Opening Prayer Last Post11:00 am 2 minutes of Silence