Cranbrook Daily Townsman, February 10, 2015

12
Vol. 64, Issue 27 Proudly serving Cranbrook and area since 1951 www.dailytownsman.com < Wheat Kings harvest Kootenay Ice. vs. Brandon | Page 7 Hunters’ protest pays off > Allocation rule changes being adjusted | Page 2 TUESDAY FEBRUARY 10, 2015 TownsmanBulletin Like Us @crantownsman Follow Us $ 1 10 INCLUDES G.S.T. $21 .95 per person - Fri. Feb.13 th and Sat. Feb. 14 th Your Choice... 8oz Prime Rib or Chicken Breast Neptune with soup or salad, choice of potato, vegetable, desert and a domestic beer or glass of wine. ARTHUR’S SPORTS BAR & GRILL In The Days Inn Check Out Our Great Daily Menu Specials Open 3 – 10 PM Monday to Saturday Reservations recommended 250-489-3305 No coupons permitted for this event 250-427-8700 Buying or Selling Buying or Selling Call Marilyn First CAROLYN GRANT The Canal Flats saw mill will begin operating on one shift as of May 4, 2015, Canfor has confirmed. Corinne Stavness from the corporate head office in Toronto says that due to a lack of economically available fibre in the re- gion, the saw mill will go from two shifts to one. “This reduction will af- fect 81 Canal Flats-based employees, all of whom will be offered positions elsewhere in the compa- ny,” Stavness said. “The Canfor executive and management teams recognize that this deci- sion will involve great per- sonal cost to employees at our Canal Flats mill. Un- fortunately, the available fibre supply in the region is not sufficient to support the processing capacity and we must make this re- duction. “Canfor is actively hir- ing at our other facilities in British Columbia and it is our hope that all 81 Canal Flats employees affected in this shift reduction will ac- cept positions at other Canfor divisions. As a com- pany, we are committed to a fair and transparent pro- cess to place our employ- ees in new jobs. “Moving to one shift will also result in a change in the mill’s operating hours to an eight-hour shift, Monday to Friday.” Canfor cuts shift at Canal Flats mill ARNE PETRYSHEN Cranbrook fire crews re- sponded to 679 calls in the fourth quarter of 2014. At council on Monday, Feb. 2, the summary on ac- tivities of the Cranbrook Fire & Emergency Services Department was included in the administration up- date. The summary covers the Sept. 1, 2014 - Dec. 31, 2014 quarter end report and is a compilation of the activ- ities of the Fire & Emergen- cy Services Department. In total crews responded to 679 fire and emergency calls. Of those 679 calls, 36 were fire related, while 295 were calls as first respond- ers. The crews responded to 88 rescue or motor vehicle accidents. Another 27 calls were public hazard calls while 13 were public service calls. The fire crews performed 219 activations, tests and re- pairs of the fire alarm. There was also on airport emergency standby. The crews performed 117 fire inspections and public education sessions. Coun. Ron Popoff noted that he’d spoken to Fire Chief Wayne Price who told him the fire inspection and public education category likely didn’t include the Grade 3 school tours of the fire hall and the education promotion program the crews put on. “Every Grade 3 class in the area gets a site visit and tour, and a fire safety promo- tion session,” Popoff said. “That is a lot of children.” He noted that Grade 3 was the grade in particular since at that age the students have a much better reten- tion of the safety measures than younger students. “They bring home the message to the families and inspect their homes for fire prevention and safety. I think just just an incredible program,” Popoff said. Kindergarten students also go on tours and are al- lowed to blow the fire truck horn. The report also included the dispatch numbers for the larger region. Cranbrook had the most calls at 679, then Fernie with 150, fol- lowed by the City — which includes the chlorine plant, Public Works and other city utilities— with 128. Kimberley had 90 calls, Invermere had 50 and Windermere had 42. The list keeps going down: Castle- gar, 41; Sparwood, 38; Elk- ford, 35; Radium Hot Springs, 35; Jaffray, 34; Canal Flats, 30; Fairmont, 28; Panorama, 26; Baynes Lake, 13; Edgewater, 11; City/bylaw after hours com- plaints, 4. TREVOR CRAWLEY PHOTO Advanced Education Minister Andrew Wilkinson made a stop in the Heavy Duty Mechanics department of the College of the Rockies on Friday after- noon. Wilkinson (far left) was joined by other COTR officials, including Dianne Teslak, Vice President of Finance, David Walls, COTR president and CEO, and Spencer Mellor, an instructor with the Heavy Duty/Commercial Transport Mechanics program. See more, Page 3. Hundreds of calls keep fire crews busy Fire crews respond to 679 calls in 4th quarter 2014

description

February 10, 2015 edition of the Cranbrook Daily Townsman

Transcript of Cranbrook Daily Townsman, February 10, 2015

Page 1: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, February 10, 2015

Vol. 64, Issue 27 Proudly serving Cranbrook and area since 1951 www.dailytownsman.com

< Wheat Kings harvestKootenay Ice. vs. Brandon | Page 7

Hunters’ protest pays off >Allocation rule changes being adjusted | Page 2

TUESDAYFEBRUARY 10, 2015

TownsmanBulletin

Like Us

@crantownsman

Follow Us

$110INCLUDES G.S.T.

$21.95 per person - Fri. Feb. 13th and Sat. Feb. 14th

Your Choice... 8oz Prime Rib or Chicken Breast Neptune

$21$21 per person - Fri. Feb. 13 per person - Fri. Feb. 13thth and Sat. Feb. 14 and Sat. Feb. 14thth

Your ChoiceYour ChoiceYour ChoiceYour Choice or Chicken Breast Neptuneor Chicken Breast NeptuneYour ChoiceYour ChoiceYour ChoiceYour Choice or Chicken Breast Neptuneor Chicken Breast Neptunewith soup or salad, choice of potato, vegetable, desert

and a domestic beer or glass of wine.

ARTHUR’S SPORTS BAR & GRILLIn The Days Inn

Check Out Our Great Daily Menu SpecialsOpen 3 – 10 PM Monday to Saturday

Reservations recommended250-489-3305

No coupons permitted for this event

250-427-8700

Buying or SellingCall Marilyn First

250-427-8700

Buying or SellingCall Marilyn First

C AROLYN GR ANTThe Canal Flats saw mill

will begin operating on one shift as of May 4, 2015, Canfor has confirmed.

Corinne Stavness from the corporate head office in Toronto says that due to a lack of economically available fibre in the re-gion, the saw mill will go from two shifts to one.

“This reduction will af-fect 81 Canal Flats-based employees, all of whom will be offered positions elsewhere in the compa-ny,” Stavness said.

“The Canfor executive and management teams recognize that this deci-sion will involve great per-sonal cost to employees at our Canal Flats mill.  Un-fortunately, the available fibre supply in the region is not sufficient to support the processing capacity and we must make this re-duction.

“Canfor is actively hir-ing at our other facilities in British Columbia and it is our hope that all 81 Canal Flats employees affected in this shift reduction will ac-cept positions at other Canfor divisions. As a com-pany, we are committed to a fair and transparent pro-cess to place our employ-ees in new jobs. 

“Moving to one shift will also result in a change in the mill’s operating hours to an eight-hour shift, Monday to Friday.”

Canfor cuts shift at Canal Flats mill

A R N E P E T RYS H E NCranbrook fire crews re-

sponded to 679 calls in the fourth quarter of 2014.

At council on Monday, Feb. 2, the summary on ac-tivities of the Cranbrook Fire & Emergency Services Department was included in the administration up-date. The summary covers the Sept. 1, 2014 - Dec. 31, 2014 quarter end report and is a compilation of the activ-ities of the Fire & Emergen-cy Services Department.

In total crews responded to 679 fire and emergency calls.

Of those 679 calls, 36 were fire related, while 295 were calls as first respond-ers.

The crews responded to 88 rescue or motor vehicle accidents. Another 27 calls were public hazard calls while 13 were public service calls.

The fire crews performed 219 activations, tests and re-pairs of the fire alarm.

There was also on airport emergency standby.

The crews performed 117 fire inspections and public

education sessions. Coun. Ron Popoff noted

that he’d spoken to Fire Chief Wayne Price who told him the fire inspection and public education category likely didn’t include the Grade 3 school tours of the fire hall and the education promotion program the crews put on.

“Every Grade 3 class in the area gets a site visit and tour, and a fire safety promo-tion session,” Popoff said. “That is a lot of children.”

He noted that Grade 3

was the grade in particular since at that age the students have a much better reten-tion of the safety measures than younger students.

“They bring home the message to the families and inspect their homes for fire prevention and safety. I think just just an incredible program,” Popoff said.

Kindergarten students also go on tours and are al-lowed to blow the fire truck horn.

The report also included the dispatch numbers for

the larger region. Cranbrook had the most calls at 679, then Fernie with 150, fol-lowed by the City —  which includes the chlorine plant, Public Works and other city utilities— with 128.

Kimberley had 90 calls, Invermere had 50 and Windermere had 42. The list keeps going down: Castle-gar, 41; Sparwood, 38; Elk-ford, 35; Radium Hot Springs, 35; Jaffray, 34; Canal Flats, 30; Fairmont, 28; Panorama, 26; Baynes Lake, 13; Edgewater, 11; City/bylaw after hours com-plaints, 4.

TREVOR CRAWLEY PHOTO

Advanced Education Minister Andrew Wilkinson made a stop in the Heavy Duty Mechanics department of the College of the Rockies on Friday after-noon. Wilkinson (far left) was joined by other COTR officials, including Dianne Teslak, Vice President of Finance, David Walls, COTR president and CEO, and Spencer Mellor, an instructor with the Heavy Duty/Commercial Transport Mechanics program. See more, Page 3.

Hundreds of calls keep fire crews busyFire crews respond to 679 calls in 4th quarter 2014

Page 2: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, February 10, 2015

Page 2 Tuesday, FeBRuaRy 10, 2015

LocaL NEWSdaily townsman / daily bulletin

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To m F l e Tc h e rBlack Press

The B.C. govern-ment has adjusted its plan to give guide-out-fitters and their non-resident clients a greater share of big-

game hunting permits, after protests from resi-dent hunters around the province.

When the plan was announced in Decem-ber, the government calculated that it repre-

sented a shift of 168 an-imals in limited-entry hunt areas from resi-dent hunters to guide outfitters. After listen-ing to the protests, For-ests Minister Steve Thomson announced Friday that is being ad-justed to a shift of about 60 animals to guide-outfitters.

The changes affect bull elk and either-sex elk permits on Vancou-ver Island, moose in the Thompson and Omine-ca regions, bison in the Peace region and big-horn sheep and grizzly bear in the Kootenays.

“I made slight revi-sions to the hunts for moose, bighorn sheep, grizzly bear, Roosevelt elk and bison to ad-dress the concerns I heard after the decision was released,” Thom-son said.

There are 34 limit-ed-entry hunts in the province that are divid-ed between resident hunters and guide out-fitters, who typically

Resident hunter protest pays off

Wikimedia Commons

Bighorn sheep in the Kootenays are among the restricted hunting species in dispute between resident hunters and guide outfitters.

guide clients from the U.S. and Europe. Resi-dent hunters enter a re-gional lottery for the

available opportunities.Allocated hunting

opportunities represent about eight per cent of the 45,700 big-game animals taken by hunt-ers each year in B.C. In most areas, hunters can purchase a tag for each species that has an

open season.Thomson an-

nounced the policy change after more than 10 years of consultation with guide outfitters and the B.C. Wildlife Federation and local rod and gun clubs that represent resident

hunters.He defended the

shift to assist guide out-fitters as a trade-off that prevented them from using unoccupied guide territories around the province. Those areas are now left to resident hunters

WeatherOutlook

TonighT

Friday

Tomorrow

highnormal

Sunrise

2 0

8:03 am

Feb. 25 Mar. 5Feb. 11 Feb. 18

-8 0record monday

Sunset

8 0 1977

17:51 pm

-28 0 1982

0.0 mm

Sunday

Precipitation Sunday

10.9 0 0.3 0

SaTurday

ThurSday

low

Sunday

2

7

8

1

3

POP 30%

POP 30%

POP 40%

7

6

2

0

POP 30%

POP 40%

8

2POP 30%

Temperatures/almanac

waning Quarter

waxing Quarter

new moon

Full moon

The Cranbrook Food Bankneeds your help.

Drop boxes at Safeway and Save On FoodsFood Bank office 104-8th Ave. S. • 250-426-7664 (from 10am-3pm)

CLASSIFIEDS HELP YOU SELLCALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202

Page 3: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, February 10, 2015

Tuesday, FeBRuaRy 10, 2015 Page 3

LocaL NEWSdaily townsman

The information contained herein has been obtained from sources which we believe to be reliable but we cannot guarantee its accuracy or completeness. This report is not, and under no circumstances is to be construed as, an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy any securities. This report is furnished on the basis and understanding that Qtrade Asset Management Inc. and Kootenay Savings MoneyWorks are to be under no responsibility or liability whatsoever in respect thereof.

Mutual Funds are offered through Qtrade Asset Management Inc., Member MFDA.

101– 200 Wallinger Avenue, Kimberley 250.432.4218 1.877.691.5769

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What you do with your money today can make a world of difference to your future. Let’s have a coffee and talk about it.

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Market Quotations Stock quotes as of closing 02/05/15

stocks & etFs

Mutual Funds

coMModities, indexes & currencies

VNP-T 5N Plus ................................. 2.31BCE-T BCE Inc. ..............................59.10BMO-1 Bank of Montreal ................76.57BNS-T Bank of Nova Scotia ............64.54CM-T CIBC ....................................92.76CU-T Canadian Utilities ................41.75CFP-T Canfor Corporation .............28.80ECA-T EnCana Corp. .....................17.40ENB-T Enbridge Inc. ......................63.04FFT-T Finning International ..........22.80FTS-T Fortis Inc. ...........................41.00HSE-T Husky Energy ......................28.14

MBT-T Manitoba Telecom ...............24.28MERC-Q Mercer International ..........13.41NA-T National Bank of Canada ....47.17OCX-T Onex Corporation ................72.54RY-T Royal Bank of Canada .........75.31S-T Sherritt International ...........2.27TD-T TD Bank ...............................53.52T-T Telus Corp. .........................43.88TCK.B-T Teck Resources ...................18.35TRP-T TransCanada Corp. ............58.73VXX-N iPath S&P 500 VIX ..............33.10

CIG Portfolio Series Balanced ........ 30.11CIG Portfolio Series Conservative .. 16.30

CIG Signature Dividend ................... 15.01CIG Signature High Income ............ 15.32

CADUSD Canadian/US Dollar ...0.804GC-FT Gold .......................1,263.00

CL-FT Light Sweet Crude Oil .51.46SI-FT Silver ...........................17.16

Monday, Feb. 9th through Wednesday, Feb. 11th

for a floor facelift.We will re-open Thursday,

February 12 at the usual time.Sorry for any inconvienence.

will be closed from...

See you then!

Arne PetryshenThe City of Cranbrook has re-

ceived funding from the province to help deal with damage to infrastruc-ture that arose from last year’s flood-ing.

“As a result of the early spring and the flooding situation and under dams we saw last spring, we did apply to the province for two emer-gency numbers to help us call in PEP claims and emergency programs,” CAO Wayne Staudt said at last week’s Council meeting.

Last year the City of Cranbrook applied to the provincial government for disaster financial assistance to help fund repairs of damaged infra-structure caused by the spring over-land flooding. Emergency Manage-ment BC (EMBC), a government or-ganization that manages emergen-cies and disasters at the provincial level, approved the claim and the city

received $61,229.60“We received those cheques in

January,” Staudt said.The organization also reimbursed

the city $8,274.42 for critical response activities during the March flood.

The spring high water levels also caused flooding of Elizabeth Lake and the surrounding area, which re-sulted in a second EMBC Provincial Emergency Program (PEP) claim.

The city prevented further flood-ing of infrastructure downstream by emergency pumping to control water levels.

EMBC supported the city’s critical response activities for two months, which included cost of equipment rental and overtime’ to continuously pump water through April and May.

EMBC approved the city’s PEP claim and reimbursed the city $69,721.22 for eligible costs in Janu-ary 2015.

tre vor Cr AwleyThe College of the

Rockies and Selkirk Col-lege are receiving just over half a million dol-lars from the provincial government that will go towards trades training equipment.

The funding, an-nounced by Advanced Education Minister An-drew Wilkinson, will help support students entering in-demand oc-cupations that are criti-cal to the Liberal gov-ernment’s economic platform.

“Our investment in trades training equip-ment supports a high-ly-trained workforce,” said Wilkinson. “Stu-dents in trades pro-grams at the College of the Rockies and Selkirk College are getting hands-on experience that employers need.”

Wilkinson, MLA for Vancouver-Quilchena, toured the Pinnacle Hall at the COTR campus in Cranbrook before mak-ing his address in front of staff and students int the heavy duty mechan-ics program.

COTR will receive $325,274 that will go to-wards an air dryer and heat exchangers for in-dustrial mechanic and millwright programs, a wheel aligner for heavy mechanical trades and an oxyfuel cutter for welding students.

Selkirk College will get $315,428 in funding that will go towards equipment such as an industry-standard drill press for the millwright program, a Lab Volt re-newable energy trainer for the electrical pro-gram and an air condi-tioning trainer for heavy mechanic trades.

“New equipment provides College of the Rockies with the oppor-tunity to help students get the necessary expe-rience and skills to get started on their careers in high-demand fields,” said David Walls, COTR president and CEO.

The funding also complements the addi-tional trades training spaces (32) at COTR and (54) at Selkirk College, which was previously announced in July 2014.

“Sectors critical to our economic growth—

get, with funding com-mitments to 25 post-sec-ondary institutions in the province. Each year, the government tries to allocated 10 per cent to-wards health disciplines and have been using that same strategy for skilled trades.

“We decided to, over time, get up to a 25 per cent quota there to put into career training and trades training. That still leaves 60 per cent-plus for general education, the professions,” said Wilkinson.

“We feel that’s a good balance because it rec-ognizes the need for full-on trades training and makes sure that the people who we are see-ing here today get the skills they need for to-morrow based on cur-rent equipment. “

It was the first time Wilkinson had been Cranbrook in his new-ly-minted capacity of Minister of Advanced Education as he took over the portfolio in a minor Cabinet shuffle last December.

“It’s a great facility, it’s wonderful to see this facility prospering the way it is and to see full enrolment in heavy duty mechanics,” Wilkinson said.

such as oil and gas, min-ing and forestry—need workers to graduate job ready,” said Koote-nay-East MLA Bill Ben-nett. “New trades train-ing equipment at Selkirk College and the College of the Rockies gives stu-dents hands-on experi-ence with tools current-ly used by these indus-tries.”

The money itself stems from the Skills for Jobs Blueprint commit-ment of $185 million over three years for trades-training infra-structure and equip-ment at at public post-secondary institu-tions.

“This is all part of our plan to address the 1 million positions that will be becoming open in the next 10 years in British Columbia,” said Wilkinson. “About two-thirds of those are relat-ed to retirement and the other third are related to new industries, popula-tion growth, new oppor-tunities, including LNG.

“So you can see whether you end up working on a specific project or not, we’re in-vesting in the talents and the abilities of Brit-ish Columbians, be-cause we want our

young people—and sometimes not-so-young people—to be getting the skills they need to be competitive in the workplace.”

The Advanced Edu-cation ministry has a $1.9 billion annual bud-

College of the Rockies gets skilled trades funding

Trevor Crawley phoTo

Advanced Education Minister Andrew Wilkinson speaks during a presentation at the College of the Rockies in Cranbrook Friday, Feb. 6.

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

Not sure about the whole

digital thing?

City gets help to repair last year’s flood damage

Page 4: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, February 10, 2015

Page 4 Tuesday, FeBRuaRy 10, 2015

LocaL NEWSdaily townsman

RECRUITMENT FOR COMMITTEES 2015CITY OF CRANBROOK

There are several opportunities for public participation and involvement in the City of Cranbrook advisory committees listed below.

Membership is open to residents of the City of Cranbrook.

Cranbrook Public Library Board

Members of the Library Board form a corporation with the powers and duties given under the Library Act. Board Applicant Process and Package available at the library or at www.cranbrook.ca. Two positions are available.

Terms of reference for all the committees are available on the City’s website – www.cranbrook.ca

Interested individuals are invited to submit a Volunteer Application form available at City Hall or the City’s website – www.cranbrook.ca.

Applications will be accepted at City Hall (attention Maryse Leroux) or by email [email protected], no later than Friday, February 16, 2015 at 4:00 p.m. local time.

Special Council Meeting 2015 – 2019

Five Year Financial PlanA special meeting of Council is scheduled for budget discussions, as it pertains to the City of Cranbrook 2015 – 2019 Five Year Financial Plan. The meeting will be held on Wednesday, February 11th, beginning at 4:30 pm in Council Chambers at City Hall.

The public is welcome to attend.

Community Directed Youth Funds “Community Value Added Grants”

ARE NOW AVAILABLE…. If you are a local youth service group, club, and/or non-pro� t you can apply

for funds to enhance and/or create new opportunities for youth in Kimberley

Applications are available at City Hall. Deadline for applications is

February 17, 2015 (4pm)

CBT

For the townsmanCollege of the Rock-

ies is hosting an Open House for community members and prospec-tive students on Wednesday, February 11 from 3 to 6 pm at the Cranbrook main cam-pus.

College faculty and staff will be on-hand to answer questions and some programs will be holding interactive demonstrations. Practi-cal Nursing students are available to take blood pressures, Kinesiology students are hosting a variety of fun and infor-mative fitness tests, Dental Assistant stu-dents are leading tooth care practice sessions, UVIC-EK Teacher Edu-cation students are leading theatre improv games and more. Cam-pus tours will be ongo-ing and a visit to the Haul Truck simulator will take place at 4 pm.

Find out how to fi-nance your education from Financial Aid and Awards Officer Lois Murray, including de-tails of the Entrance Awards available to new students. Lois will be of-fering a presentation at 4:30 pm.

Talk to an Education Advisor about course selection, prerequisites and the over 80 transfer agreements the College has with universities across Canada and abroad. This is an excel-

COTR hostsopen house Wednesday

Courtesy stewart wilson

Students and staff of Gordon Terrace were recently treated to a fascinating slide/movie presentation by John Dunn, a modern day explorer, when he shared his adventures about travelling the length of Ellesmere Island in the Arctic during the summer. Following his talk, which included spectacular shots of the high Arctic and its wildlife, students asked a variety of thoughtful questions about his exploits in the north. Grade 3 students Danica Wilson and Brynn Hyde presented him with an inukshuk that was one of several their class made for themselves and special guests as part of a project to show where they have come from, where they are, and where they are going in life’s journey.

lent opportunity to learn more about our new and exciting dual ad-mission option with University of Lethbridge as well.

College of the Rock-ies’ Recruitment Officer Jennifer Inglis says, “The Open House promises to be not only informative but also a lot of fun. There are going to be many activi-ties and presentations this year along with tours of our main cam-pus. Many people in the community haven’t been up to visit since our expansion and I think they will be im-pressed with the new look of the College.”

Members of the In-ternational department will be on hand to pro-vide information about international opportu-nities for students as well as how to become a host family.

The Admissions and Registration staff can help you to fill out an application form for the September semester and will waive the $30 application fee if you apply at the Open House.

Light refreshments will be available and all attendees are eligible to enter their name into draws including one for a $300 tuition award.

For more informa-tion on the Open House, call Jennifer at 250-489-2751 ext. 3383 or email: [email protected]

C anadian PressOne skier is in hospi-

tal with serious but non-life-threatening in-juries after an avalanche in the East Kootenay.

He and another man were allegedly skiing

out of bounds near the Kicking Horse Moun-tain Resort near Golden, B.C., when they appar-ently triggered the ava-lanche.

Search and rescue crews were called to res-

cue the skiers shortly after noon on Sunday.

Golden RCMP are asking skiers to be aware of the avalanche and weather conditions be-fore they head into the

backcountry.Two Saskatchewan

men were seriously in-jured in an avalanche while skiing out of bounds near the same resort last week.

The Canadian Ava-lanche Association says conditions for the Gold-en area and much of the rest of the province are currently at “high to considerable risk.”

Skiers trigger avalanche near Golden

nelson starThe Nelson Police

Department is asking for your help finding Al-exander MacKay, 35, a Nelson resident, who has not been seen or had contact with his family since leaving home on Tuesday.

Police seek public’s help finding Nelson manMacKay is described

as approximately 5’11”, 145 pounds, with short brown hair and blue eyes. He was last seen wearing a black hooded sweatshirt, black jeans and a black baseball cap.

Call police at 250-354-3919 if you see MacKay or know his whereabouts.

Alexander MacKay

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Page 5: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, February 10, 2015

Tuesday, FeBRuaRy 10, 2015 Page 5

OpiniOn/EvEnts

Angela Merkel grew up under Com-munist rule in the old East Germany. She speaks fluent Russian. She has

been the chancellor of Germany for the past ten years. And for all that time she has been negotiating with the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, on wide variety of subjects — including, for the past year, Ukraine. They may not like each other much, but they certainly know each other.

So listen to what Angela Merkel said about the debate in the US military, in the Congress, and even in the White House about sending direct American military aid to the Ukrainian gov-ernment. “I cannot imag-ine any situation in which improved equipment for the Ukrainian army leads to President Putin being so impressed that he believes he will lose militarily,” she said. “I have to put it that bluntly.”

Does anybody think that Angela Merkel is wrong about this? Does any sane person think Putin would flee in panic if he hears that the US is going to send Ukraine “de-fensive weapons” (anti-tank weapons, an-ti-artillery radar and the like)? If not, then this is crazy talk.

Nobody in the United States is talking about sending state-of-the-art US tanks and planes to Ukraine, and they’re certain-ly not offering to send American troops. Secretary of State John Kerry is merely talking about giving some sophisticated “defensive weapons” to an army that doesn’t even use the weapons it has very well. The Ukrainian army is poorly trained, badly led, and controlled by a government in Kiev that is as incompetent as it is cor-rupt.

It sometimes wins when it is fighting the equally ragtag troops of the two break-away “republics” of Donetsk and Lugansk. But if the Ukrainian government troops and the assorted volunteer battalions that fight alongside them start to win, then the

Russians send in a few thousand well-trained soldiers and push the Ukrainians back.

That’s what happened last August, and now it’s happening again. Putting more advanced “defensive weapons” in Ukrainian hands is not going to change this pattern, and military professionals in Washington know it. This proposal is pure, strategy-free tokenism.

Of course, Putin’s stated concerns about Western plots to draw Ukraine into NATO are not very rational either. He’s ex-ceptionally ill-informed if he thinks that

Western European coun-tries like France and Ger-many would let Ukraine join NATO, since that would mean they were taking on a treaty obligation to fight Russia on Ukraine’s behalf.

He’s completely deluded if he takes his own military’s

hoary arguments about Ukraine’s military importance seriously. It is 2015, not 1945, and Russia has lots of nuclear weapons. It simply doesn’t matter whether NATO’s tanks are far from Russia’s border or close to it. Wherever they are, nuclear deter-rence still works.

And Putin can’t really be worried about the example that a democratic and pros-perous Ukraine might set for his own peo-ple. Ukrainian incomes are far lower than Russian ones (thanks mainly to Russian oil and gas), and the West shows no inclina-tion to pour money into Ukraine in quanti-ties large enough to change that. And though Ukraine is more democratic than Russia, its government is no less corrupt.

What drives Putin, therefore, is a gr-ab-bag of emotional motives. His man in Kiev got overthrown, and he doesn’t like to lose face. Even if Ukraine has little strategic or economic importance, it was part of Russia for 300 years, and he hates the idea that it might just slide into the West on his watch. He shares the paranoia about the evil intentions of the West that every Rus-

sian inherits (for very good historical rea-sons).

None of this is worth a full-scale war in Ukraine, let alone a serious military con-frontation with the West or a new Cold War. Maybe if the United States were pre-pared to go in boots and all, showering Ukraine with weapons, money and even US troops, Putin might back away, al-though it would be a terrible risk to take.

But some token “defensive weapons”, basically to make Americans feel better? That involves less risk of a huge Russian over-reaction, admittedly, but it would still be a big step towards a new Cold War, and for no possible gain.

That is why Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande flew to Mos-cow last Friday: to head Kerry off by patch-ing up some new ceasefire (or reviving the old one) in eastern Ukraine. They will be meeting with Putin and Ukrainian Presi-dent Petro Poroshenko in Minsk on Wednesday in the hope that they can make it happen.

At best, that would mean the effective loss of Ukrainian sovereignty over two more provinces (Crimea is already gone), and a semi-permanent “frozen conflict” on Ukraine’s eastern border. Not great, but realistically Ukraine has no better options anyway.

We know that Putin is willing to settle for such “frozen conflicts” in order to crip-ple disobedient former Soviet republics, because he has already done it with Mol-dova and Georgia. We know that the vic-tims of such tactics can thrive despite Moscow’s games. Georgia certainly does, and Ukraine could do even better with strong European Union and US support.

There is no satisfactory military solu-tion for either side. Settle for a stalemate, and move on.

Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist whose articles are published

in 45 countries.

Settle for stalement and move on

Letters to the editorgos on whitetail does

A response to: “The year in hunting (2014)” by F.J. Hurtak:

I have been angry for some time over the general open season (GOS) limits on white-tail does and when I read F.J. Hurtak’s re-view of the 2014 hunting season I feel that I am not alone.

F.J. Hurtak wrote: “I personally believe that this season must be stopped to avoid serious long term damage to future white-tail populations”. He goes on to point out the impact of harvesting every female deer is like taking three deer out of the population.

I have been dissatisfied with the way wildlife has been managed in the East Koo-tenay for some time and the GOS on white-tail does is a good example of why I am upset.

In my opinion, all harvests should be controlled in some way, measured and

most importantly, sustainable year after year. If the ministry believed that there were too many whitetail deer in a given area, then I would argue that the numbers should be reduced by a limited entry draw which is both controlled and can be mea-sured.

Everyone I have spoken to regarding our whitetail deer has expressed concern for their numbers; I don’t believe that the slaughter that took place last year is sus-tainable over time. I wonder if when the numbers of a given population are reduced dramatically by hunting whether all of the other factors impacting the species are taken into account. I refer to things like what if we have a harsh winter, and the number of predators that are impacting their survival. I have certainly witnessed a dramatic increase in the numbers of wolves, cougars and grizzlies where I recre-ate. Are things really in balance for our un-

gulates? I don’t think so.The other part of F.J’s article that

shocked me was his statement: “… I was told in no uncertain terms by the biologists present at this meeting (with the Ministry in August 2014), that the GOS on whitetail does in October was supported by the BCWF and the EKWA.” I have since con-tacted the BCWF to confirm whether this is true or not and IF in fact they did support a slaughter of our does — they do not speak for me as a member and I will be not re-newing my membership. I await their re-sponse.

I really hope that the hunting regulations for the upcoming season are focused on what is really good for our wildlife on the long term rather than what is good for hunt-ers on the short term.

Wayne PelterKimberley

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Gwynne Dyer

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.

Page 6: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, February 10, 2015

PAGE 6 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015

Premier Christy Clark’s push to “re-en-gineer” the B.C. education system is moving ahead aggressively in B.C.’s 25

post-secondary institutions.One of the first tasks for Andrew

Wilkinson in his new role as advanced education minister was to outline the shift in operating grants for colleges and universities to in-demand occupations. By 2017, a quarter of the money for post-secondary institu-tions will be directed to areas where labour force surveys forecast a need.

This was greeted with some alarm when it was announced last year. Simon Fraser University president Andrew Petter at first downplayed the coming skills shortage as “relatively small” and warned against pushing post-secondary institutions into a “zero sum battle for dollars.”

Petter has since come on board, as his approving comments were featured in the ministry’s Jan. 26 news release detail-ing the shift. He and others have been assured that in spite of Clark’s rhetoric, suggesting trades training is in and uni-versity is out, the news for SFU and other universities isn’t all that bleak.

Wilkinson was completing a prov-ince-wide tour of all post-secondary in-stitutions last week, and I reached him at his visit to Thompson Rivers University in Kamloops.

“The response to this has generally

been pretty good, because the students are putting this pressure on institutions themselves,”  he said. “Some of the insti-tutions are … shrinking things like teach-er education and putting more effort into the science-based, quantitative fields that are often related to these in-demand

occupations.”The surplus of teacher

graduates has been no-ticeable for some time, but that’s largely a function of oversupply, much of it in urban areas. In the Cari-boo, for example, teaching jobs are projected to have

the highest number of openings by 2022, followed by nursing and retail and whole-sale trade managers. Then come heavy duty mechanics and electricians, but also paraprofessional jobs in legal, social, community and educational services.

Province-wide, it’s part of a broader demographic shift to fewer children and more retirees. In fact the government started this targeted funding a decade ago with health care, forcing universities to produce more doctors, nurses, lab techs and so forth.

The retiring baby boom is expected to account for more than half of the open-ings in the next decade, which will ex-pand the skills demand across most fields, beyond the trades training for the anticipated liquefied natural gas industry and other high-demand industrial areas such as truck driving.

Wilkinson notes that of the ministry’s $1.9 billion budget, about 60 per cent goes into general post-secondary educa-tion, for introductory courses that stu-dents take when they are seeking a career path,  through undergraduate studies to professions.

“So I think the idea that we’re going to somehow minimize or diminish funding in that general education, arts and sci-ence category is just not true,” he said.

Key to this shift is measuring the per-formance of courses offered at colleges, universities and technical schools. Each year, the ministry surveys about 30,000 graduates to find out whether their stud-ies helped them find a related job.

The results are available on a website that breaks them out by institution and general study area. To find it, do a web search for “BC student outcomes” and select the “executive dashboard” to check the results for courses and schools in your region.

The site provides charts showing the percentage of students who land relevant jobs. Not surprisingly, it tends to be high-er for technical programs and lower for fine arts.

It also shows grads’ average wages, a sobering but useful bit of information for high school students and their parents.

Tom Fletcher is legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press. Twitter: @tom-

fletcherbc Email: tfletcher@blackpress.

Post-secondary ‘re-engineering’ begins

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GAME TIME 7:00 PMGame & Ticket Info 250.417.0322

Tickets available at the Kootenay ICE Of� ce and Western Financial Place Box Of� ce.

w w w. k o o t e n a y i c e . n e t

‘FRIENDS OFCHILDREN’ NIGHTPRESENTED BY

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Double downBrandon Wheat Kings crown Ice back-to-back

cranbrookphoto.com

Ice forwards Jaedon Descheneau (#14), Levi Cable (back) and Luke Philp (#12) storm the Brandon Wheat Kings crease and goaltender Jordan Papirny (#33) Friday night. The Wheat Kings puck-stopper was up to the task, guiding his team to back-to-back victories over the Ice Friday and Saturday.

Kootenay Ice Scoring SummariesFrIday, Feb. 6

brandon Wheat KIngS 5 at Kootenay Ice 3

First Period 1. KTN - T. Bozon, (21) (T. King, S. Reinhart), 7:412. KTN - L. Philp, (23) (T. Lishchynsky, J. Descheneau), 11:463. BWK - R. Bukarts, (21) (T. McGauley, R. Gow), 13:424. KTN - L. Cable, (23) (T. Lishchynsky), 18:16Second Period - No scoringThird Period 5. BWK - Q. Lisoway, (8) (R. Duke, E. Roy), 4:156. BWK - E. Roy, (4) (K. Clague, C. Waltz), 7:337. BWK - T. McGauley, (32) (C. Waltz, K. Clague), 7:488. BWK - T. McGauley, (33) (C. Waltz, R. Duke), 19:57 (EN)Shots 1 2 3 TBrandon Wheat Kings 8 8 17 33Kootenay Ice 11 8 7 26Goaltenders Saves Mins SV%BWK - Jordan Papirny 23/26 60:00 0.885KTN - Wyatt Hoflin 28/32 59:12 0.875Power playsBrandon Wheat Kings 0/5 (00.0%)Kootenay Ice 0/1 (00.0%)Three Stars: 1) E. Roy (BWK); 2) T. Lishchynsky (KTN); 3) Q. Lisoway (BWK)Attendance: 2,121

Saturday, Feb. 7

brandon Wheat KIngS 4 at Kootenay Ice 1

First Period 1. BWK - T. McGauley, (34) (R. Pilon), 7:23Second Period 2. BWK - N. Patrick, (25) (M. Klimchuk, R. Gow), 5:40Third Period 3. BWK - M. Klimchuk, (21) (N. Patrick, P. Quenneville), 6:49 (PP)4. KTN - Z. Zborosky, (16 (A. Vetterl, R. Chynoweth), 7:185. BWK - R. Duke, (18) (T. McGauley, R. Bukarts), 12:39 (PP)Shots 1 2 3 TBrandon Wheat Kings 2 10 12 24Kootenay Ice 11 8 13 32

Goaltenders Saves Mins SV%BWK - Jordan Papirny 31/32 60:00 0.969KTN - Wyatt Hoflin 20/24 59:59 0.833Power playsBrandon Wheat Kings 2/4 (50.0%)Kootenay Ice 0/4 (00.0%)Three Stars: 1) J. Papirny (BWK); 2) R. Chynoweth (KTN); 3) M. Klimchuk (BWK)Attendance: 2,209

Upcoming GamesFeb. 11 vs. Medicine HatFeb. 13 vs. Moose JawFeb. 15 vs. SaskatoonFeb. 17 at LethbridgeFeb. 20 vs. EdmontonFeb. 21 at Spokane

Scoring StatisticsPlayer GP G A PTS PIM Jaedon Descheneau 52 24 36 60 50 Luke Philp 53 23 35 58 16Tim Bozon 39 21 23 44 12Sam Reinhart 29 12 30 42 16Levi Cable 51 23 17 40 6Zak Zborosky 54 16 17 33 14Rinat Valiev 35 7 25 32 35Tyler King 50 8 19 27 27Matt Alfaro 54 7 16 23 24Austin Vetterl 54 8 14 22 50Jon Martin 38 6 12 18 60Troy Murray 54 2 12 14 24Ryan Chynoweth 54 4 9 13 34Cale Fleury 53 1 10 11 6Tanner Lishchynsky 17 0 9 9 10River Beattie 48 4 3 7 29Bryan Allbee 43 3 4 7 12Vince Loschiavo 42 3 3 6 8Tanner Faith 19 1 5 6 29Lenny Hackman 44 1 2 3 0Dylan Overdyk 28 0 3 3 11Wyatt Hoflin 50 0 2 2 2Austin Wellsby 32 1 0 1 9

Goaltending StatisticsPlayer W L OT/SL SO GAA SPWyatt Hoflin 26 22 1 2 3.34 0.896 Keelan Williams 1 4 0 0 5.11 0.854

Taylor rocc aSports Editor

Friday night, it was leading scorer Tim Mc-Gauley doing the heavy lifting to help the Bran-don Wheat Kings to vic-tory. On Saturday, it was goaltender Jordan Pa-pirny standing on his head and guiding his team over the Kootenay Ice.

The Wheat Kings used a four-goal third period to earn a 5-3 come-from-behind win Friday before cruising to a 4-1 victory Saturday night.

Saturday’s win main-tained a 12-game point streak for the Wheat Kings, who are 11-0-0-1 since Jan. 11.

“For us, it’s just keep-ing it simple and stick-ing to our game plan of getting the puck deep, getting on the cycle and making it tough on the other team’s [defense],” Papirny said Saturday night. “For us, it’s been sticking with that and keeping it simple. Our special teams have been really good for us and that’s really beneficial.”

Papirny wasn’t lying when he said the Wheat Kings special teams help to get the job done. The WHL’s top-ranked power play heading into the weekend struck twice on four opportu-nities Saturday night.

Morgan Klimchuk gave the visitors a 3-0 lead with a power-play goal 6:49 into the third period. After Zak Zbo-rosky got the hosts on the board and cut the Wheat Kings lead to 3-1, Reid Duke restored the three-goal advantage for the Wheat Kings with a power-play tally 12:39 into the final period.

“Sometimes we had some good moments and sometimes we had some bad moments,” Zborosky said Saturday night. “With a good team like that, you’ve got to be playing a full 60 [min-utes]. You can’t give them any chance to get into the game, otherwise that’s what happens — they score goals.”

On top of the 50-per-cent success rate on the man advantage, the Wheat Kings blanked

the Ice on four of their own power-play oppor-tunities Saturday night.

Though the Wheat Kings special teams took care of business in the final 40 minutes, Papirny carried his share of the weight in the first period, making a number of crit-ical stops — in particular, two on Ryan Chynoweth in tight and another with his noggin on a Luke Philp snapshot.

In all, the 18-year-old native of Edmonton kept the Ice off the scoresheet in a first peri-od that saw the hosts outshoot the guests by a decisive margin of 11-2. By the time the final

buzzer sounded, the Ice had outshot the Wheat Kings 32-24.

“For myself, the mis-sion never changes,” Pa-pirny said. “As a goalie, there’s times where things are going well for myself and the boys are there to bail me out. Then there’s times like tonight where we get outshot and I’ve got to be on my game.”

Papirny was on his game Saturday, earning his WHL-leading 33rd victory of the campaign. After being passed over in his first year of eligibil-ity at the 2014 NHL Entry Draft, Papirny is certain-ly being noticed heading into the 2015 NHL Entry Draft as he was listed 25th amongst North American goaltenders on the NHL Central Scouting Service’s mid-season rankings.

McGauley opened the scoring 7:23 into the first period, tallying his 34th of the campaign and extending 10-game point streak. Wheat Kings forward Nolan Patrick doubled the lead 5:40 into the second pe-

riod. McGauley and Pat-rick each recorded multi-point efforts (1G, 1A) for the Wheat Kings.

Ice goaltender Wyatt Hoflin made 20 saves.

For the Ice, Satur-day’s loss came on the heels of a game that was well within their grasp Friday night. The hosts built a 3-1 lead through 40 minutes of play, be-fore the Wheat Kings stormed back in the third period.

“We were playing our game at the start of the first two periods and we sort of sat back in the third and let them play their game,” said Koote-nay Ice forward Levi Cable Friday night. “To-morrow, we need to come out and play our game all throughout the whole game.

“We had a strong start. Everyone was going. Our passing was on and we were getting pucks to the net in the first two periods.”

Quintin Lisoway kickstarted the Wheat Kings come back 4:15 into the third period with his eighth goal of the season.

But it was Eric Roy and McGauley doing the deepest damage that ultimately killed the

Kootenay Ice.Roy tied the game

3-3 with his fourth goal of the season after grab-bing a rebound out of the air, dropping it to his stick and quickly finding twine behind a helpless Hoflin at the 7:33 mark of the third period.

On the ensuing face-off, the Wheat Kings controlled the puck and carried into Kootenay Ice territory. From there, defenceman Colton Waltz let go of a long point shot and a cruis-ing McGauley redirect-ed it past Hoflin for a 4-3 Brandon Wheat Kings lead. It was the first time the Wheat Kings led in

the game.The two tallies from

Roy and McGauley came over the course of a light-ning-quick 15 seconds.

Life doesn’t get easi-er for the Kootenay Ice, who are set to host the Central Division-lead-ing Medicine Hat Tigers Wednesday night.

“Every two points matter a lot now — they always did all season — but now they’re magni-fied if you win or lose,” Cable said Friday. “These next 20-some games we’ve got are

going to be huge for us.”The Ice have 18

games remaining on their regular-season schedule.

The pair of losses drop the Ice into the second wild-card slot in the WHL’s Eastern Con-ference, as the Edmon-ton Oil Kings moved past into the first wild-card seed with a 2-1 overtime victory against the Prince George Cou-gars Saturday night.

Notes: Kootenay Ice F Jaedon Descheneau tallied the 250th point of

his WHL career with an assist Friday night…The Kootenay Ice scratched D Bryan Allbee, D Dylan Overdyk, F Austin Wells-by and D Tanner Faith (shoulder, four to six months) both nights…the Brandon Wheat Kings went both nights without G Alex Moodie (upper body), D Mark Taraschuk, F Jayce Haw-ryluk (upper body), F John Quenneville (upper body) and D Mark Matsuba…

“You can’t give them any chance to get

into the game, otherwise that’s

what happens — they score goals.”Kootenay Ice forward Zak

Zborosky on the Wheat Kings

Page 8: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, February 10, 2015

PAGE 8 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015

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ARIES (March 21-April 19) Confusion seems to surround a partnership. You will have a better sense of what is going on than the other party. Your sixth sense could kick in and point you to the best way to resolve the situation. Convincing others will take talent. Tonight: Let go and relax. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You’ll move through a problem quickly, especially if you decide to let someone else take the lead. This person seems to have a firm grasp of the issue. Confu-sion might be difficult to elimi-nate, as you could be wearing rose-colored glasses. Tonight: Go along with a suggestion. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You have a lot of ground to cov-er, and you might feel as if you are running around in circles. Stop and take a deep breath. Your intuition will let you know what is happening. Listen to news carefully, but know that some facts could be missing. Tonight: Change gears.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Allow your creativity to flourish. Others are likely to ask questions and make suggestions. News comes forward that will allow you to see a different path. The question boils down to wheth-er you are ready to take a risk. Tonight: Act as if there were no tomorrow. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You could be withdrawn and somewhat quiet, which is un-like you. You might not want to share what is going on. Be pre-pared for a barrage of questions from those who care about you. Realize that a financial matter needs to be dealt with carefully. Tonight: With a favorite person. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You might be slightly disorient-ed in the morning, but by the afternoon, you will have a clear view of what is going on. A loved one will respond well to a one-one-one conversation. You both will enjoy being on the same page. Tonight: Visit over dinner. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Be aware of your finances. Double-check your budget, and

understand what is required in various situations. The pressure you feel could be eliminated more quickly than you might have expected. You’ll be able to manifest a long-term goal soon. Tonight: Get into a favorite pas-time. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) An opportunity is likely to pres-ent itself in the midst of a con-fusing situation. You’ll want to sort out what is happening and understand the facts before say-ing “yes.” You might not have a clue about what this will involve. Tonight: Allow your imagination to speak. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Do you know what needs to happen in order for you to move past an obstacle? You must fig-ure this out before more com-plications arise. A friend will encourage you, but he or she might not have the solution. A family member also adds an el-ement of chaos. Tonight: Do your thing. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You’ll be more upbeat than those around you. Your positive

energy might be needed in var-ious situations. Your plans could become quite erratic as you ab-sorb a lot of others’ confusion. Confirm meetings and verify any news you hear. Tonight: Read between the lines. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Someone you respect demands your attention and time. You naturally will do what is asked, but it could add some tension to your day. Use caution with funds, as you easily could make an error. Follow through on pri-orities, but don’t give in to an impulse. Tonight: Your treat. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Work on detachment, and you’ll get a better perspective of what is happening in your immediate environment. Observe what might not be obvious. Seek out an answer as to why others seem to be acting in a confus-ing manner. Tonight: Be enter-tained!t BORN TODAY Olympic swimmer Mark Spitz (1950), poet Boris Pasternak (1890), actress Laura Dern (1967)

Dear Annie: My fiance and I have been to-gether for three years. “Justin” shares custo-dy of his 13-year-old daughter, “Chrissie.” The problem is, Chrissie will not sleep in her own bed. Until recently, she used to sleep on the floor in our room, but two months ago, Justin started sleeping in her bed. I couldn’t take it, so I went back to live at my place. Now that I am no longer in Jus-tin’s house, Chrissie sleeps with him in his bed. This bothers me. Justin and his ex-wife tried sending Chris-sie for therapy, but she told them it wasn’t working, so they stopped. We have dis-cussed this, but he continues to allow her in his bed. He doesn’t believe there is anything wrong with it and also says he doesn’t know what else to do. Chrissie is quite manipula-tive, conniving and sly. Even her hugs are fake. She is obviously competing with me for her father’s attention. I feel guilty not liking this girl. I understand that divorce is hard on children, but this is ridiculous. -- Soon-To-Be Stepmom Dear Soon: Chrissie may be manipulating her parents out of insecurity and because she can get away with it. But her parents are the real problem. They are allowing Chrissie to control the family dynamic. This is terribly unfair to everyone, but especially to Chris-sie. She desperately needs her parents to be in charge, and instead, they have given her the reins. All of them should be in family counseling together so that Chrissie cannot claim it’s “not working,” and so that Justin and his ex understand how much effort and consistency are required for their daughter’s sake. If you intend to marry Justin, insist on this. Dear Annie: I read your answer to “Grand-ma-To-Be” regarding a baby shower for a child born of a surrogate. Why did you say, “Of course, it is better if the shower is giv-en by friends and not immediate family”? I thought baby showers were supposed to be given by the aunts. Has this changed? Also, what about “sprinkles” -- those baby showers for second and third kids? This is a very sore subject for those of us who have been on the receiving end of the invitations. Unless there are several years between ba-bies, or the new baby is from a different mar-riage, it is asking too much of friends and family. Today’s generation thinks nothing of ask-ing people to dish out money over and over. What a greedy world we have become. -- Also a Grandma-To-Be Dear Also: Baby showers (also bridal show-ers) generally should not be given by imme-diate family members, because they, too, benefit from others giving gifts. Hosting it then seems self-serving. (There are excep-tions to this rule.) Aunts, cousins, sisters-in-law, etc., however, are not immediate family and, of course, can host showers. “Sprinkles” are fine if there is a big age gap and the new baby has fewer hand-me-downs, or if the couple has moved to a new city. Otherwise, they are OK only for close family and extremely close friends, or for those who didn’t attend a previous shower. As you said, it is unkind to keep burdening the same people with gift-giving over and over. Dear Annie: In my 70 years of living in New Orleans, I’ve been called honey, sweetie, sugar and baby by clerks and waitresses, al-ways with a helpful air of appreciation and never in a condescending way. Maybe it’s a southern thing, but I like it. Why would I be rude to someone who is focused on helping me? I hope that charm never goes away. -- Happy in NOLA Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to [email protected], or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. To find out more about Annie’s Mailbox and read features by other Creators Syndi-cate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syn-dicate Web page at www.creators.com.COPYRIGHT 2015 CREATORS.COM

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Page 9: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, February 10, 2015

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015 PAGE 9

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

Friday’s answers

Friday’s

Tuesday Afternoon/Evening February 10 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 Georg Cat in Word Wild News Busi PBS NewsHour Genealogy Rd Forgot-Plague Frontline Arts & Mind Charlie Rose$ $ CFCN Ellen Show News--Calgary News--Calgary etalk Theory Person-Interest The Flash Agent Carter News News Daily Mey% % KXLY-ABC Rachael Ray The Doctors News ABC News News Ent Insider Fresh- Fresh- Agent Carter Forever KXLY Kim& & KREM-CBS Dr. Oz Show Dr. Phil News CBS News Inside Ac NCIS NCIS: N.O. Person-Interest News Late _ _ KHQ-NBC Ellen Show Judge Judge News News News Million. J’pard Wheel Parks Parks Marry About- Chicago Fire News J. Fal( ( TSN Hockey Lunch Around SC Record Pardon SportsCentre SC SC Hocke Open SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre) ) NET Sportsnet NHL Hockey Sports Sportsnet Road to the Darts Sportsnet Sportsnet+ + GLOBAL BC Meredith Vieira The Young News News News Hour Ent ET NCIS NCIS: N.O. Chicago Fire News, , KNOW Olly Jelly Kate Magic Jack Wild Hope-Wildlife Blue Realm South Pacific Emergency Fraud? Blue Realm` ` CBUT Republic-Doyle Dragons’ Den CBC News CBC Murdoch Myst. Cor Mercer 22 Min Creek Mr. D The National News Mercer1 M CICT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent Chicago Fire NCIS NCIS: N.O. News Hour Fi ET Doctor3 O CIVT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent Chicago Fire NCIS NCIS: N.O. News Hour ET Doctor4 6 YTV Side Nerds Spong Chuck Par Spong Sam & As Max As Funny Videos Heart Nine Lives Vam Gags Gags6 . KAYU-FOX Steve Harvey Meredith Vieira Mike Anger Two Mod Theory Theory MasterChef New Mindy News Mod Rais Mother7 / CNN Situation Room E. B. OutFront Cooper 360 Sanjay Gupta CNN Tonight Cooper 360 Sanjay Gupta CNNI CNNI8 0 SPIKE Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Framework Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue9 1 HGTV Bryan Bryan Bryan Bryan Hunt Hunt Holmes Makes House House Hunt Hunt Holmes Makes House House House Hunters: 2 A&E Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Ship Ship Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Ship Ship< 4 CMT CMT’s Hottest Gags Gags Undercover Faith Faith Malibu Chris Undercover Faith Faith Malibu Chris Gags Gags= 5 W Change-Place Buying-Selling Buying-Selling Love It Love It-List It Property Bro Flirting With Forty Sex- Sex-? 9 SHOW NCIS Framed for Murder Stargate Atl. Royal Pains NCIS NCIS Hawaii Five-0 NCIS@ : DISC How/ How/ Daily Planet Gold Rush - Gold Rush Edge Buying Buying Gold Rush Edge Buying Buying A ; SLICE Surviving Evil Stranger Prin Prin Vander Housewives Housewives Friend Friend Vander HousewivesB < TLC Kate Plus 8 Kate Plus 8 Kate Plus 8 Kate Plus 8 Fabu Fabu Fabu Fabu Fabu Fabu Kate Plus 8 Kate Plus 8C = BRAVO Flashpoint Person-Interest Blue Bloods Cold Justice Homeland The Listener Criminal Minds Homeland Cold JusticeD > EA2 (3:30) Funny Lady Babe: Pig in the City Events Leading-Death Groundhog Day (:45) Fierce Creatures DisE ? TOON Spies! Po Rocket Jim Camp Johnny Dr. Di Rocket Johnny Pack Deten Drama Family Amer. Archer Robot Ftur FuggetF @ FAM ANT Good Phi Jessie Jessie Liv- Austin Jessie Girl I Didn’t Dog Good Next Win Good Win, Wiz DerekG A WPCH Sein Mod Theory Theory Brown Payne Brown Payne Mod Sein Family Family Amer. Amer. Jeffer. Break Mr. DeedsH B COM Gags Gags Frasier Frasier Theory Theory Match Gas Just/Laughs Gags Gags JFL Simp Theory Sirens Daily NightlyI C TCM Charade Gentleman’s Agreement (:15) The Killers (:15) I Remember Mama BachK E OUT Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Kings Stor Stor Stor Stor Kings Stor Stor GetS GetSL F HIST Restoration Cnt. Cnt. MASH MASH Dino Hunt Restoration Cnt. Cnt. Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn PickersM G SPACE Inner Scare Stargate SG-1 Castle Face Off Wizard Wars Inner Scare Castle Face Off Wizard WarsN H AMC Man Who Shot Liberty Valance Gladiator X2: X-Men United ManO I FS1 NASCAR Hub College Basketball College Basketball FOX Sports FOX Sports FOX Sports FOX SportsP J DTOUR Gotta Eat St. Moves Moves Secu Secu Hotel Impssble Hotel Showd. Ghost Adv. Mysteries at Hotel Impssble Hotel Showd.W W MC1 I Give It a Year (:05) Fakers (:15) Pacific Rim RoboCop Hours¨ ¨ KTLA KTLA 5 News Cunningham Steve Wilkos News News Two Two The Flash Supernatural KTLA 5 News News Friend≠ ≠ WGN-A Funny Videos A Knight’s Tale Wres Wres Wres Wres Wres Wres Rules Rules Rais RaisØ Ø EA1 Fear-Loathing (4:50) How High Lega Slings/Arrows Places in the Heart Fried Green Tomatoes How to Make∂ ∂ VISN Emily of Moon Murder, She... Columbo Sabah Mes Con Doctor Zhivago Un Popoff 102 102 MM Brand New S... Playlist Playlist Tosh.0 South Tosh.0 Kroll Com Simp At Mid. Conan Com Tosh.0 Kroll 105 105 SRC Les belles Entrée prin Mange Union TJ C.-B. 30 vies La fac Unité 9 Mémoires Le Téléjournal TJ C.-B.

Wednesday Afternoon/Evening February 11 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 Georg Cat in Word Wild News Busi PBS NewsHour Nature NOVA Earth-NewWld Railwa Charlie Rose$ $ CFCN Ellen Show News--Calgary News--Calgary etalk Theory Saving Hope Arrow Criminal Minds News News Daily Mey% % KXLY-ABC Rachael Ray The Doctors News ABC News News Ent Insider Middle Gold Mod black Nashville KXLY Kim& & KREM-CBS Dr. Oz Show Dr. Phil News CBS News Inside Ac The Mentalist Criminal Minds Stalker News Late _ _ KHQ-NBC Ellen Show Judge Judge News News News Million. J’pard Wheel Myst-Laura Law & Order Chicago PD News J. Fal( ( TSN SportsCentre Hocke NBA Basketball SportsCentre Golf SC SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre) ) NET Sportsnet Can Hocke NHL Hockey NHL Hockey Sportsnet Ski TV NHL in + + GLOBAL BC Meredith Vieira The Young News News News Hour Ent ET Secu Secu Chicago PD Stalker News, , KNOW Olly Jelly Kate Magic Jack Wild Blue Realm Watch Park Puyi: The Last Starkey’s Music and Monarchy Park Watch` ` CBUT Republic-Doyle Dragons’ Den CBC News CBC Murdoch Myst. Cor Dragons’ Den Book-Negroes The National News Mercer1 M CICT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent Stalker Secu Secu Chicago PD News Hour Fi ET Doctor3 O CIVT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent Stalker Secu Secu Chicago PD News Hour ET Doctor4 6 YTV Side Chuck Spong Pen Par Spong Sam & As Henry Max Gags Gags Vam Vam Haunt Haunt Gags Gags6 . KAYU-FOX Steve Harvey Meredith Vieira Mike Anger Two Mod Theory Theory American Idol (:01) Empire News Mod Rais Mother7 / CNN Situation Room E. B. OutFront Cooper 360 Anthony CNN Tonight Cooper 360 Anthony CNNI CNNI8 0 SPIKE Cops Jail Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Coaching Bad Cops Cops Cops Jail Jail Jail9 1 HGTV Bryan Bryan Fixer Upper Hunt Hunt Beach Island Carib Hawaii Hunt Hunt Beach Island Carib Hawaii House Hunters: 2 A&E Wahl Donnie Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Wahl Donnie Donnie Wahl Duck Duck Duck Duck Wahl Donnie< 4 CMT Best Best Gags Gags Undercover Faith Faith Reba Reba Undercover Faith Faith Reba Reba Gags Gags= 5 W Valentine Carol Say Say Snow Bride Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Sex- Sex-? 9 SHOW NCIS Burden of Evil Stargate Atl. Rizzoli & Isles NCIS NCIS Rizzoli & Isles NCIS@ : DISC How/ How/ Daily Planet Last Frontier Gold Rush - Gold Rush Edge Last Frontier Gold Rush - Gold RushA ; SLICE Stranger Stranger Prin Prin Friends to Unty Unty Tardy Tardy Friend Friend Friends to Unty UntyB < TLC My Addiction My Addiction My 600-Lb My 600-Lb Fat and Back Fat and Back My 600-Lb My 600-Lb My AddictionC = BRAVO Flashpoint Person-Interest Blue Bloods Motive Suits The Listener Criminal Minds Suits MotiveD > EA2 (3:25) Girlfight (:20) De-Lovely Crazy Moon Hitch The Wedding Singer Fools E ? TOON Spies! Po Rocket Jim Camp Johnny Clar Rocket Johnny Pack Deten Drama Family Amer. Archer Robot Ftur FuggetF @ FAM ANT Good Phi Jessie Jessie Liv- Austin Austin Par I Didn’t Dog Good Next Win Good Win, Wiz DerekG A WPCH Sein Mod Theory Theory Brown Payne Brown Payne Mod Sein Family Family Amer. Amer. Jeffer. Gimme The ScoreH B COM Gags Gags Frasier Frasier Sirens Theory Match Gas Just/Laughs Gags Gags JFL Simp Theory Groun Daily NightlyI C TCM (:15) The Four Musketeers All the King’s Men Twelve O’Clock High (:15) The Bicycle Thief TreasureK E OUT Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Hillbilly Buck Stor Stor Stor Stor Hillbilly Buck Stor Stor GetS GetSL F HIST Pawn. Pawn. Pawn Pawn MASH MASH Amer Amer Pawn Pawn Appalachian Swamp People Miss. Men TruckersM G SPACE Inner Scare Stargate SG-1 Castle Paranormal Wi. Paranormal Wi. Inner Scare Castle Paranormal Wi. Paranormal Wi.N H AMC (2:30) Gladiator Braveheart Call Saul (:15) Better Call Saul We O I FS1 NASCAR Hub UFC Tonight College Basketball FOX Sports FOX Sports FOX Sports FOX Sports FOX SportsP J DTOUR Gotta Eat St. Moves Moves Secu Secu The Dead Files Ghost Adv. Ghost Adv. Border Border The Dead Files Ghost Adv.W W MC1 Big (:20) Gravity (5:55) Magic Magic (:35) Thor: The Dark World Godzilla 300: Rise of an Empire¨ ¨ KTLA KTLA 5 News Cunningham Steve Wilkos News News Two Two Arrow The 100 KTLA 5 News News Friend≠ ≠ WGN-A Funny Videos Funny Videos Funny Videos Mother Mother Mother Mother Mother Mother Rules Rules Parks Parks Rais RaisØ Ø EA1 (:15) Inside Man Lega Slings/Arrows Philadelphia (:10) Leaving Las Vegas (12:05) Idlewild∂ ∂ VISN Emily of Moon Murder, She... Columbo The Midwife The Paradise Mes Con Must Love Dogs Super Popoff 102 102 MM Curated By Playlist Playlist Tosh.0 South Work. Broad Com Simp At Mid. Conan Com Work. Broad 105 105 SRC Les belles Entrée prin Mange Union TJ C.-B. 30 vies Épi Enfants de télé 19-2 Le Téléjournal TJ C.-B.

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Page 10: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, February 10, 2015

PAGE 10 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015 DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN PAGE 10 Tuesday, February 10, 2015 DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN

UsedKootenays.comfax 250.426.5003 email classifi [email protected]

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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.

Natalie & Maddie are all smiles in front of their

Christmas tree!

Stan Pluszkiewicz

Stan Pluszkiewicz passed away peacefully on Tuesday, February 3, 2015 at the Kimberley Special Care Home “The Pines” at 88 years of age.

In his younger years, Stan enjoyed fishing and hunting. He was quite the chef. He enjoyed baking bread and making homemade soups.

Stan was employed as an underground miner for many years. Stan’s travels took him across Canada, and throughout the North West Territories. He was a great storyteller and loved to share all his travel tales and experiences. Stan had resided at the Lions Valley View Lodge in Kimberley for the last 20 years.

A memorial service for Stan will be announced at a later date.Arrangements entrusted to McPherson Funeral Service.

Debbie TEMPLE “Pepper” (nee Luke)

March 4, 1959 – February 1, 2015

In the early morning hours of Sunday, February 1, 2015, Debra Jean Temple passed away at home in Wardner at the young age of 55 years. Debbie was born on March 4, 1959 in Fernie, BC, one of eight children born to Robert and Merle Luke (Gravelle).

Debbie lived a full life in her short time. She loved the outdoors, and most often than not, you could find her sitting by the fire with Molly. She was an excellent cook. One of her famous recipes was homemade bread and no one can hold a candle to her apple pies. She kept an immaculate house and loved to garden. She was most definitely a woman of many talents – she was an avid hunter and was an exceptional shot, rarely missing her aim. She loved to play ball, playing short stop until a shoulder injury kept her from the field. Debbie was also a welder, a profession not held by many women. Through her life she was a strong woman in many things. She put up a valiant fight against the cancer that took her and she fought to her last day.

Debbie leaves to cherish her memory; her beloved husband, Doug Temple; her children Jaime Cristales (James) and Kyle Staples (Selina), as well as her step-children; Kyle Temple (Katerina), Tania Temple and Leah Yonkman (Jay). She also leaves behind her two grandchildren; Tyson and Breanna and her step-grandchildren; Taylor, Tre, Jesse, Michael, James and Jody. Debbie leaves her siblings; Bob, Wes, Terry, Darrell, Shawn, Kevin, Darlene, Troy and Michael. She was predeceased by her parents, Robert Luke and Merle Luke (Gravelle).

A Celebration of Debbie’s Life will be held at the Royal Alexandra Hall, Canadian Museum of Rail Travel, 57 Van Horne St., Cranbrook on Friday, February 13, 2015 at 11:00 am. Condolences may be left for the family at www.markmemorial.com.

Mark Memorial Funeral Services in care of arrangements (250) 426-4864.

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LOGISTICS COORDINATORDuties: successful applicant will perform a variety of logistical tasks that include: managing the efficient flow of our apparel products from international suppliers to retail customers in North America and Europe; inventory control; utilizing best methods of freight forwarding and shipping; EDI order processing; warehousing and distribution; understanding and implementing processes that will ensure compliance with our major retail customers.

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Help WantedCONSTRUCTION ORIENTED bookkeeper required for local, expanding construc-tion company. Operations in mining, construction, earth-moving and development. Experience in contract work (City, MOT) and Simply Ac-counting a must. Invoicing, payroll, AP, AR, an asset. Part time to start, progress-ing to full time in the spring. Wage $17. - $24. D.O.E.

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PersonalsSWF seeking SWM Aged 53-60 for LTR.

You are a n/s; no drugs; you are height/weight proportionate. You are gainfully employed and looking for an attractive

woman for companionship. You enjoy movies, dinners and

concerts. You do not hunt. Fishing is optional.

Please reply in confi dence with recent photograph to:

sunshineand [email protected]

Employment

Business Opportunities

GET FREE Vending Ma-chines. Can earn $100,000+ per year. All cash-retire in just 3 years. Protected Territories. Full details call now 1-866-668-6629. Or visit our website: www.tcvend.comTHE DISABILITY Tax Credit. $1500 yearly tax credit. $15,000 lump sum refund (on avg). Covers: hip/knee re-placements, back conditions and restrictions in walking and dressing. 1-844-453-5372.

Help Wanted

ARE YOU A WITNESS? Sunday, August 10th, 2014, at approximately 9:30am, an elderly gentleman fell while exiting the Cranbrook Super-Store which was under reno-vation. Paramedics attended and transported the gentle-man to the hospital with seri-ous injuries. If you witnessed this incident, please contact Lloyd by phone, email or text at:

604-512-4985 [email protected]

Obituaries

Medical/DentalMEDICAL Transcriptionists are in huge demand! Train with the leading Medical Tran-scription school. Learn from home and work from home. Call today 1-800-466-1535, www.canscribe.com or email: [email protected].

Obituaries

Help Wanted

Obituaries

Help Wanted

FIND A FRIEND

Page 11: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, February 10, 2015

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015 PAGE 11DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETINDAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN Tuesday, February 10, 2015 PAGE 11

Janis Caldwell-SawleyMortgage SpecialistRoyal Bank of Canada

[email protected]/janis.sawley

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

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

IF YOU own a home or real estate, Alpine Credits can lend you money: It’s That Simple. Your Credit / Age / Income is not an issue. 1.800.587.2161.

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

Call Anytime1-800-639-2274 or

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

Accounting/Tax/Bookkeeping

IN NEED OF A BOOKKEEPER? I have over 15 years

experience doing books for various companies in the

East Kootenays. I can take your company from start-up

to year-end prep. Contact Melissa at

~ 250-581-1328 ~

Contractors

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

• Aluminum Railings We welcome any restorational work!

(250) 426-8504

GIRO

Merchandise for Sale

Appliances26.2 cu.ft. Maytag Stainless S/S fridge, water/ice on door, too many features to list, 36”, paid $2800, asking. $1000email for photos:[email protected](250)426-2002

Firewood/FuelSplit dry fi rewood, Larch, $250/cord; Mix of Fir & Larch, $225/cord; Fir, $200/cord; De-livered in Cranbrook area. Call (250)421-3745

Heavy Duty Machinery

A-STEEL SHIPPING DRY STORAGE CONTAINERS

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

sizes in stock. Trades are welcome.

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

Wanted to buy 300 size hydraulic excavator.

Ph Toll free 1-866-528-71081-778-298-3192 8am-5pm

Delivery BC and ABwww.rtccontainer.com

Misc. for SaleSAWMILLS FROM only $4,397 - Make money & save money with your own bandmill - Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. Free info & DVD: www.NorwoodSaw mills.com/400OT 1-800-566-6899 Ext:400OT.

STEEL BUILDINGS/metal buildings 60% off! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for bal-ance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206 or visit us online: www.crownsteelbuildings.ca.

Misc. WantedPrivate Collector Looking toBuy Coin Collections, Silver,Antiques, Native Art, Estates +Chad: 778-281-0030 Local

Real Estate

Acreage for SaleRare opportunity to purchase private 150 acres 5 minutes from Cranbrook BC. Borders crown land on 3 sides. Mixture of timber and fi elds. Not in the ALR zoned RR60. Serious in-quiries only 250-489-9234

Rentals

Apt/Condo for Rent1BDRM UNIT, newly renovat-ed, $595/mo + electricity. 1year lease, no pets or smok-ing. 1308 11 St. S. Phone 250-421-2590.

Suites, LowerLARGE 1BDRM furnished basement suite. Utilities, laun-dry and covered parking included. $520./mo + damage deposit. 250-426-5751

Adult

EscortsHONEY,

from Hollywood, California, is in Fernie, Cranbrook and

surrounding area. Sexy~Busty.

Available 24/7. 45 year old German Frau.

Serving Fernie & Cranbrook. Please text ~ 647-273-8303

KOOTENAY’S BEST ESCORTS

Introducing:

*New* - Hollie - 38Fun ‘n friendly, Playmate

status.

*New* - Lyndsay - 43 Sweet and petite GFE type

*New* - Chanel - 27 Perfect 10 exotic beauty

Lily - 24Sweet doll faced,

curvaceous brunette

Enjoy quality relaxations by our hand-picked beauty’s

Swedish relaxation/massage.

Spoil yourself today!!!

(250)417-2800in/out calls daily

Hiring

Transportation

Cars - Domestic

2002 Honda Accord SE Coupe

V6, auto, 156,000 kms, loaded, trailer hitch, other extras. Senior driven, well

maintained. $6500.

Dave, 250-427-2258

Mortgages

Transportation

Trucks & Vans

FOR SALE

1997 GMC Sierra 1500

4wd, long box , extend-ed cab, 221000 km, ps ,

pb, good running,new repairs, rad,

belts,plugs, etc.4wd, must sell.

$3800.00 or best offer,

417-0462 or 421-3700

Mortgages

IN NEED OF A BOOKKEEPER? I have over 15 years

experience doing books for various companies in the

East Kootenays. I can take your company from start-up

to year-end prep. Contact Melissa at

~ 250-581-1328 ~

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

TURNER CARPENTRY & ROOFING

250-489-8647

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]

~also available~Pool table installation

and service!!!

1-800-222-TIPS

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!

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

Read the DAILY newspaper for

local happenings!

250-426-5201

250-427-5333

Need help with current events?

DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN Tuesday, February 10, 2015 PAGE 11

Janis Caldwell-SawleyMortgage SpecialistRoyal Bank of Canada

[email protected]/janis.sawley

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

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

IF YOU own a home or real estate, Alpine Credits can lend you money: It’s That Simple. Your Credit / Age / Income is not an issue. 1.800.587.2161.

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

Call Anytime1-800-639-2274 or

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

Accounting/Tax/Bookkeeping

IN NEED OF A BOOKKEEPER? I have over 15 years

experience doing books for various companies in the

East Kootenays. I can take your company from start-up

to year-end prep. Contact Melissa at

~ 250-581-1328 ~

Contractors

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

• Aluminum Railings We welcome any restorational work!

(250) 426-8504

GIRO

Merchandise for Sale

Appliances26.2 cu.ft. Maytag Stainless S/S fridge, water/ice on door, too many features to list, 36”, paid $2800, asking. $1000email for photos:[email protected](250)426-2002

Firewood/FuelSplit dry fi rewood, Larch, $250/cord; Mix of Fir & Larch, $225/cord; Fir, $200/cord; De-livered in Cranbrook area. Call (250)421-3745

Heavy Duty Machinery

A-STEEL SHIPPING DRY STORAGE CONTAINERS

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

sizes in stock. Trades are welcome.

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

Wanted to buy 300 size hydraulic excavator.

Ph Toll free 1-866-528-71081-778-298-3192 8am-5pm

Delivery BC and ABwww.rtccontainer.com

Misc. for SaleSAWMILLS FROM only $4,397 - Make money & save money with your own bandmill - Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. Free info & DVD: www.NorwoodSaw mills.com/400OT 1-800-566-6899 Ext:400OT.

STEEL BUILDINGS/metal buildings 60% off! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for bal-ance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206 or visit us online: www.crownsteelbuildings.ca.

Misc. WantedPrivate Collector Looking toBuy Coin Collections, Silver,Antiques, Native Art, Estates +Chad: 778-281-0030 Local

Real Estate

Acreage for SaleRare opportunity to purchase private 150 acres 5 minutes from Cranbrook BC. Borders crown land on 3 sides. Mixture of timber and fi elds. Not in the ALR zoned RR60. Serious in-quiries only 250-489-9234

Rentals

Apt/Condo for Rent1BDRM UNIT, newly renovat-ed, $595/mo + electricity. 1year lease, no pets or smok-ing. 1308 11 St. S. Phone 250-421-2590.

Suites, LowerLARGE 1BDRM furnished basement suite. Utilities, laun-dry and covered parking included. $520./mo + damage deposit. 250-426-5751

Adult

EscortsHONEY,

from Hollywood, California, is in Fernie, Cranbrook and

surrounding area. Sexy~Busty.

Available 24/7. 45 year old German Frau.

Serving Fernie & Cranbrook. Please text ~ 647-273-8303

KOOTENAY’S BEST ESCORTS

Introducing:

*New* - Hollie - 38Fun ‘n friendly, Playmate

status.

*New* - Lyndsay - 43 Sweet and petite GFE type

*New* - Chanel - 27 Perfect 10 exotic beauty

Lily - 24Sweet doll faced,

curvaceous brunette

Enjoy quality relaxations by our hand-picked beauty’s

Swedish relaxation/massage.

Spoil yourself today!!!

(250)417-2800in/out calls daily

Hiring

Transportation

Cars - Domestic

2002 Honda Accord SE Coupe

V6, auto, 156,000 kms, loaded, trailer hitch, other extras. Senior driven, well

maintained. $6500.

Dave, 250-427-2258

Mortgages

Transportation

Trucks & Vans

FOR SALE

1997 GMC Sierra 1500

4wd, long box , extend-ed cab, 221000 km, ps ,

pb, good running,new repairs, rad,

belts,plugs, etc.4wd, must sell.

$3800.00 or best offer,

417-0462 or 421-3700

Mortgages

IN NEED OF A BOOKKEEPER? I have over 15 years

experience doing books for various companies in the

East Kootenays. I can take your company from start-up

to year-end prep. Contact Melissa at

~ 250-581-1328 ~

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

TURNER CARPENTRY & ROOFING

250-489-8647

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]

~also available~Pool table installation

and service!!!

1-800-222-TIPS

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!

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

Read the DAILY newspaper for

local happenings!

250-426-5201

250-427-5333

Need help with current events?

Tuesday Afternoon/Evening February 10 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 Georg Cat in Word Wild News Busi PBS NewsHour Genealogy Rd Forgot-Plague Frontline Arts & Mind Charlie Rose$ $ CFCN Ellen Show News--Calgary News--Calgary etalk Theory Person-Interest The Flash Agent Carter News News Daily Mey% % KXLY-ABC Rachael Ray The Doctors News ABC News News Ent Insider Fresh- Fresh- Agent Carter Forever KXLY Kim& & KREM-CBS Dr. Oz Show Dr. Phil News CBS News Inside Ac NCIS NCIS: N.O. Person-Interest News Late _ _ KHQ-NBC Ellen Show Judge Judge News News News Million. J’pard Wheel Parks Parks Marry About- Chicago Fire News J. Fal( ( TSN Hockey Lunch Around SC Record Pardon SportsCentre SC SC Hocke Open SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre) ) NET Sportsnet NHL Hockey Sports Sportsnet Road to the Darts Sportsnet Sportsnet+ + GLOBAL BC Meredith Vieira The Young News News News Hour Ent ET NCIS NCIS: N.O. Chicago Fire News, , KNOW Olly Jelly Kate Magic Jack Wild Hope-Wildlife Blue Realm South Pacific Emergency Fraud? Blue Realm` ` CBUT Republic-Doyle Dragons’ Den CBC News CBC Murdoch Myst. Cor Mercer 22 Min Creek Mr. D The National News Mercer1 M CICT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent Chicago Fire NCIS NCIS: N.O. News Hour Fi ET Doctor3 O CIVT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent Chicago Fire NCIS NCIS: N.O. News Hour ET Doctor4 6 YTV Side Nerds Spong Chuck Par Spong Sam & As Max As Funny Videos Heart Nine Lives Vam Gags Gags6 . KAYU-FOX Steve Harvey Meredith Vieira Mike Anger Two Mod Theory Theory MasterChef New Mindy News Mod Rais Mother7 / CNN Situation Room E. B. OutFront Cooper 360 Sanjay Gupta CNN Tonight Cooper 360 Sanjay Gupta CNNI CNNI8 0 SPIKE Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Framework Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue9 1 HGTV Bryan Bryan Bryan Bryan Hunt Hunt Holmes Makes House House Hunt Hunt Holmes Makes House House House Hunters: 2 A&E Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Ship Ship Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Ship Ship< 4 CMT CMT’s Hottest Gags Gags Undercover Faith Faith Malibu Chris Undercover Faith Faith Malibu Chris Gags Gags= 5 W Change-Place Buying-Selling Buying-Selling Love It Love It-List It Property Bro Flirting With Forty Sex- Sex-? 9 SHOW NCIS Framed for Murder Stargate Atl. Royal Pains NCIS NCIS Hawaii Five-0 NCIS@ : DISC How/ How/ Daily Planet Gold Rush - Gold Rush Edge Buying Buying Gold Rush Edge Buying Buying A ; SLICE Surviving Evil Stranger Prin Prin Vander Housewives Housewives Friend Friend Vander HousewivesB < TLC Kate Plus 8 Kate Plus 8 Kate Plus 8 Kate Plus 8 Fabu Fabu Fabu Fabu Fabu Fabu Kate Plus 8 Kate Plus 8C = BRAVO Flashpoint Person-Interest Blue Bloods Cold Justice Homeland The Listener Criminal Minds Homeland Cold JusticeD > EA2 (3:30) Funny Lady Babe: Pig in the City Events Leading-Death Groundhog Day (:45) Fierce Creatures DisE ? TOON Spies! Po Rocket Jim Camp Johnny Dr. Di Rocket Johnny Pack Deten Drama Family Amer. Archer Robot Ftur FuggetF @ FAM ANT Good Phi Jessie Jessie Liv- Austin Jessie Girl I Didn’t Dog Good Next Win Good Win, Wiz DerekG A WPCH Sein Mod Theory Theory Brown Payne Brown Payne Mod Sein Family Family Amer. Amer. Jeffer. Break Mr. DeedsH B COM Gags Gags Frasier Frasier Theory Theory Match Gas Just/Laughs Gags Gags JFL Simp Theory Sirens Daily NightlyI C TCM Charade Gentleman’s Agreement (:15) The Killers (:15) I Remember Mama BachK E OUT Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Kings Stor Stor Stor Stor Kings Stor Stor GetS GetSL F HIST Restoration Cnt. Cnt. MASH MASH Dino Hunt Restoration Cnt. Cnt. Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn PickersM G SPACE Inner Scare Stargate SG-1 Castle Face Off Wizard Wars Inner Scare Castle Face Off Wizard WarsN H AMC Man Who Shot Liberty Valance Gladiator X2: X-Men United ManO I FS1 NASCAR Hub College Basketball College Basketball FOX Sports FOX Sports FOX Sports FOX SportsP J DTOUR Gotta Eat St. Moves Moves Secu Secu Hotel Impssble Hotel Showd. Ghost Adv. Mysteries at Hotel Impssble Hotel Showd.W W MC1 I Give It a Year (:05) Fakers (:15) Pacific Rim RoboCop Hours¨ ¨ KTLA KTLA 5 News Cunningham Steve Wilkos News News Two Two The Flash Supernatural KTLA 5 News News Friend≠ ≠ WGN-A Funny Videos A Knight’s Tale Wres Wres Wres Wres Wres Wres Rules Rules Rais RaisØ Ø EA1 Fear-Loathing (4:50) How High Lega Slings/Arrows Places in the Heart Fried Green Tomatoes How to Make∂ ∂ VISN Emily of Moon Murder, She... Columbo Sabah Mes Con Doctor Zhivago Un Popoff 102 102 MM Brand New S... Playlist Playlist Tosh.0 South Tosh.0 Kroll Com Simp At Mid. Conan Com Tosh.0 Kroll 105 105 SRC Les belles Entrée prin Mange Union TJ C.-B. 30 vies La fac Unité 9 Mémoires Le Téléjournal TJ C.-B.

Wednesday Afternoon/Evening February 11 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 Georg Cat in Word Wild News Busi PBS NewsHour Nature NOVA Earth-NewWld Railwa Charlie Rose$ $ CFCN Ellen Show News--Calgary News--Calgary etalk Theory Saving Hope Arrow Criminal Minds News News Daily Mey% % KXLY-ABC Rachael Ray The Doctors News ABC News News Ent Insider Middle Gold Mod black Nashville KXLY Kim& & KREM-CBS Dr. Oz Show Dr. Phil News CBS News Inside Ac The Mentalist Criminal Minds Stalker News Late _ _ KHQ-NBC Ellen Show Judge Judge News News News Million. J’pard Wheel Myst-Laura Law & Order Chicago PD News J. Fal( ( TSN SportsCentre Hocke NBA Basketball SportsCentre Golf SC SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre) ) NET Sportsnet Can Hocke NHL Hockey NHL Hockey Sportsnet Ski TV NHL in + + GLOBAL BC Meredith Vieira The Young News News News Hour Ent ET Secu Secu Chicago PD Stalker News, , KNOW Olly Jelly Kate Magic Jack Wild Blue Realm Watch Park Puyi: The Last Starkey’s Music and Monarchy Park Watch` ` CBUT Republic-Doyle Dragons’ Den CBC News CBC Murdoch Myst. Cor Dragons’ Den Book-Negroes The National News Mercer1 M CICT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent Stalker Secu Secu Chicago PD News Hour Fi ET Doctor3 O CIVT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent Stalker Secu Secu Chicago PD News Hour ET Doctor4 6 YTV Side Chuck Spong Pen Par Spong Sam & As Henry Max Gags Gags Vam Vam Haunt Haunt Gags Gags6 . KAYU-FOX Steve Harvey Meredith Vieira Mike Anger Two Mod Theory Theory American Idol (:01) Empire News Mod Rais Mother7 / CNN Situation Room E. B. OutFront Cooper 360 Anthony CNN Tonight Cooper 360 Anthony CNNI CNNI8 0 SPIKE Cops Jail Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Coaching Bad Cops Cops Cops Jail Jail Jail9 1 HGTV Bryan Bryan Fixer Upper Hunt Hunt Beach Island Carib Hawaii Hunt Hunt Beach Island Carib Hawaii House Hunters: 2 A&E Wahl Donnie Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Wahl Donnie Donnie Wahl Duck Duck Duck Duck Wahl Donnie< 4 CMT Best Best Gags Gags Undercover Faith Faith Reba Reba Undercover Faith Faith Reba Reba Gags Gags= 5 W Valentine Carol Say Say Snow Bride Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Sex- Sex-? 9 SHOW NCIS Burden of Evil Stargate Atl. Rizzoli & Isles NCIS NCIS Rizzoli & Isles NCIS@ : DISC How/ How/ Daily Planet Last Frontier Gold Rush - Gold Rush Edge Last Frontier Gold Rush - Gold RushA ; SLICE Stranger Stranger Prin Prin Friends to Unty Unty Tardy Tardy Friend Friend Friends to Unty UntyB < TLC My Addiction My Addiction My 600-Lb My 600-Lb Fat and Back Fat and Back My 600-Lb My 600-Lb My AddictionC = BRAVO Flashpoint Person-Interest Blue Bloods Motive Suits The Listener Criminal Minds Suits MotiveD > EA2 (3:25) Girlfight (:20) De-Lovely Crazy Moon Hitch The Wedding Singer Fools E ? TOON Spies! Po Rocket Jim Camp Johnny Clar Rocket Johnny Pack Deten Drama Family Amer. Archer Robot Ftur FuggetF @ FAM ANT Good Phi Jessie Jessie Liv- Austin Austin Par I Didn’t Dog Good Next Win Good Win, Wiz DerekG A WPCH Sein Mod Theory Theory Brown Payne Brown Payne Mod Sein Family Family Amer. Amer. Jeffer. Gimme The ScoreH B COM Gags Gags Frasier Frasier Sirens Theory Match Gas Just/Laughs Gags Gags JFL Simp Theory Groun Daily NightlyI C TCM (:15) The Four Musketeers All the King’s Men Twelve O’Clock High (:15) The Bicycle Thief TreasureK E OUT Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Hillbilly Buck Stor Stor Stor Stor Hillbilly Buck Stor Stor GetS GetSL F HIST Pawn. Pawn. Pawn Pawn MASH MASH Amer Amer Pawn Pawn Appalachian Swamp People Miss. Men TruckersM G SPACE Inner Scare Stargate SG-1 Castle Paranormal Wi. Paranormal Wi. Inner Scare Castle Paranormal Wi. Paranormal Wi.N H AMC (2:30) Gladiator Braveheart Call Saul (:15) Better Call Saul We O I FS1 NASCAR Hub UFC Tonight College Basketball FOX Sports FOX Sports FOX Sports FOX Sports FOX SportsP J DTOUR Gotta Eat St. Moves Moves Secu Secu The Dead Files Ghost Adv. Ghost Adv. Border Border The Dead Files Ghost Adv.W W MC1 Big (:20) Gravity (5:55) Magic Magic (:35) Thor: The Dark World Godzilla 300: Rise of an Empire¨ ¨ KTLA KTLA 5 News Cunningham Steve Wilkos News News Two Two Arrow The 100 KTLA 5 News News Friend≠ ≠ WGN-A Funny Videos Funny Videos Funny Videos Mother Mother Mother Mother Mother Mother Rules Rules Parks Parks Rais RaisØ Ø EA1 (:15) Inside Man Lega Slings/Arrows Philadelphia (:10) Leaving Las Vegas (12:05) Idlewild∂ ∂ VISN Emily of Moon Murder, She... Columbo The Midwife The Paradise Mes Con Must Love Dogs Super Popoff 102 102 MM Curated By Playlist Playlist Tosh.0 South Work. Broad Com Simp At Mid. Conan Com Work. Broad 105 105 SRC Les belles Entrée prin Mange Union TJ C.-B. 30 vies Épi Enfants de télé 19-2 Le Téléjournal TJ C.-B.

SOLD

Page 12: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, February 10, 2015

daily townsman / daily bulletin Page 12 Tuesday, FeBRuaRy 10, 2015

communitysnapshot

Battle of the Books contest at Lindsay Park: After counting up more than 120 wonderful submissions!, Lindsay Park students voted Robert Munch books as the most popular. Geronimo Stilton books were ranked #2. Diary of a Wimpy Kid by Jeff Kinney, Dr. Seuss books and the Spirit Animal series all tied for third. Silver Wing by Kenneth Oppel, Pony Pals, Mine Craft & Lego books were also very popular. The lucky recipients of book prizes this year were Ian, Justine, Jewel, Avery, Tristen, Nate, Mischa, Connor, Victor, Issiah, Remy, Graeson, January, Freja, Jordan, Clarie, Lukas, Kendra, Nola, Kienna, Raelyn, Dayten, Htoo, Logan, Morgan, Kenzye, Fleichia and Willamena, Organized by Kim Roberts CBAL Kimberley Literacy Coordinator, Doreen Sharpe, Crystal MaCleod and the School Staff.

Battle of the Books contest at Maryville School: A big thank you for the number of fan-tastic submissions –well done Marysville students! Drum roll please... Geronimo Stilton books got the most votes followed by Diary of a Wimpy Kid by Jeff Kinney, Tacky the Penguin by Helen Lester, Harry Potter books by J.K Rowling, and Daisy Meadows books. Authors David Shannon, David Alderton and Paula Harrison were also very popular. Marysville student draw winners for book prizes were Cliff, Luke, Kennedy Travis, Aiden, Isis, Madison, Hannah, Katherine, Casey, Evyn, Candice, Jaxson, Jade, Nicholaas, Phoenixx, Gavyn, Brayden, Lynden, Talon, Tucker, Marshall, Ciara and Lachlan. Organized by Kim Roberts CBAL Kimberley Literacy Coordinator, Marilyn Bancks School Principal and the School Staff.

Kimberley Independent School submitted a variety of very interesting and noteworthy titles. The lucky draw winners were Noah, Rory, Liam, Hunter, Roan, Logan, Raife, Noe, Hailee-Mae, and Nikola. Organized by School staff and Kim Roberts CBAL Kimberley Literacy Coordinator

All photos courtesy cBAl KimBerley

Wow – After counting submissions from all 12 classes the votes are in. Most popular Grade 4 & 5 book and ranked #1 for two years in a row was Diary of a Wimpy Kid by Jeff Kinney. The #1 ranked book with the Grade 6 & 7’s was the Maze Runners Series by James Dashner. The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins was the most popular. Olivia Dunn (gr 4), Lola Garsonnin (gr 5) Charlize DuPreez (gr 6) and Paul Sotropa (gr 7) were recognized for submitting outstanding nominations. The following students were the lucky draw win-ners of a new book. Tayah, Ella, Emery, Ryan, Winter, Cliodhna, Tianna, Madison, Azaria, Desirae, Sydney, Kianna, Mathew, Brenna, Zoe, Chassidy, Jade, Mya, Alexis, Danielle, Olivia, Jasmine, Kayla, Joel, Emma, Maddie, Brae and Janasha. Organized by Amber Neilsen McKim Librarian and Kim Roberts CBAL Kimberley Literacy Coordinator

CBAL Kimberley Battle of the Books, Family Literacy

Baby Goose celebrated Family Literacy Day with a visit to the library. Thank you to Arlene who runs the Children’s Story Time for meeting with us. Baby Goose is a free drop-in program for parents with babies under a year old Thursdays 10:30 – Noon at the Early Learning Center. All are welcome! Contact Public Heath Nurses at 250-427-2215 or Kim Roberts CBAL- Kimberley 250-427-4468 for more information.