Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

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THE BULLETIN THURSDAY JUNE 13, 20 13 PROUDLY SERVING KIMBERLEY AND AREA SINCE 1932 | Vol. 80, Issue XX | www.dailybulletin.ca $ 1 10 INCLUDES G.S.T. www.facebook.com/ TownsmanBulletin Like Us and keep up to date with all the breaking East Kootenay news. East Kootenay Realty Jason Wheeldon Personal Real Estate Corporation 250-426-8211 W W E E N S S E E I I B B A A B • EAST KOOTENAY REGIONAL HOSPITAL May 6 Amanda Joy & Frederick Lee Schmidt of Cranbrook, a son May 10 Kayla & J.T. Ewasiuk of Elko, a son May 15 Amanda & Jesse Corrigan of Cranbrook, a son May 15 Brandynn Greene & Chris Pearson of Cranbrook, a son May 22 Marci & Brent Archibald of Cranbrook, a daughter ARNE PETRYSHEN Townsman Staff The Mount Baker Robotics Club has re- turned from represent- ing B.C. at the national skills competition in Vancouver with a bronze medal. The club, made up of Landon Harvey, Ed- mond Yoo and Derek Johnson competed from June 5 to 8, after placing first in robotics in the Skills B.C. Competition. The national skills competition took place at B.C. Place Stadium, pitting the club against eight other teams from provinces and territo- ries across Canada, in- cluding Ontario, Sas- katchewan and Nun- avut. Mt. Baker robotics team takes bronze medal at nationals See BAKER, Page 2 ARNE PETRYSHEN Townsman Staff Two Cranbrook resi- dents with building and restoration experience told council that they have brought together a group keen on restoring the historic brick build- ing behind city hall. Ken Haberman and Rob Amsing said that they would like council to allow them submit the building for heritage funding. They estimated that it would cost only $30,000 to get the garage to a usable and structur- ally sound state. The es- timate was significantly lower than the sum that the city came up with, which was about $135,000. The reasons the two gave for the lower costs was that for the purpose of a heritage building, there is no need for things like plumbing, electricity and insula- tion, but rather a need to get the building to a preservable state. “We want to preserve that building, we think it is a historical building in Cranbrook,” Amsing said. Group hopes for city’s support on preserving old brick building See GROUP , Page 5 TOWNSMAN STAFF Police are seeking witness- es to a crash that occurred on Highway 93/95 near Skoo- kumchuck on Sunday, June 9. Three persons were seri- ously injured after a two-vehi- cle crash that occurred about 5:30 p.m. RCMP said it appeared a north bound vehicle with a lone female occupant crossed the centre line and collided head on with a south bound vehicle with two occupants. Police are specifically look- ing for anyone who may have observed the driving behavior of either vehicle prior to the crash. The north bound vehi- cle is a 2002 Grey Ford Escape, with an Alberta License plate. The driver of the Escape is a female driver The southbound vehicle is a 2008 red Toyota Corolla with two female occu- pants. Police are also looking for persons who may have come in contact with the drivers of either vehicle in the hours pre- ceding the crash. SUBMITTED Cranbrook’s Maxine Adshead is pictured on the final day of her 13-day trek to Mount Everest base camp. After climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, Africa, the retired nurse set her sights on a little more challenging hike. See story, Page 4. SALLY MACDONALD Townsman Staff The highway between Marysville and Kimberley was closed for half a day on Wednesday, June 12, after a vehicle crashed into a utility pole and broke it. According to an RCMP statement, at about 9 a.m. on Wednesday morning, a police officer came across the scene of the crash on Highway 95A, but there was no sign of the driver. Witnesses told police that the driver of the vehicle had tried to pass several vehicles on a curve just south of Kimbrook. A vehicle approached in the opposing lane, so the driver Crash closes highway between Kimberley and Marysville tried to pull in but lost control. The vehicle went off the road to the right, where it clipped and broke a utility pole, then over- turned. The driver got out and ran away from the scene of the crash, heading toward the bush near Forest Crown subdivision. After two hours of tracking the driver, and RCMP police dog found the 24-year-old man and he was arrested. He was charged with driving without due care and attention, no drivers’ li- cense, and failure to remain at the scene of an accident. RCMP said there was a pas- senger in the vehicle, but neither occupant was injured. The highway was fully re- opened about 3 p.m. after BC Hydro replaced the pole. RCMP seek Skookumchuck accident witnesses < Basketballers hit the court in U.S. Cranbrook 3G club in Spokane | Page 8 More than just blazing speed > Scientists are amazed at cheetahs’ abilities | Page 12 Cost of PROMOTING a little more than you planned for? Try us! We have something the competition doesn’t – daily coverage! Need help? Call and speak to one of our ad representatives... Cranbrook Daily Townsman (250) 426-5201 Kimberley Daily Bulletin (250) 427-5333

description

June 13, 2013 edition of the Kimberley Daily Bulletin

Transcript of Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Page 1: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

The BulleTin

ThursDAYJUNE 13, 2013

ProUdly sErviNg kimbErlEy aNd arEa siNcE 1932 | Vol. 80, Issue XX | www.dailybulletin.ca $110 INCLUDESG.S.t.

www.facebook.com/TownsmanBulletin Like Us and keep

up to date with all the breaking

East Kootenay news.

East Kootenay Realty

Jason WheeldonPersonal Real Estate Corporation

250-426-8211

WWEENN SSEEIIBBAABB

• EAST KOOTENAY REGIONAL HOSPITAL

May 6 Amanda Joy & Frederick Lee Schmidt of Cranbrook, a sonMay 10 Kayla & J.T. Ewasiuk of Elko, a sonMay 15 Amanda & Jesse Corrigan of Cranbrook, a sonMay 15 Brandynn Greene & Chris Pearson of Cranbrook, a sonMay 22 Marci & Brent Archibald of Cranbrook, a daughter

• EAST KOOTENAY REGIONAL HOSPITAL

arNE PEtryshENTownsman Staff

The Mount Baker Robotics Club has re-turned from represent-ing B.C. at the national skills competition in Vancouver with a bronze medal.

The club, made up of Landon Harvey, Ed-mond Yoo and Derek Johnson competed from June 5 to 8, after placing

first in robotics in the Skills B.C. Competition.

The national skills competition took place at B.C. Place Stadium, pitting the club against eight other teams from provinces and territo-ries across Canada, in-cluding Ontario, Sas-katchewan and Nun-avut.

Mt. Baker robotics team takes bronze medal at nationals

See BAKER, Page 2

arNE PEtryshEN Townsman Staff

Two Cranbrook resi-dents with building and restoration experience told council that they have brought together a group keen on restoring the historic brick build-ing behind city hall.

Ken Haberman and Rob Amsing said that they would like council to allow them submit the building for heritage funding. They estimated that it would cost only $30,000 to get the garage to a usable and structur-ally sound state. The es-timate was significantly

lower than the sum that the city came up with, which was about $135,000.

The reasons the two gave for the lower costs was that for the purpose of a heritage building, there is no need for things like plumbing, electricity and insula-tion, but rather a need to get the building to a preservable state.

“We want to preserve that building, we think it is a historical building in Cranbrook,” Amsing said.

Group hopes for city’s support on preserving old brick building

See GROUP , Page 5

towNsmaN staff

Police are seeking witness-es to a crash that occurred on Highway 93/95 near Skoo-kumchuck on Sunday, June 9.

Three persons were seri-ously injured after a two-vehi-cle crash that occurred about 5:30 p.m.

RCMP said it appeared a north bound vehicle with a

lone female occupant crossed the centre line and collided head on with a south bound vehicle with two occupants.

Police are specifically look-ing for anyone who may have observed the driving behavior of either vehicle prior to the crash. The north bound vehi-cle is a 2002 Grey Ford Escape, with an Alberta License plate.

The driver of the Escape is a female driver The southbound vehicle is a 2008 red Toyota Corolla with two female occu-pants.

Police are also looking for persons who may have come in contact with the drivers of either vehicle in the hours pre-ceding the crash.

Submitted

Cranbrook’s Maxine Adshead is pictured on the final day of her 13-day trek to Mount Everest base camp. After climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, Africa, the retired nurse set her sights on a little more challenging hike. see story, Page 4.

sally macdoNaldTownsman Staff

The highway between Marysville and Kimberley was closed for half a day on Wednesday, June 12, after a vehicle crashed into a utility

pole and broke it.According to an RCMP

statement, at about 9 a.m. on Wednesday morning, a police officer came across the scene of the crash on Highway 95A, but there was no sign of the

driver.Witnesses told police that

the driver of the vehicle had tried to pass several vehicles on a curve just south of Kimbrook. A vehicle approached in the opposing lane, so the driver

Crash closes highway between Kimberley and Marysvilletried to pull in but lost control. The vehicle went off the road to the right, where it clipped and broke a utility pole, then over-turned. The driver got out and ran away from the scene of the crash, heading toward the bush near Forest Crown subdivision.

After two hours of tracking the driver, and RCMP police dog found the 24-year-old man and he was arrested. He was charged with driving without due care and attention, no drivers’ li-cense, and failure to remain at the scene of an accident.

RCMP said there was a pas-senger in the vehicle, but neither occupant was injured.

The highway was fully re-opened about 3 p.m. after BC Hydro replaced the pole.

RCMP seek Skookumchuck accident witnesses

< Basketballers hit the court in U.S. Cranbrook 3G club in Spokane | Page 8

More than just blazing speed >Scientists are amazed at cheetahs’ abilities | Page 12

Cost of PROMOTING a little more than you planned for?

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

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

Page 2: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Page 2 Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013

LocaL NEWSdaily townsman / daily bulletin

Almanac

YellowknifeWhitehorseVancouverVictoriaSaskatoonReginaBrandonWinnipegThunder BayS. Ste. MarieTorontoWindsorOttawaMontrealQuebec CityFredericton

p.cloudy 22/14 p.cloudy 22/13showers 16/7 cloudy 19/9p.cloudy 18/13 p.cloudy 17/12showers 16/11 p.cloudy 17/11tstorms 22/14 tstorms 20/12tstorms 25/13 tstorms 22/11p.cloudy 24/14 tstorms 24/12m.sunny 26/15 showers 25/16sunny 25/7 p.cloudy 19/8p.cloudy 19/7 sunny 18/5showers 20/13 p.cloudy 21/10showers 23/13 m.sunny 20/12showers 20/13 p.cloudy 21/9tshowers 23/13 tshowers 23/10p.cloudy 22/11 showers 21/9p.cloudy 20/7 showers 17/8

TemperaturesHigh Low

Normal ..........................20.5°.................7.5°Record......................32.5°/1987 .........1°/1981Yesterday......................18.2°................10.5°

Precipitation Normal..............................................2.6mmRecord...................................36.5mm/1981Yesterday ...........................................0 mmThis month to date...........................2.6 mmThis year to date........................1123.1 mmPrecipitation totals include rain and snow

Canada today tomorrow

Castlegar18/8

Calgary15/8

Banff12/5

Edmonton17/13

Jasper15/7

The Weather Network incorporates �nvironment Canada data

WeatherWeatheroutlook outlook

Cranbrook17/6

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tshowers 34/20 sunny 29/19sunny 24/14 p.cloudy 15/7showers 24/14 p.cloudy 24/11tshowers 25/7 showers 22/7tshowers 31/23 tshowers 32/22showers 29/25 rain 28/27showers 26/14 sunny 30/15showers 16/9 showers 17/8p.cloudy 20/17 cloudy 22/16tstorms 31/24 tstorms 31/24rain 16/10 p.cloudy 20/8sunny 29/15 sunny 29/15tstorms 32/28 cloudy 32/27sunny 19/11 m.sunny 18/11rain 21/21 showers 25/21tstorms 32/22 sunny 26/17

The World today tomorrow

Tomorrow17

6POP 30%

Tonight

8POP 40%

Sunday27

11POP 0%

Saturday23

9POP 10%

Monday25

9POP 30%

Tuesday23

10POP 90%

�un 16 �un 23 �un 30 �uly 8

Revelstoke18/10

Kamloops22/12

Prince George18/9

Kelowna20/8

Vancouver17/12

Across the Region Tomorro w

Tomorrows�unrise� 5�35 a.m.�unset� 9�51 p.m.�oonset� 12�33 a.m.�oonrise� 11�44 a.m.

July 10th – Senior Tea Matinee We welcome all seniors, whether individuals and or groups, to join us for this special matinee where pre-show tea and biscuits will be served.

July 13th 2:00pm - Lecture Series Matinee Kimberley Summer Theatre welcomes patrons to this special pre-show lecture matinee where Director Tanya Laing Gahr will be on site to talk about the play and the process of directing the production.

July 17th 2:00pm - KST Member/Donor Matinee (Private pre-show wine and cheese reception) This very special matinee includes a private pre-show wine and cheese reception for all KST Members/Donors. This matinee is open to the general public, however only Members/Donors are invited to the pre-show re-ception.

July 20th 2:00pm – “Behind the Scenes” Matinee We welcome guests to join us pre-show for a short lec-ture by Producer Tony James. Guests will have the chance to see a pre-performance set up of the stage and all the “behind the scenes” ins and outs that go into preparing each show. Don’t miss this insiders look back-stage.

July 24th 2:00pm – Sponsor Matinee (Private pre-show wine and cheese reception) Kimberley Summer Theatre is pleased to host this very special matinee for all of its corporate and local/provincial government sponsors. The reception will be hosted by Chair Shirley Rossi and Producer Tony James. Select production members will also be on hand for sponsors to meet. This reception is exclusive and by in-vitation only. Reception begins at 1:00 pm with the per-formance beginning at 2:00 pm.

July 27th 2:00pm – Community Group Tea Matinee The Community Group Matinee is an opportunity for area groups to attend the performance and join com-pany members pre-show for a tea and biscuit reception. The matinee is our way of engaging with local groups to extend our thanks for their continued support of the productions and company as a whole. So gather your group today and join us for this special afternoon.

Consider making your theatre experience extra special by pur-chasing a dinner/theatre pack-age for two and make it a date night!

Kimberley Summer Theatre, in partnership with area restaurants, is pleased to offer a very special package to local residents and visitors that includes two dis-counted tickets during the July performances of the hit comedy Self Help, along with a discounted and/or specially priced menu item at one of our seven exclu-sive participating restaurants.

Participating Restaurants:

Lunch: Bears Eatery /Our Place / Snowdrift Café

Dinner:

The Gasthaus am Platzl / Mozart House Inn / Chef Bernards Platzl Inn / Pedal & Tap

For details visit us online or call the Box Office at

250.427.4080

KIMBERLEY SUMMER THEATRE www.kimberleysummertheatre.ca

14th Performance Season

JOIN US AT THE THEATRE THIS JULY/AUGUST GENERAL TICKETS

Kimberley Summer Theatre is pleased to offer businesses the opportunity to advertise in the 2013 programmes. The Self Help

& Wizard of Oz programmes are designed with a styl-ish and classical look with a colour cover and a black and white matte interior finish to highlight advertisers in the most professional way possible.

By advertising, not only will you advance your com-pany’s image, service or product to a potentially new market, but also help support the endeavors of the theatre company. Kimberley Summer Theatre will be producing 1800 performance programmes for Self Help and 2600 for Wizard of Oz. For more info and rates visit www.kimberleysummertheatre.ca Book today! Deadline is June 17th at 5:00 pm.

DINNER THEATRE PACKAGES “SELF HELP” SPECIAL MATINEES

GROUP BOOKINGS Kimberley Summer Theatre in-vites you and your guests to join us for the 2013 season this sum-mer. Two exciting “must see” shows await you this July & Au-gust. Reserved seating so order early to guarantee your seats.

Curtain

2:00 pm and 7:30 pm

Venues:

Self Help - Centre 64 Theatre Wizard of Oz - McKim Theatre

General tickets - “Self Help”

Adult: $23 / Senior $21 & Student: $18

General tickets - “Wizard of Oz”

Adult: $23 / Senior $21 / Student: $18 Child: $13 (3 - 12 yrs)

Kimberley Summer Theatre is your ticket to the ultimate group experience. Whether you’re organizing a corporate night-out, looking to host your clients, say thank you to your staff, or simply want to get a group of family & friends together, our dedicated team will ensure your visit will be an event to remember. With competitive discounts we offer a quick and seam-less booking process with flexible payment terms, and only the best in customer service. So why wait - just visit our website, download the order form and discover our promise to you that good things come in group packages! Book today and make your theatre experience a memorable night for you and your guests.

*July 23rd (7:30 pm) - SOLD OUT (CIBC Wood Gundy)

PROGRAMME ADVERTISING

NORM FOSTERS HILARIOUS COMEDY

SELF HELP

JULY 9-27, 2013

CENTRE 64 THEATRE KIMBERLEY, B.C.

Directed By: Tanya Laing Gahr Produced By: Tony James

L. FRANK BAUM’S TIMELESS CLASSIC

THE WIZARD OF OZ

AUGUST 3-14, 2013

MCKIM THEATRE KIMBERLEY, B.C.

Directed By: Truus Verkley Produced By: Tony James

KIMBERLEY SUMMER THEATRE PRESENTS

TIXS: 250.427.4080 OR IN PERSON AT CENTRE 64 THEATRE

FOR PERFORMANCE DATES, TIMES, SPECIAL DISCOUNTS AND GROUP RATES CALL 250.427.4080 OR VISIT US ONLINE AT

WWW.KIMBERLEYSUMMERTHEATRE.COM

*Mature Audience

A Must See Comedy!

PROUDLY SUPPORTED BY

NORM FOSTERS HILARIOUS COMEDY

SELF HELP

JULY 9-27, 2013

CENTRE 64 THEATRE KIMBERLEY, B.C.

Directed By: Tanya Laing Gahr Produced By: Tony James

L. FRANK BAUM’S TIMELESS CLASSIC

THE WIZARD OF OZ

AUGUST 3-14, 2013

MCKIM THEATRE KIMBERLEY, B.C.

Directed By: Truus Verkley Produced By: Tony James

KIMBERLEY SUMMER THEATRE PRESENTS

TIXS: 250.427.4080 OR IN PERSON AT CENTRE 64 THEATRE

FOR PERFORMANCE DATES, TIMES, SPECIAL DISCOUNTS AND GROUP RATES CALL 250.427.4080 OR VISIT US ONLINE AT

WWW.KIMBERLEYSUMMERTHEATRE.COM

*Mature Audience

A Must See Comedy!

PROUDLY SUPPORTED BY

NORM FOSTERS HILARIOUS COMEDY

SELF HELP

JULY 9-27, 2013

CENTRE 64 THEATRE KIMBERLEY, B.C.

Directed By: Tanya Laing Gahr Produced By: Tony James

L. FRANK BAUM’S TIMELESS CLASSIC

THE WIZARD OF OZ

AUGUST 3-14, 2013

MCKIM THEATRE KIMBERLEY, B.C.

Directed By: Truus Verkley Produced By: Tony James

KIMBERLEY SUMMER THEATRE PRESENTS

TIXS: 250.427.4080 OR IN PERSON AT CENTRE 64 THEATRE

FOR PERFORMANCE DATES, TIMES, SPECIAL DISCOUNTS AND GROUP RATES CALL 250.427.4080 OR VISIT US ONLINE AT

WWW.KIMBERLEYSUMMERTHEATRE.COM

*Mature Audience

A Must See Comedy!

PROUDLY SUPPORTED BY

KIMBERLEY SUMMER THEATRE

PRESENTS

Charge By Phone:Visa / Mastercard - 250.427.4080

OR IN PERSON AT THE KST BOX OFFICE (in Centre 64 Theatre)

BOX OFFICE HOURS: TUESDAY-FRIDAY 11:OO to 3:00

and SATURDAY 12:00 to 4:00

For performance dates, times and all other information please visit us online at

www.kimberleysummertheatre.ca

Like us on Facebook -www.facebook.com/

kimberleysummertheatrePROUDLY

SUPPORTED BY

Courtesy Bill Walker

Robotixmeisters Landon Harvey, Derek Johnson and Edmond Yoo display the B.C. flag at the recent national skills competition at B.C. Place Stadium in Vancouver. The MBSS team took the bronze medals, which they are wearing in the picture, but hidden behind the flag.

“We competed there for two days, eight hours each day,” Landon Har-vey said. “I think it was very stressful for us.”

That stress came as a result of competitive pressure.

“Seeing all the other robots and how good they were compared to the provincials ... there was some really good competition down there and we were really happy we could go,” he said.

The team ended up pulling off the bronze medal win, which he said was so close, it could have gone either way.

The competition was to build a robot that could complete a specif-ic action, which in this case was retrieving a pallet and stacking it on a shelf.

“In September, we had a scope document. It was about 24 pages long and it told us all the rules and regulations of the game that we had to do,” Harvey explained. “We had to build a robot on that document. We built this robot and what it could do was go over obstacles like teeter-tot-ers and stairs. We had to pick up these little wooden pallets and bring them over the ob-stacles and put them in a shelving unit. Mean-while, there would be another robot in the same arena doing the same tasks on the oppo-site side of the shelves, knocking ours out, back and forth.”

The team from On-tario took gold and Sas-katchewan took silver.

“It was really neat to go there and see all these other designs and stuff that we would never think of doing and seeing it done properly. Some of it worked really well,” Harvey said, add-ing that some of the de-signs were similar to their forklift idea and some were very differ-ent. “For instance their robot would lock the pallet in place to trans-port, while other robots would grab on with little rollers and other inter-esting contraptions.”

The team took home $10,000 in Stanley tools for the school as well as the bronze medal.

All three members are graduating this year.

Baker ‘bot vies for top spotContinued from page 1

Page 3: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013 Page 3

LocaL NEWSdaily townsman

K ait y Brown

The city approved the roofing renovations for the Kimberley Curling Rink and the Centennial Hall.

Currently the roof at the Kimberley Curling Rink is leaking and is a necessary repair, said Tom Spra-do, Manager of Parks, Recreation and Facilities of Kimberley.

To replace both of the roofs the total cost will be $34,000.

“In Centennial Hall we are doing the lower roof,” said Sprado. “It’s an old roof and I just want to pre-vent any leakage.”

“At the Curling Rink it’s already leaking, the flat roof in the lobby. That’s why repairs should be done to that.”

Sprado said that the final due date for the re-placements to be made is Sept 30 but he anticipates that the replacements will be finalized sooner due to the fact that renovations are staring now.

“They’re just necessary repairs,” said Sprado.

Replacements to roofs slatedThe City of Kimberley approved roof replacements for Centennial

Hall and the Curling Rink

SuBmit ted

Together with Interior Health, UBC researchers Dr. Craig Mitton and Dr. Evelyn Cornelissen are em-barking on a study of the Kimberley Primary Health Centre (PHC). The model currently in use has evolved over the last decade and we are interested in learning more about the impact of the PHC on the local community. To help learn about the impact, we are interested in conducting individual inter-views or a focus group with Kimberley residents. We will include questions about how the PHC model evolved, how the current PHC compares to previous local healthcare services prior to the PHC, and how the community has been impacted by this new model. As such, the questions will provide insight into Kimberley residents’ perspectives on the im-pact of the PHC model on the local community. A similar set of interviews and/or focus group will also be conducted with clinicians who work at the Kim-berley PHC.

The information gathered from these interviews and/or focus groups will add to a comprehensive evaluation of the PHC as we will also be evaluating various quality and cost indicators.

By participating in this research, you will be con-tributing to this comprehensive evaluation of the Kimberley PHC. These findings will be shared broadly so that other communities in BC and be-yond can learn about the benefits and challenges of the Kimberley model.

If you are a resident of Kimberley and 19 years of age and older, and interested in participating in this research (i.e., one interview or focus group), please email or call the study coordinator, Evelyn Cornelis-sen, at [email protected] or 604-875-4111 local 62995.

Your participation will involve one individual face-to-face or telephone interview (30-60 min. long) OR one face-to-face focus group (60-90 min. long).

Your choice to participate in this research, as well as all of your responses in the interview or focus group, will be held in confidence by the researchers.

In light of the research schedule, we are looking to conduct the in-person interviews and/or focus group June 17-19, 2013.

Participants wanted for research study

Submitted

The North Star Quilters have just completed their annual quilt show at Centre 64. Twenty quilters entered 72 pieces in the show. Maureen Price (above) won the Viewers Choice Award with this stunning quilt called Affairs of the Heart from a pattern designed by Aie Rossmann. Maureen likes to hand appliqué usually in the evening while watching television It took her two years of evenings to hand appliqué the quilt followed by many more hours to quilt it using her domestic sewing machine rather than the more user-friendly long-arm quilter that most people use today.

Submitted

Twelve people signed up for this year’s Challenge organized by Virginia Rasch. This year’s theme was “Celestial Delights”. It is always interesting to see what each year’s theme produces. This year was no exception. Joan Taylor (center) won “Best in Show” for her ‘Aurora Borealis,’ Lorna Willey (left) won “Most Original” with ‘The Willy Nebula,’. Heather Krane (right) won “Best Represents Theme.” with her quilt, ‘Evening Sky I’.

Where in the world wide web will you fi nd outwhat’s happening right here at home?www.dailybulletin.ca

Page 4: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Page 4 Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013

LocaL NEWSdaily townsman / daily bulletin

Advertorial

by Kathleen Thomas

Residents at Garden View Village in Kimberley have been keeping local media outlets busy lately. Over the last couple months, Shaw TV’s go! Kootenays program has featured stories on residents Nona Fransen, and Len and Catherine Shields.

At 84, Nona Fransen has spent a lifetime tearing up the ski slopes. As a young woman living in Trail, Fransen and her friends would hike up the hill at Rossland’s Red Mountain wearing their ski boots, strap on their skis at the top and carve turns in the powder all the way down. Nowadays, Fransen has it a lot easier; she mentions in her TV feature, living at Garden View Village makes hitting the slopes a stress-free because her housekeep-ing is done for her and tasty meals are ready for her when she gets back home. She made the news by doing what she loves; she’s a ded-icated athlete who believes that if you can keep fit, you should.

The Shields’s story is completely different but equally impressive. This couple caught the attention of Shaw TV because of their endur-ing love story. Len and Catherine Shields have been married for 64 years. After a chance encounter at a bus stop in 1948, they both were hit by Cupid’s arrow and have lived a rich, rewarding life together. Their home at Garden View Village

gives them ample opportunity to visit with family and friends. There is plenty of room if one of their 20 great-grandkids wants to sleep over. While Len and Catherine en-joy a morning game of gin rummy to keep a competitive spark alive, they can also play cards and other games with the other friendly resi-dents of Garden View Village.

The Village draws residents from all walks of life. The many amenities, the security, the social opportunities, and the easily ac-cessed personal care are among the features valued by residents. Delicious home-style meals are served each day, along with morn-ing and afternoon snacks and cof-fee/tea. For those who like to do their own cooking, all residents have full kitchens in their suite. The housekeeping and mainte-nance are taken care of so seniors have a welcome break from those chores. A chapel, a library and games room, a spa room and a sa-lon where residents can get hair-cut and set: these are all welcome aspects of the community. This worry free community is perfect for those seeking an active lifestyle and complete peace of mind.

Whether you’re an athlete, a social butterfly, or a retiring per-son who values a quiet, attractive home, Garden View Village has much to offer. For more informa-tion call Garden View Village at 250-427-4014.

Kimberley seniors get featured in local media

Nina & Roland’s

Hillside Gardenwill be open for the season

June 18, 201311:00 a.m. - closing

(lunch only)

We hope to see you all this summer!

Admission for the season$2.00/person; $5.00/family.

~ Nina and Roland ~440 Spokane Street, Kimberley

(Behind Kimberley Shell)250-427-4681

Sally MacDonalDTownsman Staff

A retired nurse has just returned home to Cranbrook after hiking to Mount Everest Base Camp at 17,500 feet.

Maxine Adshead, 64, flew to Kathmandu in May to take part in a 13-day trek through the Hi-malayas.

Learning about and experiencing Nepalese culture was the highlight of the trip, Maxine told the Townsman.

“It was an absolutely amazing experience. We had so many cultural opportunities,” Maxine said.

“I can’t say enough about it. It was much more than I expected.”

Arriving in Kathman-du on May 10, Maxine met up with friends she made two years ago when she hiked Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania with Nevada-based Tusker Trails.

The group came from

all over the world to meet in Nepal before the trip. From Kathmandu, they boarded a plane to the world’s most dan-gerous airport, Lukla at 9,383 feet in elevation. Thankfully, the group’s scheduled fly-in and fly-out days were clear.

The trek began from there, and the group began the climb to Nam-che Bazar, famous for its marketplace.

“When we went up to Namche Bazar, it just seemed to go on forever and ever and ever,” Max-ine said.

“It’s steep – it’s a lot steeper than you would expect. You look at the elevation changes and they don’t look like that much but you go down and then you go up and then you go down and then you go up.”

After two days in that village, Maxine said they continued on to Khum-jung, where Edmund Hillary formed Nepal’s

first school.“(Italian mountain-

eer) Reinhold Messner was there creating a doc-umentary to celebrate the 60th anniversary of Edmund Hillary’s climb. We actually got to talk to Reinhold Messner and we were filmed while we were talking to him. We probably won’t see it here, but some place in the world we will be seen talking to Reinhold Messner!” Maxine said.

The trek then carried on to Pheriche and, after two days of acclimatiza-tion, on to Lobuche.

“That’s when we real-ly started to get into a lot of cloud. The second day, when we left, we pretty much walked through cloud that day until we got to Lobuche,” Maxine said.

The group’s Nepalese guides were fantastic, she said, making sure the group went slow enough to handle the el-evation.

Cranbrook retiree treks to Everest base camp“They looked after us

very well. We really couldn’t say enough about them. They were just so great,” Maxine said.

Leaving Lobuche, the group faced a steep hill that required determi-nation to conquer, Max-ine said.

“I remember when we left Lobuche, I looked up at this hill and I thought, ‘Oh God, I can’t do that.’ Then I just said to myself, ‘One step at a time, Max, one step at a time.’ So I just did it one

step at a time and I got there.”

Providing her with inspiration was one member of her group, named Robert, who did the trek despite having cerebral palsy and not learning to walk until he was 11 years old.

With one person on either side of him for support, Robert made it to Gorak Shep at 16,942 feet in elevation.

“To me, it was ex-tremely inspirational. For people who do things and complain, I just think, just look at Robert and use him as a guide to how you can do things, just don’t let things get in your way,” Maxine said.

“Part of it is sheer de-termination. That’s what it took for him. So much energy had to be ex-pended to take steps compared to the rest of us.”

The group arrived at Gorak Shep having al-ready hiked five hours that day. Still, most of

the group decided to carry on to base camp at 17,500 feet in elevation, another two and a half hours each way.

“It was challenging because it was such a long day. If it hadn’t been quite so long, it wouldn’t have been quite as exhausting,” Maxine said. “Part of it is the terrain. The terrain is really rough.”

She compared the hike from Gorak Shep to base camp to the boul-der field on Fisher Peak.

“You are going over that at twice the eleva-tion of Fisher Peak, only it isn’t just up, it’s up and down. And that’s the last two and a half hours, getting to base camp, and then two and a half hours getting back,” Maxine said.

Base camp was a busy place when Maxine visited in prime season for summiting Everest.

“It’s just a huge sea of tents,” she said.

The place was abuzz with the news of a Japa-

nese man in his 80s who had just returned from reaching Everest’s peak.

But for every inspir-ing story, there was one of tragedy — Maxine lost count of the number of people she heard had died on Everest during her time in Nepal. Some were hit by falling boul-ders, others by ava-lanches. Some got lost in the fog, while others ran out of oxygen on the way down from the summit.

“And I only heard about some of them, I’m sure. Some things I just don’t want to hear; it just makes me too sad,” Max-ine said.

Now back in Cran-brook, the active grand-mother, who is a mem-ber of a Cranbrook retir-ees hiking group and has a black belt in karate, hasn’t given much thought of where she will next travel to.

“I haven’t anything that I’ve thought of, but you never know with me what’s going to happen next,” Maxine said.

“I thought, ‘Oh God, I can’t do that.’ Then I just said to myself, ‘One step at a time, Max, one step at a

time.’ So I just did it one step at a time

and I got there.”Maxine Adshead

Submitted

Cate Doerksen of Kimberley and her horse Lucky came out of the Horizons Spring Show in Cranbrook, Saturday, June 9, with first place in Hunter Hack — 17 & under, and second place in Hunter Seat Equitation — 17 & under. Overall, Cate won five ribbons: one first place, one second place, two fourth place and a with place rib-bon. Cate rides for Windover Ranch near Wycliffe.

Page 5: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013 Page 5

LocaL NEWSdaily townsman / daily bulletin

PUBLIC Notice is hereby given that the Council of the City of Kimberley intends to adopt “Bylaw No. 2480, Procedure Bylaw No. 2205, 2004, Amendment No. 3, 2013”.

Bylaw No. 2480 will amend City Council “Procedure Bylaw No. 2205, 2004” by repealing section 6. of Schedule “A” attached to and forming part of Bylaw No. 2205 and substituting the following:

“6. Order Of Proceedings:

The General Order of the Agenda for all regular meetings of the Council shall be:

a. Addition of Late Items b. Adoption of Agenda c. Adoption of Minutes d. Public Hearing (if required) e. Delegations and Presentations f. Consent Agenda: 1. Minutes 2. Information only reports 3. Correspondence g. Items from Committee meetings: 1. Reports 2. Bylaw Readings 3. Any other items requiring Council action h. New/Other Business i. Items Brought Forward for Public Information j. Council Enquiries and Sundry Matters k. Question Period l. Notice of Closed Meeting m. Adjournment

As well, Bylaw No. 2480 will add a new Section “7.A Consent Agenda” noted above outlining guidelines for the “Consent Agenda”.

Dated at Kimberley, B.C., this 10th day of June, 2013.

City of KimberleyPUBLIC NOTICE

Dene MooreCanadian Press

The British Columbia coast has seen 22 major earthquakes over the last 11,000 years, and is due for another, says a new study.

But there is no cause for alarm, cautioned the author of the research paper published Wednesday.

“The longest time be-tween earthquakes along the southern B.C. coast is about a thou-sand years, and we also know that our most re-cent megathrust earth-quake happened 313 years ago,’’ said Audrey Dallimore, of Royal Roads University.

“So what that means is we’re due for another subduction zone earth-quake either tomorrow — or 700 years from now.’’

In terms of a human lifetime, it’s not neces-sarily imminent, but knowing the earthquake cycle is important, she said.

“Hopefully it wakes us up a little bit to un-derstand that we’re liv-ing on a planet that does things happily on its own, and large earth-quakes are some of those things, and those things may happen within our lifetimes and will certainly happen at some time over the life of our communities and our infrastructures,’’ she said.

The study looked at sediment disturbance in Effingham Inlet, on the west coast of Vancouver

Island.Dallimore said re-

searchers using state-of-the-art radiocarbon dat-ing determined the last so-called megathrust earthquake in the zone that stretches from northern Vancouver Is-land down to California happened more than 300 years ago.

In fact, comparing the sediment dating to records of a tsunami in Japan, they were able to pinpoint the last so-called megathrust quake to a 9 p.m., Jan. 26, 1700.

The world’s largest earthquakes are all megathrust earth-quakes, which occur when there is a slip along the fault between a subducting and over-riding tectonic plate.

There has never been a megathrust earth-quake along the west coast in the written his-tory of Canada, but the study found that megathrust earthquakes occur about every 500 years in the region, al-though they can stretch out for up to 1,000 years.

“The last megathrust earthquake originating from the Cascadia sub-duction zone occurred in 1700 AD. Therefore, we are now in the risk zone of another earth-quake,’’ Dallimore said.

B.C. forms part of the North American portion of what is called the Pa-cific “Ring of Fire,’’ a 40,000 km horseshoe of ocean trenches and vol-canic zones where 90 per cent of the world’s earthquakes take place.

Study says B.C. is ‘in the risk zone’ for mega-earthquake

They would apply for funding from the Heritage Legacy Fund to cover the $30,000 and get the work done with volunteer labour. They have started a list of volunteers.

“We would like to see the building put back to good shape and then used again,” Haberman said.

Coun. Angus Davis couldn’t understand how the group estimat-ed such a low number

compared with the en-gineering report.

“If we say yes you go ahead, that leaves the onus right on the city if some mistake is made where the building is not structurally made significantly better than it should be,” Davis said.

Haberman argued that the report had a lot of things not necessary for preserving the building.

“They have $15,000 for insulation, $6,600

for plumbing and $10,000 for drywalling the ceiling and the inte-rior work,” Haberman said. “A lot of these things really don’t apply to keeping that building in good repair. A lot of these things are an upgrade to take it to the next level.”

He said that the en-gineering report didn’t touch on anything structural.

Amsing said there is building experience within the group, not-ing that he himself has renovated four or five 100-year-old homes within Cranbrook and in Alberta.

“If an engineer went in there and said, ‘Look, it needs supports, all the way inside needs to be cross braced,’ that’s a different story,” he said. “But the engineer didn’t say that. The engineer is saying we’re going to take out the ceiling and put in $15,000 worth of insulation into a stor-age building, $10,000 into electrical. I don’t see the point of putting

that much effort into a garage that we’re trying to just preserve.”

He said they would focus on replacing the windows, the garage doors and the roof.

Coun. Bob Wheth-am said the two figures need to be rectified, saying he would need to see what the differ-ences were before mak-ing decisions. Wheth-am also had concerns

Group seeks support from Cranbrook CouncilContinueD from page 1

what the city uses this land for,” Whetham said, adding that he didn’t want to see effort go into preserving a building then council deciding later that it is the wrong place for the building, if for instance city hall were to be ex-panded.

Coun. Diana J. Scott asked whether they would be interested in

about the locations of the building, between city hall (a heritage building), the empty fire hall and the police station, which will like-ly be transitioned to an-other use in the future.

“My question is, if this building is pre-served, more for the aesthetics of its historic appearance rather than as a functional part of

seeing the building re-purposed as something else, such as new wash-rooms downtown.

“We’re looking at it from a point of view that this is one of two buildings left in Cran-brook with that archi-tectural design, which is very unique to this area,” Amsing said. “Why would we want to tear it down and repur-pose the bricks when we’ve got it there? We can preserve it and keep it going for many more years.”

Scott also worried about the building get-ting a heritage designa-tion, because then it may not be able to be moved.

The application deadline for the heri-tage funding is not for another year, and so council will have some decisions to make in terms of what it hopes to accomplish in the area behind city hall and whether a historic brick garage fits into that vision.

Townsman file phoTo

An aged building behind Cranbrook City Hall has become the subject of much debate over whether to restore it or not.

Page 6: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

PAGE 6 THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 2013

As I write this Nelson Mandela is still with us. He may even still be living at the end of this year. But this is his

fourth hospitalisation in six months, and the prognosis for 94-year-old men with persistent lung infections is not good. How will South Africa do without him?

Wrong question, actually. In practice, South Africa has been doing without him for more than a decade already — but psy-chologically, it is just now getting to grips with the re-ality that he will soon be gone entirely.

For all its many faults and failures, post-apart-heid South Africa is a mira-cle that few expected to happen. Although Mandela retired from the presidency in 1999, 14 years later he is still seen as the man who made the magic work, and somehow the guarantor that it will go on working. If only in some vague and formless way, a great many people fear that his death will re-move that safety net.

Just in the past two weeks, however, the tone of the discussion has begun to change. On hearing that Nelson Mandela had been admitted to hospital yet again, Andrew Mlangeni, one of his dearest friends and once a fellow-prisoner on Robben Island, said simply: “It’s time to let him go. The family must release him, so that God may have his own way with him ... Once the family releases him, the peo-ple of South Africa will follow.”

That one comment opened the flood-gates, for it had a strong resonance in tra-ditional African culture, which holds that a very sick person cannot die until his family “releases” him. They have to give him “permission” to die, by reassuring him that his loved ones will be fine when he’s gone. So South Africans must now accept that they can get along without

Nelson Mandela, and then he will be free to go.

It’s not that everybody really believes in this tradition, but it frames the conversa-tion in more positive and less distressing way. People can argue about whether or not South Africa is doing as well as it should, but they can at least agree that Mandela got the country safely through the most dangerous phase of the transi-

tion, and that they can carry on with the job of building a just and demo-cratic society without him.

Except for President Robert Mugabe of Zimba-bwe, of course. Mugabe has always deeply resented the fact that Nelson Man-

dela is revered as the father of his nation while he himself is seen as a vicious tyrant who has ruined his country. So he seized the opportunity of a recent high-profile interview on South African television to accuse Mandela of having failed in his duty to South Africa’s black majority: he had been too soft on the whites.

What would have particularly annoyed Mandela, if he was well enough to watch the show, was that the interviewer was Dali Tambo, the son of his oldest and most trusted ally, the late Oliver Tambo. As young lawyers, the two men co-founded South Africa’s first black-run legal office in 1952, and when Tambo became the presi-dent-in-exile of the African National Con-gress he made Mandela’s release from prison its highest priority.

Dali Tambo is another kettle of fish: a flamboyant man who has traded on his family name to forge a career as a TV in-terviewer. He has his own soft-focus inter-view show, “People of the South,” and re-cently he persuaded Robert Mugabe to give him a two-hour interview. In the course of it, Mugabe dismissed Mandela

as “too much of a saint.”“Mandela has gone a bit too far in

doing good to the non-black communi-ties, really in some cases at the expense of blacks,” the Zimbabwean dictator said. “That’s being too saintly, too good, too much of a saint.”

Nonsense. What Nelson Mandela and his white negotiating partner, F.W. De Klerk, were trying to avoid in the early 1990s was a South African civil war that would have killed millions and lasted for a very long time. The 20 per cent white min-ority were heavily armed, and they had nowhere else to go. Their families, for the most part, had been in South Africa for at least a century.

Therefore, a settlement that gave South Africa a peaceful (and hopefully prosper-ous) democratic future had to be one in which the whites still had a future. So you either make the kind of deal that Mandela and De Klerk made, in which nobody loses too much, or you submit to a future that would make the current civil war in Syria look like a tea party.

And by the way, Mugabe was making his remarks in a country whose economy has been so devastated by his “tougher” approach that fully one-quarter of the population has fled abroad in search of work, mostly to South Africa.

Archbishop Desmond Tutu, talking about Mandela’s inevitable death, said last week: “The best memorial to Nelson Man-dela would be a democracy that was really up and running: a democracy in which every single person in South Africa knew that they mattered.” That is still some dis-tance away, but Mandela has laid the foundations. He was the right man for the job: a saint who also understood real-politik.

Gwynne Dyer is a London-based independent journalist

The legacy of Nelson Mandela

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

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Gwynne Dyer

Page 7: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013 Page 7

OpiniOn/features

UPCOMINGGrand Opening of the Immigrant Welcome Center, Thursday June 13th, 9:30 at the Kimberley Public Library. Please join us to learn about the Center services and the other Welcoming Community projects in Kimberley. Info: contact Kim Roberts CBAL Coordinator at [email protected] or Pam Bailie CBAL Immigrant Settlement Assistance Worker at [email protected] 250-427-6027SOCIAL~DANCE to the music of ‘Chapparal’ JUNE 15, at the Cranbrook Seniors HALL 2nd St. South. A great evening of Song and Dance held on Third Saturdays, at 7 pm. EVERYONE WELCOME. Refreshments served. 250.489.2720The annual Elks Charity Tournament is coming up on June 16 at the Kimberley Golf Course. Includes a prize for every player and a Prime Rib dinner. Sign up your own team or we can � nd a team for you. Call 250-427-2343 for more info.Kimberley Nature Park - Father’s Day Hike - Sunday, June 16. Meet at the Higgins St. entrance at 1 pm for a 3 - 4 hr moderate hike. Join leaders Ellen & Dan Chase 250- 427-5517Businesses have until June 20th to purchase and register their Urban Artsy Deer for the Cranbrook Summer Artsy Deer Quest. Everyone else has until Aug. 24th to purchase and decorate their deer for the Great Cranbrook Artsy Deer Round Up and Competition to be held at Art in the Park in Rotary Park. Deer and details available at CDAC Gallery, 135-10th Ave. S., Cranbrook.The East Kootenay Railway Pensioners Association will be having a Social Luncheon at 12:30 pm, Tuesday June 18th, 2013 at the Bavarian Chalet (Day’s Inn) 600 Cranbrook St.N,Cranbrook BC. All Railway Retiree’s and Spouses are welcome. RSVP by June 14th, 2013. Info: Contact Secretary Frances Allen at 250-426-2720 or Bill Belding at 250- 426-50062013 FREE FAMILY SWIM Wednesday, June 19th, 6:00-7:00 PM is sponsored by Kimberley Medical Clinic. Children 18 years & under must be accompanied by an adult.Lorraine Butler’s Music Studio will be having the year-end Recital at the Knox Church at 7pm. On June 23rd, 2013, Reception following. Everyone Welcome.Cranbrook Community Theatre is hosting a free forum about directing plays on Monday, June 24th at 7:00 p.m. at the Stage Door Theatre. Five local directors will share their experiences.

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ONGOING Canadian Cancer Society- if you have spare time and would like to volunteer, interested applicants can call 250-426-8916, drop by our o� ce at #19-9th Avenue S, Cranbrook or go to www.� ghtwithus.ca and register as a volunteer.ICBL-Duplicate Bridge–Senior Center in Cranbrook. Mon & Wed 7pm, Thurs & Fri 1pm at Scout Hall, Marysville. Info: Maggie 250-417-2868.Cranbrook Phoenix Toastmasters meet every Thursday, noon - 1:00 Heritage Inn. Toastmasters teaches communication & leadership skills. Roberta 250-489-0174. 1911.toastmastersclubs.org.Breast Cancer Support Group in Kimberley. Info about meetings; Daniela 250-427-2562 or Lori 250-427-4568.Contact the Kimberley Health Care Auxiliary Thrift Shops at 250-427-2503 (Brenda) or 250-427-1754 Gayle) for volunteer opportunities: cashiers, sorters, after hours cleaners.CRANBROOK QUILTERS’ GUILD hold their meetings every 2nd & 4th Tuesday of each month at 7:15pm upstairs in the Seniors’ Hall, 125-17th Ave. S. Everyone welcome. Info: Betty at 250-489-1498 or June 250-426-8817.Community Acupuncture. By donation – Each Tuesday 4-6 pm, Roots to Health Naturopathic Clinic, Kimberley Health Centre – Lower Level, 260 4th Ave. 778-481-5008. Please visit: www.roots-to-health.com for more info.Mark Creek Lions “Meet and Greet” the 1st and 3rd Wednesday, from 6:00-6:30 pm. Dinner to follow at Western Lodge. FMI: 250-427-5612 or 427-7496.Cranbrook Branch of the Stroke Recovery Association of BC. Meetings are from 10:00am-1:00pm the 2nd and 4th Wed. in the lower level of the Senior Citizen’s Hall, 125-17th St. S. Bring bag lunch. Tootie Gripich, 426-3994.The GoGo Grannies meet the last Monday of each month at 7:00 at The College of the Rockies. Join us as we raise awareness & funds for Grandmothers raising their Grandchildren in countries devastated by Aids. Norma at 250-426-6111.ESL: CBAL hosts Conversation Cafe Tues 7-9pm, morning class Wed 10am-12noon & Evening class Wed 7pm-9pm. All sessions held at CBAL o� ce 19 9th Ave S. Childcare upon request. All programs are FREE. FMI: Bruce 250-919-2766 or [email protected] Compassionate Friends meet 2nd Tuesday each month at 4:00pm at the East Kootenay Child Care Resource and Referral Boardroom (in the Baker Street Mall parking lot) Info: call Laura @ 250 489-1000/Diane @ 250 489-0154Do you have the desire to stop eating compulsively? OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS (a 12-Step Program) meets Tuesdays from 7-8 pm at Cranbrook United Church, 2-12 S. S., downstairs. Contact: [email protected].

daily townsman / daily bulletin

When I was a kid, be-fore I started school, my mother used the

library as a day care. In the community where

we lived, the library was locat-ed in the community centre. Once a week, she would at-tend a meeting there. Instead of having me sit in on the meeting with colouring books – and having to shush me every few minutes – she would drop off in the library, have a word to the librarian, and come back for me an hour later after her meeting.

I rarely even noticed she was gone. It was already com-mon for me to spend hours in the children’s section of the li-brary. My mum had taught me to read a little already; my dad would invent his own stories to go with pictures in my fa-vourite books so every time we read it, the tale was different.

By the summer of Grade 3, my teachers were calling me “a voracious reader”. And be-cause I read so much, I actual-

ly knew what that word meant. Once a week over summer,

I’d go to the library and bor-row seven or eight books. By the end of the week, I’d have burned through the lot. I made friends with so many different characters, and could barely stand to say goodbye to them when I read the final page. To ease the grief, I’d just start the next book.

My mother would tell me to go for a walk, get out in the fresh air. So I’d walk, with my head in a book the entire way.

We would go on family road trips. In a strange twist, I would get motion sickness when I wasn’t reading.

But somewhere along the way, I stopped reading so much. I always have a book on the go, even more so since my family gave me an e-reader a few Christmases ago. But it’s barely the same.

I cherish book series, be-cause it’s enough to absorb me so much that I will read

above doing other things.These days, I watch televi-

sion, or I read items on the internet using my iPhone. The other day, my chiropractor told me that for the sake of my neck muscles, I should stop looking at my phone all the time and go back to reading. I mean, that’s doctor’s orders, right?

It gave me an idea. This summer, instead of watching repeats on HGTV for hours, playing thoughtless time-suck games on my phone, I am going to launch my own per-sonal summer reading chal-

lenge.Every week, I will read a

book that has made the New York Times bestseller list. That way we can trust that each novel I read is easy to digest and probably going to be liked by a vast majority of people. I’ll avoid series since it’s hard to drop into the middle and not get bogged down by going back to the beginning. Each book will be available at Cran-brook Public Library.

Then I’ll write a review to appear here once a week.

There’s no going back; I’ll be held accountable by that weekly deadline. And I know how to meet a deadline, let me tell you. Famous last words.

Stay tuned next week for my first review: ‘The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry’ by Rachel Joyce.

When she’s not buried in a book, Sally MacDonald is a reporter at the Cranbrook

Daily Townsman.

Summer reading Challenge

Built on a foundation of books

So why is Cranbrook going to Wonju and Taicang?

A fair question, and one that I have wrestled with over the last few months. To find the answer we need to go back a ways.

In spring 2008 the City agreed, with financial support from the province, to pursue the development of an Asia Pacific twinning opportunity. Unlike traditional sister city or friendship relationships, the focus is on building long-term relationships that will gener-ate new investment opportu-nities for selected communi-ties in B.C.

Asia has become a major global economic driver and is increasingly important to our future. Over 50 per cent of the coal produced in the Elk Valley is bound for Asia and the Skookumchuck pulp mill is now owned by the Chi-na-based “Paper Excellence” company. Provincially while B.C. exports to the U.S. are decreasing, exports to Asia are increasing substantially.

Although the City agreed to take on the role as a regional centre for this part of B.C., due to local priorities substantial work on this initiative didn’t begin until late 2010 with the commencement of market op-portunity research and candi-date community identifica-tion.

In 2011, a consultant with Asia expertise was retained to undertake the initial scouting exercise to identify potential

twinning communities. In the same year Cranbrook city staff participated in a trade delega-tion to Asia (specifically Bei-jing and Seoul) to assess de-mand for resources available in our region, particularly bio-

mass, to develop local con-tacts in Asia with the B.C. and Canada trade representatives, and to get a better under-standing on the protocols and cultural subtleties of working with officials in China and Korea.

Based on the research in 2011, Cranbrook took the next step to developing formal ties to Asia with a small delegation from the City making the first formal introductions to Tai-cang, China and Wonju, South Korea in February, 2012. These two communities were identi-fied as having the strongest economic twinning potential for Cranbrook and the region.

During the February 2012 visit a Letter of Understanding to explore economic opportu-nities was signed with Taicang, and in August of 2012 Cran-brook hosted a senior delega-tion of five municipal officials from Wonju, South Korea. We are expecting a visit from se-nior city officials from Taicang,

China in the fall of 2013.The upcoming visit is in-

tended to strengthen the rela-tionship between Cranbrook and these two Asia Pacific communities and to explore in more detail the economic op-portunities that may be real-ized.

The visit to Taicang is geared towards natural re-source exports from the re-gion, opportunities for post-secondary training through the College of the Rockies (COTR), and in-bound tourism to the Koote-nays.

In Wonju, the focus will be on education and tourism to start with as well as us learn-ing more about their alterna-tive energy solutions and use of solar energy.

As I said earlier I struggled with “is this a good investment of Cranbrook citizen’s tax dol-lars?” The cost estimate is around $10,500 total for Coun-cillor Diana J. Scott, Economic Development Officer Kevin Weaver, and me for airfare as once we are over there the host cities pick up the majority of our costs.

I asked representatives of the Province of BC’s Economic Development Division both locally and in Victoria if we should do this. Their response was yes — this endeavour is a great opportunity for Cran-brook and the region, and to realize the benefits you must commit to maintaining and solidifying the relationships.

Mayors and Councillors are extremely important in Chi-nese and Korean cultures and are key to making this initia-tive work.

My approach then became to do whatever we could to make it a trade and invest-ment initiative. We have invit-ed other East Kootenay may-ors, the College of the Rockies, Teck Coal and Canfor repre-sentatives to accompany us. I have asked a businessman who spends a fair bit of time in China selling B.C. wood to provide a list of important people to visit in Taicang. I have also requested material from the Ktunaxa First Nation and Kootenay Rockies Tour-ism to provide material that we can use to encourage more visitation to our region from China and South Korea, which are both areas of growth for visits to B.C.

While I very much value the twinning of Cranbrook with these cities in Asia I also want to see some new busi-ness come out of it. Develop-ing trust and a sense of mutual respect is key to making it hap-pen.

Will we have a successful trip? I’ll let you know. We leave on June 17 and return on June 27 after spending three days in Taicang, four in Wonju and three days travelling.

I’ll follow up with you upon our return.

Wayne Stetski is Mayor of Cranbrook

Wayne Stetski

Sally MacDonald

Towards stronger Asian relationships

Page 8: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

PAGE 8 THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 2013

TRE VOR CR AWLEYSports Editor

Four out of five wins isn’t so bad for the Cranbrook 3G girls basketball club.

The club headed down south of the bor-der over the weekend for the annual Gonzaga Shootout, a club bas-ketball tournament in Spokane, where they racked up a 4-1 record, while being the lone representative from Canada in a field of 40 teams.

“I am happy with our play this weekend,” said Bobbi-Jo Colburn. “I am so proud of how hard our coaching staff has helped us to un-derstand the impor-tance of skill and de-velopment, competi-tive drive and goal set-ting in a competitive environment.”

The team beat up Shadle Park 47-25 but were given a bit more of a challenge with a 45-30 win over Mount Spokane. The Cran-brook squad had two more dominating wins over Coleville by a score of 42-22 and Na-ches Valley by 39-22.

The only loss for the 3G club was served by East Valley at a score of 42-33.

“This is a great showing for our pro-gram and team, and a great achievement for the girls,” said head coach Greg Colburn. “It will help us in next year’s bid to jump up a division to a larger classification.

“Our program is now recognized in Al-berta, British Colum-bia and the Pacific Northwest as a com-

SPORTS

Club team brings the heat in Spokane

3G BASKETBALL CLUB

SUBMITTED PHOTO

Cranbrook 3G Basketball Club coach Greg Colburn addresses his team during a game at a tournament in Spokane over the weekend.

VACANCY ADVERTISE HERE!CALL TO BOOK YOUR AD NOW!

250.426.5201 250.427.5333

SPORTS BRIEFS

Sports News? Call Trevor 250-426-5201, ext. 212

[email protected]

DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

Applications are being accepted for

COACHESof all levels (Beginner to Midget)

Application forms can be found atwww.kimberleyminorhockey.ca

Mail applications to: Kimberley Minor Hockey,

Box 73, Kimberley, BC V1A 2Y5Deadline for applications is June 30, 2012.

Selkirk Secondary

2013

Awards NightMonday, June 17th, 20137:00 pm at McKim Theatre6:30 - Refreshments 7:00 - Awards

Parents and Guardians of recipients can expect to receive invitations in the mail prior to the awards.

petitive and successful program. As coaches, we have been able to compete at a very high level and every tourna-ment we have attended is due to the dedication and hard work of our athletes.”

The 3G club enjoys high level competition, and makes frequent trips to the Lower

Mainland and the U.S. where they get the op-portunity to face tough opposition and build their skills.

“As athletes, we are thankful that our coaches have been able to provide us with the support and knowl-edge it takes to succeed at a competitive level,” said Rae-Lyn Pighin.

“The systems and skills we have learned over the last three years have helped us com-pete with any team that we’ve faced.”

Next action for the club is another trip to Spokane for the annual camp classic tourna-ment that the team has attended for the last three summers.

STEPHEN WHYNOCanadian Press

CHICAGO - By the time it ended, the Chica-go Blackhawks’ come-back was a distant mem-ory. It almost didn’t matter that the Boston Bruins blew a two-goal lead in the third period.

Almost an entire game was played after regulation ended, capped by Andrew Shaw’s game-winner at 12:08 of triple overtime that gave the Black-hawks a 4-3 victory Wednesday night at United Center and a 1-0 series lead in the Stanley Cup final. It was the fifth longest game in Cup

final history.After 112 minutes of

hockey, the fatigue was noticeable. More than 100 shots were put on goal, more than 100 hits levelled and more than 100 faceoffs taken.

But all that mattered was a double deflection, a point shot by Michal Rozsival that went off

David Bolland and Shaw that finished the Black-hawks’ comeback that began hours earlier.

“We knew it wasn’t going to be pretty at this point,” said Shaw. “It was a great shot. It was unbelievable. All the guys, we deserved this. It was a great battle for us.”

For most of the night, a storybook ending for the Blackhawks looked unlikely. Led by David Krejci and Milan Lucic, the Bruins looked just as bit as strong as they did in sweeping the Pitts-burgh Penguins in the Eastern Conference final.

Shaw leads Blackhawks past Bruins in triple OT

Bombers open new � eld with a loss to Argonauts

WINNIPEG - The cowbells rang and the horns blew as Investors Group Field was christened but the Toronto Argonauts spoiled the party with a 24-6 exhibition win over the Blue Bombers Wednesday.

Last year’s Grey Cup champions brought their backup quarterbacks and a cast of newcomers to town and still looked confident on the newest turf in the CFL.

The Bombers opened with starter Buck Pierce but pulled him midway through the first quarter, putting in Max Hall, one of the two newcomers in camp this season to challenge for No. 1 backup.

Hall played the rest of the first half. Justin Goltz took over in the second, the only backup the Bomb-ers retained from last season. The other newcomer, Chase Clement, saw action in the fourth quarter.

Canadian Press

Coyotes move possible if no deal is reached in Glendale

CHICAGO - NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly says it’s possible the Phoenix Coyotes could relocate if a new ownership group can’t reach a deal to keep the team in Glendale, Ariz.

The Coyotes’ unstable situation appears to be the biggest issue facing the league, and commissioner Gary Bettman said “time is getting short” finding a solution to keep the team in Arizona.

Asked about Quebec City, Bettman refused to speculate on potential landing spots for the Coyotes.

“We’re still focused on making it work with the Coyotes staying in Arizona,” he said. “I don’t want to begin the process, particularly publicly, where there’s going to be a lot of speculation as to where the team might go if it moved because all that would do would be to unfairly raise expectation in places.”

Canadian Press

Nets hire Jason Kidd as coach, bringing former star player back to the franchise

The Brooklyn Nets have hired Jason Kidd as their coach, bringing the former star back to the fran-chise.

Kidd just retired after his 19th NBA season and the Nets decided to hire him despite his lack of coaching experience.

The move reunites Kidd with the franchise he led to consecutive NBA Finals in 2002-03, when they played in New Jersey.

“Welcome home, Jason,” owner Mikhail Prok-horov says Wednesday in a statement.

Associated Press

Page 9: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 2013 PAGE 9

SPORTSDAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

City of Kimberley

June 19th, 2013 at 7:00 pm

Aquatic Centre Meeting RoomAll organizations/groups

requesting to utilize the City of Kimberley

Civic Centre/Marysville Arena’s for the 2013 - 2014 Season

are to attend the Ice Allocation Meeting.

Any questions please call the Operations Desk at 250-427-9660.

ARENA ICE ALLOCATION

MEETINGHave you ever found it difficult or complicated to communicate with

friends, family, or strangers?

Cranbrook Fellowship Baptist is hosting three seminars on communication by Rev. D. Cyril

Marlatt, Chris Ondrik R.N., and Dr. K. Shope on June 16, 23, and 30 (6:30 - 8:30 pm). We will

focus on skills for how and why we communicate the way we do from medical and spiritual aspects, and how to improve our connections with others.

Please leave a message at 250-489-5169 to register for these dates. There is limited space

and a $10 donation for all three sessions.

S e m i n a rartsVest™ is coming to the Columbia Basin!artsVest™ provides small- to mid-sized arts and culture organizations with the expertise and tools to develop sponsorship opportunities with local business, through in-depth sponsorship training, matching incentive funds and community networking events.

We’ll be delivering a full day sponsorship workshop for arts and cultural organization staff and Board members in:Golden, June 8, 2013, 10:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.Cranbrook, June 9, 2013, 12 noon – 6:00 p.m.Castlegar, June 22, 2013, 9:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.

The workshop will include an application guide for artsVest funding. You must attend a workshop to be eligible to apply for the funding. To register, please send an email request to [email protected] with “Golden Workshop” OR “Cranbrook Workshop” OR “Castlegar Workshop” in the subject line.

Funded by:

TREVOR CRAWLEY PHOTO

AIMING FOR THE MESH: A Cranbrook Outlaws pee wee lacrosse player takes a shot at the net during a game against a squad out of Lethbridge over the weekend at Western Financial Place. The Pee Wee Outlaws lost both their games to the same team. The Midgets su� ered a pair of losses, while the Bantams won twice at home, and the Novices, which are in a heated battle for � rst place, pulled out a pair of wins on the road.

Read the DAILY newspaper for

local happenings!

250-426-5201

250-427-5333

Need help with current events?

Skapski off to Hockey Canada campTRE VOR CR AWLEY

Sports Editor

Mackenzie Skapski is back in familiar territo-ry.

The Kootenay Ice crease guardian is in Calgary for a second straight appearance at a Hockey Canada Pro-gram of Excellence goal-tending camp for the next four days.

Eighteen other goal-tenders from across the CHL have joined Skaps-ki, including Cranbrook product Payton Lee, who minds the net for the Vancouver Giants.

“We have had terrific success with this camp in its first seven years, and we are excited to

have Canada’s best young goaltenders work with some of the top in-structors in the game,” said Brad Pascall, Hock-ey Canada’s vice-presi-dent of hockey opera-tions/national teams. “We want to give these young goaltenders every opportunity to develop and prepare for interna-tional competition, and we feel this camp is a step in the right direc-tion.”

Skapski was arguably one of the biggest rea-sons for Kootenay’s stel-lar record in the second half of the season, as he

backstopped the team from the basement of the WHL to the fran-chise’s 15th consecutive playoff appearance.

Setting a franchise record for games played in a single season, Skap-ski suited up for 65 con-tests, posting a 2.78 goals against average and a save percentage of 0.910.

Other WHL net minders such as Austin Lotz (Everett), Lee (Van-couver), Chris Driedger (Calgary), and Eric Comrie (Tri-City) are also taking part in the camp.

Being that he was there last year, Skapski doesn’t have any expec-tations, but hopes to make an impression.

“I have no expecta-tions this year, just being here once before,” Skap-ski said. “[I want to] just come in and put myself on the map and hope-fully get a shot at con-tinuing with Hockey Canada.”

The camp consists of both on- and off-ice ses-sions with goaltending coaches from around

the WHL, OHL and QMJHL.

“You got guys from across the CHL and they all have different tech-niques and its really tough to adjust to, going from drill to drill, but you just need to soak everything in,” said Skapski.

“It’s fun competing—it’s one of my biggest at-tributes—and I’m really looking forward to see-ing the guys around the league.”

Weather forces Blue Jays-White Sox to postpone game

CHICAGO - The game between the Toronto Blue Jays and Chicago White Sox scheduled for Wednes-day night was postponed because storms were in the forecast.

The game was called early in the afternoon as severe weather was approaching.

No makeup date was announced. The Blue Jays aren’t scheduled to play again at U.S. Cellular Field this season.

This was the fourth home postponement for the White Sox this season, the most since they had five home games called off in 2008.

Toronto is scheduled to play at Texas on Thurs-day night. The White Sox are off Thursday and visit Houston on Friday night.

Associated Press

BETH HARRISAssociated Press

LOS ANGELES - The Dodgers remained upset Wednesday about their brawl with the Arizona Diamondbacks, and much of their ire was di-rected toward pitcher Ian Kennedy.

Kennedy hit Los An-geles rookie Yasiel Puig and pitcher Zack Grein-ke with high pitches Tuesday night, and a day later the Dodgers were still taking exception to where they were thrown.

“Anything like that is going to leave a lot of taste in people’s mouths,” manager Don Mattingly said.

Mattingly said he doesn’t think Kennedy hit Puig deliberately. The ball deflected off the young slugger’s shoulder and grazed his nose.

The pitch from Ken-nedy to Greinke deflect-ed off his helmet and

struck his upper left shoulder.

“The second ball is no doubt intentional,” Mat-tingly said. “That’s two balls thrown last night that could have ended guys’ careers.”

Arizona manager Kirk Gibson repeated his ear-lier denial that Kennedy was head-hunting Grein-ke.

“That’s not our in-tent,” he said.

The teams met in the series finale on Wednes-day night, one night after their nasty fight led to six ejections, including Ken-nedy, Puig and Gibson.

“We had some guys on our team get heated and overreacted,” Dodg-ers ace Clayton Kershaw said.

Arizona catcher Mi-guel Montero had a dif-ferent view.

“We both went at it, and it was kind of fun,” he said.

Dodgers still sore after brawl with Diamondbacks

Page 10: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

daily townsman / daily bulletin Page 10 Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013

sports

YOUR CITY WORKING FOR YOU!

The pool located in Western Financial Place will be closed to all public use for annual maintenance work. The pool will reopen on Tuesday June 25, 2013. If you have questions or would like more information, please call Leisure Services at 250-489-0220. The City of Cranbrook apologizes for any inconvenience.

AQUATIC CENTRE CLOSED FOR MAINTENANCE – REOPENS JUNE 25TH.

Thursday, June 13th, 2013

Watch the latestCranbrook City Council meeting when you want. Visit www.cranbrook.ca

Working Toward A Greener Community

STREETS & TRAFFIC – RV & TRAILER PARKING

Under this bylaw, you are prohibited from parking recreational vehicles and trailers on residential streets between the hours of 10:00am and 3:00 pm and prohibits parking unattached trailers on any street at any time, unless in an emergency situation. The bylaw applies to travel trailers, tent trailers, campers, motor homes as well as boats and boats on trailers. The intent of the regulation is to keep City streets safe and accessible for vehicular and pedestrian use. Visit our website and click on ‘Bylaws’ for more on all of our City bylaws.

COFFEE WITH THE MAYOR @ KOOTENAY ROASTING COMPANY - SATURDAY JUNE 22, 2013 FROM 1 – 4PM

You are invited to have coffee with Councillor Gerry Warner, on behalf of the Mayor, at Kootenay Roasting Company on Saturday June 22, 2013 from 1– 4pm. The afternoon is open for one-on-one discussion for you to discuss concerns and ask questions about the City of Cranbrook. Refreshments are not provided. Please come and join us!

Home and property owners are strongly encouraged to stop mosquitoes before they start, by removing all sources of standing water from around your home. Some places to eliminate standing water include:

• Clogged gutters • Trays under fl ower pots• Outside pets’ dishes • Children’s pools and toys• Bird baths and feeders • Canoes / boats • Tires

Residents are encouraged to call the Mosquito Hotline at (250) 421-1294 to report potential mosquito development sites or for more information regarding the 2013 City of Cranbrook Mosquito Control Program.

MOSQUITO CONTROL BEGINS AT HOME

REMINDERS...Monday June 24, 2013 – Regular City Council

Meeting @ 6pm

Wednesday June 26, 2013 – Brown Bag Lunch @ 12:00pm

Submitted photo

The Cranbrook Eagles Boxing Club crew that recently attended provincials in Victoria. Pictured above, back row: Ashton Brock, coach Bill Watson, Official Derek Hoyt, coach Larry Adams. Front Row: Dylan Clark, Phoenix Larsen. Hoyt, a Cranbrook native, is a former Canadian Champion and Commonwealth Games bronze medalist who is now officiating for Boxing B.C.

James pushes Heat to come back against Spurs

Brian MahoneyAssociated Press

SAN ANTONIO - Game 4 of the NBA Fi-nals will tell more about the Miami Heat than a 66-win regular season ever could.

Any questions about LeBron James and the Heat were supposed to have been answered by now. He was too good to be taken out of games, his teammates too talented to go through long stretches where they weren’t contributing.

But they didn’t re-semble the league’s reigning powerhouse in Game 3, when the San Antonio Spurs handed them the third-worst beating in finals history in a 113-77 romp. They looked like the con-fused club from two years ago, when the fi-nals last came to Texas.

Another loss Thurs-day night and they’re on the verge of some-thing much bigger than

another finals failure.Lose this series, and

the whole Big Three era might be a failure.

“Something has to give tomorrow night,” James said Wednesday. “They have a champi-onship pedigree. They have four (titles). We have two. So something has to give. We’ll see what happens. We’ve been able to bounce back throughout ad-verse times throughout the season throughout the years that we’ve been together, these three years. We’ll see.”

“We’ll see” is the ap-proach the Spurs are taking with Tony Park-er, who has a mild ham-string strain. The team is calling the All-Star point guard day to day after he was hurt during Game 3 and had an MRI exam Wednesday.

“I want to wait until tomorrow before I make a decision wheth-er he should play or not,” Spurs coach Gregg

Popovich said. “And obviously a lot of it will have to do with Tony, and what happens to him during the day, and how I think his play will affect our team, whether good or bad.”

The Spurs didn’t need much from him Tuesday, when Danny Green and Gary Neal combined for 13 of the Spurs’ NBA Finals-re-cord 16 3-pointers and Kawhi Leonard had 14 points and 12 re-bounds, essentially playing James even.

James had his prac-tice jersey hanging over his back like a cape Wednesday, and he knows the Heat need him to be Super on Thursday.

And he insists that what he’s going to be.

“As dark as it was last night, can’t get no darker than that, espe-cially for me,” he said. “So, I guarantee I’ll be better tomorrow for sure.”

Page 11: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013 Page 11

the literary beatdaily townsman / daily bulletin

You Need to Know About…3With MLA, Bill Bennett

Bill Bennett, M.L.A.(Kootenay East)

Province of British Columbia

Constituency Offi ce:100c Cranbrook Street N.Cranbrook, B.C. V1C 3P9

Phone: 250-417-6022Fax: 250-417-6026

[email protected]

FACTS PAID ADVERTISEMENT

Premier Christy Clark is fulfi lling the commitments made in her campaign platform with a fi rst step of forming a strong new cabinet composed of

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under control. Liquefi ed Natural Gas is now split off from Energy, Core Review of Government is added to Energy & Mines, International Trade and Technology & Innovation will enhance government’s focus on accelerating our jobs plan.

I will serve as Minister of Energy and Mines and Minister Responsible for Core Review of government spending. I’m honoured to keep

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Receive a free shutoff sprinkler timer with your outdoor lawn and garden water audit!This summer the City of Kimberley has partnered with Columbia Basin’s Water Smart Initiative to help you keep your lawn and garden healthy and green all summer long, while using less water in the process!

The City of Kimberley’s Water Smart Ambassador would like to help you reduce your outdoor water use by offering a free landscape and outdoor water audit at your home. Audits include: assessing current watering practices, assessing automatic watering systems, reviewing lawn and soil conditions, determining landscape and watering needs, and providing simple recom-mendations to help improve watering practices and reduce water use.

Along with the free landscape and outdoor water audit, participating residents will receive a free water conservation kit. These kits include: an automatic shutoff sprinkler timer, a lawn moisture meter, a water conservation frisbee, and the Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corpo-ration’s ‘Household Guide to Water Efficiency.’

The City of Kimberley is committed to reaching a 30 percent reduction in gross water demand by 2015, by means of system improvements and ongoing wise water practices. Although Kimberley’s water use is higher than both the provincial and national average, simple changes made to indoor and outdoor water use can help to dramatically reduce system demands, with-out sacrificing lawns, gardens, or indoor lifestyles.

By making a few easy changes to outdoor watering practices, you can keep your lawn healthy and green all summer long, while dramatically reducing your outdoor water use, and ensuring that Kimberley’s water supply remains plentiful for many years to come!

To book a free landscape and outdoor water audit at your home, contact your Water Smart Ambassador at 250-427-5311 extension 213, or email [email protected]

Receive a free shutoff sprinkler timer with your outdoor lawn and garden water audit!This summer the City of Kimberley has partnered with Columbia Basin’s Water Smart Initiative to help you keep your lawn and garden healthy and green all summer long, while using less water in the process!

The City of Kimberley’s Water Smart Ambassador would like to help you reduce your outdoor water use by offering a free landscape and outdoor water audit at your home. Audits include: assessing current watering practices, assessing automatic watering systems, reviewing lawn and soil conditions, determining landscape and watering needs, and providing simple recommendations to help improve watering practices and reduce water use.

Along with the free landscape and outdoor water audit, participating residents will receive a free water conservation kit. These kits include: an automatic shutoff sprinkler timer, a lawn moister meter, a water conservation frisbee, water level gauge, and the Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation’s ‘Household Guide to Water Efficiency.’

The City of Kimberley is committed to reaching a 30 percent reduction in gross water demand by 2015, by means of system improvements and ongoing wise water practices. Although Kimberley’s water us is higher than both the provincial and national average, simple changes made to indoor and outdoor water use can help to dramatically reduce system demands, without sacrificing lawns, gardens, or indoor lifestyles.

By making a few easy changes to outdoor watering practices, you can keep your lawn healthy and green all summer long, while dramatically reducing your outdoor water use, and ensuring that Kimberley’s water supply remains plentiful for many years to come!

To book a free landscape and outdoor water audit at your home, contact your Water Smart Ambassador at 250-432-5294, or email [email protected]

Email: [email protected]: (250) 432-5294

Jessica Zulps

Canada is a free country, filled with liberated

people who have the ability to make their own logical decisions. We live in one of the most tech-nologically, morally ad-vanced nations in the world — so why do deathly ill citizens have to fly to countries like Swit-zerland, Belgium, and the Netherlands in order to achieve peace?

The definition of eu-thanasia is “the painless killing of a patient suffer-ing from an incurable and painful disease or in an irreversible coma.” As Canadians it is preached daily that we are free, and sayings like “free-dom of speech” and “freedom of association” are tossed around con-stantly. If we have the freedom to make all these decisions through-out the course of our life, who has the right to say that we can’t choose when our life ends?

There’s a time and a place for everything, and when someone has been suffering for an immea-surable amount of time, they should have the

ability to cease their suf-fering and leave their family and friends in peace. Prior to assisted suicide taking place, the patient should have to undergo mental, emo-tional, and physical eval-uation by more than one psychologist and doctor in order to get a fair diag-nosis.

Legalizing euthana-sia has been a topic of debate for years, and there have been numer-ous cases of people all over the country fighting for the right to end their life painlessly. Another side to this debate is whether or not the doc-tors across the country feel it’s morally accept-able to take part in the euthanasia of patients. The doctors could possi-bly be left with a huge burden of whether or not they did the right thing; which is why I definitely support multiple diag-nosis from different pro-fessionals, so that the doctors could feel con-tent that what they did was in the best interest of their patient.

One aspect to eutha-nasia I definitely dis-agree with is ending

someone’s life without their written or spoken consent. Patients should have written in their will, or voiced to their doctors and family that they wish to end their life this way. Some debilitating dis-eases will leave a person unable to move or com-municate in any way; prior to that happening, I believe that the person should have articulated that when their life pro-vides no more meaning, they want it to be medi-cally ended.

I believe that if eutha-nasia becomes legal and something practiced in North America, it should be just another box to fill out on your driver’s li-cense or ID card. When you receive a new driv-er’s license it’s necessary to fill out the form that specifies whether or not you’re to be an organ donor; I believe the same should be true with euthanasia – there should be something to

fill out that if you’re brain dead or have been diag-nosed with a fatal dis-ease, assisted suicide would be something you’d be wanting to have when the time comes.

I definitely agree that euthanasia is separate from both murder and suicide. Murder is taking someone’s life without their consent, and sui-cide is taking one’s own life due to a depression or another form of men-tal illness. Euthanasia would be unlike both of those – there would be no way it would be car-ried out without the one hundred percent con-sent of the patient, and the patient would under-go severe mental and physical screening be-fore it would be ap-proved.

I believe that in the long run euthanasia would be a positive thing in many different ways. Firstly, it would save many fatally ill Canadi-

ans thousands of dollars in flights to other coun-tries. It would also allow their family members, friends, and acquain-tances peace of mind and a respectful last image of their loved one. Many people take pride in their image, and they don’t want their loved one’s minds tainted with thoughts of them unable to move or speak. Lastly it would save Canadians millions in tax dollars each year, tax dollars that would be going towards keeping ventilators run-ning just because two family members are in a disagreement about who should pull the plug.

Euthanasia would allow peace of mind for many Canadians, and I truly believe it should be legalized in our country.

Jessica Zulps is a student at Mount

Baker Secondary School in Cranbrook

The right to make your own decisionThis is the latest submission from the students of Carrie Blais’

Creative Writing Class at Mount Baker Secondary School

submit tedThe Cranbrook Pub-

lic Library invites future astronauts, superheroes in training, and kids of all ages to join the Summer Reading Club and read their way to outer space.

It’s free! Sign up at the library starting on June 22.

Kids receive a kit to keep track of their read-

ing, and if they fill one whole reading log, they’ll be awarded the Summer Reading Club medal.

For more informa-tion, and to learn about other free programs and contests for kids, call the Cranbrook Public Li-brary at 250-426-4063 or visit their website: cran-brookpubliclibrary.ca.

Up, Up and Away!Children invited to take part in

Library’s Summer Reading Club

associated pressA rare copy of the

comic book featuring Superman’s first appear-ance that went undis-covered for over 70 years in the insulation of a Minnesota house has been sold for $175,000.

Stephen Fishler, CEO of ComicConnect.com, says the winning bidder in the online auction was a “hard core, golden age

comic book collector’’ who was looking for a lower-grade, unrestored copy of Action Comics No. 1.

He estimates there are only around 100 known copies of Action Comics No. 1, which was published in 1938.

David Gonzalez found the copy in the ceiling insulation of a house he was restoring.

Rare copy of 1938 comic featuring Superman’s debut sells for $175,000

Page 12: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Page 12 Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013

NEWSdaily townsman / daily bulletin

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Seth BorenSteinAssociated Press

WASHINGTON — Everyone knows cheetahs are blazingly fast. Now new research illustrates how their acceleration and nimble zig-zagging leave other animals in the dust and scientists in awe.

Researchers first determined that cheetahs can run twice as fast as Olympian Usain Bolt on a straightaway. Then they mea-sured the energy a cheetah mus-cle produces compared to body size and calculated the same for Bolt, the sprinter. They found the cheetah had four times the crucial kick power of the Olympian.

That power to rapidly acceler-ate — not just speed alone — is the key to the cheetah’s hunting success, said study lead author, Alan Wilson. He’s professor of lo-

comotive biomechanics at the Royal Veterinary College at the University of London.

“Capturing prey seems to come down to manoeuvring,’’ he said. “It’s all the zigzagging, duck-

ing and diving.’’Wilson and colleagues put

specialized tracking collars on five of these animals in Botswana, Af-rica.

They clocked cheetahs topping out at 58 mph (93 kph) — slightly less than the 65 mph (104 kph) measured for a cheetah once in 1965. Wilson said most hunts were done at more moderate speeds of 30 mph (48 kph), but with amaz-ing starts, stops and turns.

The way cheetahs pivoted and turned while sprinting was amaz-ing, he said. A cheetah can bank at a 50-degree angle in a high-speed turn, while a motorcycle can do maybe 45 degrees, Wilson said.

“If you are trying to catch something, the faster you go, the harder it is to turn,’’ he said.

Power athletes of the feline worldScientists awed by cheetahs’ acceleration, power and agility

ASSociAted PreSS

TOKYO — Japan’s Ji-roemon Kimura, who had been recognized by Guinness World Re-cords as the world’s old-est living person and the oldest man ever, died Wednesday of nat-ural causes. He was 116.

Kimura, of Kyotango, Japan, was born April 19, 1897. Officials in Kyotango said he died in a local hospital, where he had been un-dergoing treatment for pneumonia.

According to Guin-ness, Kimura was the first man in history to have lived to 116 years old.

Kimura became the oldest man ever on Dec. 28, 2012, at the age of 115 years, 253 days, breaking the record set by Christian Mortensen, a Danish immigrant to the United States, whose life spanned from 1882-1998.

The title of oldest liv-ing person is now held by another Japanese, 115-year-old Misao Okawa, of Osaka. Okawa was born March 5, 1898.

Kyotango officials said Kimura’s funeral would be held Friday.

The new oldest living man, according to the U.S.-based Gerontology Research Group, is James McCoubrey, and American who was born in Canada on Sept. 13, 1901. Now 111 years old, he is the 32nd old-est living person ac-cording to GRG’s list, which shows all those older than him are women.

World’s oldest person and oldest man ever, dies in Japan at age 116

Jiroemon KimuraYou need to keep your wits about you if you hope to out-run the cheetahs.

Page 13: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013 Page 13daily townsman / daily bulletin

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Gifts to thrill your dad at the barbecueThe Entertainer -- Items designed for both cooking prep and presentation are great gifts for an outdoor enter-tainer. A jalapeno pepper rack adds grill appeal to this popular appetizer and a pizza stone helps backyard chefs prepare and serve an authentic pizza pie.

For the dad who has it all- explore the wide range of rubs, marinades and wood chips available to provide hours of � avor experimenting. Additional gift grilling ideas are avail-able online at broilking-bbq.com.

size for little hands, and a basket that can grill at least six at time will help keep hungry mouths fed. A stu� ed burger press is perfect for creating unique � avour combina-tions for the adults. Try Greek burgers stu� ed with feta cheese, roasted red pepper, and spinach.

The Enthusiast - If he insists on being called Tex, Tiny, Tubby, or just “dad” when he’s tending the barbecue for hours on end, consider a pair of heavy stainless steel pork claws. Broil King’s experts claim they make shredding pork a walk in the park.

Page 14: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Page 14 Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013 daily townsman / daily bulletin

B2BBUSINESS TO BUSINESSwww.cranbrookchamber.com

Our Mission Statement:Fostering a healthy business climate in Cranbrook & District

2012 ANNUAL REPORT

The City of Cranbrook 2012 Annual Report will be presented to Council for consideration at the Special Meeting on June 24, 2013 at 3:00pm in the City Hall Council Chambers.

The 2012 Annual Report is available for public review at the City website – www.cranbrook.ca or can be picked up at reception at City Hall.

This notice is published in accordance with Section 99 of the Community Charter. • Sparwood June24

• Cranbrook June25• Invermere June26

Ombudsperson’s staff will be in your community on the following dates, and are available by

appointment to discuss your complaint:

Foranappointmentcall1-800-567-3247 (toll-free)

www.bcombudsperson.ca

Have you been treated unfairly by a provincial

or local government

agency?The B.C. Ombudsperson

may be able to help

Karin Penner, Dave Butler and I recently at-

tended the BC Chamber of Commerce annual general meeting in Na-naimo, BC. This meet-ing is a great way for chambers to connect with others from around the province and see what issues are pressing for their particular re-gion of the province. The AGM is the time that chambers present policies they would like

to see brought to the BC Chamber, for the provin-cial body to advocate for on their behalf.

Each policy goes through a rigorous review before it is adopted. During the year, an individual cham-ber drafts a policy that it forwards to the provin-cial policy review com-mittee. The policy re-view committee is made up of members from around the province that have expertise in work-ing with this type of doc-

umentation, as well as being comprised of a cross section of back-grounds that are involved in the individual policies themselves. Representa-tives from the retail sec-tor, the tourism sector, and natural resources are all part of the process. The committee com-ments on the draft policy and suggests changes that maybe needed to im-prove it. Policies should focus on the business community in BC or

Canada as a whole, as opposed to one munici-pality or region within a province. The commit-tee will comment on the policy and suggest their support or opposition to it. During the confer-ence, each policy is de-bated individually and any member may speak in favour of or in opposi-tion to the policy. Final-ly, the policy is voted on and requires a 2/3 major-ity vote to pass and be-come part of the BC Chamber policy manual.

Some of the highlights to this year’s approved pol-icies include:

One that would see the Provincial Government work with the BC Arts Council and the BC Gaming and Enforce-ment Branch to institute a three year funding cy-cle for arts and cultural

organizations receiving core funding

A recommendation for the Provincial Govern-ment to amend the Com-munity Charter & Local Government Act to es-tablish reasonable time-lines and focused guide-lines for the approval/rejection of development permits by local govern-ments and to provide standard requirements for the submission of de-velopment permits to lo-cal governments such as specific drawing require-ments, traffic survey, etc.

A policy for the Provin-cial Government to pro-vide a fully refundable investment tax credit claimed on businesses’ income tax returns equal to the PST paid on all ac-quisitions of machinery and equipment and work-ing with the chamber to

reduce the administrative burden of the PST

Further changes to PST to provide exemptions on all agricultural goods and services that are ze-ro-rated under the GST system to help enhance BC’s agriculture com-petitiveness

A number of policies re-garding the forest indus-try and changes the gov-ernment can make to ensure a healthy forest industry now and in the future.

There were some poli-cies brought forward that did not pass into effect. A couple that had inter-esting debate included: a policy that would see BC not change time and always be on daylight savings time, and one that would see driver training for young driv-ers be brought in as a

component of the sec-ondary school curricu-lum.

Overall it was a very good conference and provided us an opportu-nity to network with oth-er chambers in the prov-ince. It was interesting to discuss issues facing other communities and discovering that many are going through similar advocacy procedures in their cities. There were a number that have been working with their city on reducing barriers to doing business in the city, and working with the city on streamlining policies and procedures within the city to make it easier for business. We look forward to bringing some of these recom-mendations to our own advocacy efforts.

REPORTPRESIDENT’S

Mike Adams

Page 15: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013 Page 15daily townsman / daily bulletin

B2BBUSINESS TO BUSINESS

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e Fun Has Begun

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This year marks the 49th anniversary of the Sam Steele Days festival and is being held June 13-16th. It is Cranbrook’ s largest annual festival, attracting thousands of locals and visitors from out of town.

This year Sam Steele Days has undergone a bit of a makeover, streamlining some of the marketing and visuals. With hundreds of volunteer hours donated into making the festival run smoothly and hundreds more in planning it became important to organizers that the event branding become more consistent and recognizable which helps save time and improves the overall exposure.

In early March this year an online vote was set up where over 450 people partici-pated in deciding what logo should represent the festival. The winning logo sports Sam Steele’s iconic moustache combined with the traditional Canadian maple leaf and unmistakable Canadian Royal Mounties uniform.

You will see new posters, print ads, buttons and more at this year’s festival show-casing the new logo, look and feel.

With over 12,000 visits to the Sam Steele Days website last year alone, Sam Steele Days has also become more accessible by establishing a Facebook page at www.facebook.com/samsteeledays, a twitter account @samsteeledays and a real-time event calendar and blog at www.samsteeledays.org. The Sam Steele website has also been made mobile friendly so that event goers can look up and find instant in-formation about event times and locations.

Cranbrook’ s 2013 Youth ambassador can-didates successfully completed the World-Host program under the leadership of Christy Wheeldon. WorldHost was first introduced in 1985 to prepare B.C’s tourism workforce to host the world at Expo’86. Since then over 550,000 British Columbians have par-ticipated in this train-ing. WorldHost was unveiled in preparation for the 2010 Olympic games and was also used extensively to pre-pare B.C.’s service in-dustry. The widely-rec-ognized WorldHost Fundamentals Certifi-cate is highly valued by employers throughout the service and hospi-tality industries seeking staff who are well-trained in providing ex-ceptional customer ser-viced.

go2 Summer Photo Contestgo2 kicks off summer season with a $500 travel gift card photo contest

To celebrate the beginning of the summer season and Tourism Week in Canada, go2 – BC’s tourism human resource association – is giving away a $500 travel gift card to one lucky employee in the tourism and hospitality industry.

How much do your employees love working in tourism and hospitality?

Encourage your team to share their enthusiasm by entering the ‘People Make the Place’ Photo Contest today! Partici-pants simply need to submit a photo with the completed sentence: “I work in tourism be-cause _________.” Photos can be submit-ted through Instagram, Twitter or email.

Cranbrook’ s 2013 Youth ambassador candidates

Page 16: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Page 16 Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013 daily townsman / daily bulletin

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Page 17: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013 Page 17

NEWSdaily townsman / daily bulletin

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AssociAted Press

MADRID, Spain — A nun believed to hold the world record of 86 years cloistered in a monastery has died in Spain.

Sister Maria Romero, abbess of the Buena-fuente del Sistal monas-tery northeast of Ma-drid said Wednesday that Sister Teresita Bara-juen had died over-night. She was 105.

She entered the Cis-tercian monastery when she was 19, the

abbess said.Barajuen acknowl-

edged in interviews that like many young women at the time, she never intended being a nun but entered the monastery because of family pressure.

In 2011, Barajuen left the monastery for the first time in 40 years to meet retired Benedict XVI during a papal visit to Madrid. She had en-tered the monastery on the same day he was born.

Nun with record of 86 years in monastery dies in Spain AssociAted Press

An annual U.N. re-port on children in armed conflict details atrocities against minors in Mali for the first time.

The Secretary Gener-al’s report released Wednesday linked 21 countries to atrocities against minors includ-ing torture rape and forced recruitment.

The report says hun-dreds of children were enlisted by Islamic groups who seized northern Mali for 10 months last year before a France-led interven-

tion chased them out. The children were main-ly boys between 12 and 15. The document also said the U.N. received reports that pro-govern-ment militias recruited children.

The report also ac-cused both the Syrian government and rebel groups of committing atrocities against chil-dren in that country’s civil war.

The Syrian and Mali-an missions to the U.N. did not immediately re-turn requests for com-ment.

AssociAted PressPORT-AU-PRINCE,

Haiti — Britain re-opened its embassy in Haiti on Wednesday after being absent for nearly a half century, a part of an effort to broaden its diplomatic and business presence in the Western Hemi-sphere.

The new two-person mission will be housed at the Canadian Embas-sy in Port-au-Prince. The ambassador is Ste-ven Fisher, who is al-ready the British envoy

to the neighbouring Do-minican Republic. He will continue to live and work in the Dominican capital of Santo Domin-go.

Britain opened an embassy in El Salvador late last year and anoth-er will be reopened in Paraguay in July as part of a push by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office to strength British diplomacy in Latin America and the Carib-bean. A new British consulate was opened in late 2011 in the Bra-

zilian city of Recife. There was already a full embassy in Brazil’s cap-ital of Brasilia and con-sulates in the leading cities of Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo.

Visiting British For-eign Office Minister Hugo Swire was on hand for the Wednes-day ceremony in Port-au-Prince. He also met with President Michel Martelly and other Hai-tian officials during a two-day trip to encour-age bilateral trade and investment.

UN report lists atrocities against minors in Mali

Britain reopens embassy in Haiti after an absence of 47-years

Page 18: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

daily townsman / daily bulletin Page 18 Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013

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Tuesday 9:30am - 6:00pm

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Hours Location Store Info

Monday 9:30am - 6:00pm

Tuesday 9:30am - 6:00pm

Wednesday 9:30am - 6:00pm

Thursday 9:30am - 6:00pm

Friday 9:30am - 6:00pm

Saturday Closed

Sunday Closed

417B 304th StreetKimberly, BC V1A 3H4

Phone: 250.520.0226Fax: 250.520.0039

In the same building as Creekside Physiotherapy

www.remedys.ca

Gray’s Compounding Pharmacy

Gray’s Compounding Pharmacy Remedy’sRx provides you with a whole health approach, they have an enthusiastic staff whom they encourage to practice their passion.

Services available to you:

Vaccination Services

Compression Stocking Fitting

Anti-Aging Services

Stress Evaluation

Hormone Evaluations

Food Sensitivity Testing

Full prescription service

All third parties accepted

Professional compounding centre

Blister packaging

Delivery available to all Kimberly residents.

Kimberley Hwy 304 St

304 Ave

303 Ave

305 Ave

306 Ave

307 Ave

303 St

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Hours Location Store Info

Monday 9:30am - 6:00pm

Tuesday 9:30am - 6:00pm

Wednesday 9:30am - 6:00pm

Thursday 9:30am - 6:00pm

Friday 9:30am - 6:00pm

Saturday Closed

Sunday Closed

417B 304th StreetKimberly, BC V1A 3H4

Phone: 250.520.0226Fax: 250.520.0039

In the same building as Creekside Physiotherapy

www.remedys.ca

Gray’s Compounding Pharmacy

Gray’s Compounding Pharmacy Remedy’sRx provides you with a whole health approach, they have an enthusiastic staff whom they encourage to practice their passion.

Services available to you:

Vaccination Services

Compression Stocking Fitting

Anti-Aging Services

Stress Evaluation

Hormone Evaluations

Food Sensitivity Testing

Full prescription service

All third parties accepted

Professional compounding centre

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Phone: 250.427.0038Fax: 250.427.0039

Huatulco is one of the few areas in Mexico still un-

spoiled by tourism. When I looked at a map to see where I was travel-ling to, I was very sur-prised how far south it really is. Huatulco is lo-cated in the southwest corner of Mexico in the state of Oaxaca. Its sunny dry climate boasts more than 300 days of sunshine per year! It is truly a wonderful, un-spoiled vacation desti-nation.

There are two quaint towns nearby, La Cru-cecita and Santa Cruz. La Crucecita is a charm-ing “true Mexican” town with many shops, flea markets and restau-

rants. It is centred around the main square or “zocalo”, which is an attraction on its own.

You can stroll the streets to visit an amaz-ing church, or visit the weaving factory off a cobblestone street.

The area is also fa-mous for its black Oaxa-ca pottery which you can purchase at almost any shop.

Santa Cruz is a lively harbour area with restaurants and bou-tiques. Boats depart from Santa Cruz dock to take visitors to the many beaches close by and it is the cruise dock for major cruise lines.

The area is made up of a series of nine bays, and many small coves, home to more than 30 wonderful sandy beach-es. The views are amaz-ing and the jagged coastline is pristine.

Enjoy a day at one of the many deserted beaches. You can pack a cooler, hire a cab, get dropped off in the morning and arrange for a pick up in the af-ternoon!

For excursions, there is something for every-one. You can try river rafting, seven bays snor-kelling tours, ecological crocodile and turtle tours, waterfall tours. There is golfing, shop-ping, and relaxing.

There is also Copali-ta, an eco-archeological site that dates back to 500 BC.

The resorts range from three to five star and offer all-inclusive rates so your stay is worry free.

Both Transat and Sun Wing vacations offer this lovely destina-tion. For more informa-tion and to book your getaway, call Maritime Travel at 250-489-4788 or pop in to 1001 Baker Street, Cranbrook.

Huatulco: The unspoiled MexicoMaritime Travel’s Janice Frioult

goes off the beaten path in Mexico

Submitted

The “zocalo” or town square in La Crucecita is the centre of the charming Mexican town in the unspoiled Huatulco region.

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Page 19: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013 Page 19

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

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Thursday Afternoon/Evening June 13 Cbk. Kim. 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30 # # KSPS-PBS Sid Word Wild Elec News Busi PBS NewsHour Spo NW New Tricks Masterpiece Mystery! Well Charlie Rose $ $ CFCN Ellen Show News News CTV News etalk Theory CSI: Cri. Scene Theory Two (:01) Motive News News Daily Colbert % % KXLY-ABC Rachael Ray ABC News News NBA 2013 NBA Finals Kim Ent Insider What Would News Kim & & KREM-CBS Dr. Phil Dr. Oz Show News CBS News Inside Ac Theory Two Person-Interest Elementary News Late _ _ KHQ-NBC Ellen Show Judge Judge News News News Million. J’pard Wheel Save Save Office Parks (:01) Hannibal News Jay ( ( TSN U.S. Open Golf Sports E:60 Pre 2013 NBA Finals SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre ) ) NET Base Party Poker Blue MLB Baseball Sports Hocke UFC Count. Sportsnet Con. Hocke Blue + + GLOBAL BC Ricki Lake The Young News News News Hour Ent ET Save Save Have to Go? Elementary News , , KNOW Rob Clifford Ceorge Arthur Martha Wild Ani Rivers Ancient Clues Story-Science The Old, Weird Crows Ancient Clues ` ` CBUT Cor Ste NHL Hockey News 22 Min Nature/ Things Doc Zone The National News Georg 1 M CICT The Young News News News News ET Ent Elementary Save Save Have to Go? News Hour Fi ET J. 3 O CIVT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent Elementary Save Save Have to Go? News Hour ET J. 4 6 YTV Squir Side Par Par Par Par Young Young Boys Boys Spla Zoink’ Gags Gags Boys Young Weird Spla 6 . KAYU-FOX Ricki Lake Steve Harvey Simp Ray Theory Two Theory Two Hell’s Kitchen Have to Go? News Rock Sunny TMZ 7 / CNN Situation Room E. B. OutFront Cooper 360 Piers Morgan Cooper 360 E. B. OutFront Piers Morgan Cooper 360 E. B. OutFront 8 0 SPIKE Police Videos Police Videos Police Videos iMPACT Wrestling Police Videos Deadliest Jail Jail Jail Jail 9 1 HGTV Holmes/Home Income Prop. Hunt Hunt Income Prop. Res Res Hunt Hunt Income Prop. Res Res Hunt Hunt : 2 A&E The First 48 The First 48 Intervention Intervention Beyond Scared Beyond Scared Intervention Intervention Beyond Scared < 4 CMT Wil House Gags Gags Wipeout Rules Rules Funny Videos Gags Gags Rules Rules Funny Videos Wipeout = 5 W Murder-Hamp. Cand Cand Cand Love Love It-List It Property Bro Undercover Be the Boss Buying Property Bro ? 9 SHOW Continuum Look Again Beauty NCIS Continuum NCIS NCIS NCIS @ : DISC How/ How/ Daily Planet Pyros Overhaulin’ Overhaulin’ Last Car Stand Overhaulin’ Overhaulin’ Fast N’ Loud A ; SLICE Debt Debt Rent Eat St. Casino Casino The Hero 72 Hours Casino Casino The Hero 72 Hours Big Brother B < TLC Toddler-Tiara Say Say Say Say Four Weddings Four Weddings Four Weddings Four Weddings Say Say Say Say C = BRAVO Criminal Minds Flashpoint The Mentalist Boston’s Fine Graceland Flashpoint Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Boston’s Fine D > EA2 Bring It On (4:50) Mr. Baseball ReGenesis The Kid Caddyshack II (:40) Happy Gilmore Calcium Kid E ? TOON Scoob Loone Jim Jim Johnny Johnny Adven Loone Drag Deten Just Adven Ftur Family Amer. Robot Family Dating F @ FAM Wiz ANT Phi Austin Jessie Good ANT Shake Good Next Good Shake Win Warth Lizzie Raven Cory Prin G A WPCH Office Office Theory Theory Brown Payne Brown Payne Sein Sein Family Family Amer. Bedtime Stories Double H B COM Sein Sein Match N’Rad. Com Theory Gas Gags Just/Laughs Match Simp Theory Com Comedy Now! Daily Colbert I C TCM The Mark of Zorro Brewster’s Millions Please Believe Me (:15) Good Neighbor Sam Cinderella Jones K E OUT Mantracker Stor Stor Stor Stor Toy Toy Stor Stor Stor Stor Toy Toy Stor Stor Ghost Hunters L F HIST Real Inglorious Yukon Gold MASH MASH Real Inglorious Swamp People Yukon Gold Museum Se Big Rig Bounty Real Inglorious M G SPACE Inner Ripley Castle Stargate SG-1 Total Scare Orphan Black Inner Castle Star Trek: Voy. Ripley Total Scare N H AMC (3:45) Sixteen Candles (:45) The Breakfast Club Showville Town Town The Italian Job Show O I SPEED NASCAR Hub Pass Pass Auto Racing Lucas Oil Off Car Warriors Wreck Wreck Pinks Pinks Unique Whips P J TVTROP Four Weddings Housewives 3’s Co. 3’s Co. Frasier Frasier Rose. Rose. Debt ET 3’s Co. 3’s Co. Frasier Frasier 3rd 3rd W W MC1 Guard Margin Call (:20) Vampire Dog (7:55) Gone Inescapable (:05) Goon Artist ¨ ¨ KTLA Cunningham Maury Family Holly News News Two Two Vampire Beauty KTLA 5 News Friend Friend ≠ ≠ WGN-A Funny Videos Funny Videos Mother Mother Mother Mother News Videos Funny Videos Rules Rules Rock Scrubs Rock Sunny Ø Ø EA1 Ghost Ghostbusters II (:20) The Fourth Angel The Frighteners (9:50) Sleepwalkers (:20) Gothika ∂ ∂ VISN Sue Thomas Murder, She... Eas Jam Columbo Yes... Sue Thomas Rich in Love Super Popoff 102 102 MM New Music Prince Prince MMVA Trial Road Trip: Beer Pong Top 10 Prince Prince Road Trip: Beer Pong 105 105 SRC Petits Meurtres Cap sur l’été Paquet TJ C.-B. Sque Animo Prière Pénélope TJ Nou TJ C.-B.

Friday Afternoon/Evening June 14 Cbk. Kim. 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30 # # KSPS-PBS Sid Word Wild Biz Kid News Busi PBS NewsHour Wash Need Chihuly Out American Masters Pione Charlie Rose $ $ CFCN Ellen Show News News CTV News etalk Theory Blue Bloods Shark Tank The Following News News The Mentalist % % KXLY-ABC Rachael Ray The Doctors News ABC News News Ent Insider Shark Tank What Would 20/20 News Kim & & KREM-CBS Dr. Phil Dr. Oz Show News CBS News Inside Ac Undercover Hawaii Five-0 Blue Bloods News Late _ _ KHQ-NBC Ellen Show Judge Judge News News News Million. J’pard Wheel Dateline NBC Rock Center News Jay ( ( TSN U.S. Open Golf Sports 30 for 30 CFL Football SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre ) ) NET Poker Tour MLB Blue MLB Baseball Sportsnet Con. IndyCar Racing Sportsnet Con. Hocke Blue + + GLOBAL BC Ricki Lake The Young News News News Hour Ent ET Bones Take It All 16x9 News , , KNOW Rob Clifford Ceorge Arthur Martha Wild Ani Parks Lions Gate Ballykissangel Miss Marple Architects ` ` CBUT Cor Ste NHL Hockey News 22 Min Market Mercer the fifth estate The National News Georg 1 M CICT The Young News News News News ET Ent 16x9 Bones Take It All News Hour Fi ET J. 3 O CIVT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent 16x9 Bones Take It All News Hour ET J. 4 6 YTV Squir Side Kung Kung Kung Kung 17 Again (:15) Picture This! Young Boys Boys 6 . KAYU-FOX Ricki Lake Steve Harvey Simp Ray Theory Two Theory Two Bones The Following News Rock Sunny TMZ 7 / CNN Situation Room E. B. OutFront Cooper 360 Piers Morgan A Cooper Stroumboulop Cooper 360 A Cooper Stroumboulop 8 0 SPIKE Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Remember the Titans Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Res 9 1 HGTV Holmes/Home Bryan Bryan Hunt Hunt Flea Flea Million Dollar Hunt Hunt Flea Flea Million Dollar Hunt Hunt : 2 A&E Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor < 4 CMT The The The Blue Collar Comedy Tour Swamp Pawn Ham Ham Wipeout Swamp Pawn Blue Collar = 5 W (3:00) Rivals Love It-List It Love Love Love It-List It Prop Deal The The Sweet Home Alabama The ? 9 SHOW Ogre Tasmanian Devils Boardwalk Em. (:15) The Other Guys (:45) Boardwalk Empire @ : DISC How/ How/ Daily Planet Never Never Last Car Stand Mayday Mayday Last Car Stand Never Never Mayday A ; SLICE Debt Debt Rent Eat St. Pickers Money Money Collection Pickers Money Money Collection Big Brother B < TLC Say Say DC Cupcakes: Some Some Randy Rescue Gown Gown Randy Rescue Gown Gown Some Some DC Cupcakes: C = BRAVO Criminal Minds Flashpoint The Mentalist Criminal Minds The Listener Flashpoint Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds D > EA2 Field (:35) Bruce Almighty (:20) Casper Ghost Dad (:25) Magicians Austin Powers Austin E ? TOON Scoob Loone Jim Jim Johnny Johnny Beast Beast Beast Beast Aveng Star Batman Year One Bat Fugget Dating F @ FAM Wiz ANT Phi ANT Dog Good Shake Austin ANT Jessie Beverly Hills 3 Good Get a Clue Prin G A WPCH Office Office Theory Theory Brown Payne Brown Payne Sein Sein Family Family Amer. Get Smart Mon H B COM Sein Sein Match Nathan Men- Theory Gas Gags Just/Laughs Match LOL :-) Theory JFL Just/Laughs Comedy Now! I C TCM (3:45) The Seventh Dawn Dark Passage Nightfall The Burglar Shoot the Piano Player Bur K E OUT Mantracker Stor Stor Stor Stor Haunted Coll. Stor Stor Stor Stor Haunted Coll. Stor Stor Ghost Hunters L F HIST Battle Castle Museum Se MASH MASH Vikings Museum Se Snake Monster: Titanoboa! Vikings Battle Castle M G SPACE Inner Ripley Castle Stargate SG-1 Let Me In Castle Star Trek: Voy. Let Me In N H AMC Usual The Italian Job Kingdom of Heaven Breaking Bad Breaking Bad Breaking Bad O I SPEED ARCA Series Trackside At... SP NASCAR Racing ARCA RE/MAX Series Racing Trackside At... A Racer’s Life Unique Whips P J TVTROP Outlaw Bikers Secu Secu Pickers Pickers Pickers Debt ET 3’s Co. 3’s Co. King King 3rd 3rd W W MC1 Big Moonrise Kingdom (:10) Peepers (:35) Silent House House at End (:45) Your Highness Seek ¨ ¨ KTLA Cunningham Maury Family Holly News News Two Two Nikita Supernatural News Sports Friend Friend ≠ ≠ WGN-A Funny Videos Funny Videos Mother Mother Mother Mother News at Nine Funny Videos Rules Rules Rock Scrubs Rock Sunny Ø Ø EA1 6th (:25) Virus (:05) Red Dawn Dante’s Peak (9:50) Soylent Green Conan the Destroyer ∂ ∂ VISN Sue Thomas Murder, She... Eas Wine Gaither Gospel God’s Time- Sue Thomas On Golden Pond Super Popoff 102 102 MM New Music MuchMusic Countdown Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (:15) Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen 105 105 SRC Le Vallon Cap sur l’été Paquet TJ C.-B. Encore toi! Vancouver TJ Nou TJ C.-B.

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Page 20: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Page 20 Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013

COMICSAnnie’s MAilbox

by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar

HoroScopeSby Jacqueline Bigar

daily townsman / daily Bulletin

For Better or Worse By Lynn Johnston

Garfield By Jim Davis

Hagar the Horrible By Dick Browne

Baby Blues By Kirkman and Scott

Rhymes with Orange By Hillary B. Price

ARIES (March 21-April 19) You will sense some volatility in the air; however, you should note that this energy most likely is coming from you. Though this might surprise you, do your best to keep communication moving. You’ll enjoy the series of calls that come in. Make plans. To-night: Think “weekend.” TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You might be taken aback by people’s behavior and, conse-quently, what you learn about them. Stay even and direct in how you deal with this volatility. Note your reaction, but choose not to visibly react. Think posi-tively instead. Tonight: Make a family-favorite meal. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Do not stand on ceremony with someone. Simply call that per-son and make plans. If it is con-cerning a professional matter, you might want to schedule a meeting. If the other party is not enthusiastic, simply drop his or her participation in a project. To-night: You’ll find the right words.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Your instincts are working over-time. Why not test them out, and then keep track of how of-ten you are right? No one needs to know if you are uncomfort-able sharing. Use care with your spending -- you could be mis-reading someone. Tonight: Treat a friend to drinks and munchies. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be more in touch with some-one’s feelings. You would pre-fer to know up front if there is something on this person’s mind. A call from a distance could result in a change of plans, and it also might cause you to rethink a personal matter. To-night: Find your friends and join them. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You might enjoy some down-time, in which you feel less pres-sured by others. The real issue has to do with how much you are willing to give. Stay in touch with a key friend or an associate. This person often play devil’s ad-vocate for you in situations like this. Tonight: Get plenty of rest! LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)

Close friends make all the dif-ference. They give you feedback, and they encourage you. You don’t have to incorporate their ideas, but it’s nice to have them behind you. News comes in that could cause you to reconsider an important decision. Tonight: Music, fun and friends. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You might want to rethink a per-sonal matter that could be driv-ing your professional or outside life. A friend, family member or loved one might be trying to run interference. Listen to this person’s insight and feedback, if you trust him or her. Tonight: In the limelight. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Reach out to an expert or some-one at a distance. The more you know, the better your decisions will be. A loved one could be provocative, yet he or she has ingenious ideas. Your creativity will surge as a result of dealing with him or her directly. Tonight: Mix relaxing with fun. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) A partner holds the key to a change in your life. The issue

lies in how well you relate to this person and whether you can see eye to eye. Only time will tell. If you can be reflective, you will respond in a very different way. Tonight: Join a friend or loved one for dinner. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Move forward in a positive man-ner. You might need to dodge an emotional wall that some-one has constructed in order to achieve the results you desire. Stay calm when dealing with the unexpected. Others will seek you out, so make time for them. Tonight: Fun with a loved one. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Pace yourself, as you have a lot of ground to cover. If you feel lucky, take a bit of a risk. Buy a lottery ticket, or express feelings to a loved one that you have held back. Consider making exercise a part of your daily life. Know that it will happen naturally. Tonight: Run errands. BORN TODAY Comedian Tim Allen (1953), ac-tor Richard Thomas (1951), poet William Butler Yeats (1865) ***

Dear Annie: About a year ago, I ran into a woman I used to spend time with in high school. We are both married, although she is going through a divorce. Since that day, she and I have been talking quite a bit. We discuss a lot of different things, all on a platonic level. The problem is, I believe I am becoming infatuated with her again. I had a thing for her throughout high school but never had the courage to ask her out, probably because I was too afraid to lose our friendship. I am now in a situation where I won’t be home for a few months. I know I will miss her communication. I feel I’m doing some-thing wrong. Is this normal? Do I need to just keep my distance and cease contact? -- Back in High School Dear Back: You recognize that you are “becoming” infatuated (we think you are already there) and will miss this woman’s communication. The fact that she is going through a divorce also puts you in an awk-ward position, because she may lean on you for comfort, and when she becomes avail-able, you will find her hard to resist. Please back far, far away before you find yourself enmeshed in an affair, whether emotional or physical. If your marriage needs revitalizing, work on it. Consider how your wife would feel if she found out how close you are to this other woman. How would you feel if she did this to you? You are playing with fire. Stop. Dear Annie: This summer, I have my con-cert tickets ordered and am excited to see some of my favorite performers on stage. However, I’m unsure of proper etiquette af-ter a problem I encountered last year. I went to a country concert, which meant plenty of beer and dancing. The problem was, as soon as the audience stood up, the people directly behind me started yelling at my friend and me to sit down. We did, but we couldn’t see a thing because of the doz-ens of rows of people standing in front of us. We stood back up, only to be yelled at again. I turned around and explained that every-one else was standing and they should do the same. They were angry and continued to yell throughout the concert. After the con-cert, they sarcastically thanked us for ruin-ing their night. What is the right way to handle people like this? Should I sit and see nothing because misery loves company? -- Juliana Dear Juliana: Concerts have evolved into two basic types: The formal concert, where everyone sits, and the informal concert, where people often stand. Once the people in the rows ahead of you get up, you need to do the same in order to see. We have advised people who attend such concerts to try to get seats in the front row or first-row balcony if they want their view unobstructed. Those who are in wheelchairs often find there is a handicapped section, although it may be necessary to find an usher and inquire. It is unrealistic at informal events to ex-pect hundreds of other people to sit down for your convenience. If this happens again, apologize to the people behind you and sug-gest that they, too, stand up or move closer to the aisle for a better view. You are not ob-ligated to sit if the people in front of you are standing. Dear Annie: “An Anxious Mom” was reluc-tant to give money from her late husband’s will to her 58-year-old unemployed son who is living on his veterans benefits. One of your suggestions was to put the money in a trust. Please suggest she check into creating a Special Needs Trust for her son. If she gives the money directly to him, he will probably spend it very quickly, but he could also lose his VA benefits. She will need to consult a lawyer knowledgeable in these matters. -- M. Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitch-ell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to [email protected], or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. To find out more about Annie’s Mailbox and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.cre-ators.com.COPYRIGHT 2013 CREATORS.COM

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Self Help

July 9 - 27

Wizard of Oz August 3 - 14

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Page 21: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013 Page 21daily townsman / daily bulletinPAGE 24 Thursday, June 13, 2013 DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN

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GLEN JAKE NOLIN 1938 - 2013

On the evening of Thursday, June 6, 2013, Glen Jake Nolin passed away at the East Kootenay Regional Hospital at the age of 75 years.

Glen was born in Vanguard, Saskatchewan on March 29, 1938. Glen spent approximately 10 years in work camps as a heavy equipment operator

building roads. He came to BC following job opportunities and to be with family. He settled in Golden, BC where he met his wife, Eleanor and started his own family. Glen was a man of many talents and worked in various fields. Over the years, Glen was a bartender, janitor, milkman, school bus driver/union rep. He spent the last 20 years working at the Donald Mill in different positions. Upon retirement, Glen worked hard as a handyman. He never advertised but was always in demand. He was well known for his work ethic and honesty.

Glen was well known in the community and spent time volunteering and helping whoever needed a hand. He was very active in the Golden Seniors Centre. He was also active in the Cranbrook Seniors Centre and was instrumental in getting their woodworking shop up and running. Glen also volunteered for the local food bank in Cranbrook.

Glen had a great love for the outdoors. He spent much of his spare time hunting, fishing, hiking and camping. He loved to take his wife and children on outdoor adventures and later his grandchildren.

Glen leaves loving memories to be cherished by his beloved wife of 49 years, Eleanor and his daughter Ann (Glen Carlson) and grandchildren; Erica Seitz (Scott) and Nolin and their father Ken Hoodicoff. Additionally his daughter Lorna Heisi and her children, Joshua and Matthew who entered his life 10 years ago. Also left behind are his brothers and sisters, Stan (Eileen), Lila (Don), Philip (Liz), Stephanie, Noella, Larry and Leslie (Lisa) and numerous nieces and nephews.

Glen was predeceased by his son, Kevin, his sister Etalia Roy, brother Clifford Nolin, brothers-in-law Brian Pakka and John Boltz and his nephews Buster Roy, Chad Nolin and Murray Gilfillan. He was also predeceased by his parents and in-laws Susan and Edward, Antoine and Adelia, Margaret and Paul, Charlie and Evelyn.

Glen was a very kind and gentle soul. He had a loving and generous heart, and was always giving to others. He was well known for his quick wit and twinkle in his eye. He will never be forgotten.

A Celebration of Glen’s Life was held at the Cranbrook Senior Citizens Hall on Wednesday, June 12 at 2:00 pm. If friends desire, memorial donations may be made in Glen’s memory to the Canadian Cancer Society, 19 - 9th Ave. S., Cranbrook, BC V1C 2L9 or to the 4th Annual John Boltz Memorial Kettle River Run - BC Cancer Foundation (www.midwaylibrary.bc.ca). 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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ON THE WEB:

Lawrence Joseph Romano

Lawrence was born and raised in Creston, leaving for a brief time to work, but he soon returned home and then worked surveying. He met Faye Tangen in 1950 and they married in 1953. They made Creston their home and raised three children. He worked at the Creston sawmill until his retirement in 1990.Lawrence was a member of the Eagles Club and the oyal Canadian Legion. He en oyed shing, woodworking and cooking but what he loved most of all was spending time with his family.Lawrence was predeceased by his daughter Cheryl Marie; grandson Joshua James; parents Joe and Tress; sisters Gloria and Bev; brother, Roy; brothers-in-law, Harold (Bonnie) Bonnet, Vern Hawkins and sister-in-law Kaye Romano.He will be dearly missed by his wife Faye; son Larry (Carolyn) Romano; daughter Shelley (Barry) Wisdom; son Rick (Wanda) Romano; grandchildren Gesse (Michelle) Romano, Zabrina (Stuart) Ackerman, Aaron Romano and Staci Romano; great-granddaughter Kahlia Ackerman; brothers Joe (Dorothy) Romano, Gary Romano, Merv (Jeannie) Romano and Bob (Gloria) Romano; sisters Lorraine Kofoed, Gail Kofoed, Sharon (Butch) Dawson and many, many nieces and nephews.

A Celebration of Life Gathering will be heldJuly 7, 2013 at 11:00 a.m. at Lister Park

with Pastor arry abersto k of iating.Any friends wishing to make a

memorial contribution may do so tothe Canadian Diabetes Association

360 - 1385 West 8th Ave,Vancouver, BC, V6H 3V9.

Lawrence Joseph Romano passed away peacefully on May 30, 2013 with family by his side, in Creston, BC

at the age of 83 years.

1931 ~ 2013

Diane Phyllis Steenson (nee Lilley)Sept 1, 1941 - June 13, 2012

In memory of an amazing mother, daughter, sister, aunt and friend

Grieve not too long but look around,In earthly things she can be foundThe falling snow, a growing tree,

In every breeze fl ying free.

As you were, you will be remembered.Always loved and missed every day.

Your sister Ileane (Gordon), Michelle, Shirley (Bert), Derek, Kelly

The family of Hank Campsall sadly announces that Hank took his last ride, Saturday,

June 8, 2013. There will be no services at Hank’s request. In lieu of cards or

donations, Hank’s family asks that you please write down any or all of your

‘Hank Stories’ and send them to: N. Campsall, Box 91, Fort Steele, BC

V0B 1N0A celebration of life will be held August 24,

2013 at the Henderson Pavillion, Wycliffe exhibition grounds

between 2 & 6 pm.

In Memoriam

Daycare CentersFULL-TIME or part-time spot available in Registered Day-care for children aged 0-5years. Please call (250)581-1328

Obituaries Obituaries

Coming EventsTHE 37TH ANNUAL

Cranbrook Firefi ghter’s Fishing Clinic.

When: Sunday, June 16/13 (Fathers Day), from 8:30am-12:30pm.Where: Idlewild Park in Cranbrook.Who: Children 15 years old and under.What: Fishing! No cost or pre-registration required. Refreshments will also be served.

Many prizes to be won.

Obituaries

PersonalsKOOTENAY’S BEST

ESCORTS

*For your safety and comfort call the best.

*Quality and V.I.P Service Guarantee

*Licensed studio

- Gina, 25, Brunette blue-eyed beauty.

NEW - Phoenix, 27, Mocha Latte, busty BBW

~New girls coming soon~

“Spice up your life”

(250)417-2800in/out calls daily

Hiring

Obituaries

PersonalsNEW,

Smokin’ hot girl in town. Call Diamond

1-778-870-1600.

Garage Sales Garage Sales

in June Sale!

JuneTelus Community

Ambassdors Saturday

Start your shopping early with us.We have a large selection of knitted and sewn items ideal for Christmas gifts.

Excellent prices.We will also be selling coffee.

Sale starts at am at our of ce44 - 1 1 th Ave. S.

Kittie corner from Rotary Park

DOWNSIZING SALE! Stereo/speakers -

Lots of Misc!! Sat., June 15 and Sun., June 16. 9am til 3pm.

1004 19th Ave S., Cranbrook

ESTATE SALE Sat&Sun June 15-16 - 8 to 3pm. 134 - 13 Ave S CBK - Collectibles, furniture, kitch-en & HHG, crafts, tools and much much more!!! [email protected]

ESTATE SALE Sat&Sun June 15-16 - 8 to 3pm. 134 - 13 Ave S CBK - Collectibles, furniture, kitch-en & HHG, crafts, tools and much much more!!! [email protected]

GARAGE SALE: Sat. June 15, 9am to 3pm.

531 11th St S. Curio cabinets, end tables, LazyBoy chair, Singer Sew-ing cabinet and chair, craft supplies, walking cane, fi le cabinet, 2013 Tundra Truck fl oor mats, Truck Swing tool box, tons of household and

decor items.

GARAGE SALE: Saturday, June 15.

8am til 2pm. 964 313th Drive,

Marysville. Canopy, kids stuff(dance shoes), tools, household

items.

GARAGE SALE: Saturday, June 15,

8am to 3pm. Tools, tables, Harley parts,

camping, household, GOOD STUFF.

313 6th St S., Cranbrook

HUGE ACREAGE MOVING SALE.

Saturday, June 15. 8am to 3pm.

7384 Turner Road, Wycliffe. Furniture, large & small ap-

pliances, dishes, ornaments, pictures, tools, yard tractor with mover & blower - you

name it.Follow signs.

HUGE, COMMUNITY Garage Sale

Home Hardware is hosting a weekly community garage sale every Saturday from

May 25th to Sept. 28th. Rent as many 4’ x 8’ tables and a reserved spot to sell your

stuff for only $10.ea. Hours are 10am - 3pm.

Call Brad @ 250-426-6288 to reserve your spot today and make sure to come by

this Saturday for the Biggest Garage Sale

in town!

HUGE, COMMUNITY Garage Sale

Home Hardware is hosting a weekly community garage sale every Saturday from

May 25th to Sept. 28th. Rent as many 4’ x 8’ tables and a reserved spot to sell your

stuff for only $10.ea. Hours are 10am - 3pm.

Call Brad @ 250-426-6288 to reserve your spot today and make sure to come by

this Saturday for the Biggest Garage Sale

in town!

HUGE GARAGE SALE: Meadowbrook.

Saturday and Sunday, June 15 & 16,

8:30 am to 1:30pm. 8047 Sorensen Rd.

Kitchen goods, fi shing, camping, furniture, child’s bed, sewing machines and

lots more.

MOVING SALE. Furniture, lots of household

misc., tools, fi shing stuff, garden tools. June 15 & 16. 8am to 2pm.

No early birds.2301 8th Ave S.

(by Colombo Hall)

TWO GARAGE SALES: Chapman Camp, Kimberley.

106 Ave and 109 Ave. Sat. June 15.

8:30am to 1pm. Lots of goodies. Dresser,

kids stuff, printers, appliances and more.

CLASSIFIEDSWILL SELL

WHAT YOU WANT SOLD!CALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202

Page 22: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Page 22 Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013 daily townsman / daily bulletin DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN Thursday, June 13, 2013 PAGE 25

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

Sympathy & Understanding

2200 - 2nd Street SouthCranbrook, BC V1C 1E1

250-426-3132

1885 Warren AvenueKimberley, BC V1A 1R9

250-427-7221www.mcphersonfh.com

Ph: 250.426.6006Fx: 250.426.6005

2104D 2nd Street S.Cranbrook, BC

[email protected]

Kootenay Monument Installations

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

Granite & Bronze Memorials, Dedication Plaques,

Benches, Memorial Walls, Gravesite Restorations,

Sales & Installations

www.kootenaymonument.ca

IN-HOME CONSULTATION OR VISIT OUR SHOWROOM

End of Life?Bereaved?

May We Help?

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

Eternally RememberYour Loved One

BHeadstones B Grave Markers BUrns B

We will help you create a special memorial including personalized engraving and installation.

2873 Cranbrook St., Cranbrook

250-426-6278kootenaygranite.com

Have you considered a lasting legacy?

250.426.1119www.ourfoundation.ca

[email protected]

Reasons people choose to give through community foundations.

#10Your Gift is a Gift for Good and Forever.

We build endowment funds that benefi t the community forever and help create personal legacies.

BUILD YOUR CAREER WITH US

Tolko Industries Ltd. is a forest products company with marketing, resource management and manufacturing operations throughout Western Canada. We are currently seeking a Maintenance Supervisor to join our team at our Armstrong Division located in the North Okanagan Region of British Columbia. We are looking for a key member of our team who will be engaged in our pursuit of World Class Maintenance Performance.RESPONSIBILITIESThe Maintenance Supervisor is responsible for providing supervision of maintenance crews to maintain and improve operational performance and ensure quality and machine safety standards. Weekend work supervision will be required.QUALIFICATIONS:

minimum 3 to 5 years’ experience in forest industry.

Strong values of Safety, Respect, Progressiveness, Open Communication, Integrity and Profit guide us at Tolko.

TO APPLY:If you are interested in exploring this opportunity and being part of our community please visit our website at: www.tolko.com and submit your resume by June 20, 2013.

Maintenance SupervisorArmstrong Division

PRAIRIE HOLDINGS INC.

NOW HIRINGClass 1 Drivers needed for a busy and expanding company. Must have drivers abstract, and a valid class 1 license. Experience in the Forestry/Logging industry would be helpful. Wages based on percentage or hourly with benefits after 3 months. For out of town employees, accommodations will be provided.

Experienced Journeyman, Heavy Duty Truck Mechanics need-ed to join our busy and expanding company. Previous experience in the Forestry/Logging industry is helpful. Wages are hourly based on experience with benefits after 3 months.

Operators needed for our busy and expanding company. Experi-ence with:Feller Buncher Skidder Processors Excavators Log LoadersPrevious Forestry/Logging experience helpful. Wages are hourly based on experience with benefits after 3 months.

Please respond to: Prairie Holdings

P.O. Box 787 Cranbrook, BC

Fax: 250-489-0768 or Email: [email protected]

Planer Technician #1

Apply today at www.tolko.com

Do you thrive in a dynamic and challenging environment with opportuni e or con nuou growth and development?

FULL-TIME CUSTOM HOME INSTALLER / OUTSIDE SALESPERSON

EXCLUSIVE CONTRACT POSITION WITH ANDRE’S ELECTRONIC EXPERTS

JOB DESCRIPTION: • Installation of televisions, home audio, and custom

home theatre systems in client’s home or business• Outside sales in order to generate new installation

and related electronics business. (Andre’s will provide any publications or sales tools required to develop your business.)

• Limited in-store installation and setup of television and home theatre displays as required

• Delivery of televisions, home theatre systems, and related equipment within the East Kootenay area

WE OFFER:• Guaranteed monthly income• Excellent commission pay on all install labour sales

(both generated within the store and from outside sales)

• Commission on all outside product sales generated by installer

WE REQUIRE YOU TO PROVIDE:• Reliable vehicle (pickup truck or van recommended

for purpose of television and audio deliveries)• Valid driver’s license and vehicle insurance• WCB coverage• Your own tools required for the job• Gas (mileage will be paid on deliveries/jobs outside

the Cranbrook area)• Outgoing, positive attitude, with an attention to de-

tail, a passion for excellence and a drive to succeed.Special consideration given to applicants with satellite installation and/or previous

related experience.Please email resume to: [email protected]

Or apply in person with resume (attention Trevor) to:Andre’s Electronics Experts101 Kootenay Street NorthCranbrook, BC V1C 3T5

Thank you in advance to all interested applicants, however only short-listed candidates will be contacted.

Interim Junior Magazine Editor and Newspaper Reporter

Location: Invermere, B.C.The full-time, 8-12 week position involves, but is not limited to, content gathering, writing and editing two mag-azine publications as well as being part of the newsroom for two community newspapers. This position involves working alongside the newspaper Editor and two reporters taking photos, writing stories, and laying out and editing pages in InDesign. Some weekend and evening work is required.

QualificationsThis exciting, challenging and varied position requires a very organized writer with strong editing and journalistic skills. As the final set of eyes on magazine pages, meticulous attention to detail is needed.

A journalism degree or diploma, plus a minimum of 3-5 years’ newsroom experience is required. Mac OS X platform experience, Photoshop skills, proficiency with InDesign and previous editing experience is essential, as is a reliable vehicle and full driver’s licence.

To apply, send a copy of your resume, along with writing samples, cover letter and references to

Rose-Marie Regitnig, PublisherThe Columbia Valley Pioneer

Box 868, 8 – 1008, 8th Avenue, Invermere, B.C. V0A 1K0

[email protected] www.columbiavalleypioneer.com

N EW S PA P E R

Employment Employment Employment EmploymentEmployment

Help Wanted

Part-Time Position Available at Meadowbrook Motors

(Red’s Country Store). MUST BE AVAILABLE TO WORK ALL

SHIFTS (MON-SAT). Please APPLY IN PERSON with a detailed resumé,

including 3 recent references.

Obituaries

Employment

Help WantedAn Alberta Oilfi eld Company is hiring dozer and excavator operators. Lodging and meals provided. Drug testing re-quired. Call (780)723-5051 Edson, Alta.

HUSKY TRUCK stop requires FT/PT cook, server & prep person. Apply in person during offi ce hours at 1604 Cran-brook St. N., on the strip. Info to Kathleen. Positions open now.

Obituaries

Employment

Help WantedNEED A NANNY.

July 1 - Sept. 1. Live-in, to care for a 13 year old girl. Monday to Friday. Horse

knowledge an asset. Must have fi rst-aid ticket. Private room. References required-wage negotiable. Please call

Jerry @ 250-427-1090

Obituaries

Career Opportunities

Career Opportunities

Help Wanted Help Wanted

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?

Page 23: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013 Page 23daily townsman / daily bulletinPAGE 26 Thursday, June 13, 2013 DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN

Please apply by email or fax at:F: (250) 489-0063 Email: [email protected]

Assited Living Workers,Registered Care Aides, &Licensed Practical Nurses

NOW HIRING:

Joseph Creek VillageCranbrook, BC

Please apply by email or fax at:F: (250) 489-0063 Email: [email protected]

Staffing SchedulerAs part of Joseph Creek Village human resource team the Staffing Scheduler is responsible for the coordination of scheduling large volumes of employees throughout multiple departments and shifts.

NOW HIRING:

Joseph Creek VillageCranbrook, BC

www.cbt.or Join us:

This is a full-time position, based out of our Golden office. View details at www.cbt.org/careers or request them from Debra Stewart at 1.800.505.8998.

Résumés accepted via email to [email protected]

Careers at CBTAdministrative Assistant, Sector Initiatives

Oh Dog’sRescue and Adoption250-429-3453the place to pick up the special dog for your family

[email protected]

PUBLIC AUCTION SALE

SALE DATE: SAT. JUNE 22, 201310 am BC time/11 am Alta Time

SALE SITE: 1001 INDUSTRIAL ROAD 1(Watch for Signs) Cranbrook, B.C.

Viewing Friday June 21, 2pm to 5 pm Alta Time

FOR ACCU-FORM VENTURES LTD.Contactors of Concrete Curbs, Sidewalks, Walls & Rentals

Partial list only;Equipment, Power tools, supplies, something just for you.

2008 Double axle cargo trailer, 2008 Mirage flat deck trailer, 2002Link-Belt excavator (2) buckets, 2002 Power curber PC 150, 1999Power curber 5700-B, 1994 Case skid steer 2 buckets and fork,

1986 IHC flat deck with HIab, 1981 Chev 70, 5 ton truck with deck and eighty foot ladder crane, (2) Modular homes, (4) sheds, Bartell & Master power trowels, Honda generators, compressors,

cut-off saws, insulated blankets, many power tools, bldg supplies, concrete forms, waler bars, many items too numerous to mention,

catalogue available on site.

Terms of sale: Cash or Bank approved cheques. All buyers must register, 12% buyers’ premium added.

(Auctioneers note: This is the right time to buy, be your own boss)

SALE CONDUCTED BYGOLDMAN BROS. AUCTIONEERS INC.

(The sound that sells)A.O. (Art) Robatzek

Chief Auctioneer Since 1957P.O. Box 478 Vernon, B.C. Canada V1T 6M4Tel: (250) 545-6251, Fax: (250)545-4224

INFO 24/7 tex-Cell & auction Site: 250-549-0278Email: [email protected]

RAIN OR

SHINE

Employment Employment Employment

Help Wanted

We’re looking for Experienced

People.We offer our

people...

WE ARE LOOKING FOR...

Help Wanted Help Wanted

Employment

Help Wanted

CREATIVE AND caring ECE worker for childcare centre for a maternity leave re-placement. Must have ECE certifi cate, fi rst aid and crimi-nal record check. Drop off resume at Alliance Friend-ship Place Daycare Centre, 1200 Kootenay Street N., Cranbrook, or fax to: 250-489-0129 or email to: [email protected] Phone inquiries to Jo-Anne Trotter: 250-489-4526

Secure Vernon company look-ing for Marine Mechanic, with good customer service, atten-tion to detail, must have valid boat license, drivers license an asset. Fast paced environ-ment. [email protected]

Services

Financial Services

Need CA$H Today?

Own A Vehicle?Borrow Up To $25,000

No Credit Checks!Cash same day, local offi ce.www.PitStopLoans.com

1-800-514-9399

Career Opportunities

Services

Legal Services

CRIMINAL RECORD?Guaranteed Record Removal

since 1989. Confi dential, Fast, & Affordable. Our A+BBB Rating

assures EMPLOYMENT &TRAVEL FREEDOM.

Call for FREE INFO. BOOKLET1-8-NOW-PARDON(1-866-972-7366)

RemoveYourRecord.com

Career Opportunities

Services

Contractors

GIRO

Pets

Auctions

Services

Masonry & Brickwork

WANTED: Looking for free,used or new, red chimney bricks. Will pick up.

250-427-1022

Paving/Seal/Coating

SERVING ALLTHE KOOTENAYS

POWERPAVING

NOTICE

BLACKTOPNOW!

NO JOB TOO SMALL

Driveways & Parking Lots

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

CALL NOW!

Pets

Auctions

WE ARE ALWAYS

LOOKING FOR CARRIERS.

Give us a call and start walking

today!

250-427-5333www.dailybulletin.ca

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

Cove

ring Yo

ur Comm

unity

Get your news delivered daily - subscribe!

Far-ReachingDelivery!

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

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

Call For Home Delivery in Kimberley:250-427-5333.

Page 24: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Page 24 Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013 daily townsman / daily bulletin DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN Thursday, June 13, 2013 PAGE 27

40 FT 2003 “ULTIMATE FREEDOM” WINNEBAGO

3 slides, 400 HP Cummins Diesel, Allison transmission, Corian counters, leather seats, new tires, CB, auto seek sat. dish,

diesel heat/hot water, AC/heat pump, 50 amp generator, Eurostyle warmer dryer, CD, wood cabinets throughout, air

brakes, heated storage, electric awning, microwave/convection oven, gas counter-top range, 2 door fridge, exhaust brake, cruise

control, full of extras, very clean, 65,000± miles. This is a high end unit with nothing spared

$99,000 WILL TAKE TRADES

Call 250-426-6913 College of the Rockies

Invitation to TenderThe College of the Rockies invites tenders for:

Janitorial ServicesCranbrook Campus

Sealed tenders, clearly marked "JANITORIAL SERVICES – CRANBROOK CAMPUS" will be received until 16:00 hrs. (4:00 pm local time), Wednesday, August 7, 2013 at the o ce o :

Facilities Manager College of the Rockies 2700 College Way, PO Box 8500 Cranbrook, B.C. V1C 5L7 Phone: (250) 489-8227

ender d cuments and s eci cati ns will be available t interested contractors at the Cranbrook Campus Facilities

ce oom

A mandatory site meeting for all interested contractors has been arranged for Friday, July 26, 2013 at 08:30 hrs. (8:30 am local time) in Room S220 (Summit Hall Build-ing) at the College of the ockies Cranbrook Campus

he College of the ockies reserves the right to waive infor-malities in, or reject any or all tenders, or accept the tender deemed most favourable in the interest of the College of the ockies he lowest or any tender will not necessarily be accepted

For further information please contact: Allan Knibbs, Manager, Facilities, College of the ockies, College

ay, Cranbrook, C C , hone - - www.cotr.bc.ca

Merchandise for Sale

Antiques / Vintage1947 Buick Sedan Super all original, good running

condition $4800 OBO Call 250-365-5003

Free Items

WANTED: Looking for free, used or new, red chimney bricks. Will pick up.

250-427-1022

Merchandise for Sale

Heavy Duty Machinery

A-STEEL SHIPPING DRYSTORAGE CONTAINERS

Used 20’40’45’53 in stock.SPECIAL

44’ x 40’ Container Shopw/steel trusses $13,800!

Sets up in one day!40’ Containers under $2500!

Call Toll Free AlsoJD 544 & 644 wheel loaders

JD 892D LC ExcavatorPh. 1-866-528-7108 Delivery BC and AB

www.rtccontainer.com

Merchandise for Sale

Heavy Duty Machinery

FREE GOLF for 2 in Kalispell, MT - With the purchase of $500 in used equipment from Parsons Kubota and Bobcat of Kalispell. Offer expires June 30th, 2013.

www.parsonstractor.com 406-755-0628

Misc. WantedWANTED: Looking for free, used or new, red chimney bricks. Will pick up.

250-427-1022

Merchandise for Sale

Misc. WantedTrue Coin Collector Looking to Purchase Collections, Accu- mulations, Olympic Gold and Silver coins, Bills + Not melting down, Serious Collector. Call: Coin Couple 1-778-281-0030

Real Estate

For Sale By Owner

Bungalow with finished basement across from

Joseph Creek from St. Mary’s School. Upgrades including furnace, windows, kitchen,

bathrooms.

$259,900 For more information call Denis at 250-919-8834.

FOR SALE

2413 4th Street South Cran-brook B.C. 3 Bedroom 3 Bath-room Multiple Upgrades. For questions or to view this beau-tiful home call 250-919-9009 OPEN HOUSE June 15th & 16th from 1pm-3pm $259,000

Recreational/Sale

Real Estate

Houses For Sale

BEST VIEW IN KIMBERLEY

612 Trail St. Complete home

makeover, 2500 sq.ft., 3+1 Bdrms, 2 Bath.

Pictures + more info on Kijiji. $385,000.

250-427-4647 or 250-919-1091.

Rentals

Apt/Condo for Rent1 BEDROOM apartment, downtown Cranbrook, across from Rotary Park. Bright and roomy, on the 2nd fl oor. 55+, no pets. Heat and hot water in-cluded. $850./mo. Please call 250-426-6913.

2BDRM, 1 1/2 BATH apart-ment for rent, in Canal Flats. Great view, parking, F/S, D/W, microwave. $700 + utilities & D.D. Available im-mediately. Call (250)349-5306 or (250)489-8389.

Recreational/Sale

Rentals

Apt/Condo for Rent2 BEDROOM UNITS

available in Victoria Villas. Rent includes w/d and water.

Starting at $775./mo plus electric.

D/D starting at $387.50 N/P, N/S.

1 year lease. To view call778-517-4517

3BDRM UNIT for rent, unfi nished basement, partial new fl ooring, F/S, parking and front yard. No smoking-no pets. 1 year lease, $950./mo + utilities. 1308A 11th St S.

Call 250-421-2590MT.VIEW APT. 112 - 17th Ave S., Cranbrook. 1 bdrm, senior oriented, modern, 4 applianc-es, clean, quiet, laundry, heat included. Available July 1st. Call 250-423-6818 after six.

Cottages / CabinsSMALLER RECREATIONAL cabin on Kootenay Lake, for rent. $4000./yr includes utilities. Access to water via private beach. Available Apr. 1 to Oct 31 every year. Please call: 250-223-8181 for more information.

RecreationWATERFRONT LOG chalets: Spring/Fall special. ~5 nights, $700. Sleeps up to 8 persons.

250-223-8181 www.kootenaylakelodge.com

WATERFRONT RV sites on Kootenay Lake, for lease. Please phone us for info.

250-223-8181

Transportation

Cars - Domestic

8,000 km, sangria red metallic, black leather, heated seats, sun roof, 2.0L engine, automatic

4 speed.

$16,000 firmPhone 250-426-8846

(Curly)

2011 Ford Focus SEL

TransportationCars - Sports

& Imports

1994 CORVETTE COUPEGreat shape. 165,000 kms. $11,100 leave message at250-421-1747

Motorcycles

Absolutely showroom condition, one owner, comes

complete with fresh oil change, windshield, hard mounted saddle bags, low rise back rest and luggage rack. Low seat height. All

manuals and tool kit. This is a must see bike ready to take

you anywhere.Asking $6,500

Phone 250-417-1079

FOR SALE2007 Suzuki

Boulevard 1400

Recreational/Sale38’ ITASCA Sunrise, V10, gas,52000 km, gas/elec heat, big kitchen, living room, dble-door fridge/freezer, pantry, new awning, satellite dish,a real home away from home. View at Fort Steele RV. Ph: 403-605-1335

Trucks & Vans

1994 GMC 3/4 ton.

Excellent wood truckwith canopy.

New brakes front and rear including wheel cylinders

and brake cables.

Good on gas/oil.

Call Mel Adams: 250-426-4998

Asking $1500./obo

Tenders

Business/Offi ce Service

Business/Offi ce Service

Business/Offi ce Service

CLASSIFIEDSWILL SELL

WHAT YOU WANT SOLD!CALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202

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!

B8MAN’sHandyman Service

*Yard and Lawn care*Rototilling

*Fences and Decks*Dump runs*Odd jobs

Serving Cranbrook and Kimberley

250-422-9336

CONCRETE WORKS!!

Get your free quotes now, for:

Driveways, Steps, Sidewalks (any decorative

fi nish available), Retaining Walls, Residential or

Commercial Slabs.

Jobs done from start to fi nish.

Bobcat and Dump Truck Service also available.

Satisfaction guaranteed.

Call Jason250-464-5595

EAST KOOTENAY TREE SERVICE

CERTIFIED ARBORIST

~Dangerous Tree Removal~Stump Grinding

~Ornamental Tree Pruning~Shaping and topping

hedges, fruit trees.~Free chips and delivery

Fully insuredFree estimates

Seniors discount

Roy Anderson250-489-1900

1-877-219-2227

FLOORING INSTALLATIONS.

Wholesale Prices. Carpet ~ Lino

Laminate ~ Hardwood.

Certifi ed Journeyman Installer.

Repairs to damaged fl oors, wrinkled carpets, etc.

*All work guaranteed.*

Enquiries: 250-427-3037 or cell: 250-520-0188

~Ask for Ben~

HOUSE PLANS

by Jody at

CHARLTON HOMES

Building New or Renovating? Plan Design

for all your projects:

-New Home-Additions

-Renovations-Electrical

-Landscape

Plans include construction drawings and 3D renderings.

www.CHARLTONHOMES.ca

250-919-1575

JJ EXCAVATION & TRUCKING

TIME TO GET THOSE JOBS DONE!

Mini Excavator & Dump Truck Available

-Utility excavation & installation

-All types of excavation-Water & sewer line

trenching-Leaky basement excavation

-Landscaping-Retaining walls

-Delivery & haul away of materials

-Concrete & asphalt breakage & removal

-All aspects of concrete from start to fi nish

Wade (250)919-6150(250)489-2155

TIP TOP CHIMNEYSERVICES

“Sweeping the Kootenay’s Clean”

Chimney SweepingFireplace & Woodstove

ServicingVisual Inspections and

InstallationsGutter Cleaning Available

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Page 25: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013 Page 25daily bulletin

NEWS

AP Photo/ChArles DhArAPAk

Gen. Keith B. Alexander, commander, U.S. Cyber Command and director, National Security Agency/Chief, Central Security Service testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, June 12, 2013, before the Senate Appropriations Committee hearing to examine cybersecurity, focusing on preparing for and responding to the enduring threat.

AssociAted PressWASHINGTON —

The director of the Na-tional Security Agency said Wednesday that once-secret surveillance programs disrupted dozens of terrorist at-tacks, explicitly describ-ing for Congress how the programs worked in collecting Americans’ phone records and tap-ping into their Internet activity.

Vigorously defend-ing the programs, Gen. Keith Alexander said the public needs to know how the programs oper-ate amid growing con-cerns that government efforts to secure the na-tion are encroaching on Americans’ privacy and civil liberties.

“I do think it’s im-portant that we get this right and I want the American people to know that we’re trying to be transparent here, protect civil liberties and privacy but also the security of this country,’’ Alexander told a Senate panel.

Congressional lead-ers and intelligence committee members have been routinely briefed about the spy programs, officials said, and Congress has at least twice renewed laws approving them. But the disclosure of their sheer scope stunned some lawmak-ers, shocked foreign al-lies from nations with strict privacy protec-tions and emboldened civil liberties advocates who long have accused the government of being too invasive in the name of national security.

Alexander said he will provide additional

information to the Sen-ate Intelligence Com-mittee in closed session on Thursday and hopes to have as many details as possible within a week. He said he wants the information to be checked first by other agencies to ensure that the details are correct.

But he also warned that disclosures about the secret programs have eroded agency ca-pabilities and, as a re-sult, U.S. allies and Americans will not be as safe as they were two weeks ago.

“Some of these are still going to be classi-fied and should be, be-cause if we tell the ter-rorists every way that we’re going to track them, they will get through and Americans will die,’’ he said, adding that he would rather be criticized by people who think he’s hiding some-thing “than jeopardize the security of this country.’’

He was questioned at length by senators seek-ing information on ex-actly how much data the NSA collects and the legal backing for the ac-tivities. He did not give details on the plots he said had been disrupted.

Half a world away, Edward Snowden, the former contractor who fled to Hong Kong and leaked the documents, said he is not there to hide from justice and has faith in “the courts and people of Hong Kong to decide my fate.’’

“I am neither traitor nor hero. I’m an Ameri-can,’’ Snowden told the South China Morning Post about his disclo-sures of top-secret sur-

Intelligence chief says surveillance programs disrupted dozens of terrorist attacks

veillance programs that rocked Washington.

Snowden said in the interview published Wednesday that he hasn’t dared contact his family or his girlfriend since coming forward as the leaker of NSA docu-ments. “I am worried about the pressure they are feeling from the FBI,’’ he said.

The FBI visited his fa-ther’s house in Pennsyl-vania on Monday.

Snowden resurfaced in the Chinese newspa-per after dropping out of sight since Sunday. Snowden said he want-ed to fight the U.S. gov-ernment in Hong Kong’s courts and would stay unless “asked to leave.’’ Hong Kong is a Chinese autonomous region that maintains a West-ern-style legal system and freedom of speech.

U.S. law enforcement officials have said they are building a case

against Snowden but have yet to bring charges. Hong Kong has an extradition treaty with the United States; there are exceptions in cases of political perse-cution or where there are concerns over cruel treatment.

Snowden told the paper from a location the paper didn’t dis-close that he has no plans to leave.

“I have had many op-portunities to flee (Hong Kong), but I would rath-er stay and fight the US government in the courts, because I have faith in (Hong Kong’s) rule of law,’’ he said.

On Tuesday, a pha-lanx of FBI, legal and in-telligence officials briefed the entire House in an attempt to explain National Security Agen-cy programs that collect millions of Americans’ phone and Internet re-cords. Since they were

revealed last week, the programs have pro-voked distrust in the Obama administration from around the world.

House members were told not to disclose information they heard in the briefing because it is classified. Several said they left with unan-swered questions.

“People aren’t satis-fied,’’ Rep. Tim Murphy, a Republican, said as he left the briefing Tues-day. “More detail needs to come out.’’

While many rank-and-file members of Congress have ex-pressed anger and be-wilderment, there is ap-parently very little appe-tite among key leaders and intelligence com-mittee chiefs to pursue any action. Most have expressed support for the programs as invalu-able counterterror tools and some have labeled Snowden a traitor.

chintA PuxleyCanadian Press

WINNIPEG — A fast-food restaurant in Mani-toba has turned a joke into a burger fit for Fred Flintstone.

A Wendy’s outlet in Brandon is offering cus-tomers a T. Rex burger consisting of nine quar-ter-pound patties held together by nine pieces of processed cheese and a flimsy bun. All for $21.99 — $24.99 if you add fries and a drink.

The burger started out as a joke ad in Sports Illustrated nine years ago, but customers came in asking for the real thing. The restaurant obliged and now sells two to three such beef beasts a day.

Wendy’s had a picture of the meat monster hanging in the dining room, but the photo has since been taken down and the burger isn’t listed on the menu. That hasn’t stopped word of mouth from spreading across Canada and south of the border, where pictures of the mammoth burger have been making the rounds.

KFC’s infamous “double down’’ sandwich — bacon, cheese and “special sauce’’ between two pieces of battered chicken — has nothing on this burger.

Weighing in at around a whopping 3,000 calo-ries, the T. Rex burger has more calories than many people consume in a day. To the dismay of dieticians, it also contains roughly 200 grams of fat — triple the daily allowance — and an eye-wa-tering 6,000 grams of sodium, enough to last the average adult four days.

The restaurant has been fielding calls from across North America about its greasy offering, but referred all comment to corporate headquar-ters. A spokesperson there did not respond to a request for comment.

Carla Taylor, a professor in human nutritional science at the University of Manitoba, said the T. Rex sends the wrong message.

“Food is something I don’t think we can treat in this way,’’ she said. “We need to get appreciat-ing good food ... of appropriate portion size.’’

While many fast-food chains have made con-certed efforts in the last few years to offer healthi-er choices — such as salads, fruit and low-fat muffins — there are still menu items that un-abashedly embrace unhealthy indulgence. And it appears the United States out-greases Canada at the cooking line: nutritional nightmares seem to originate south of the border.

KFC’s “double down’’ originated in the U.S. before making its way to Canada. Dunkin’ Donuts is offering American connoisseurs an unusual breakfast sandwich — bacon and egg between two glazed doughnuts.

Consuming that combination of fat, sodium and calories in one sitting might appeal to some, but Taylor said it should be a once-in-a-lifetime indulgence.

“Maybe somebody wants to try it once for the challenge,’’ she said. “But I think the better chal-lenge is to look at how to eat healthy every day and think long term about how the foods you’re putting in your mouth are impacting on your health.’’

Manitoba restaurant offers meat monster

‘T. Rex’ burger

CAlliNG Fred FliNtStoNe

ADVERTISINGOPPORTUNITYA powerful tool when you want to reach your potential customers – the Daily Townsman and Daily Bulletin are invited into over 6,900 homes every day, Monday to Friday.

To advertise or subscribe in Cranbrook, 250-426-5201, ext 0

To advertise or subscribe in Kimberley 250-427-5333 • 10:00-4:30

c AnAdiAn Press

ZAMA CITY, Alta. — A pipe-line operated by a Texas-based oil company has leaked 9.5 million litres of industrial waste water in northern Alberta.

The Energy Resources Con-servation Board said the spill was first reported by Apache Canada Ltd. on June 1.

The pipeline breach is about 20 kilometres northeast of Zama City, a remote communi-ty near the Northwest Territo-ries boundary.

“The affected area is under-going cleanup, environmental monitoring, wildlife protection and remediation efforts and is

currently estimated at 42 hect-ares,’’ the company said in a release Wednesday.

Apache said the nearby Zama River has not been af-fected by the leak, which has been plugged.

An Apache official declined to answer questions about the Zama spill.

Waste water that is extracted during oil and natural gas op-erations contains oil, gas, salt and other minerals.

Bob Curren of the resources conservation board said Alber-ta regulators didn’t learn how big the spill was until Tuesday.

“At the outset we were un-

aware that it was of this extent or volume,’’ Curren said from Calgary. “If we had known that up-front we would have made the announcement at that time.

“Once it was determined that the volumes were at this level we immediately moved to issue a news release.’’

Greenpeace Canada said the area of the spill is an im-portant wetland and habitat for animals and birds.

The environmental group calls the leak one of the largest of its type in Canadian history.

Keith Stewart, a Greenpeace spokesman, said this kind of

waste water is full of toxic com-pounds.

“This is a massive spill of toxics into one of the most im-portant wetlands in Canada, if not the world,’’ he said from Toronto. “The government shouldn’t be trying to hide these kinds of things.’’

Greenpeace called on the Alberta government to release the findings of a pipeline safety review completed last year.

The province commis-sioned the report following spills from pipelines owned by Plains Midstream Canada in central Alberta last June and in April 2011 in north Alberta.

Pipeline leaks 9.5 million litres of industrial waste water

Page 26: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Page 26 Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013 daily townsman / daily bulletin

[ JOB INFO ] [ MECHANICAL SPECS ] [ APPROVALS ] [ ACTION ]

[ PUBLICATION INFO ] [ FONTS ] [ PRINTED AT ]

ROUND

LiveTrimBleedInks

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Revision date :6-11-2013 4:01 PM Please contact Delia Zaharelos e: [email protected] t: (647) 925.1382 INNOCEAN WORLDWIDE CANADA, INC 662 King St West. Unit 101. Toronto ON M5V 1M7

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West Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Black

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kia.ca

THE NEW 2014s ARE HERE

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ER EN

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O� er(s) available on select new 2014 models through participating dealers to qualifi ed customers who take delivery by July 2, 2013. Dealers may sell or lease for less. Some conditions apply. See dealer for complete details. All o� ers are subject to change without notice. Vehicles shown may include optional accessories and upgrades available at extra cost. All pricing includes delivery and destination fees up to $1,665, other fees and certain levies (including tire levies) and $100 A/C charge (where applicable) and excludes licensing, registration, insurance, other taxes and variable dealer administration fees (up to $699). Other dealer charges may be required at the time of purchase. Other lease and fi nancing options also available. ∞“Don’t Pay For 60 Days” o� er is a 60-day payment deferral and applies to purchase fi nancing o� ers on all 2014 models. No interest will accrue during the fi rst 30 days of the fi nance contract. After this period interest starts to accrue and the purchaser will repay principal and interest monthly over the term of the contract. See your Kia dealer for full details. Some conditions apply and on approved credit. **0% purchase fi nancing is available on select new 2014 Kia models O.A.C. Terms vary by model and trim, see dealer for complete details. Purchase fi nancing example based on new 2014 Rondo LX MT (RN551E) with a selling price of $23,482, fi nanced at 0% APR corresponds to a bi-weekly payment of $129 for 60 months, amortized over 84 months with a down payment/ equivalent trade of $0. Some conditions apply and on approved credit. ≠Bi-weekly fi nance payment O.A.C. for new 2014 Sorento 2.4L LX AT FWD (SR75BE)/2014 Forte Sedan LX MT (FO541E)/2014 Rondo LX MT (RN551E) based on a selling price of $28,482/$17,502/$23,482 is $156/$96/$129 with an APR of 0% for 60/84/84 months, amortized over 84 months. Estimated remaining principal balance of $8,138/$0/$0 plus applicable taxes due at end of 60-month period. Retailer may sell for less. See dealer for full details. Model shown Manufacturer Suggested Retail Price for 2014 Sorento EX V6 AWD (SR75HE)/2014 Forte SX (FO748E)/2014 Rondo EX Luxury (RN756E) is $34,195/$26,195/$32,195 and includes delivery and destination fees of $1,665/$1,485/$1,665, and A/C charge ($100, where applicable). Licence, insurance, applicable taxes, other fees and certain levies (including tire levies), variable dealer administration fees (up to $699) and registration fees are extra. Retailer may sell for less. Available at participating dealers. See dealer for full details. Highway/city fuel consumption is based on the 2014 Sorento LX 2.4L GDI 4-cyl (A/T)/2014 Forte 1.8L MPI 4-cyl (M/T)/2014 Rondo 2.0L GDI 4-cyl (M/T). These updated estimates are based on the Government of Canada’s approved criteria and testing methods. Refer to the EnerGuide Fuel Consumption Guide. Your actual fuel consumption will vary based on driving habits and other factors. °The Bluetooth® wordmark and logo are registered trademarks and are owned by Bluetooth SIG, Inc. Information in this advertisement is believed to be accurate at the time of printing. For more information on our 5-year warranty coverage, visit kia.ca or call us at 1-877-542-2886. Kia is a trademark of Kia Motors Corporation.

bi-weekly for 60 months, amortized over 84 months with $0 DOWN PAYMENT. Offer includes delivery, destination and fees. Offer based on 2014 Sorento 2.4L LX AT FWD with a purchase price of $28,482.

bi-weekly for 84 months with $0 DOWN PAYMENT. Offer includes delivery, destination and fees. Offer based on 2014 Forte LX MT with a purchase price of $17,502.

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Page 27: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 2013 PAGE 27DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

Leftover Rock

Teck operates five steelmaking coal mines in the Elk Valley which employ over 4,000 people. We raise our families in the valley, fish and swim in the river and care deeply about ensuring the environment is protected. That’s why we’re taking action to ensure that water quality is protected in the valley now and for generations to come.

The Challenge

Mining generates large quantities of leftover rock that contains naturally occurring substances such as selenium.

Water from rain and runoff flows through these rock piles and carries selenium and other substances, such as nitrate, into local waters.

If present in high enough concentrations in the watershed, those substances can adversely affect aquatic health.

Creating the Elk Valley Water Quality Plan Together

The B.C. Government has created guidelines for development of an Elk Valley Water Quality Plan to address water quality issues. We will consult extensively and work with communities, government, Indigenous Peoples and stakeholders to create this plan. The Elk Valley Water Quality Plan will set target levels for selenium, cadmium, nitrate and sulphate, as well as calcite formation. Water treatment technologies and strategies already developed by Teck will help in the development of the new plan.

Timeline for the Elk Valley Water Quality Plan:

A Strategy to Protect Water Quality

Our proposed water quality management strategy includes investing up to $600 million over five years for construction of water treatment plants, research and development, and ongoing monitoring. Our first water treatment plant is already under construction at our Line Creek Operations. This strategy builds on the steps we have taken over the years to address water quality, including studies, construction of water diversions and establishing the Strategic Advisory Panel on Selenium Management.

Fish Health and Human Health

Aquatic Health: Monitoring and scientific studies show that selenium is below levels that would affect populations of fish and other sensitive animals and plants in the main stem of the Elk River and the Fording River below Josephine Falls. Monitoring does indicate some localized effects to sensitive insect larvae that live on stream bottoms, mainly in the tributaries closest to mining activities, but overall larval insect communities throughout most of the Elk Valley are healthy and diverse.

Human Health: Monitoring indicates that there are elevated levels of selenium in some fish; however, the average selenium level in fish muscle tissue from the Elk River and lower Fording River is below the level of concern for even frequent fish consumers. Selenium levels in municipal drinking water sources in the valley are also below Health Canada and B.C. drinking water guidelines and are not a human health concern.

Get Involved

We will be consulting and working with people throughout the region to finalize the Elk Valley Water Quality Plan. To learn more and provide your feedback and suggestions, go to www.teck.com/ElkValley or call 1-855-806-6854.

Community Information Sessions

You are invited to attend our community information sessions on the Elk Valley Water Quality Plan.

Taking Action on Water Quality

Throughout: Implement solutions to protect water quality

Spring 2013: Develop terms

of reference

2013–2014: Consultation and

development of plan

Spring 2014: Submit final plan

to province

Fernie Community Centre 901 6th Avenue Thursday, June 6 2–7 p.m.

Sparwood Seniors Drop In Centre 101 Pine Avenue Tuesday, June 11 2–7 p.m.

Elkford Community Conference Centre 750 Fording Drive Wednesday, June 12 2–7 p.m.

Page 28: Kimberley Daily Bulletin, June 13, 2013

Page 28 Thursday, JuNE 13, 2013 daily townsman / daily bulletin

Spacious 2 bed, 2 bath mobile home on 1.3 acres just a short drive to either Cranbrook or Kimberley. Spacious living room, family room & kitchen. Shop has 220 wiring, barn & loads of storage. RV parking.

$269,900

831 Mennie Road

Two bed, one bath home located close to downtown amenities, schools and playground. Fully fenced back yard with alley access. Covered verandah out front. Upgrades include: roofi ng, hot water tank, heating system and electrical service.

$139,900

723 5th St. S.

Stunning mountain views and 300’ of waterfront on Kootenay River. 3 bed, 3 bath home situated on 10.93 acres has vaulted ceilings, large arched windows, hardwood & tile fl ooring, two master suites, beautiful kitchen. Walkout basement.

$500,000

8895 Colony Road

3 bed, 2 bath home in great residential location with upgrades to the main fl oor & basement fi nish. Natural gas fi replace in living room. Oak hardwood throughout main fl oor. Cozy rec room down with wood stove. Double attached carport. Fully fenced yard with alley access.

$249,900

613 18th Ave. S.

Executive bungalow with panoramic views. This 4 bed, 3 bath home is custom built featuring numberous amenities including a full (unauthorized) in-law suite. Custom kitchen upstairs with oak cabinets and adjacent dining nook. Spacious backyard. Double attached garage.

$409,000

Southview home with full renovations and upgrades. This 2+1 bed, 3 bath home has a spacious fl oorplan with sunken living room. Large master on the main fl oor. Cozy rec room down with freestanding ng fi replace. Nestled on a street with similar executive homes. Fenced yard with new deck. Double attached garage.

$349,900

Renovated bungalow with lots of upgrades with double detached garage. Centrally located near Laurie Middle School. Bright fl oor plan with upgrades to fl ooring, paint, roof, electrical and furnace. Natural gas fi replace in LR. Country kitchen.

$259,900

904 16th St. S. 1421 20th St. S. 1925 3rd St. S.

Immaculately clean & modernly designed 3 bed, 4 bath home in central location. Open concept fl oor with beautiful laminate & ceramic tiled fl oors. Kitchen has alder cabinetry and breakfast bar. Upstairs has spacious master with 4pc. ensuite & large walk-in closet. Downstairs is a very cozy rec room. Attached dble garage and paved drive.

$349,900

2321 Mt. Baker Cres.

Spacious 3+1 bed, 2.5 bath home on 0.98 acres in Gold Creek. This home has large living room with wood fi replace. Kitchen has bright cabinetry, centre island and adjoining dining room. Large partially covered deck out back. Bright rec room. Large laundry room. Double attached carport.

$389,900

3 bed, 2.5 bath home on 5.69 acres in Silver Springs area. Rock to ceiling wood fi replace in living room. Beautiful kitchen with centre island, pantry, tile backsplash. Cozy family room with sliders leading to large deck in back. Main fl oor laundry. Spacious master. Double attached carport.

$449,900

3 bed, 1.5 bath home on 2.16 acres in the Gold Creek Area. This home has seen many upgrades including: kitchen, main bath, siding, roof, hot water tank and well pump. Spacious living room with wood burning stove. Single attached garage & attached carport.

$274,9002310 34th Ave. S.

721 Franklin Road

3400 38th Ave. S.

Wasa location just a few blocks from the beach. Rancher style home with substantial renovations in the mid 90’s. Open fl oor plan with vaulted ceilings, oak kitchen, wood stove in LR. Offering close proximity to 4 seasons of recreation.

$379,900

6147 Wolf Creek Road

3+2 bed, 3 bath home on manicured acreage features 2.5 acres including pasture area for horses. Home has large country kitchen with adjoining dining room. Spacious fl oor plan. 1500 Sq.Ft. shop complete with kitchen, bath, living area & wet bar.

$499,900

2351 9th St. S.

Cozy & comfy, this 3 bed 1 bath home is in a fabulous location close to schools, churches, and Kinsman Park. Nice sized and fully fenced back yard has a patio area. Large undeveloped basement with plumbing for a second bath.

$179,900

331 13th Ave. S.

Located just 5 minutes from Ta Ta Creek and Wasa lies this newer executive bungalow set up for equestrian use. This quality 4-5 bed home is well appointed with spacious fl oor plan. Gourmet kitchen with centre island. Lands are set up with numberous outbuildings with fencing and x-fencing; perfect equestrian ground with automatic stock waterers.

$549,900

4363 Lister Road

Exceptional Southview home with high ceilings and great design. Grade level entry with large foyer, family room & guest bedroom. Open design on the 2nd level with gourmet kitchen & maple hardwood throughout. Attached double garage.

$386,900

1425 20th St. S.

Executive 2 storey home on 4.75 acres just outside the borders of the City. This home features 2500 Sq.Ft. above grade of custom fi nishing by a quality builder. 4 bed on the upper fl oor. 19x20 attached garage and 28x36 detached garage.

$599,900

1825 20th Ave. S.

Cedar panabode A-frame style cabin just a short walk to Moyie Lake. This property has 1 bed on the main fl oor with a loft bedroom upstairs. Living room has wood stove. Kitchen has maple cabinetry. Cabin not currently connected to water or sewer.

$189,900

7457 Green Bay Road

Family home with beautiful mountain views. This 3+2 bed, 3.5 bath home has seen many upgrades including paint, new roof last year, new garage door. Formal living/dining room as well as casual family room. Stunning kitchen with centre island and breakfast nook. Fully fi nished basement. Close to elementary school.

$399,900

Located in mature setting along Summit drive is this 3+1 bed, 3 bath home. Close to elementary school and park. Living room has ng fi replace, formal dining room and casual eating area in kitchen. Home has newer torch on roof and attached double carport.

$299,900

Family oriented neighborhood on quiet residential street! Great 3 bed, 1 bath home on raised lot with partial fencing. Recently updated. Tiled kitchen, modern paint scheme. New roof in 2011 and furnace in 2008 Double paved driveway in back. Alley access.

$199,900

Highlands home that has seen pride of ownership for over 20 years. Bi-level home has seen a good level of updates. Ideal location close to community forest, Idlewild Park and local schools. Splendid curb appeal with extensive landscaping.

$289,900

2 bed, 1 bath home on half an acre in the Jim Smith Lake area. This home is fully renovated with vaulted ceilings and spacious fl oor plan. The land offers a good level of privacy. This home has seen many upgrades.

$289,900

1640 Staple Crescent725 Summit Drive316 6th Ave. S.

305 31st Ave. S.2348 Michel Road

2 bed, 1 bath home in close proximity to many amenities. This home has seen many upgrades including new hardiboard siding, new bathroom, new hardwood fl ooring in living room and bedroom. Double detached garage. Fully fenced yard.

$219,900

221 17th Ave. N.

Home & acreage offered at a great price located just minutes from city limits. Spacious 3 bed, 1 bath home on 2.86 acres. Home features ample entertaining space. Property is fenced with additional outbuildings including a barn.

$379,900

3900 Read Road

66’ of lakefront right on Monroe Lake. This 2 storey home is just steps from the lake and features 3 beds and 3 full baths. Main fl oor is open with large kitchen, dining and living room. Vaulted ceilings allow for stunning lake views. Spacious master with exercise area. Double attached garage. Decking on both levels.

$899,900

Cape Cod design with great curb appeal in family neighborhood. This 4 bed, 3 bath home has seen a good level of updates and renovations. Spacious living areas with breathtaking mountain views. Attached double garage with RV parking.

$379,900

Updated home in great area! 4 bedroom home with bright basement with built-in workshop & large rec room. Outside storage, huge sundeck, fully fenced & landscaped yard. Close to Kinsman Park & St. Mary’s Elementary School.

$249,900

7814 Monroe Lake Rd. 1604 6th Ave. S. 2004 4th St. S.

Highlands home!! This 3+2 bed, 3 bath home has ideal location in the Sylvan Summit area. Grade level entry home with spacious living areas throughout. Well maintained home with oak accents and large country kitchen. Oversized attached garage. Fenced yard with mature landscaping.

$389,900

3301 5th St. S.

Stunning location with the Rocky Mountains as your backdrop. Custom designed home on 1.277 acres with cathedral ceilings in the great room. Spacious kitchen with raised centre island. 24x24 detached garage.

$468,900

6452 Stanley Road

2008 built 2+1 bed, 2 bath home on .75 of an acre in quiet cul-de-sac. Quality built home has an open concept design. Custom oak cabinetry in kitchen. Spacious living room. Large rec room/games room downstairs. 24x26 detached shop, and two large sheds.

$424,900

1896 Countryland Drive

2+2 bed, 2 bath ½ duplex in central location. Custom built home features quality fi nish with wood cabinets, centre island in kitchen. Hardwood fl oors in LR. Single attached garage. Centrally located close to many amenities

$275,000

1831B Kelowna Crescent

212 12th Ave. S.

Character and heritage evident in this home estimated to be constructed in the mid 1920s. Baker Hill home is classic architecture with turret and Victorian charm. Main fl oor has newer birch hardwood and renovated baths. Four bdrm, two bath home located close to city amenities and walking distance to downtown.

$259,900

Gorgeous 3000 Sq.Ft. 4 bed, 3 bath home on large lot just steps from Rosen Lake. Beautiful inside & out. Large kitchen, vaulted ceilings, great room with rock fi replace, hardwood & tiled fl oors. Loft area upstairs. Central vac, underground sprinklers and A/C.

$489,900

6725 Audia Road

3 bed, 2 bath home within short walking distance to both elementary and middle schools. This home has hardwood fl ooring on the main fl oor. Large windows for lots of light. Many upgrades. Single attached carport. RV Parking. Alley access

$239,900

428 12th St. S.

EAST KOOTENAY REALTY

[email protected] 250-426-8211 250-426-9482 www.cranbrookrealty.com

WHEELDONJasonWHEELDONWHEELDONPERSONAL REAL ESTATE CORPORATION

“A Trusted Name in Real Estate

since 1994.”25-10th Avenue South, Cranbrook

Brand new 2 bed, 2 bath home in rural Mayook Station Estates subdivision. This home has open concept fl oor plan with hardwood and tile fl ooring. Full unfi nished basement just waiting for design idea. Large covered deck. Triple attached garage. Short drive to Cranbrook with endless recreation opportunities.

$535,000

7956 Foothills Drive

SOLD

SOLD SOLD

SOLD

SOLD