cranbrook daily townsman, june 23, 2014

12
Vol. 63, Issue 119 Proudly serving Cranbrook and area since 1951 www.dailytownsman.com $ 1 10 INCLUDES G.S.T. < Bear’s feeling better Checking in with Fisher and Jo | Page 2 Stepping up to the plate > Bandits versus Bitterroot Red Sox | Page 7 MONDAY JUNE 23, 2014 TownsmanBulletin Like Us @crantownsman Follow Us 290 Wallinger Avenue, Kimberley 250-427-2221 www.caldwellagencies.com Caldwell A gencies The Hometown Experts with a World of Experience ® Fairmont Goldsmith Everything done on location! 250-342-8778 926 7th Ave, Invermere SALLY MACDONALD Townsman Staff Seven young ladies wooed a full house at the Key City Theatre on Friday, June 20 for the 2014 Sam Steele Youth Ambassador pageants. Showcasing talents from piano playing to singing, from silent film to stop motion ani- mation, Alexis Shuffler, Katie Elder, Burke Bidder, Devon Kennedy, Kendall Bostock, Kendall Aikins and Carley Roller were at their best for the pageant. At the end of the evening, Devon Kennedy was crowned 2014 Sweetheart of Sam Steele, and Kendall Bostock was crowned 2014 Princess of Sam Steele. The pair will spend 12 months representing Cran- brook at home and in other communities near and far. Katie Elder received the Toastmasters Public Speaking Award, Burke Bidder was given the Community Awareness Award, and Devon Kennedy received the Talent Award. Congratulations to all of the candidates. See the Towns- man later this week for an in- depth behind-the-scenes fea- ture on the pageant. Youth ambassadors win hearts SALLY MACDONALD PHOTO Cranbrook heralded the reign of two new royalty on Friday, June 20 at the Sam Steele youth ambassador program. Kendall Bostock, left, was crowned Princess of Sam Steele, and Devon Kennedy, right, was crowned Sweetheart of Sam Steele. ARNE PETRYSHEN Townsman Staff The Conservative Government approved the Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline with 209 conditions last week. Kootenay Co- lumbia MP David Wilks spoke to the Townsman on Thursday after a parliamentary session in Ottawa. Wilks said the condi- tions should help to mitigate criticism against the pipeline. “I don’t know if you can ever keep everyone happy, but the 209 con- ditions placed upon whomever will build the pipeline, by the Na- tional Energy Board are quite stringent,” Wilks said, adding they look at environmental im- pact and include con- sultation with aborigi- nal services. “It will be a chal- lenge for whoever de- cides to build this pipe- line to get all these con- ditions done, but if they do they will be con- forming to one of the most rigorous stan- dards set in North America. Conditions should mitigate pipeline concerns, MP says SALLY MACDONALD Townsman Staff Summer has started early for school-aged children across B.C. as teachers enter the sec- ond week of a full-scale strike. Many parents have been left scrambling to find child care, and Cranbrook Leisure Ser- vices has found a way to help out. Starting today, Mon- day, June 23, and carry- ing on all week, Leisure Services is offering a “Fast Forward Into Summer” program. From 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day this week, the camp will keep kids busy with fun events and activities. On Monday in Rota- ry Park, there is a nature scavenger hunt and a gardening lesson. On Tuesday, also in Rotary Park, kids will do some arts and crafts, and play water games. On Wednesday, kids will spend the day at Jimsmith Lake. Summer starts now Leisure Services has put together a summer camp for school children affected by the teachers’ strike See SUMMER, Page 2 See PIPELINE, Page 4

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June 23, 2014 edition of the Cranbrook Daily Townsman

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Page 1: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, June 23, 2014

Vol. 63, Issue 119 Proudly serving Cranbrook and area since 1951 www.dailytownsman.com

$110INCLUDES

G.S.T.

< Bear’s feeling betterChecking in with Fisher and Jo | Page 2

Stepping up to the plate >Bandits versus Bitterroot Red Sox | Page 7

MONDAYJUNE 23, 2014

TownsmanBulletin

Like Us

@crantownsman

Follow Us

290 Wallinger Avenue, Kimberley ❘ 250-427-2221 ❘ www.caldwellagencies.com

Caldwell AgenciesThe Hometown Experts with a World of Experience®

Fairmont GoldsmithEverything done

on location!

250-342-8778926 7th Ave, Invermere

SALLY MACDONALDTownsman Staff

Seven young ladies wooed a full house at the Key City Theatre on Friday, June 20 for the 2014 Sam Steele Youth Ambassador pageants.

Showcasing talents from piano playing to singing, from

silent film to stop motion ani-mation, Alexis Shuffler, Katie Elder, Burke Bidder, Devon Kennedy, Kendall Bostock, Kendall Aikins and Carley Roller were at their best for the pageant.

At the end of the evening, Devon Kennedy was crowned

2014 Sweetheart of Sam Steele, and Kendall Bostock was crowned 2014 Princess of Sam Steele. The pair will spend 12 months representing Cran-brook at home and in other communities near and far.

Katie Elder received the Toastmasters Public Speaking

Award, Burke Bidder was given the Community Awareness Award, and Devon Kennedy received the Talent Award.

Congratulations to all of the candidates. See the Towns-man later this week for an in-depth behind-the-scenes fea-ture on the pageant.

Youth ambassadors win hearts

SALLY MACDONALD PHOTO

Cranbrook heralded the reign of two new royalty on Friday, June 20 at the Sam Steele youth ambassador program. Kendall Bostock, left, was crowned Princess of Sam Steele, and Devon Kennedy, right, was crowned Sweetheart of Sam Steele.

A R N E P E T RYS H E NTownsman Staff

The Conservative Government approved the Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline with 209 conditions last week. Kootenay Co-lumbia MP David Wilks spoke to the Townsman on Thursday after a parliamentary session in Ottawa.

Wilks said the condi-tions should help to mitigate criticism against the pipeline.

“I don’t know if you can ever keep everyone happy, but the 209 con-ditions placed upon

whomever will build the pipeline, by the Na-tional Energy Board are quite stringent,” Wilks said, adding they look at environmental im-pact and include con-sultation with aborigi-nal services.

“It will be a chal-lenge for whoever de-cides to build this pipe-line to get all these con-ditions done, but if they do they will be con-forming to one of the most rigorous stan-dards set in North America.

Conditions should mitigate pipeline concerns, MP says

SALLY MACDONALDTownsman Staff

Summer has started early for school-aged children across B.C. as teachers enter the sec-ond week of a full-scale strike.

Many parents have been left scrambling to find child care, and Cranbrook Leisure Ser-vices has found a way to help out.

Starting today, Mon-day, June 23, and carry-ing on all week, Leisure Services is offering a “Fast Forward Into

Summer” program.From 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

each day this week, the camp will keep kids busy with fun events and activities.

On Monday in Rota-ry Park, there is a nature scavenger hunt and a gardening lesson. On Tuesday, also in Rotary Park, kids will do some arts and crafts, and play water games.

On Wednesday, kids will spend the day at Jimsmith Lake.

Summer starts nowLeisure Services has put together a summer camp for school children

affected by the teachers’ strike

See SUMMER, Page 2

See PIPELINE, Page 4

Page 2: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, June 23, 2014

Page 2 monday, June 23, 2014

LocaL NEWSdaily townsman / daily bulletin

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On Thursday, back at Rotary Park, there will be soccer and a fort-making competi-tion. Finally, on Friday, kids will spend the day at Idlewild Park.

Leaders with the pro-gram will also be avail-able to provide child care in the mornings and afternoons before and after the camp ses-sions begin.

Parents and guard-ians should send kids along with a healthy lunch, lots of water, a bathing suit and towel, hat and sunscreen, rain jacket, runners and snacks.

For more informa-tion and to register, con-tact Leisure Services at 250-489-0220.

FOR THE TOWNSMAN

Fisher, one of the bear cub rescued one month ago near Cranbrook, is starting to feel better after suddenly falling ill early last week. Angelika Langen, the manager of the Northern Lights Wildlife Society shelter in Smithers, was happy to report Friday that the little bear cub is improving daily. He was diagnosed with Liver Sarcosis and will requires long-term medication over the next four to five weeks.

Step #1:

Call Karrie and get your access code

number.250-426-5201 extension 208

Step #2:

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www.dailytownsman.com

Step #3:Step #3: Click on E-Edition and start reading!

DON’T BE SCARED!! Just 3 easy steps and you’re reading news online!

For the townsman

The countdown is on to Cranbrook’s best ever Canada Day celebra-tions. Bring your lawn chairs and hang out for an amazing line-up of entertainment, food and festivities. The fun will kick off at Moir Park on July 1st at 5pm with two stages of music and acts, games for all ages, the area’s best food ven-dors, and if that wasn’t enough, a fireworks dis-play twice the size of last year’s starting around 11pm.

Live performances from Dewey, Chetuem and Howe, REDGIRL, the Connect Band and the Good Ol’ Goats are going to be rocking the park throughout the evening. There won’t

be a kid in the place moaning the words, “Mom I’m bored”, with Choco Pop the Clown, Glow Zumba, Aspire Dance, Retro Aerobics, bouncy castles, face painting, sports and games to keep them oc-cupied. Not to mention the sugar rush to be had from the mini donuts, shaved ice and other goodies that will be available.

“Our goal this Cana-da Day is simple. We want to love on Cran-brook by throwing the biggest party for this country that this city has ever seen.” an-nounced Frank Hackett, Canada Day planner and leader of Connect Church.

The magnitude of

this event would not be possible without the in-credible support of the community and the generosity of our Cana-da Day sponsors. Those who have significantly contributed to this effort are: Spring Honda; Sel-kirk Signs; Freightliner; Kootenay Landscape; City of Cranbrook; Heri-tage Canada; the Dis-trict Community Foun-dation; The Bedroom Furniture Galleries; the Townsman and Adver-tiser; B-104 and The Drive; The Painted Crate; Signal Collision; Bridge Interiors; and Aaron’s Furniture.

For info about the event and a full sched-ule please see www.connectcranbrook.com or www.cranbrook.ca.

Countdown to Canada Day

C anadian PressVANCOUVER — Al-

cohol can now be sold at farmers markets in Brit-ish Columbia, and pubs may accommodate mi-nors.

New liquor laws allow alcohol manufac-turers to apply to farm-ers markets to sell prod-ucts.

Market associations then determine which

producers are accepted, subject to approval by municipal bylaws.

Pubs and legions can apply to accommodate minors, who must be accompanied by an adult and can stay no later than 10 p.m.

The province says this change opens up new dining options for rural communities, where the number of

New B.C. liquor laws allow booze at farmers markets and minors in pubs

family restaurants may be limited.

In January, the gov-ernment endorsed 73 recommendations to change B.C.’s liquor laws, 17 of which have been carried out to date.

Summer campsContinued from page 1

Page 3: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, June 23, 2014

monday, June 23, 2014 Page 3

LocaL NEWSdaily townsman

Images of the Sam Steele Days Parade, Saturday, June 21They turned out in their thousands to mark the 50th Sam Steele Days Parade in Cranbrook. The parade wound its way through the downtown core and

festivities were underway. See further photo features this week in the Townsman Bulletin, and a Sam Steele Days wrap-up. Photos by Barry Coulter

Page 4: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, June 23, 2014

Page 4 monday, June 23, 2014

LocaL NEWSdaily townsman

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Wilks said the Koo-tenay Columbia riding is a shining example of how big industry can work alongside the nat-ural environment.

“If you look through-out the Kootenay Co-lumbia constituency, we have four national parks, we have some very pristine protected areas as well; the Dark-woods near Creston and the Flathead Valley near Fernie,” he said. “On top of that we have the second largest coal-mine company in the world, we have a very good, robust forestry sector, we have some of the largest hydroelec-tric dams in Canada, and all of those work very well with their neighbouring environ-ment.”

Wilks said the pipe-line could have local impacts as well.

“I think there are a number of people in the Kootenays that work in Fort McMurray and the surrounding area that would benefit from the extraction from bitumen from Fort McMurray and area being exported to the Asian markets,” Wilks said.

Wilks didn’t know whether the project, if it goes forward, would have any impact on the local economy.

“Certainly there are companies around that do a lot of steel fabrica-tion like Fabrite and Rayko Steel in Spar-wood, but normally they stick to the coal mines,” he said.

Pipeline could have local impacts, MP says

Continued from page 1

Wilks backs cyberbully billA r n e P e t rys h e n

Townsman Staff

Kootenay Columbia MP David Wilks said from his perspective, a recent Supreme Court of Canada ruling on In-ternet privacy won’t have an effect on the government’s proposed cyberbullying bill.

“I don’t think it does, and the reason that I say that is under the new bill C-13 there is a provision in which the police must obtain a preservation order which is good for 21 days with regards to the

digital information that they are looking for,” Wilks said.

The supreme court ruling, which came June 13, found that under Canada’s consti-tution, police do re-quire a search warrant in order to compel In-ternet Service Provid-ers to release subscrib-er information to an investigation.

Bill C-13 was intro-duced as a bill to deal with cyberbullying, but has proven controver-sial as it also extends police powers for on-

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALSupply and Delivery of Diesel

and Gasoline Fuel

The City is seeking proposals from quali� ed proponents for the supply and delivery of diesel and gasoline fuel for a three year period commencing July 1, 2014 to June 30, 2017.

Proposal documents are available from the City’s web site under “Business – City Tenders”.

The sealed proposals, clearly marked, should be addressed:

“Request for Proposal – CRA2014-R-002 – Supply and Delivery of Diesel and Gasoline Fuel”

and must be received by Wednesday, June 25, 2014, no later than 2:30 pm local time by the of� ce of:

The Corporation of the City of CranbrookAttention: Melissa Smith, Financial Services Manager40 10th Avenue SouthCranbrook, BCV1C 2M8

Late submissions will be rejected.

The City reserves the right to accept or reject any or all proposals submitted.

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line surveillance. Wilks said that it’s a

matter of discretion on what information the organization chose to share.

“Irregardless if it’s the police or you at the newspaper, you have to make that call and that can’t be controlled by any law,” Wilks said. “What this law does under C-13 and the subsequent decision by the supreme court is to ensure that the police, when doing an investi-gation, follow the rules to which they are re-quired to get a warrant, and I believe that C-13 does that very well. “

Wilks said that C-13 brings forward ad-vancements of the

Criminal Code that has not been amended since the 1980s.

“Since the 1980s, a lot has happened in the world and you have to give the police the tools to do the investigations and you have to trust the police that they are going to investigate in the best manner that they can,” he said. “I believe, as a former po-lice officer, that police officers have good will and do their investiga-tions to the best of their ability within the pa-rameters that they are required to investigate them in.”

When asked wheth-er splitting the bill would be a possibility, Wilks said it wasn’t.

“It’s all fine and dandy saying that you can split the bill, but the police still need the power to investigate today,” he said. “So to say that we’re going to do things about cyber-bullying and ‘yes we agree that cyberbully-ing is bad and we have to find ways to stop it,’ but then we don’t give the police the tools to do it? That’s like giving someone a hammer but then not giving them the nail to put two boards together. It’s difficult to do.”

He said he has no problems and no qualms whatsoever with C-13 as it was put together by the Minis-ter of Justice.

CLASSIFIEDS HELP YOU SELLCALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202

Townsman sTaff

Nathan Kennelly stopped into the Townsman office to pick up his prize — a scholarship to the Niedermayer Hockey School in August. Beckham Toth was the other winner, in the contest sponsored by Edge Hockey and the Townsman/Bulletin.

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?

Protect our earth.The Cranbrook Daily Townsman and the

Kimberley Daily Bulletin promote recycling.

We use vegetable-based inks, and our newsprint, tin and aluminum waste is recycled.

Page 5: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, June 23, 2014

monday, June 23, 2014 Page 5

news/opinion

It’s time for everybody in Iraq to take a tranquiliser. The media will go on fizzing with apocalyptic speculations for a week or so, because that kind of talk always sells, but the war of movement is over.

It never was much of a war: a third of Iraq was captured by ISIS and various Sunni militias in one week at a cost that probably didn’t exceed a thousand lives (plus however many were murdered by ISIS afterwards). The Islamist radicals have now reached approximately the limits of the territory in Iraq that has a Sunni Arab majority, and they’d be mad to throw away all their gains by try-ing to conquer Baghdad.

There are lots of young men fighting for the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (the Levant) who would love to be martyred in such an attack, but ISIS is run by grown-ups. They know that they can’t go any farther without running out of the popular support that let a few thousand fighters sweep through the Sunni lands so easily.

Baghdad is defended by Shia militias that already number in the tens of thou-sands and will probably soon pass the hundred thousand mark. Most of them know far less about fighting than the ISIS veterans, but they are just as keen on mar-tyrdom and they would outnumber the ISIS fighters twenty-to-one, maybe fifty-to-one. Two or three days of street fighting in the huge, now mostly Shia city of Baghdad and ISIS would have no more troops.

So ISIS has advanced about as far as it is going to go. And, by the way, so has the Kurdistan Regional Government. The KRG’s Peshmerga troops now control not only the disputed oil city of Kirkuk but al-most 100 percent of traditionally Kurdish territory in Iraq, compared to only about 70 percent two weeks ago.

During most of that time the Peshmer-

ga and ISIS observed a de facto ceasefire while they concentrated on the territory that really mattered to them. There have been some exchanges of fire between ISIS and Peshmerga in the past few days along the ill-defined border between their new holdings, but nothing very serious.

There might have been a major clash around Tel Afar, where KRG President Ma-soud Barzani offered to commit Peshmer-ga to the city’s defence just before ISIS at-tacked, but President Nuri al-Maliki in

Baghdad rejected his offer. The Kurdish troops with-drew, and the city fell to ISIS.

Almost certainly, the reason Maliki declined Barzani’s offer was that it came with major strings at-tached. Having grabbed

the territory he wanted, Barzani was ask-ing the government in Baghdad to recog-nise Kurdistan’s new borders. Maliki’s rea-son for refusing, even though it meant losing Tel Afar, would have been that he still hopes for a third term and could not afford to be seen giving away “Arab” terri-tory to the Kurds.

In ideological terms, ISIS would like to incorporate Kurdistan into its ever-ex-panding Islamic caliphate, which would erase all borders within the (Sunni) Mus-lim world, but in practical terms it knows that it cannot do that, at least for the mo-ment. In ideological terms, ISIS would also like to convert or exterminate all the Shias in the world, starting with the 20 million in Iraq, but in practical terms it cannot do that either.

So the borders of the three successors to the current state of Iraq, Kurdish, Shia Arab and Sunni Arab, have already been drawn, with the important addition that the Sunni Arab successor extends across the old international frontier to include eastern Syria as well. These changes will

not be reversed: the Shia-majority rump of the former Iraqi state that extends from Baghdad to Basra does not have the strength to restore the old centralised Iraq.

Is this really such a disaster? Not for the Kurds, obviously, and not really for the Shia Arabs either: they still have all of their own territory (i.e. Shia-majority territory) and most of the oil. Nor will the Baghdad government which still rules that territory need US air power to save it. (US President Obama has just been stalling until that became clear).

The problematic bit is the Sunni Arabs of Iraq. They are clearly delighted to have shaken off the corrupt and oppressive sectarian rule of President Nuri al-Maliki, but for the near future at least they will have to contend with the unappetising prospect of being ruled instead by the incorruptible but brutally intolerant lead-ers of ISIS.

It should be borne in mind, however, that even now the great majority of the armed men who have created this new Sunni proto-state are not ISIS fanatics. Most of them are either tribal militiamen or former members of the Baathist-era army that was dissolved by the invaders after the overthrow of Saddam Hussein. They belong to organisations that have real political power, and they vastly outnumber the ISIS fanatics.

Those same organisations broke the hold of “Al Qaeda in Iraq”, the ancestor to ISIS, in western Iraq in 2007-09, and it’s entirely possible that in a few years’s time they will end up doing it again to ISIS. But the borders of the new Sunni Arab state, stretching from western and northern Iraq into eastern Syria, may survive. There’s no particular harm in that.

Gwynne Dyer is an independent jour-nalist whose articles on world affairs are

published in 45 countries.

Iraq: Time for a tranquiliser

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

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

non-pro� t organizations to publicize their coming events — provided the following requirements are met:

• Notices will be accepted two weeks prior to the event.• All notices must be emailed, faxed or dropped off in person.

No telephone calls please.• NOTICES SHOULD NOT EXCEED 30 WORDS.

• Only one notice per week from any one club or organization.• All notices must be received by the Thursday prior to publication• There is no guarantee of publication. Notices will run subject to

space limitations.

CRANBROOK TOWNSMAN & KIMBERLEY BULLETIN COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Drop off : 822 Cranbrook St. N. • Drop off : 335 Spokane StreetE-mail: [email protected] • Fax: 250-426-5003

ONGOING Seniors Autobiographical Writing for those aged 60 or wiser at the Kimberley Library. No writing experience necessary. It’s free. Tuesdays 10:00 - Noon. Register: Kim Roberts CBAL Coordinator 250-427-4468 or [email protected] Cellar Thrift Store Open Mon. to Sat., noon to 4:30 p.m. Our revenues support local programs and outreach programs of Cranbrook United Church. Baker Lane Entry at 2 – 12th Ave. S. Cranbrook, B. C. Donations of new or gently used items welcome.Canadian Cancer Society- if you have spare time and would like to volunteer, interested applicants can call 250-426-8916, drop by our o� ce at #19-9th Avenue S, Cranbrook or go to www.� ghtwithus.ca and register as a volunteer.Do you have the desire to stop eating compulsively? Overeaters Anonymous (a 12-Step Program) meets Wednesdays from 7-8pm at Cranbrook United Church, 2-12th St. S., downstairs. Contact: [email protected] Singers Drop-In Singing group; free to attend-just for fun! No experience necessary! CDAC O� ce&Gallery 135 10th Ave S, Tuesdays; 6.45-8.15pm 250-426-4223 / [email protected] / www.cranbrookanddistrictartscouncil.comCranbrook Branch of the Stroke Recovery Association of BC. Meetings are from 10:00am-1:00pm the 2nd and 4th Wed. in the lower level of the Senior Citizen’s Hall, 125-17th St. S. Bring bag lunch. Tootie Gripich, 426-3994. Cranbrook Phoenix Toastmasters meet every Thursday, noon -1:00 Heritage Inn. Toastmasters teaches communication & leadership skills. Roberta 250-489-0174. 1911.toastmastersclubs.org.The Canadian Orthopaedic Foundation invites anyone expecting bone and joint surgery to make contact with local volunteers for peer support. The free Ortho Connect program helps to ease the fear, stress and anxiety that go along with surgery and help patients prepare. 1-800-461-3639 ext 4, and ask for Lauralee.TOPS (Take O� Pounds Sensibly) non pro� t weight loss support group meets EVERY Thursday at 5:00 pm at the Sr Citizen’s Centre, (downstairs) 125 17th Ave S, Cranbrook. Drop in, have fun while losing weight gradually. This Chapter has won an annual B.C. Provincial Award for “BEST AVG WEIGHT LOSS PER MEMBER”. Info: Marie 250 417 2642 Help Big Brothers Big Sisters of Cranbrook: One way you can help is by donating to our “Blue Bin” located outside to the left of Wal- Mart. This bin is there for any clothing items or soft items. (250)489-3111 or email us at @bigbrothersbigsisters.caDance/Practice: every Saturday. Practice from 7 to 8 PM, dancing until 11 PM. Dance With Me Cranbrook Studio, 206-14 A 13th Street, South, behind Safeway.Volunteers are needed to assist sta� with childminding while parents attend programs at the Kimberley Early Learning Center. Come play!! Weekly or monthly for 2 hours. Diana 250427-0716 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: Donna at 250-426-7136.Cranbrook Writer’s Group meet on the 4th Monday of the month at the Arts Council. Engage in writing exercises, constructive critiques & share in information on upcoming literary events & contests. Cbk and District Arts Council, 104, 135-10th Ave S, CBK. info: 250-426-4223 www.cranbrookanddistrictartscouncil.com

UPCOMINGGeology in the Nature Park - Saturday June 28, Leader Ralph Rudser - 427-1590. Join a professional geologist for this informative 3 hour hike. Meet at 9:00 am at the Matthew Creek turno� to arrange car pooling and rides. Bring water & snack.2014 FREE PUBLIC SWIM Wednesday, July 2nd, 5:00-6:00pm is sponsored by Grubstake Pizza.Kimberley Nature Park Hike; Creeks & Ponds Natural history Event - Saturday, July 5. Leaders Ruth & Kent Goodwin 427-5404 ‘Creeks & Ponds’ nature loop will start at 9 am at the Higgins St entrance. After following Eimer’s Creek we will have a look at Eimer’s Lake before heading up to Myrtle Junction and over to Duck Pond. On our way back to the trail head, we will pass more ponds on the Edge Trail. Intermediate hike will � nish at 11:30.Old English Car Club of BC presents Brits ‘Round BC, Tueday July 8, from 4-7pm. Join us at Trickle Creek Lodge at Kimberley Alpine Resort. Info: cli� @westernwireless.ca / 250-489-5874.Kimberley Nature Park Hike; The Hills Are Alive Singalong and Amble in the Park - Saturday, July 12. Leader John Allen 432-9356. Meet at the Swan St entrance at 10 am. Bring a snack, drink and camera. Song sheets will be provided. Howling dogs welcome.2014 FREE FAMILY SWIM Wednesday, July 16th, 6:00-7:00pm is sponsored by Kimberley Healthcare Auxiliary. Persons 18 years & younger must be accompanied by an adult.Kimberley Nature Park Hike; The Terri� c Nature Park Traverse - Sunday, July 20. Leaders Alan Ansell & Suzanne McAllister 427-7043. Meet at the Riverside Campground at 9:30 am. Hike to the Nordic Centre. Bring water and a snack for this 3 hr hike.

daily townsman / daily bulletin

Gwynne Dyer

Tamsyn BurgmannCanadian Press

VANCOUVER — The British Columbia government agreed Friday to bring in a mediator to try and resolve the impasse that has put thousands of teachers on picket lines, after the inde-pendent facilitator who spent more than a year running inter-ference in the dispute resigned.

Mark Brown stepped aside after the BC Teachers’ Federa-tion unilaterally called for me-diation on Thursday, facing a second week on strike with the parties still legions apart.

The government’s chief ne-gotiator, Peter Cameron, said Friday he spoke directly to the union president earlier in the day and they decided to contact the union’s proposed mediator together, get clarification on his availability and find out if he would accept the job.

“There is a number of peo-ple in the province that are highly respected, have a high profile and a success record,’’ Cameron said in an interview.

“It may be that (a mediator) is able to help convince the union about where the settlement zone has to be.

“But the expectation shouldn’t be that we’re going to be doing anything more than making relatively small adjust-ments that are available at this point.’’

Cameron said his decision to leave is unfortunate but his view was that Brown had been put in an “awkward position.’’ The union, for their part, said Brown was well-informed of the decision to call for media-tion and said it’s a normal next step for a facilitator to depart at that point.

Federation president Jim Iker suggested veteran media-tor Vince Ready could help bridge the divide.

“We’ve already moved into the government’s zone in wages, we did that last week-end,’’ he said in an interview.

“So we’re pretty close on wages. We made a significant

move and now what we need government to do is move into our zone to deal with the issues of class size, class composition and specialist teacher levels.’’

A statement Friday from the government’s bargaining arm said it supported getting a me-diator involved.

“The sooner the better,’’ said the statement from the BC Pub-lic School Employers’ Associa-tion.

“Regardless of the process going forward, the union must still deal with the fact that the solution ... is not simply chang-ing from an expert and respect-ed facilitator to an expert and respected mediator.’’

A mediator has no formal authority to settle the dispute. Their mandate is to bring the parties together and help them reach agreement on their own, McQuarrie said.

There’s not even consensus at this point about the biggest impediment to a deal.

Government negotiators

contend teachers are asking for wage increases and a benefit fund that would amount to a 14.5 per cent hike, which they discount as outside “the afford-ability zone.’’

The union is asking for an eight per cent salary boost, a $5,000 signing bonus and $225 million fund over the life of a five-year agreement to cover additional costs like prepara-tion time and improved health benefits.

The government has offered a seven per cent wage increase and $1,200 signing bonus over six years, arguing the union is asking for twice the compensa-tion of other public-sector set-tlements.

There’s also a standoff over classroom conditions. The gov-ernment’s proposal of a $75-million annual learning improvement fund is a third of the union’s proposal of an on-going $225 million annual fund to be used exclusively to hire additional teachers.

Province agrees to try mediation to jump start stalled teacher talks

Page 6: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, June 23, 2014

PAGE 6 MONDAY, JUNE 23, 2014

The wider world is a scary place and when one contemplates where you’d like to hang your hat, it’s hard to argue that British Columbia may indeed be “the best place on earth”. Granted, we have our is-sues — the Enbridge pipeline decision promising to be a mighty contentious one for the peo-ple of our province. But we have yet to decide to tear ourselves apart.

Even Canada as a whole — grumbling from Quebec notwithstanding — is a sta-ble, mostly healthy place to live and prosper.

That is certainly not the case in other strife-torn nations. Witness the sectarian violence in Iraq, a country that now seems determined to rend itself into pieces as Sunni and Shiite factions are amping up the atrocities on a daily basis. And the United States is contemplating a return to what ... restore order? Or perhaps finish off what they started on the fateful day in Oc-tober of 2002 when the American govern-ment decided to follow their fearless lead-er George W. Bush down a road paved with yellow cake uranium in order to catch a terrorist who at no time was proven to be present in Iraq. And many countries fol-lowed blindly behind him.

As a side note, despite all the scandal, I will always consider our Prime Minister

Jean Chretien a great man for not allowing Canada to follow down that road. He stood up and said no, and was reviled in the U.S. for doing so. That was one thing the little guy from Shawinigan can rightfully claim as a great accomplishment.

I’m not arguing that Sadaam Hussein was a very bad man, but I will argue that things are no better after a decade of war, and American “na-tion building”.

Then we turn north to eastern Ukraine, where

the looming shadow of Vladimir Putin blocks the sun. I have come to believe that Mr. Putin has an ambition, a life’s goal, and that goal is to restore the great Soviet So-cialist Republic, to go down in history as the man who put the Soviet Union back together after Gorbachev et al so foolishly thought to give democracy a try. All those states like Georgia, Uzbekistan and more should be looking very nervously to their borders once Putin is done freeing Ukraine from the tyranny of independence.

And then turn your eyes a little to the northwest to green isle of Great Britain. For a battle is looming there as well. In Sep-tember Scottish voters go to the polls to decide on whether it remains in the United Kingdom. The question will be simple, “Should Scotland be an independent

country?” No sovereignty association, just bam, independence.

The fact that the Scottish National Party, whose central aim is independence, won the 2011 Scottish election by a landslide is probably causing the boys in the House of Lords some concern. They could just do it. They could vote to be independent.

The United Kingdom has been united for just 300 years. Prior to that the two countries coexisted uneasily and some-times peacefully. But there have been bat-tles. There was the First War of Scottish Independence, the Scots led by William Wallace, which began in 1296, and led to Mel Gibson giving the world Braveheart. That war lasted some 30 years, then there was a two year break followed by the Sec-ond war of Scottish Independence. Vari-ous Anglo-Scottish border wars followed for the next three or four centuries (!!) cul-minating in what Scots still consider the end of the Highland way of life, the great battle of Culloden in 1746.

And now, they go for independence again. Peacefully, this time. But the ramifi-cations are huge.

The question is, in all these countries, at the end of the conflict, if there is an end, will anyone’s life be any better?

Carolyn Grant is Editor of the Kimberley Daily Bulletin

The world splitting apart

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

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Page 7: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, June 23, 2014

MONDAY, JUNE 23, 2014 PAGE 7

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In both games, it was a case of too little, too late.

The Cranbrook Ban-dits struggled on the plate this weekend against the Bitterroot Red Sox, losing twice at scores of 5-2 and 8-1 on Sunday afternoon.

The Bandits were supposed to play the Whitefish Glacier ‘B’ team on Saturday for a double-header, but their opponents had to cancel due to lack of players.

However, the Red Sox proved to be a tough team for their double-header on Sun-day at Confederation Park.

“The first game, we strung three hits to-gether in the last inning and scored two runs, but other than that, it was a hit here, a hit there, and we never got

a string of hits,” said Bandits head coach Paul Mrazek.

“Hitting the ball in the air, we weren’t hit-ting the ball on the ground. Everything was routine, so the bats were flat.

“Then you got a cou-ple of errors and they score some runs, but if we’re not stringing a couple hits together...”

The Red Sox opened the game with a run in the first inning, and added to their lead with another in the third. They scored twice in the fourth and came home again in the sixth for a five run lead.

The Bandits got their bats going in the final inning, with Tyler Thorn doubling to sec-ond base and Jake Bromley hitting a single before Ryotaro Yukawa brought them home, but it wasn’t enough to mount a comeback.

Devon Marra pitched the majority of the game, with Kei Chlopan coming in for relief for the final two innings. Marra threw two strikeouts and walked three, while Chlopan came in later

Bandits struggle at the plate against BitterrootAMERICAN LEGION BASEBALL

TREVOR CRAWLEY PHOTO

EYE ON THE BALL: The Balls of Steele bocce pits at Baker Park were in full swing by Saturday afternoon, as teams battled for tournament bragging rights. All kinds of sporting activities such as slo-pitch, soccer and the Wheels of Steele were a part of the Sam Steele Days celebration this past weekend. Keep an eye on the Daily Townsman for photo features this week.

DAILY TOWNSMAN / DAILY BULLETIN

Kjell Enoksen 1950 - 2014

We sadly announce Kjell’s, passing on June 12, 2014 in Cranbrook.Kjell came to the Pioneer Lodge in Cranbrook on December 1, 1998.  Prior to that he lived at Hermosa House in Cranbrook. He was born in Norway he came to Canada as a child and lived in several BC locations before coming to Cranbrook in the mid 80s.

Kjell was a very friendly man who liked people. He had a very good sense of humour and an  infectious laugh. Kjell liked to walk and would go great distances. In his younger days would often spend hours out walking while sight seeing and people watching. He was adventurous and delightfully unpredictable, loved music and was a very good dancer.He was involved with REALM and the Community Living Centre, participated with Special Olympics and was a wicked Bocce player. Kjell was determined and preserved with his dreams and his desire to travel.He leaves behind many friends in Cranbrook as well as his two sisters Linda and Irene.A memorial service for Kjell will be held on Tuesday, June 24, 2014 at McPherson Funeral Home in Cranbrook at 10:00 am with a reception to follow.

Arrangements entrusted to McPherson Funeral Service Condolences for the family can be offered at:

www.mcphersonfh.com

in the game and only gave up one run.

In the subsequent rematch, the Red Sox went up early with a 5-0 lead after three innings. Bitterroot scored again in three more to build

an insurmountable lead.

The Bandits were able to respond by scor-ing once in the sixth, with Marra hitting an RBI single to bring Chlopan home.

“We didn’t concen-trate well,” said Yukawa, who plays right field and is a first-year player on the team. “We didn’t hit very well. We were, yesterday at practice, but not today.”

TREVOR CRAWLEY PHOTO

Tyler Thorn of the Cranbrook Bandits makes a big double to second base during a game against the Bitterroot Red Sox on Sunday at Confederation Park.

Portugal salvages late-game draw

against USA

FRIDAY, JUNE 20THGROUP DItaly 0 Costa Rica 1

GROUP ESwitzerland 2 France 5Honduras 1 Ecuador 2

SATURDAY, JUNE 21THGROUP FArgentina 1 Iran 0Nigeria 1 Bosnia-Herzegovina 0

GROUP GGermany 2 Ghana 2

SUNDAY, JUNE 20THGROUP HBelgium 1 Russia 0South Korea 2 Algeria 4

GROUP GUnited States 2 Portugal 2

CHRIS LEHOURITESAssociated Press

MANAUS, Brazil - Cristiano Ronaldo set up Varela for a late equalizer on a hot and humid night in the jungle Sunday to give Portugal a 2-2 draw with the United States and hope for a spot in the second round of the World Cup.

Ronaldo, who has been playing despite a left knee injury, sent in a cross in the fifth minute of stoppage time and Va-rela scored with a diving header in the last sec-onds of the match.

Nani had scored first

for Portugal, shooting past a sprawling Tim Howard in the fifth min-ute, but the Americans responded in the second half as Portugal seemed to wilt in the stifling heat.

Jermaine Jones made it 1-1 with a curling shot in the 64th minute after a cross from Graham Zusi made its way through the Portugal defence.

Clint Dempsey, play-ing with a broken nose, then put the Americans ahead in the 81st. The United States captain used his stomach to di-rect the ball into the net from a cross by Zusi.

Page 8: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, June 23, 2014

Page 8 monday, June 23, 2014

COMICS

Tundra By Chad Carpenter

Garfield By Jim Davis

Hagar the Horrible By Dick Browne

Baby Blues By Kirkman and Scott

Rhymes with Orange By Hillary B. Price

Annie’s MAilboxby Kathy Mitchell and

Marcy Sugar

HoroScopeSby Jacqueline Bigar

daily townsman / daily Bulletin

Dear Annie: I have several cousins who are celebrating weddings and baby showers this summer. Several of my aunts will not at-tend any of these events if they are not held in a Catholic Church. They say it is against their “rules.” One aunt sent a reply saying she would not attend the outdoor wedding because it was not being held in a church. Another aunt replied to a wedding shower invitation that she would not attend it at a Lutheran church hall because it was not her religion.

I find these replies to be quite rude and judgmental. Should something be said? Should we ignore it? Should future invita-tions not be sent? -- Wisconsin

Dear Wisconsin: Catholic weddings are supposed to take place in a church, offici-ated by a priest. If your aunt will not attend any wedding that is not sanctioned by the church (generally meaning an interfaith marriage), please respect that. And while that is not a problem with wedding showers, there are those who will not enter the place of worship of a different religion. That, too, is their choice. These religious restrictions don’t leave a great deal of room for compro-mise.

The aunts were rude in explaining (which apparently felt like lecturing) the reasons they would not attend. Simply saying, “Sorry I cannot be there,” would have been simpler and kinder. But your choice is to invite those with whom you wish to celebrate, and theirs is whether or not to come. Please say noth-ing more about it.

Dear Annie: I am writing to let you know one of your columns has saved at least one life.

My friend told me she read a letter from “L.,” who is a cancer survivor. The writer discussed the importance of having a colo-noscopy and listed all the symptoms of co-lon cancer. When she finished reading it, my friend told her son, “I have cancer,” and it turned out, she did.

The doctor found Stage II colon cancer, for which she is now being treated, and the doctors think she will make a full recovery. I think that letter should run every week. -- Anonymous

Dear Anonymous: While we cannot re-peat the same letter every week, we think it is a public service to reprint the symptoms of colon cancer. If you notice any of the follow-ing, please see your doctor immediately and schedule a colonoscopy:

1. Blood in the stool or rectal bleeding when you have a bowel movement.

2. Stomach aches, pains and cramps that continue with no apparent cause.

3. Difficulty eating or swallowing. 4. Losing weight without cause.Dear Annie: I read the letter from “Over-

whelmed in Smalltown, USA,” whose trans-gendered sister is invited to the brother’s wedding, and the family won’t attend.

Seven years ago, my son moved out of state for a job. Two years later, he emailed that he had made the decision to transgen-der to a female. I was absolutely devastated. But after a few months, I realized that I had to accept my “daughter” if I wanted to have a relationship with her. The first time I vis-ited, my knees were shaking, and my heart was pounding. She was respectful of my feelings and dressed in her male clothing so as not to shock me. She wanted us to meet her transgendered friends, and even though I was scared, they turned out to be the nicest people.

Due to other medical issues, my sweet, beautiful daughter recently died. Her friends drove 800 miles to support me. My only memories of her female self are in the stories her friends tell. I miss my sweet angel every moment of every day. -- Grieving Mom of a Beautiful Daughter

Dear Mom: Our condolences on your ter-rible loss. Thank you for expressing what is most important: This is still your child.

To all our Muslim readers: Happy Eid

Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sug-ar, 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 writ-ers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2014 CREATORS.COM

ARIES (March 21-April 19) You can push only so much and expect positive results. Ultimate-ly, you could experience some negativity when trying to reach a financial agreement. You might have to indulge in some wining and dining in order to persuade the involved parties to agree. Tonight: Your treat. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Your optimism might exhaust a partner and force you to rethink your direction. This person could become very difficult. Know that a smile can be more influential than you realize. Try to be a little more subtle and a little less like a cheerleader. Tonight: As you like it.GEMINI (May 21-June 20)Someone’s insecurities might be getting the best of you. You could feel down and somewhat tired by recent hassles. Venus enters your sign, which adds to your buoyancy and charisma. Follow your intuition with a difficult situation. Tonight: Visit with a friend.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) You’ll be more grounded than usual, especially as you express your opinions in a meeting. Recognize that everyone hits a brick wall occasionally, but that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t test a different approach or a new idea. Tonight: Surround yourself with friends.LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Take a stand, and know that you might need to accept far more responsibility. How you deal with someone could radically change as you gain a sense of control. Stay grounded. Make a point to clearly communicate your thoughts to others. Tonight: Burn the candle at both ends.VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You have the ability to see the big picture, whereas those around you might not. You could have difficulty expressing why your priorities are so different, as a result. Honor your vision. When others see the results, they might strive to detach more often. To-night: Accept an offer.LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)Deal directly with a friend who often gives you feedback. What

this person suggests might seem lackluster or superficial. Be po-lite, but seek out other answers if need be. Pace yourself, especially if you are trying to get a lot done. Tonight: Seek out an expert.SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)Others won’t hesitate to chal-lenge you. You might wonder about their strong approach, but first recognize how you come off. Listen to what is being shared by a trusted loved one. Take an overview as you weigh the pros and cons. Tonight: Say “yes” to an invitation.SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You’ll want to be more direct with someone, but at the mo-ment you might not be as sure of yourself as you would like. Remain level-headed with someone you need to respond to. You’ll want this person to understand where you are com-ing from. Tonight: Kick back and relax.CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)Don’t even consider doing any-thing except detaching from a hot issue. Your judgment might be off, and you could make a huge mistake. Stop and have a

friendly little chat with some-one you normally just nod or say “hello” to. Tonight: Approach a situation creatively.AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Stay close to home. If you work from home, you might consider establishing a stronger pres-ence there. The results of giving yourself greater freedom will be spectacular, and it will give whatever you do an extra touch of excellence. Tonight: Make spe-cial time for a loved one.PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You might want to establish a stronger bond with someone in your life. It could be with a co-worker, neighbor or friend whom you’ve been too quick to say “hi” and “bye” to. A family member suddenly might change his or her tune. Tonight: Buy a treat on the way home. BORN TODAYU.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Clarence Thomas (1948), singer/songwriter June Carter Cash (1929), actress Selma Blair (1972)***

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Page 9: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, June 23, 2014

monday, June 23, 2014 Page 9

PUZZLES

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

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

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

CALL 426-3272OR VISIT

www.tribute.cafor this week’s movie listings

Tuesday Afternoon/Evening June 24 Cbk. Kim. 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30 # # KSPS-PBS Georg Georg Arthur Wild News Busi PBS NewsHour The March Freedom Summer: American Divine Women Charlie Rose $ $ CFCN Ellen Show News News CTV News etalk Theory Person-Interest Anger Gold Law & Order News News Daily Mey % % KXLY-ABC Rachael Ray The Doctors News ABC News News Ent Insider Extreme Weight Loss Celeb.-Swap KXLY Kim & & KREM-CBS Dr. Phil Dr. Oz Show News CBS News Inside Ac NCIS NCIS: LA Person-Interest News Late _ _ KHQ-NBC Ellen Show Judge Judge News News News Million. J’pard Wheel America’s Got Talent The Night Shift News J. Fal ( ( TSN SportsCentre Hocke NHL Pitts Hocke E:60 SportsCentre Record NHL NHL SportsCentre SportsCentre ) ) NET Sportsnet Con. MLB Baseball From Rogers Centre in Toronto. Sportsnet Con. Hocke Mis Poker Tour Sportsnet Con. Hocke World + + GLOBAL BC Queen Latifah The Young News News News Hour Ent ET NCIS NCIS: LA The Night Shift News , , KNOW Olly Jelly Maya Arthur Martha Wild Hope-Wildlife Marine Mach. Finding Fallen Farmer John High Marine Mach. ` ` CBUT Reci Ste Dragons’ Den CBC CBC CBC Cor FIFA World C. NHL Awards The National News World 1 M CICT The Young News News News News ET Ent The Night Shift NCIS NCIS: LA News Hour Fi ET The 3 O CIVT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent The Night Shift NCIS NCIS: LA News Hour ET The 4 6 YTV Side Squir Spong Chuck Par Spong Cache Japan Cook’d Under. Vam Haunt Haunt Young Gags Gags Vam Haunt 6 . KAYU-FOX Steve Harvey Bethenny Two Two Simp Mod Theory Theory Family Brook Brook Mindy News Mod Arsenio Hall 7 / CNN Situa Cross E. B. OutFront Cooper 360 Special Report CNN Tonight Cooper 360 Special Report CNN Tonight Foren Foren 8 0 SPIKE Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo I Am Steve McQueen Bullitt I Am Steve McQueen 9 1 HGTV Bryan Bryan Bryan Bryan Hunt Hunt Decks Decks Decke Decke Hunt Hunt Decks Decks Decke Decke Ext. Homes : 2 A&E Big Ship Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Ship Ship Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Stor Ship Ship < 4 CMT CMT’s Hottest: Gags Gags Burger Burger Big Redneck Ship Ship Rules Rules Big Redneck Ship Ship Rules Rules = 5 W (3:00) Numb Undercover Property Bro Love It-List It Property Bro Property Bro Brother vs. Shan Chris Property Bro ? 9 SHOW Rookie Blue Bomb Girls Crisis Point Justified Lost Girl NCIS NCIS NCIS: LA @ : DISC How/ How/ How/ How/ Ice Cold Gold Deadliest Deadly Catch Siberian Cut Deadliest Deadly Catch Bering Gold A ; SLICE Debt Debt Prop Prop Millionaire Thicke Thicke Housewives Debt Debt Thicke Thicke Housewives Friend Friend B < TLC Gypsy Here Comes Turn 10 Cake Boss: Next Great Baker Cake Boss: Next Great Baker Turn 10 Here Comes C = BRAVO The Listener Flashpoint Blue Bloods Saving Hope Perception The Listener Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Saving Hope D > EA2 Army (:35) The Craft ReGenesis Act of God Lucille Deep (:40) Anaconda (:10) Poseidon E ? TOON Ben 10 Tenkai Jim Rocket Johnny Johnny Adven Camp Pack Johnny Total Total Family Amer. Archer Robot Ftur Fugget F @ FAM Shake ANT Phi Lego Jessie Jessie Austin Austin Win, Good Good ANT Win Really Good Jessie Wiz Derek G A WPCH Middle Mod Theory Theory Brown Payne Brown Payne Mod Sein Family Family Amer. Amer. Jeffer. Jeffer. Runaway Bride H B COM Sein Sein Gas Theory Parks Theory Match Match Just/Laughs Gags Gags JFL Simp Theory Theory Daily Colbert I C TCM (:15) Corvette Summer Thunder in the City The Best House in London Sanders of the River No Orchids for Miss Blandish K E OUT Mantracker Stor Stor Stor Stor Mr Goodwin Stor Stor Stor Stor Mr Goodwin Stor Stor MeatEater L F HIST America Ancient Aliens MASH MASH Pickers Restoration Ancient Aliens Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Yukon Gold M G SPACE Inner Scare Castle Stargate SG-1 Cosplay Highway Inner Castle Star Trek: Voy. Star Trek: Next Cos N H AMC (2:30) Shutter Island National Lampoon’s Vacation Meet the Fockers Freak Freak Town X2: X-Men United O I FS1 Pregame World Poker MLB Shop Pecos Big MLB FOX Sports FOX Sports FOX Sports FOX Sports P J DTOUR Disas Disas Trashopolis Museum Se Declassified Castle Secrets Ghost Adv. Declassified Castle Secrets Ghost Adv. W W MC1 House at End (:05) Compliance (:35) Time of Death (:10) Insidious: Chapter 2 You’re Next House at End ¨ ¨ KTLA Cunningham Maury Family Family News News Two Two Famous in 12 Supernatural KTLA 5 News News Ar ≠ ≠ WGN-A Funny Videos Funny Videos Demolition Man Salem Salem Parks Parks Parks Rock Rock Sunny Ø Ø EA1 (3:30) The Good Shepherd (:20) Childstar Excess Baggage (:45) Overnight Delivery (:15) The Cowboy Way ∂ ∂ VISN Road-Avonlea Murder, She... Eas Vicar A Passage to Ottawa Road-Avonlea Tyler Perry’s the Family That Preys Popoff 102 102 MM VideoFlow VideoFlow Top 10 De Cleve Drunk Drunk Nathan Nathan Conan Com Prince Drunk Drunk 105 105 SRC Ric’do Quelle histoire! Alors on jase! TJ C.-B. Sque Monde Vengeance TJ Tous d’une même voix

Wednesday Afternoon/Evening June 25 Cbk. Kim. 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:30 # # KSPS-PBS Georg Georg Arthur Wild News Busi PBS NewsHour Nature NOVA NOVA Railwa Charlie Rose $ $ CFCN Ellen Show News News CTV News etalk Theory Motive So You Think You Can Dance News News Daily Mey % % KXLY-ABC Rachael Ray The Doctors News ABC News News Ent Insider Middle Gold Mod Gold Motive KXLY Kim & & KREM-CBS Dr. Phil Dr. Oz Show News CBS News Inside Ac Big Brother Criminal Minds CSI: Cri. Scene News Late _ _ KHQ-NBC Ellen Show Judge Judge News News News Million. J’pard Wheel America’s Got Talent Taxi Brooklyn News J. Fal ( ( TSN SportsCentre Hocke Grey CFL CFL Preview MLS MLS Soccer SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre ) ) NET Sportsnet Con. MLB Baseball From Rogers Centre in Toronto. Sportsnet Con. Hocke Darts Poker Tour Sportsnet Con. Hocke World + + GLOBAL BC Queen Latifah The Young News News News Hour Ent ET Big Brother The Simpsons Movie News , , KNOW Olly Jelly Maya Arthur Martha Wild Marine Mach. Canada World Before András Schiff Don Giovanni Canada ` ` CBUT Reci Ste Dragons’ Den CBC CBC CBC Cor Mercer 2014 FIFA World Cup The National News World 1 M CICT The Young News News News News ET Ent Engels Engels Big Brother The Simpsons Movie News Hour Fi 3 O CIVT The Young News News News Hour ET Ent Big Brother The Simpsons Movie News Hour ET The 4 6 YTV Side Squir Spong Nerds Par Spong Haunt Thun As As Vam Haunt Haunt Young Gags Gags Vam Haunt 6 . KAYU-FOX Steve Harvey Bethenny Two Two Simp Mod Theory Theory So You Think You Can Dance News Mod Arsenio Hall 7 / CNN Situa Cross E. B. OutFront Cooper 360 Anthony CNN Tonight Cooper 360 Anthony CNN Tonight Foren Foren 8 0 SPIKE Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo Repo Games Coming to America Res 9 1 HGTV Decke Decke Decke Decke Hunt Hunt Live Live Flipping Out Hunt Hunt Live Live Flipping Out Home Strange : 2 A&E Duck Dynasty Big Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Big Big Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Duck Big < 4 CMT Wipeout Gags Gags Undercover Tori J. Me Reba Reba Reba Tori J. Me Reba Reba Reba = 5 W My Neighbor Undercover Property Bro Love It-List It Love It Love It-List It Love It-List It Love It Love It-List It ? 9 SHOW Licence to Kill Bomb Girls Lost Girl Remedy NCIS NCIS NCIS NCIS NCIS: LA @ : DISC How/ How/ How/ How/ Car Hoards Deadly Catch Fast N’ Loud Overhaulin’ Car Hoards Highway Thru Fast N’ Loud A ; SLICE Debt Debt Prop Prop Millionaire Dance Moms Abby’s Studio Debt Debt Dance Moms Abby’s Studio Friend Friend B < TLC Gypsy Gypsy Return-Amish Return-Amish Return-Amish Return-Amish Return-Amish Return-Amish Gypsy C = BRAVO The Listener Flashpoint Blue Bloods Suits Graceland The Listener Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Suits D > EA2 The Mask (:05) The Big Lebowski ReGenesis (:25) Cake Hostile Makeover Killer Hair Lethal Weap. 3 E ? TOON Ben 10 Tenkai Jim Groj. Johnny Johnny Adven Rocket Pack Johnny Total Total Family Amer. Archer Robot Ftur Fugget F @ FAM Shake ANT Phi Dog Jessie Jessie Austin Jessie Lego Good Good ANT Win Really Good Jessie Wiz Derek G A WPCH Middle Mod Theory Theory Brown Payne Brown Payne Mod Sein Family Family Amer. Amer. Jeffer. Jeffer. Rules-Engage. H B COM Sein Sein Gas Theory Parks Theory Match Match Just/Laughs Gags Gags JFL Simp Theory Theory Daily Colbert I C TCM Interrupted Melody Dillinger (:15) Badman’s Territory Born to Kill (:45) The Hoodlum Step by Step K E OUT Mantracker Stor Stor Stor Stor Be Alive Stor Stor Stor Stor Be Alive Stor Stor MeatEater L F HIST Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn MASH MASH Pickers Pawn Pawn Amer Amer Swamp People Miracles Decd. Yukon Gold M G SPACE Inner Scare Castle Stargate SG-1 Paranormal Wi. Paranormal Wi. Inner Castle Star Trek: Voy. Star Trek: Next Para. N H AMC (3:30) Meet the Fockers The Green Mile (:01) McLintock! O I FS1 Pregame UFC UFC UFC Tonight Ultimate Fight Ultimate Fight FOX Sports MLB Ultimate Fight FOX Sports P J DTOUR Disas Disas Gotta Gotta Live Live Coast Coast Wat Wat Ghost Adv. Coast Coast Wat Wat Ghost Adv. W W MC1 (3:35) Cloud Atlas Zambezia (7:55) Molly Maxwell Free Samples (10:50) Magic Mike Beauti ¨ ¨ KTLA Cunningham Maury Family Family News News Two Two Arrow The 100 KTLA 5 News News Ar ≠ ≠ WGN-A Funny Videos MLB Baseball From Wrigley Field in Chicago. Rules Rules Rules Rules Parks Parks Parks Rock Rock Sunny Ø Ø EA1 (3:45) The Forsaken (:20) Fright Night (:10) Lost Song The Lost Boys (:40) The Forsaken Slaughtrhse 5 ∂ ∂ VISN Road-Avonlea Murder, She... Eas F’wlty Downton A. The Syndicate Road-Avonlea Meet the Browns Super Popoff 102 102 MM VideoFlow VideoFlow Top 10 Simp Cleve Bang! Bang! Amy Amy Conan Com Prince Bang! Bang! 105 105 SRC Ric’do Quelle histoire! Alors on jase! TJ C.-B. Sque Épi Séduction Pénélope TJ Coupe du monde

Protect our earth.The Cranbrook Daily Townsman and the

Kimberley Daily Bulletin promote recycling.

We use vegetable-based inks, and our newsprint, tin and aluminum waste is recycled.

Friday’s answers

Friday’s

Page 10: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, June 23, 2014

Page 10 monday, June 23, 2014 daily townsman / daily bulletin DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN Monday, June 23, 2014 PAGE 10

bcclassifi ed.comfax 250.426.5003 email classifi [email protected]

250.426.5201 ext 202

Your community. Your classifi eds. Share Your Smiles!

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

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

order they are received.

Avery Wrightis smiling because

daddy was taking a picture of her.

Dale Duane Cupples

1943 - 2014

Dale Cupples, age 70, passed away at his home in Cranbrook, BC on June 17, 2014.

He had resided in Kimberley and Cranbrook for many years. Dale was predeceased by his wife Julie in November of 2012.

Dale had such a big heart and was always willing to give. He asked nothing in return. Even through the pain and difficulty of breathing, he would do his best to put on a brave, happy face and do whatever he could to help others. He loved being outside fishing, hunting and warming up by the wood stove after being outdoors. He often said the wood stove was the only way to warm his bones, even if his house did get smoked out every once in a while!

Dale will be greatly missed by his children, sister, grand children, great grand children, friends and his faithful friend Snoopy.

A memorial service for Dale will be held at First Baptist Church in Cranbrook on Wednesday June 25th at 1:00pm.

In lieu of flowers, those wishing to make a donation in Dale’s honour may do so to Youth With A Mission.

Arrangements entrusted to McPherson Funeral Service.Condolences for the family can be offered at:

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

Sympathy & Understanding

2200 - 2nd Street SouthCranbrook, BC V1C 1E1

250-426-3132

1885 Warren AvenueKimberley, BC V1A 1R9

250-427-7221www.mcphersonfh.com

Kootenay Monument Installations

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

Granite & Bronze Memorials, Dedication Plaques,

Benches, Memorial Walls, Gravesite Restorations,

Sales & Installations

www.kootenaymonument.ca

IN-HOME CONSULTATION OR VISIT OUR SHOWROOM

End of Life?Bereaved?

May We Help?

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

Your community foundation.

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

We build endowment funds that benefit the community forever and

help create personal legacies

INDEX IN BRIEFFAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTSTRAVEL

CHILDRENEMPLOYMENT

BUSINESS SERVICESPETS & LIVESTOCK

MERCHANDISE FOR SALEREAL ESTATE

RENTALSAUTOMOTIVE

ADULT ENTERTAINMENTLEGAL NOTICES

AGREEMENTIt is agreed by any display or Classified Advertiser requesting space that the liability of the paper in the event of failure to publish an advertisement shall be limited to the amount paid by the advertiser for that portion of the advertising space occupied by the incorrect item only, and that there shall be no liability in any event beyond the amount paid for such advertisement. The publisher shall not be liable for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement.

bcclassified.com cannot be responsible for errors after the first day of publication of any advertisement. Notice of errors on the first day should immediately be called to the attention of the Classified Department to be corrected for the following edition.

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

DISCRIMINATORY LEGISLATIONAdvertisers are reminded that Provincial legislation forbids the publication of any advertisement which discriminates against any person because of race, religion, sex, color, nationality, ancestry or place of origin, or age, unless the condition is justified by a bona fide requirement for the work involved.

COPYRIGHTCopyright and/or properties subsist in all advertisements and in all other material appearing in this edition of bcclassified.com. Permission to reproduce wholly or in part and in any form whatsoever, particularly by a photographic or offset process in a publication must be obtained in writing from the publisher. Any unauthorized reproduction will be subject to recourse in law.

ON THE WEB:

S.M. QUENNELL TRUCKING

is looking for log truck drivers, based in

Cranbrook.

• Full time work, home every night.

• Excellent medical, dental, pension benefi ts

• Wages competitive with industry standards.

Fax resume and

drivers abstract to:

fax:250-426-4610 or call: 250-426-6853

Help Wanted

CARE AIDE required for split shift position, morning and evening. Client is in a wheelchair and on a ventilator. Duties include morning routine of personal care, exercises, physio and equipment maintenance and evening bedtime routine. Email resumes or questions to:

[email protected] or contact Gisele at

250-489-4928.

Home Care/Support

In Memoriam

IN MEMORY of HELEN MULLEN

there will be a Celebration of Life

held at Dave and Bev Westerby’s located at

712-23rd Ave N, Cranbrook, BC on June 28th

between 1 & 4 pm.

PersonalsMEET SINGLES right now! No paid operators, just real peo-ple like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and con-nect live. Try it free. Call now: 1-800-712-9851.

Lost & FoundLOST: WALLINGER Ave. area in Kimberley. Dark Calico female cat, answers to Suki. Missing since June 9th.Please call 250-427-5475

Travel

TimeshareCANCEL YOUR Timeshare- No Risk Program, Stop Mort-gage & Maintenance Pay-ments Today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. Free Consul-tation. Call Us Now. We Can Help! 1-888-356-5248.

Drivers/Courier/Trucking

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

• Guaranteed 40hr. WorkWeek & Overtime

• Paid Travel & Lodging• Meal Allowance

• 4 Weeks Vacation• Excellent Benefi ts Package

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

careers & then choosethe FastTRACK Application.

Obituaries

Education/Trade Schools

APARTMENT/CONDOMANAGER TRAINING

• Certifi ed Home Study

Course• Jobs

RegisteredAcross Canada• Gov. Certifi ed

www.RMTI.ca / 604.681.5456 or 1.800.665.8339

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

Obituaries

Help WantedCOMPUTER TECH NEEDEDCranbrook Computer Works is looking for a new member to join our team. Must have some Computer TechKnowledge but we are willing to train the right person. Please bring resume to:

Cranbrook Computer Works at 135 6th Ave S.,

Cranbrook, BCCOUNTERTOP CARPENTER: Ongoing training provided. You will build countertops, re-face kitchens and install. You must have a woodworking background. Valid drivers li-cense required. Please apply at:

A1 Tops 933 Industrial Road #1.

250-426-6575

Help WantedNEED A NANNY.

July 1 - Sept. 1. Live-in, to care for a 14 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

WHERE DO YOU TURN

YOUR NEWSPAPER:The link to your community

TO LEARNWHAT’S

ON SALE?

WE ARE ALWAYS

LOOKING FOR CARRIERS.

Give us a call and start walking

today!

250-427-5333www.dailybulletin.ca

CLASSIFIEDS HELP YOU SELLCALL: 426-5201 EXT. 202

CLASSIFIEDSWILL SELL

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

Page 11: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, June 23, 2014

monday, June 23, 2014 Page 11daily townsman / daily bulletinPAGE 11 Monday, June 23, 2014 DAILY TOWNSMAN/DAILY BULLETIN

Janis Caldwell-SawleyMortgage SpecialistRoyal Bank of Canada

[email protected]/janis.sawley

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

Mortgages

Services

Financial ServicesARE YOU $10K Or More In Debt? DebtGo can help re-duce a signifi cant portion of your debt load. Call now and see if you qualify. 1-800-351-1783.

BANK DECLINED LOAN?WE APPROVE.

Now you can get up to $3.5M business/personal consolidation loan with rate starting from 1.99% with min. of $35K. Bad credit or Bankruptsy welcome. Apply now at 1-866-249-1055

GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB.

1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com

UNFILED TAX Returns? Un-reported Income? Avoid Prosecution and Penalties. Call a Tax Attorney First! 1-855-668-8089. (Mon-Fri 9-6 ET)

Contractors

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

• Aluminum Railings We welcome any restorational work!

(250) 426-8504

GIRO

Services

Contractors

SERVING ALLTHE KOOTENAYS

POWERPAVING

NOTICE

BLACKTOPNOW!

NO JOB TOO SMALL

Driveways & Parking Lots

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

CALL NOW!

Services

Home RepairsFULL SERVICE Plumbing from Parker Dean. Fast, re-liable, 24/7 service. Take $50 off your next job if you present this ad. Vancouver area. 1-800-573-2928.

Merchandise for Sale

$300 & Under

EUROPEAN STYLE Tent trailer with external propane stove. In poor condition. Could be converted to a utility trailer. $300./obo. 250-489-3942

Misc. for SaleA- STEEL SHIPPING DRY STORAGE CONTAINERS

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

sizes in stock. SPECIAL

Trades are welcome.40’ Containers under $2500!

Also JD 544 &644 wheel Loaders

LC excavator. Wanted 300 excavator.

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

www.rtccontainer.com

KILL BED Bugs & Their Eggs! Buy Harris Bed Bug Killer Complete Treatment Program or Kit. Available: Hardware Stores, Buy Online:homedepot.com

Merchandise for Sale

Misc. for SaleKILL ROACHES! Buy Harris Roach Tablets. Eliminate bugs- guaranteed. No mess, odorless, long lasting. Available at Ace Hardware & The Home Depot.

Misc. WantedBUYING Coin Collections,Estates, Antiques, Native Art,Silver, Jewelry 778-281-0030

Rentals

Apt/Condo for RentCEDAR PARK

Apartments: 2 Bdrm. Elevator, on-site laundry,

central location, live-in owner/manager.

Heat & hot water included. No Parties, N/S. $750-$800/mo.

(250)489-0134.

Homes for RentBC Housing Cranbrook

has exciting rental opportunities for families

looking for affordable housing. The 3-bedroom

units we offer are spacious with 1.5 bathroom stove

fridge and washer/dryer hook-ups. One small

pet is allowed, with BC Housing approval. No

smoking is allowed. Tenants pay 30% of their gross

monthly income for rent. For applications please call

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

www.bchousing.org

RecreationKOOTENAY LAKE RV site - right by the water. $2500. for the rest of 2014. (campground closes Oct 31) Rate includes water, sewer, 30amp elec-tricity and garbage. For more information please visit

www.kootenaylakelodge.com/rv.html

or phone 250-223-8181

Suites, Upper

Kimberley Studio Suite. Furnished, $495./mo. in-cludes utilities, basic cable and internet. Sorry, no pets, no smoking. References and application required.

Call Peter at East Kootenay Realty

~ 250-908-0045 ~

Transportation

Antiques / Classics

1966 Chrysler Windsor

Collector Car

partially restored

$7,000 obo

(250) 429-3937

(250) 489-9720

TransportationAuto

Accessories/Parts

SET OF 4 SUMMER TIRES ON RIMS. P225/60R17 on 6 bolt rims. $375 obo. Call (250)489-8389.

Auto Financing

Cars - Domestic

$12,000 obo

Call Greg250-581-0797

2009 Subaru Outback

AWD

Excellent condition, well maintained, cruise, air,

heated seats, sunroof, trailer hitch, satellite radio.

Mortgages

Transportation

Cars - Domestic

2001 FordFocus SE

Sedan

Good condition, well maintained. 224735 kms Cloth interior. New deck (usb & aux ports) and

front speakers. Full set of both studded winter

tires, and summer tires, a full tank of

gas included. Phone calls only, leave message.

250-426-5750$2,900 obo

Motorcycles

Sell Your Ride!

2 weeks with a photo

$30.00 + tax*Offer valid June 1-30, 2014

Submit photo & text to:[email protected]

or [email protected]

Sport Utility Vehicle

2008 TOYOTA SPORT RAV 4

4WD 4DR

$13,500.Silver-Stone Grey,

cloth interior.

Very clean, well maintained.

Records supplied.

160,000 km

Auto, A/C, tilt, cruise,

AM/FM, 6 pack CD, Sunroof.

Call 250-427-3246

Transportation

Sport Utility Vehicle

2006 Chevy Uplander

Full tune-up, new front brakes, fully serviced

(engine & transmission)

$5,49500

stk#8441

EK Transmission Ltd.DL#29679

1019 Kootenay St. N.,Cranbrook, BC • 426-4157

Trucks & Vans

2007 CHEVROLET SILVERADO 2500

CREW CAB 4X4

Automatic, Duramax diesel, Allison transmission w/ tap shift, 3/4 ton, short

box, black leather interior, driver & passenger power

heated bucket seats, power windows, door locks & mirrors, satellite radio,

AM/FM stereo, 6 pack CD player, BOSE speakers, A/C, tilt steering, cruise control, command start, fog lights,

Reese 5th Wheel rails installed, runs great,

pulls great. 173,000 kms.

$24,500Call 250.427.9850

Utility Trailers

2007 Coachman Chaparral, 28’

Walk around queen bed, 3 bunks, living

room slide-out. Winter package.

Like new!

$15,000

Call Joe at250-427-7897

Boats14 FT. RED CANOE.

Used only 3 times. Paddles and PFD. $600.

Phone 250-427-4694

B8MAN’sHandyman Service

**Yard and Lawn care

**Rototilling

**Fences and Decks

**Dump runs

**Odd jobs

Serving Cranbrook and Kimberley

250-422-9336

CONSTRUCTION, RENO’S, DECKS,

FENCES

›› Hire John ‹‹

Have been a carpenter for

20 years and able to do

most jobs.

Call me for estimates at:

250-919-7984

ELABORATE LAWN SERVICES

• Lawn and yard care• Tree and shrub pruning• Garden preparation• Yard clean-up

Serving Cranbrook and surrounding area

Call Jack250-426-6254

IS YOUR COMPUTER SLUGGISH OR HAVING

PROBLEMS?

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

SuperDave comes into your home?

Specializes in: *Virus/Spyware Removal,

*Troubleshooting, *Installations,

*PC Purchase Consulting.

SuperDave offers affordable, superior service

& most importantly; Honesty. SuperDave works Satur-

days & evenings too!

Call SuperDave (250)421-4044

www.superdaveconsult-ing.ca

LEAKY BASEMENT

• Foundation Cracks

• Damp Proofi ng

• Drainage Systems

• Foundation Restoration

Residential / CommercialFree estimates

250-919-1777

PLAN DESIGNNew construction,

Additions, Renovations, Electrical, Landscape

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

FEEL, FUNCTION and LOOK GREAT!

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

TIP TOP CHIMNEYSERVICES

“Sweeping the Kootenay’s Clean”

Chimney SweepingFireplace & Woodstove

ServicingVisual Inspections and

InstallationsGutter Cleaning Available

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

Technician

Richard Hedrich250-919-3643

[email protected]

TRIPLE J WINDOW CLEANING

~residential~

For a brighter outlook, call Jim Detta

250-349-7546

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!

Read the DAILY newspaper for

local happenings!

250-426-5201

250-427-5333

Need help with current events?

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

“litter-less”

www.pitch-in.ca…show it!

We’re on the net at www.bcclassifi ed.com

Page 12: Cranbrook Daily Townsman, June 23, 2014

Page 12 monday, June 23, 2014 daily townsman / daily bulletin

1.5L, Automatic, Air, Pwr Windows, Locks, Cruise, Tilt, CD Player,

Keyless Entry

Ground Effects Package, V6, 5 Spd, AC, Pwr Windows, Pwr Locks,

Cruise, Tilt, CD Player

Leather, Heated Seats, Panoramic Roof, Backup Camera,

All Power Options

Air Conditioning, Cruise, Tilt, Pwr Windows,

Pwr Locks

ON NOW! HURRY IN.Great offers on many 2014 Toyota models.

1924 Cranbrook St. N.Cranbrook, BC

Local: 250-489-4010Long Distance: 1-888-489-4010

www.alpinetoyota.com

DL#30845

2014 COROLLA CEAir and Automatic, Power Windows,

CD Player, Tilt Wheel

STK#C009187

NOW ONLY$18,9950.9% FINANCE

2 ATTHIS PRICE!

BRAND NEW 2014TOYOTA YARIS LE, 4DR HATCH

$18,815 PLUS 0.9% FINANCE

BRAND NEW 2014TOYOTA TACOMA XRUNNER

BRAND NEW 2014TOYOTA VENZA XLE AWD

BRAND NEW 2014TOYOTA RAV4 AWD

$27,995 PLUS 1.9% FINANCE

$30,999* AFTER DISCOUNTAND TAXABLE REBATE

$33,395* AFTER DISCOUNTAND TAXABLE REBATE

STK#W178501STK#U097610STK#X001878STK#A010945

* Price is after $1000 Taxable Rebate * Price is after $3500 Taxable Rebate

3 ATTHIS PRICE!

2 ATTHIS PRICE!

ALL WHEELDRIVE

ALL WHEELDRIVE