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Contact the Times: Phone: 250-368-8551 Fax: 250-368-8550 Newsroom: 250-364-1242 Canada Post, Contract number 42068012 Salmo woman wins $1 million Page 4 S I N C E 1 8 9 5 PROUDLY SERVING THE COMMUNITIES OF ROSSLAND, WARFIELD, TRAIL, MONTROSE, FRUITVALE & SALMO Follow us online WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 31, 2014 Vol. 119, Issue 202 $ 1 05 INCLUDING G.S.T. Thea 250.231.1661 Mario 250.368.1027 RE/MAX All Pro Realty Ltd. Cheers, Friends! As we wrap up the old year and ring in the new, we’re filled with thanks for customers like you. Your trust, your friendship, your patronage too make us truly enjoy the work that we do! BY LIZ BEVAN Times Staff The water in the Columbia River is sitting at a chilly 4.8 C, and Corporal Christopher Buckley is getting his swim trunks on to go for a dip while inviting all of Trail to join him. For nearly 30 years, the 44 Engineer Squadron, 39th Combat Engineer Regiment has hosted the Polar Bear Swim on Jan. 1 at Gyro Park Beach and since its inception, atten- dance has grown exponentially. “It started out with seven guys from the 44th who just decided to jump in the river on New Year’s Day,” said Buckley. “We now get about 500 people on the beach every year, with about 150 swimmers. Our record was 174 swimmers.” Buckley wasn't so gung-ho about the idea of jumping in the river in January, which usually has a water temperature just above freezing, but after years of excuses, he finally decided to take the plunge. “I used to think it was nuts,” he said. “Chief Warrant Officer Sharman Thomas tried to get me to go in for five years. I was always giving him excuses like I had to look after the kids, or I was working. Then one year, I couldn't get out of it. I ended up organizing it and it turned out better than I thought.” Now, Buckley is a seasoned Polar Bear Swim veteran. “The water is usually warmer than the air, so the worst minute is when you have to get out of your wet clothes into dry ones,” he said. “I am the first one in, calling everyone in to the water, and I am the last one out to make sure that everyone got out and is safe.” The swim isn't just for a good time and a laugh, he says. There are some valuable prizes that will be handed out. “We've got prizes from Red Mountain, the Colander and our grand prize is a round trip for two to Vancouver on Pacific Coastal Airlines,” said Buckley, adding that you have to register and get wet to qualify for the prizes. “I want to see wet hair when people are getting out of the water. It is not like you have to do laps though. If you want to run in and run out, nobody is going to stop you.” Registration for the Polar Bear Swim is on the day of the event. Every swimmer must be registered ahead of the noon starting time. A bonfire and hot chocolate will help chilled swimmers warm up. BY SHERI REGNIER Times Staff Local mayoral races seemed to turn the tide and reel in a high voter turnout in 2014, compared to previous civic elections. Now, many eyes will be watching if campaign promises like restoring regional recreation, engaging the public, or becoming a better neigh- bour, will sink or swim this year. Keeping with his platform of growth, vitality and pride, one of Trail Mayor Mike Martin's first orders of business was to create new portfolios for major projects in the coming year – including coun- cil appointments to the Riverfront Centre and pipe/pedestrian bridge committees as well as the Trail Regional Airport's new terminal proposal. “At this time, moving to com- plete major issues coming forward from the previous administration will be the number one priority,” said Martin. “In this regard, I have modified the city’s committee's structure to address these matters...where indi- vidual members of council will be appointed to focus on some of the more major issues.” Another priority over the next few months for new council mem- bers, Carol Dobie, Lisa Pasin and Sandy Santori and incumbents Eleanor Gattafoni Robinson, Robert Cacchioni and Kevin Jolly is to develop new strategies for the city in a formal planning session scheduled for March. “With a new council we need to get to know each other and be com- fortable working together,” Martin explained. “As the new mayor, I need to ensure that everyone is comfort- able and that we get together as a team given the many matters that need to be dealt with.” While none of the outstand- ing issues, such as Trail's pro- posed boundary expansion, will be settled in January, reviewing and approving the city's 2015 budgets are a critical starting point, noted Martin. “Council is hoping to see major development advance in the city in early 2015,” he said. “We also need to ensure strat- egies are in place to continue to advance Trail as a good place to invest.” With so many newly-elected pol- iticians on city and village councils, there's a need to bring everyone up to speed on the ins and outs of local government, says Rossland's new Mayor Kathy Moore. See NEW, Page 5 LIZ BEVAN PHOTO An idyllic winter setting on Gyro Park beach will get an abrupt about-face at noon on New Year’s Day when hundreds descend on the beach for the annual Polar Bear Swim. Start the new year with a splash Local mayors look forward to busy 2015 BY LIZ BEVAN Times Staff As the countdown to midnight ends and the champagne toasts are over, New Year's Eve revellers will be look- ing for a ride home. Options for trans- portation will be lim- ited this year for Trail party-goers, and police want residents to make a plan to get home safely. There will be one taxi and no buses run- ning past 10 p.m. on the streets of the Silver City tonight and Don Ross with Trail Taxi says calls for rides will be answered on a first- come-first-serve basis. He asks customers to be patient when wait- ing for a ride. “We are running 24/7, but we answer calls as they come in,” he said adding that there will only be one cab on the job. “We are going to try our best. If the calls are spaced out, it will work better, but if we get 10 calls at once, it will be a bit slower. It is going to be a busy night, espe- cially because there is no transit.” There used to be free bus service over- night in Trail, but a few years ago, the service was cancelled due to unruly passengers. “We used to have three buses (running in Trail on New Year's Eve),” said Sharman Thomas of Trail Transit. “It just became problematic in the sense that there were a lot of kids, drinking too much, fighting, you know. “The last time we ran it, a few years ago, it just didn't work out.” Sgt. Darren Oelke from the Trail RCMP says that the police will be out in force mak- ing sure everyone stays safe on the roads dur- ing the holiday season. Plan ahead for a ride tonight
16

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Page 1: Trail Daily Times, December 31, 2014

FineLine TechnologiesJN 62937 Index 980% 1.5 BWR NU

Contact the Times: Phone: 250-368-8551

Fax: 250-368-8550Newsroom:

250-364-1242Canada Post, Contract number 42068012

Salmowoman wins$1 millionPage 4

S I N C E 1 8 9 5S I N C E 1 8 9 5

PROUDLY SERVING THE COMMUNITIES OF ROSSLAND, WARFIELD, TRAIL, MONTROSE, FRUITVALE & SALMO

Follow us online

WEDNESDAYDECEMBER 31, 2014

Vol. 119, Issue 202

$105 INCLUDING G.S.T.

Thea 250.231.1661

Mario250.368.1027

RE/MAX All Pro Realty Ltd.RE/MAX

Cheers, Friends!As we wrap up the old year and ring in the new, we’re � lled with thanks for customers like you.

Your trust, your friendship, your patronage toomake us truly enjoy the work that we do!

B Y L I Z B E V A NTimes Staff

The water in the Columbia River is sitting at a chilly 4.8 C, and Corporal Christopher Buckley is getting his swim trunks on to go for a dip while inviting all of Trail to join him.

For nearly 30 years, the 44 Engineer Squadron, 39th Combat Engineer Regiment has hosted the Polar Bear Swim on Jan. 1 at Gyro Park Beach and since its inception, atten-dance has grown exponentially.

“It started out with seven guys from the 44th who just decided to jump in the river on New Year’s Day,” said Buckley. “We now get about 500 people on the beach every year, with about 150 swimmers. Our record was 174 swimmers.”

Buckley wasn't so gung-ho about the idea of jumping in the river in January, which usually has a water temperature just above freezing, but after years of excuses, he finally decided to take the plunge.

“I used to think it was nuts,” he said. “Chief Warrant Officer Sharman Thomas tried to get me to go in for five years. I was always giving him excuses like I had to look after the kids, or I was working. Then one year, I couldn't get

out of it. I ended up organizing it and it turned out better than I thought.”

Now, Buckley is a seasoned Polar Bear Swim veteran.

“The water is usually warmer than the air, so the worst minute is when you have to get out of your wet clothes into dry ones,” he said. “I am the first one in, calling everyone in to the water, and I am the last one out to make sure that everyone got out and is safe.”

The swim isn't just for a good time and a laugh, he says. There are some valuable prizes that will be handed out.

“We've got prizes from Red Mountain, the Colander and our grand prize is a round trip for two to Vancouver on Pacific Coastal Airlines,” said Buckley, adding that you have to register and get wet to qualify for the prizes. “I want to see wet hair when people are getting out of the water. It is not like you have to do laps though. If you want to run in and run out, nobody is going to stop you.”

Registration for the Polar Bear Swim is on the day of the event. Every swimmer must be registered ahead of the noon starting time.

A bonfire and hot chocolate will help chilled swimmers warm up.

B Y S H E R I R E G N I E R Times Staff

Local mayoral races seemed to turn the tide and reel in a high voter turnout in 2014, compared to previous civic elections.

Now, many eyes will be watching if campaign promises like restoring regional recreation, engaging the public, or becoming a better neigh-bour, will sink or swim this year.

Keeping with his platform of growth, vitality and pride, one of Trail Mayor Mike Martin's first orders of business was to create new portfolios for major projects in the coming year – including coun-cil appointments to the Riverfront Centre and pipe/pedestrian bridge committees as well as the Trail Regional Airport's new terminal proposal.

“At this time, moving to com-plete major issues coming forward from the previous administration will be the number one priority,” said Martin.

“In this regard, I have modified the city’s committee's structure to address these matters...where indi-vidual members of council will be appointed to focus on some of the more major issues.”

Another priority over the next few months for new council mem-bers, Carol Dobie, Lisa Pasin and

Sandy Santori and incumbents Eleanor Gattafoni Robinson, Robert Cacchioni and Kevin Jolly is to develop new strategies for the city in a formal planning session scheduled for March.

“With a new council we need to get to know each other and be com-fortable working together,” Martin explained.

“As the new mayor, I need to ensure that everyone is comfort-able and that we get together as a team given the many matters that need to be dealt with.”

While none of the outstand-ing issues, such as Trail's pro-posed boundary expansion, will be settled in January, reviewing and approving the city's 2015 budgets are a critical starting point, noted Martin.

“Council is hoping to see major development advance in the city in early 2015,” he said.

“We also need to ensure strat-egies are in place to continue to advance Trail as a good place to invest.”

With so many newly-elected pol-iticians on city and village councils, there's a need to bring everyone up to speed on the ins and outs of local government, says Rossland's new Mayor Kathy Moore.

See NEW, Page 5

LIZ BEVAN PHOTO

An idyllic winter setting on Gyro Park beach will get an abrupt about-face at noon on New Year’s Day when hundreds descend on the beach for the annual Polar Bear Swim.

Start the new year with a splash

Local mayors look forward to busy 2015

B Y L I Z B E V A NTimes Staff

As the countdown to midnight ends and the champagne toasts are over, New Year's Eve revellers will be look-ing for a ride home.

Options for trans-portation will be lim-ited this year for Trail party-goers, and police want residents to make a plan to get home safely.

There will be one taxi and no buses run-ning past 10 p.m. on the streets of the Silver City tonight and Don Ross with Trail Taxi says calls for rides will be answered on a first-

come-first-serve basis. He asks customers to be patient when wait-ing for a ride.

“We are running 24/7, but we answer calls as they come in,” he said adding that there will only be one cab on the job.

“We are going to try our best. If the calls are spaced out, it will work better, but if we get 10 calls at once, it will be a bit slower. It is going to be a busy night, espe-cially because there is no transit.”

There used to be free bus service over-night in Trail, but a few years ago, the service

was cancelled due to unruly passengers.

“We used to have three buses (running in Trail on New Year's Eve),” said Sharman Thomas of Trail Transit.

“It just became problematic in the sense that there were a lot of kids, drinking too much, fighting, you know.

“The last time we ran it, a few years ago, it just didn't work out.”

Sgt. Darren Oelke from the Trail RCMP says that the police will be out in force mak-ing sure everyone stays safe on the roads dur-ing the holiday season.

Plan ahead for a ride tonight

Page 2: Trail Daily Times, December 31, 2014

A2 www.trailtimes.ca Wednesday, December 31, 2014 Trail Times

Year in review

Town & Country

When you’ve finished reading this paper, please recycle it!

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October 31Liz Bevan Photo

Gordon Lightfoot and his band were centre stage at Charles Bailey Theatre for a show the audience won’t soon forget.

November 10Sheri regnier Photo

City of Trail Mayor Dieter Bogs reflected on his four decades in public office as he pre-pared to retire following the municipal elec-tions.

October 18Liz Bevan Photo

Guglielmo Di Domenico and Luigi Bedin cut the cake at a dedication cere-mony honouring their work as stone-masons over 50 years ago. The Rock Wall Project Entusiastico Society unveiled the bronze plaques that are now hanging on rock walls through-out the city, com-memorating the hard work the masons put into the project.

December 3Sheri regnier Photo

The volunteers and downtown businesses who took part in this year’s incrEDIBLE trail program were acknowledge at a local event. The group held a potluck dinner at the Local 480 Hall.

December 1Sheri regnier Photo

During the City of Trail inauguration ceremony, retired councillor Gord DeRosa was pre-sented with a gift for his 27 years of service to the city.

Page 3: Trail Daily Times, December 31, 2014

Year in reviewTrail Times Wednesday, December 31, 2014 www.trailtimes.ca A3

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Here’s hoping this New Year outshines all the rest!It’s been a delight doing business with you all year and we thank you for your patronage. Friends like you make us especially grateful to be a part of this wonderful community. May the coming year shower you with all the happiness and good fortune you deserve. Happy New year!

The Trail Times presents its annual review of moments and news from 2014. This segment wraps up the year with high-lights of moments from October, November and December.

October1 – After a 27-year run on

Trail council, Gord DeRosa will not seek re-election in the Nov. 15 municipal vote.

8 – The regional sewer part-ners have reached a deal and the City of Trail can go ahead with its approved new bridge walkway in the new year. Representatives from Rossland, Trail and Warfield agreed to a $4.2 million deal to fund an aerial sewer line cross-ing over the Columbia River.

14 – A medical marijuana grower has its sights set on purchasing the 5N Plus build-ing in the Waneta Industrial Park. Worldwide Marijuana Inc. secured the right to buy the 46,000-square-foot building and is slated to take ownership in December.

18 – In a ceremony at Gyro Park, the Rock Wall Project Enthusiastico Society unveiled plaques honouring the builders of the iconic rock walls in Trail.

20 – School District 20 will return $1.1 million in strike sav-ings to the province. The district saved that sum during the fall teachers’ dispute.

22 – The Creston Cab owner

is ready to fill the void in Trail after the closing of Champion Cabs earlier in October. Ken Parker will be offering one cab for the city initially but plans to increase it if demand rises.

27 – Trail city council agreed to waive the Greater Trail Swim Club’s $5,700 debt, allowing the

club to stay afloat during tough financial times. The city stipu-lated the club must seek possible reimbursement from the City of Rossland next year.

November3 – The first of the local all-

candidates forums drew a large crowd in Warfield. It will be a trend that is repeated through-out the region as voter turn-out for the municipal elections exceeded past years in many communities.

5 – Food banks report increase in usage matching studies across Canada that show use of food banks rose 20 per cent in the last five years.

7 – On the heels of the tra-gic deaths of military personnel in Ottawa and Quebec, security will be increased for the upcom-ing Remembrance Day activities throughout the country includ-ing Trail.

11 – A 24-year-old Rossland man dies after a vehicle he was in went down an embankment along the Centennial Trail.

11 – Large crowds turn out on a sunny but chilly day for the annual Remembrance Day cere-monies in Trail and Fruitvale.

12 – A sudden cold snap snapped the heads off of park-ing meters along Cedar Ave. According to reports, the newly installed meters had no drain-age for water that accumulated.

When it froze, it pushed the heads off the poles. Two people reportedly grabbed the change-filled meters and attempted to break them open by smashing them near the Columbia River. Police recovered the meters but made no arrests.

14 – Pacific Coastal announ-ces it will begin direct flights between Trail and Kelowna in January 2015.

15 – A wave of change sweeps through the region following the

municipal election. In Trail, Mike Martin assumes the mayor’s role. Ted Pahl will serve as mayor in Warfield, Kathy Moore takes on the mayor’s duties in Rossland and Stephen White is elected mayor in Salmo. Montrose mayor Joe Danchuk is re-elect-ed while Fruitvale’s incumbent mayor Patricia Cecchini was acclaaimed. Changes to council occurred in all communities.

15 – Trail votes responded with a 61 per cent in favour of borrowing for a new library/museum along the Esplanade.

20 – J.L. Crowe Secondary Grade 8 students Ashley Quigley and Rayanna Miskulin are off to the Grey Cup in Vancouver after being selected on their leader-ship qualities and school per-formance. The girls will also attend a youth summit, hosted by the BC Lions, focusing on bullying, gender violence, men-tal health issues and the power of positive choices.

21 – Outrage citizens stormed out of a meeting between the community and a CP Rail spokesperson at the Greater Trail Community Centre. The meeting, organized by local elected representatives, failed to answer the citizens’ concerns over night-time trains.

23 – Trail’s newly-elected mayor Mike Martin was inter-viewed by the BBC after world-famous “Top Gear” host Jeremy Clarkson tweeted his serach for something to do in the city on a Sunday afternoon while his flight out of Trail was delayed.

See YEAR, Page 5

New leaders emerge after municipal elections

November 26Submitted photo

Mayor of Warfield Ted Pahl, Mayor of Fruitvale Patricia Cecchini, Mayor of Montrose Joe Danchuk, Mayor of Rossland Kathy Moore and City of Trail Mayor Mike Martin gathered for a photo during the inaugura-tion ceremonies in Rossland.

November 19Guy bertrand photo

Trevor Heyd, tour manager for the Hockey Canada Century Tour, sets up the welcome sign as preparations were under way for the tour-ing display in the Cominco parking lot. Trail was selected as one of four B.C. stops for the tour which features interactive games, video displays and some iconic trophies including the Allan Cup. The tour is in conjunction with 100 years of Hockey Canada.

December 10Sheri reGnier photo

Police and Kootenay Boundary Fire Rescue responded to a vehicle submerged in the Columbia River near McQuarrie St. in East Trail.

Page 4: Trail Daily Times, December 31, 2014

A4 www.trailtimes.ca Wednesday, December 31, 2014 Trail Times

Provincial

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KAMLOOPS –A Boxing Day shopping trip turned into a million dollar event for Salmo resident Kristy Bengert after she bought a $100 Million Fortune Scratch & Win.

Once Bengert returned home that afternoon, she sat down to scratch the ticket and revealed the $1 million top prize. She then started yelling at her roommate to come upstairs and confirm what she was seeing.

“When I saw the matching numbers, I had to blink a few times,” recalls Bengert. “This was a really big surprise.”

After discovering the win, Bengert kept the ticket in her back pocket for safekeeping until she could check it on the Check-A-Ticket self-serve terminal the next day. Just to be sure, she checked it twice.

“I still can’t believe I won,” exclaims Bengert. “I will be buying a house in Salmo with this win.”

Bengert said she has been buying Scratch & Win tickets for years, but this is definitely the largest prize she has ever won.

The winning ticket was purchased at the Trail Waneta Plaza lottery kiosk.

The overall odds to win a prize on the $100 Million Fortune are 1:3. Odds of winning $1 mil-lion are 1:1,217,000.

Submitted photo

Kristy Bengert of Salmo won $1 million from a ticket purchased at the Waneta Plaza in Trail.

t H e C A N A d i A N P R e S SGOLDEN, B.C. -

Police say a head-on crash in southeastern B.C. involving two semis has left one dead and one in ser-ious condition.

Const. Amber Brunner says driving conditions were clear when one of the trucks crossed the centre line on the Trans Canada Highway west of Golden.

She says one per-son was killed in

the collision, and another was airlifted to Foothills Medical Centre in Calgary with serious injuries.

United Towing’s heavy rescue div-ision responded to the scene, and said on social media that both semis burst into flames and that the wreckage was later struck by a passing train. A photo from the scene shows one of the involved trucks totalled beyond rec-ognition.

The crash closed the highway Monday night, and was expected to re-open Tuesday afternoon.

Golden

Crash closes Trans Canada

Eugene Genio

Bojechko

Bojechko, Eugene Genio of Trail, born June 22, 1930 in High Prairie, Alberta passed away suddenly at his home on December 22, 2014 at the age of 84.He was the Proprietor of Gene’s Refrigeration from 1961 until his retirement in 1989.He is survived by his wife Dorothy, sons: Rod (Diane), Mike (Lori), Ken (Marlene) and Darrel (Sandy). He is also survived by � ve grandchildren: Shannon (Nathan), Michelle, Jordan, Casey (Lauren) and Corey (Leah), two great grandchildren, Anella and Halen as well as numerous nieces and nephews.Gene was predeceased by his parents, John and Rose, his brother Mike, sister Helen and his grandson Gordon.Gene was a member and president of the Fraternal Order of Eagles #2838 and a� ended many conventions. He enjoyed RV’ing, making many trips across Canada, stopping in major cities to exchange Trail city pins. Newfoundland was his favourite. He enjoyed being a ‘snowbird’, � ending several years on the California desert. Gene also loved his yearly � shing trips to Victoria. For 20 years he a� ended a family reunion every May 24th weekend with his in-laws in Tiny Town, Kelowna.Cremation has taken place with a Celebration of Life Service to be held in the early spring.As an expression of sympathy, donations may be made to the LeRoi Community Foundation c/o 1252 Bay Ave., Trail, BC V1R 4A6 or online at: www.leroifoundation.com. Al Grywacheski is in care of the cremation arrangements.

EvaKozniuk

Eva was born July 20, 1932 in Eyebrow, Saskatchewan and passed away peacefully at Columbia View Lodge on December 27, 2014.

She � ent many years as a transcriptionist at Medical Associates in Trail. Eva enjoyed baking, bowling and � ending time with family.Eva was predeceased by her husband John Kozniuk, daughter Colleen Taylor and her brother Bill Gillespie.She is survived by her son Stephen (Tracy) McFadden and grandchildren; Murray, Lindsay, Rachel, Melissa (Brian) and Cody.A Graveside Service will be held on Friday, January 2, 2014 at 11:00am at Mountainview Cemetery in Rossland, BC. Al Grywacheski of Alternatives Funeral and Cremation Services has been entrusted with the arrangements. As an expression of sympathy, donations may be made in Eva’s name to � e Canadian Heart and Stroke Foundation www.heartandstroke.caYou are invited to leave a personal message of condolence by visiting the family’s register at www.myalternatives.ca

trailtimes.ca/eeditions

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Page 5: Trail Daily Times, December 31, 2014

Trail Times Wednesday, December 31, 2014 www.trailtimes.ca A5

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FROM PAGE 324 – The Trail Chamber of Commerce announces the return of the

Trail indoor market in the former Liquidation World building.

December1 – Former Fruitvale mayor Libby Nelson donates a parcel of 95

acres to Beaver Valley Recreation, Parks and Trails committee to be used to enhance the region’s trail system.

5 – The East End Services Board of the Regional District of Kootenay Boundary will feature mayors from all five communities in a bid to improve relations with neighbouring districts as well as seek common ground for on-going issues.

5 – The Ministry of Education sent over $600,000 in funding to School District 20 to help cover costs associated with the new teach-ers’ contract.

12 – Heavy rains are being blamed for a rock slide that temporarily shut down Highway 22A to the Waneta border crossing and the Seven Mile Dam Road. It took a few hours to re-open Highway 22A and over 24 hours before the Seven Mile Dam Road was open to traffic.

16 – A Rossland nurse practitioner told the Trail Times in a phone interview from Ebola-stricken Sierra Leone that the mood is surpris-ingly upbeat in the ravaged country. Patrice Gordon volunteered for the assignment to help the fight against the spread of Ebola.

17 – CP Rail has implemented a new policy regarding the use of equipment for clearing branches along its train tracks in the area. The move came after a meeting with citizens in November. However, the main issue of nighttime noise has yet to be resolved.

19 – Teck began accepting shipments from the revived Pend Oreille mine near Metaline Falls, Wash. The mine was shutdown in 2009 but market conditions for zinc has prompted the company to re-open the mine.

19 – The City of Trail purchased the building adjacent to the site for the proposed museum/library. The additional lot will allow the archi-tect more options in designing the new building.

30 – Police charge 24-year-old Jordan Shimell with second-degree murder following an incident in Fruitvale on Dec. 28. Scott Decembrini, 52, was rushed to the Kootenay Boundary Regional Hospital where he died from his injuries.

Year in Review

FROM PAGE 1“There is a steep

learning curve and copious amounts of reading and assimila-tion info and issues,” she explained.

As a first-time mayor, there is a lot to learn in the role, Moore continued, adding that the new council will deal with issues presented by staff as well as starting to carve out their own priorities.

“Our staff action lists is a hodge-podge of projects that the last council had directed staff to tackle,” Moore said.

“One of our first priorities will be to spend some time with that list, understand-ing what the projects are, deciding which are important to use, determining what the needs are and how to best prioritize them.”

Rossland’s new council is interested in resolving the long

standing regional recreation issue, she noted, adding that she is confident that an agreement equitable for all parties can be reached.

A promise Warfield Mayor Ted Pahl made to his constituents was to revamp the village’s communication strat-egy, which includes a website refresh, a social media platform, frequent newsletters and more face-to-face meetings.

“We are in the pro-cess of developing our criteria of function-ality and content for what these will look like,” Pahl said.

“Including sourcing out secure self-service

options for taxes and pool pass payments for people who prefer online options.”

In the Beaver Valley, re-elected Montrose Mayor Joe Danchuk, maintains that recrea-tion is at the forefront as he remains commit-ted to resolving a new agreement with the City of Trail.

“Ninety per cent of my time is going to be spent on recreation,” Danchuk confirmed during the Dec. 15 council meeting. “And council is feeling the same thing,” he added. “We are moving ahead with getting what our costs were this year and are hopefully going to meet sometime in January. I am positive and agreement can be worked out that will be very beneficial to everybody.”

Although there wasn’t a mayoral race in Fruitvale, Mayor Patricia Cecchini retained the position for a second term by acclamation, the lack of a recreation agree-ment was the first topic geared toward the panel of councillor candidates during the village’s forum.

Cecchini remains on the Beaver

Valley Recreation Commission and will serve as Fruitvale’s regional director in the upcoming year.

Further east in Salmo, that munici-pality saw the biggest turnover in local gov-ernment after Mayor Stephen White was voted in alongside four new council members.

The priorities beginning in January include holding coun-cil meetings in a new venue where the pub-lic is fully welcome, and able to sit to see and hear the meeting, said White.

Additionally, he’s committed to oversee-ing the village’s 2013 financial audit with a top priority of shar-ing the results of the financial statements with the public.

“The new council is committed to open-ing up the political process,” White said. “We have a lot of work to accomplish if we want to regain public confidence and trust. Opening the political process, welcoming the public to meetings, allowing for ques-tions from the public has started that work and it will continue through 2015.”

Bidding Three No Trump in a cuebid-ding sequence

shows that one has extra values and that one is serious about trying for slam. If one bypasses Three No Trump in a cuebid-ding sequence, one is not serious about slam and if partner continues cuebidding, he is serious.

When a partner-ship has a four-four or a five-four major fit or better, one never wants to play in Three No Trump. Therefore, Three No Trump is not to play and is available in this way. 

A five-three fit is only better in Three No Trump if there is no dummy reversal, if the short trump hand cannot ruff and if all side suits are adequately stopped. 

The word “never” in bridge always has at least one excep-tion, and that is when there is a four-four fit, when neither hand has shortness (both four triple three) and when all suits are adequately stopped, then and only then, Three No Trump is the place to play. 

However, this is often difficult to dis-cover, and a four-four major fit is usually played in the major with the hope that partner’s hand may have shortness. In a five-three fit, short hand ruffs occur in the hand with three trump. In a four-four fit, either hand can be made the short-trump hand, and then the other hand is used to draw trump.

The bidding: A four-four major fit is always better than a five-three major fit because of the short-hand ruffing reason above and because the five-card major when it is a side-suit gives two discards. A four-four major fit will usu-ally result in a trick better than a five-three major fit.

So when North opens One Heart, South knows they have a Golden Fit in Hearts, but he still responds One Spade. North now knows they have a Golden Fit in Spades and can re-evaluate his hand high enough to force game opposite a minimum hand from partner. Three Spades would be invitational so he

manufactures a Three-Diamond bid. 

South shows a pref-erence to Hearts over Diamonds, and then North sets the trump suit as Spades. The bids that follow are a cuebidding sequence. I would not be sur-prised at all if either partner threw their

hands in the air in confusion. However, North discovers that partner has first and second round Heart control and second round Club control so he can bid Six Spades. The partner who learns enough from the cuebidding sequence must take charge and place the contract appropriately.

The Lead: The Queen of Diamonds is a natural top-of-a-sequence lead.

The play: Declarer must play the trump suit carefully. He plays the Ten of Spades to the King and then a small Spade to the Nine. He loses one trump trick and claims.

Result: Six Spades making for +980.

New councils set to deal with regional issues

“Ninety per cent of my

time is going to be spent on

recreation.”

Joe Danchuk

Serious three no trump offers hint of slam

warren watson

Play Bridge

Page 6: Trail Daily Times, December 31, 2014

A6 www.trailtimes.ca Wednesday, December 31, 2014 Trail Times

OPINION

New Year’s resolutions for B.C. politiciansIt’s that time of year

when B.C. politicians should start think-ing about some New

Year’s resolutions for a bit of political self-improve-ment. So, in the spirit of giving, here are five ideas for politicians to consider as they set their resolu-tions for 2015.

1. Do the shuffleIn keeping with the sea-

son’s “out with the old, in with the new” theme, a cabinet shuffle is over-due. But a real one, trad-ing deck chairs between Andrew Wilkinson and Amrik Virk a week before Christmas doesn’t count.

And what was Premier Christy Clark thinking when she put Virk in charge of Technology, Innovation and Citizens’ Services as a political demotion, when technology clearly wasn’t his strong suit at Kwantlen University? Virk needs some shifts in the minors, not a far seat at the cabinet table.

Todd Stone would likely appreciate a new portfolio after the S.S. Minnow – err, MV Nimpkish – affair. Bet Mary Polak might prefer

a change too. And talk-ing about trading deck chairs, how about Andrew Wilkinson for Justice and Suzanne Anton for Advanced Education?

2. Remember: the secret to survivin’ is knowin’ what to throw away and knowin’ what to keep

Back in 2011, the B.C. government predicted that the first liquified natural gas plant would be oper-ational by 2015. Doesn’t look promising.

Despite cutting its pro-posed income tax on the LNG industry in half and inking agreements with China to facilitate the use of foreign workers in B.C. to help build the facilities – that is if they’re built here at all and not just floated in – it’s doubtful anyone from government will be cutting the ribbon at an LNG plant any time soon.

However, there’s one take away lesson from this: if you’re going to play cards with the high rollers, it doesn’t hurt to know the rules.

So a little advice from Kenny Rogers: “You’ve

got to know when to hold ‘em. Know when to fold ‘em. Know when to walk away. And know when to run. You never count your money when you’re sittin’ at the table. There’ll be time enough for countin’ when the dealin’s done.”

3. Stop counting your chickens before they’re hatched

A quick review of Petronas headlines sums this one up well: ‘Petronas LNG pullout threat just a negotiating tactic: Premier’ (September 25), ‘Petronas warns of pos-sible delay of $11-billion B.C. LNG project’ (October 6), ‘B.C. in ‘good shape’ to close $10-billion LNG deal: Premier’ (December

2), ‘Petronas defers deci-sion on $36 billion BC LNG project’ (December 3), and ‘Christy Clark says Petronas LNG project is a ‘done deal’ despite delay’ (December 8).

Yes, folk do want to know what’s going on, but not if it makes them dizzy.

4. Stop stating the obvious

Back in August, Energy and Mines minister Bill Bennett had this to say about the tailings pond breach at Mt. Polley Mine: “This is a serious incident that should not have hap-pened.” Very true that.

In November, Health minister Terry Lake called the decision of the B.C. Cancer Foundation (a registered charity) to top up the salary of the former head of the B.C. Cancer Agency (a government body): “questionable.” At the very least.

And here’s what B.C. Lottery Corporation chair-man Bud Smith said react-ing to a government audit of the BCLC that found a move to cut staffing costs ended up costing $25 mil-lion instead: “The execu-

tion wasn’t good.” You don’t say.

Stating the obvious can leave you open to ridicule, unless it’s accompanied with a sincere mea culpa and a genuine promise for improvement.

5. Cancel “That ‘90s Show”

“I’ll meet your fast fer-ries and raise you one B.C. Place Stadium roof.”

In a few days, it’ll be 2015. Can anyone think of a better time for the B.C. Liberal party and the NDP to finally put the 1990s behind them?

A little something for supporters of the B.C. Liberal party to consider as well: lobbing those fast ferries at the NDP may be the equivalent of a political grenade backfiring.

It doesn’t speak well of the government’s acumen, if supporters have to call up the fast ferries’ debacle to counter criticism.

Think of it as the theory of political equivalence.

And Happy New Year.Dermod Travis is the

executive director of IntegrityBC. www.integ-ritybc.ca

Published by Black PressTuesday to Friday, except

statutory holidays

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Trail Times Wednesday, December 31, 2014 www.trailtimes.ca A7

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The main pur-pose of year-end reviews, of course, is

to hold the ads apart. But they can also serve as a kind of annual check-up on the pol-itical health – and also on the economic, demographic and even physical health – of the planet and its teeming human population. So imagine that we are a panel of high-priced medicos reviewing the health status of our most important client, the human race.

The first thing to note is that the client is still piling on weight at an alarming rate – up from two billion units to seven billion in the past seventy-five years – but continues to thrive, for the most part. And most of the ailments that it wor-ries about are mere hypochondria.

Take, for example, the widespread con-cern (at least in the media and among what Bob Fisk calls the “think-tank mounte-banks”) that the emer-gence of the so-called Islamic State in the no man’s land between Iraq and Syria will lead to catastrophe. There will allegedly be a surge in terror-ist attacks around the world, a Sunni-Shia religious war span-ning the entire Middle East, or even a global religious war between Muslims and every-body else.

The Sunni fanatics and the Shia fanatics are far too busy try-ing to kill each other to have time to spare for attacking non-Mus-lims. (Besides, most Muslims don’t want to attack anybody; they just want to be left in peace.) Quite a lot of the slaughter in Iraq and Syria is driven by religion, but we are still a long way from a religious conflict that directly involves the really important states of the Middle East: Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Iran.

Even the antici-pated surge in terror-ist attacks outside the region is not likely to come to pass. The only strategic purpose

for such attacks by any organised group of Islamist extremists is to gain support and recruits within their own region. If they can lure Western pow-ers into killing lots of Muslims in their region, then their cause will prosper locally.

As it turns out, Islamic State has not even needed to carry out terrorist attacks in the West to achieve this goal.

Videos of Western hostages being beheaded have been enough to get the bombing going again, and Western govern-ments are no more troubled by the sheer pointlessness of the bombing than they were in the past. Both sides are playing for the home audience, and really don’t care much about the impact of their actions on the alleged enemy.

The whole “Islamic State” panic is a tem-pest in a fairly small teacup. The casual-ties are small, and the entire region matters little economically or strategically except to its own inhabitants. Even in the unlikely event that a Sunni-Shia religious war should engulf the whole of the Middle East, it would have no more effect on the rest of the planet than the European wars of religion four centuries ago had on the Middle East. That is to say, hardly any.

So in terms of the global system’s health, the rise of radical Islamism is not a life-threatening disease. It’s a local infection that will probably have to run its course. If it really gets bad, some quarantine measures may be needed, but this is not ebola.

Speaking of which,

the ebola outbreak in Africa seems on the way to being con-tained, although it will probably remain as a low-level chronic problem in the three West African countries where it reached epi-demic status: Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea. There is a small risk that ebola might take root in a densely populated country whose people travel widely, like Nigeria or, even worse, India, but so far, so good.

The other great shock of 2014 was a war in Europe. The Ukrainian revolution of last February was a messy and compli-cated business, but it need not have ended in Russia’s illegal annexa-tion of Crimea and in a Russian-backed sep-aratist war in Ukraine’s two easternmost prov-inces.

We owe that mainly to Russian President Vladimir Putin’s world-view as a former agent of the KGB, the Soviet secret police, which (as the old say-ing had it) thwarted ten anti-Soviet plots for every one that actually existed.

The KGB was full of very clever people – indeed, it was the most intelligent and best informed part of the old Soviet regime, one of the world’s strong-holds of institution-alised stupidity – but it was also a nest of para-noid fantasists. You may debate to your heart’s content wheth-er this was a Russian cultural phenomenon or an extreme case of the disease that infects every great-power spy agency, but that’s why Putin reacted the way he did.

Western European governments are so divided and introspec-tive that they could not come up with a credible plan to boil an egg, and they care very little about the parts of Eastern Europe beyond the European Union’s borders. The only section of the American population that sees President Obama’s adminis-tration as capable of

hatching a plot is the extreme right, and they think he’s a for-eign-born Communist plotting the overthrow of the United States.

Various Western politicians showed up in Kiev to cheer the protesters on, but these were just the usual suspects taking advan-tage of a good photo op. Their real intended audience, as usual, was back home. As for NATO, it is another Cold War institution that has long outlived its purpose, but it no more wants to bring Ukraine into the fold than it longs to recruit Mongolia as a member. Too much trouble, and no profit whatever.

There was no Western plot, but Putin is driven by the belief that there was. He has taken Russia into a confrontation with the West that it cannot win, and the country’s economy is already crumbling under the twin strains of coping with Western sanctions and the col-lapse of the oil price. He is finding it almost impossible to back away without losing face, but he has noth-ing to gain by continu-ing the conflict either. Risk of a new Cold War: minimal.

So far the patient’s health is looking pretty good. There is the usual clutter of minor ailments – a mini-civil war here (Libya, South Sudan), civil rights protest-ers under attack there (Hong Kong, Missouri) – and there is a sig-nificant possibility that next year will bring another recession. That’s as inevitable as catching a cold once in a while. But there has been nothing really out of the ordinary this year, nothing that sets off alarm bells.

The only big worry the doctors have is the same one that has bothered them for the past twenty-five years: the patient sim-ply won’t stop smok-ing. Their increasingly grave warnings are met with empty prom-ises to cut back or quit entirely, but not right now, just some time

far in the future. Maybe.The news flows in

endlessly, and some of it has significant impact on many people’s lives – a bil-lion people’s lives when India elects a new prime minis-ter or China gets an (unelected) new presi-dent, both of which happened this year. But truly fundamental change is much rarer than people think (and than the media

encourage them to think). Now that the threat of large-scale nuclear war has died down, only one thing qualifies.

Climate change is the spectre at every feast, the unstoppable rot that undermines every positive develop-ment. The failure at Copenhagen in 2009 bleeds indistinguish-ably into the fudge at Durban in 2011 and on into the feeble compromise in Lima

in 2014, which sets us up for the bigger dis-appointment of Paris in 2015. And even if by some miracle we get a useful agreement in Paris next year, noth-ing will actually be done until 2020.

The patient thinks there’s still plenty of time to quit. There isn’t.

Gwynne Dyer is an independent journal-ist whose articles are published in 45 coun-tries.

Annual check-up on the health of our planet

GWYNNE DYER

World Affairs

Page 8: Trail Daily Times, December 31, 2014

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VANCOUVER CANUCKSHOCKEY TICKETS

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The Trail Times Sports Year in Review continues with the highlights of Greater Trail sport and those that made headlines in the fall of 2014.

September2 – The Trail Smoke Eaters begin the season

with rigorous military-style training from Dynamic Shift Consulting drill sergeant Sean Bacon to get the team physically and mentally prepared for the season.

3 -The Kootenay 55+ Glacier Kings complete an undefeated run to win gold in hockey at the 2014 Canada 55+ Games in Sherwood Park, Alta. with a 3-2 overtime victory over Ontario Point.

Fruitvale’s Ella Matteucci travels to Japan with Team Canada to compete at the IBAF Women’s Baseball World Cup in Miyasaki.

4 – The Trail Smoke Eaters charity softball game was a runaway success as they faced the Trail RCMP and Kootenay Boundary Regional Fire Rescue in a match that attracted about 300 fans with funds going to support KBRH Foundation, Special Olympics and the Smokies Booster Club.

9 – Trail hockey legend and Rossland native Seth Martin passes away. Martin backstopped the Trail Smoke Eaters to gold at the ‘61 World Hockey championship, playing in five World tournaments, as well as the 1964 Winter Olympics in Innsbruck, Aust. and played goal for the St. Louis Blues in ‘68-69. Among his many honours, Martin was inducted into the IIHF Hall of Fame, the B.C. Hall of Fame, and Home of Champions inductee.

- Ella Matteucci and the Team Canada women’s baseball team lose the bronze medal game at the IBAF Baseball World Cup to Australia, giving up a final inning bases-loaded walk for a 3-2 win.

12 – The Beaver Valley Nitehawks open the 2014-15 season with new assistant coach and former Smoke Eater head coach Jim Ingram behind the bench.

19 – The 55+ B.C. Senior Games wrap up with the West Kootenay-Boundary contingent taking home 89 medals including 37 gold, 28 silver, and 24 bronze.

23 – The Trail Smoke Eaters open their season with two wins at the Bauer-BCHL Showcase at Prospera Place in Chilliwack.

October8 – Warfield’s Craig Cunningham begins the

hockey season with the NHL Boston Bruins. Cunningham will see action in the first three games of the year before returning to Providence, the Bruins AHL affiliate.

16 – Trail Smoke Eaters forward and Trail native Jake Lucchini is named Player of the Week in the BCHL after tallying three goals and three assists in a three-game road swing to Vancouver Island.

23 – BCHL commissioner John Grisdale visits the Cominco Arena to survey the state of the game in Trail after signing a three-year contract exten-sion.

29 - Fruitvale’s Ben Postmus is named associate coach of Canada’s Special Olympic Golf Team that will compete in the 2015 World Special Olympics in Los Angeles in July.

30 – The Red Mountain Racer ski swap raises over $11,000, as hundreds descend on the Willi Krause Field House to nab great deals on ski equip-ment.

November6 – Course superintendent Greg Kennedy retires

after 27 years at Birchbank Golf Course.

12 – Team Canada Olympic hockey gold medalits Catherine Ward and former head coach Daniele Savageau host the Teck Coaching Series at the Cominco Arena and a coaches breakfast then attend the Smoke Eaters game where they drop the cere-monial puck and sign autographs for hockey fans.

14 – As part of Hockey Canada’s 100 year celebra-tion the Hockey Canada caravan stops in Trail as one of four stops in B.C. on its cross-country tour.

18 – Trail’s Brenda Butlin is awarded the Canadian Tire Hero of Play Award as part of the Hockey Canada Century Tour recognizing her dedication to minor hockey in Trail.

19 – Former Trail Jr. Smoke Eater Peter Geronazzo is inducted into the Colorado Springs Sports Hall of Fame. As captain of the Colorado College Tigers Geronazzo led the Tigers to the ‘96 NCAA Frozen Four final only to lose to University of Michigan 3-2.

- In celebration of 100 years of Hockey Canada, the Michael McKinley book “It’s Our Game” features a chapter entitled ‘The Trail Smoke Eaters of 1961 and the End of an Era.’

26 – Quinnipiac forward Travis St. Denis of Trail is awarded Player of the Week in the NCAA ECAC division after scoring a hat trick in a 3-1 win over RPI and netting the winning goal in a 4-3 victory over Union the previous night.

27 – With growing concern over the state of the Kootenay Lake fishery and low kokanee numbers, organizers cancel the popular Family Day Fishing Derby scheduled for the February weekend.

28 - Goalkeeper Paige Gattafoni and striker Brady Stevens of Trail are selected to play for the U17 and U16 Kootenay Regional Soccer Academy teams trav-elling to the Star Fire Showcase Soccer Tournament in Seattle to compete against some of the top teams in North America.

December3 – The Trail Smoke Eaters deal defenceman

Viktor Dombrovskiy to the Prince George Spruce Kings for six-foot-five defenceman Steve Penner and forward Cooper Leitch.

4 – Montreal Canadiens legend Jean Beliveau dies at age 83 and is remembered by the Times.

5 – Rossland native Al Holm and his 1965 Michigan Tech Huskies hockey team are inducted into the Michigan Tech University Sports Hall of Fame in honour of the 50th anniversary of the team’s NCAA victory. Holm captained the Huskies to its second NCAA championship beating Boston College in an 8-2 rout in the final of the Frozen Four.

6 – The Greater Trail Minor Hockey Tier 2 Bantam Smoke Eaters win their Bantam Rep tournament with an exciting 5-3 victory over OMAHA rival West Kelowna Warriors.

17 – The Black Jack Ski Club hosted the Haywood NorAm and Kootenay Cup races. Despite a dearth of snow and change of location, volunteers turned the biathlon trails into an excellent venue for the races that attracted close to 300 skiers to the annual event.

- Craig Cunningham is recalled by the Boston Bruins and nets his first NHL goal on a shorthanded effort beating Ottawa Senators goalie five hole in a 3-2 Bruins loss.

24 – The Trail Smoke Eaters forwards Jake Lucchini and Charlie Zuccarini secure scholarships to NCAA Universities. Lucchini commits to NCAA div. 1 Michigan Tech to play for the Huskies, and Zuccarini to Arizona State to lace them up for the Sun Devils, a team that will begin integrated play with the NCAA div. 1 next season.

Nov. 12

Dec. 17

Nov. 6

Dec. 5

Sept. 9

Nov. 14

100 years of Hockey Canada celebrates in Greater Trail

Page 9: Trail Daily Times, December 31, 2014

SportSTrail Times Wednesday, December 31, 2014 www.trailtimes.ca A9

ScoreboardFootball

National Football League Final standings All Times EST

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

East W L T Pcty-New England 12 4 0 0.75Buffalo 9 7 0 .563Miami 8 8 0 0.5N.Y. Jets 4 12 0 0.25

South W L T Pcty-Indianapolis 11 5 0 .688Houston 9 7 0 .563Jacksonville 3 13 0 .188Tennessee 2 14 0 .125

North W L T Pcty-Pittsburgh 11 5 0 .688x-Cincinnati 10 5 1 .656x-Baltimore 10 6 0 .625Cleveland 7 9 0 .438

West W L T Pcty-Denver 12 4 0 0.75Kansas City 9 7 0 .563San Diego 9 7 0 .563Oakland 3 13 0 .188 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pcty-Dallas 12 4 0 0.75Philadelphia 10 6 0 .625N.Y. Giants 6 10 0 .375Washington 4 12 0 .25

South W L T Pcty-Carolina 7 8 1 .469New Orleans 7 9 0 .438Atlanta 6 10 0 .375Tampa Bay 2 14 0 .125

North

W L T Pcty-Green Bay 12 4 0 0.75x-Detroit 11 5 0 .688Minnesota 7 9 0 .438Chicago 5 11 0 .313

West W L T Pcty-Seattle 12 4 0 0.75x-Arizona 11 5 0 .688San Francisco 8 8 0 .5St. Louis 6 10 0 .375 x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division

Sunday’s GamesIndianapolis 27, Tennessee 10

Houston 23, Jacksonville 17Kansas City 19, San Diego 7

Minnesota 13, Chicago 9Baltimore 20, Cleveland 10Dallas 44, Washington 17

N.Y. Jets 37, Miami 24Buffalo 17, New England 9

Philadelphia 34, N.Y. Giants 26

New Orleans 23, Tampa Bay 20

San Francisco 20, Arizona 17Seattle 20, St. Louis 6Denver 47, Oakland 14

Green Bay 30, Detroit 20Carolina 34, Atlanta 3

Pittsburgh 27, Cincinnati 17

Wild-card PlayoffsSaturday, Jan. 3

Arizona at Carolina, 4:35 p.m. (ESPN)

Baltimore at Pittsburgh, 8:15 p.m. (NBC)Sunday, Jan. 4

Cincinnati at Indianapolis, 1:05 (CBS)

Detroit at Dallas, 4:40 p.m. (FOX)

TAKE IT OFF FOR

Located in the award winning Best Western Plus Columbia River Hotel, Trail www.bestwesterntrail.com 250.368.3355

HAPPY HOURHAPPY HOURHAPPY HOURHAPPY HOURHAPPY HOURHAPPY HOURhal -oHAPPY HOURhalHAPPY HOURhalHAPPY HOURhal -oHAPPY HOURHAPPY HOUR-o

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In partnership with

Come support your current KIJHL, BC and Western

Canadian Champs.

Beaver Valley Nitehawks

In the Beaver Valley Arenawww.bvnitehawks.com

Revelstoke Grizzlies

Friday, January 2@ 7:30pm

SpokaneBraves

Sunday, January 4@ 1pm

Host

B y T i m e s s T a f fBeaver Valley Nitehawks forward Spencer

McLean scored twice including the winner to lift the Hawks to a 5-3 victory over the Castlegar Rebels Monday night at the Hawks Nest.

McLean made it 4-2 with just 26 seconds remaining in the second period finishing a nice passing play from McKoy Hauk and Ross Armour, while netting his ninth goal of the season and 23rd point.

The win puts the Hawks into sole possession of first place in the Neil Murdoch division two points up on Nelson pending the outcome of Tuesday night’s game against the Leafs.

Despite getting outshot 17-8 in the first per-iod, Castlegar took a 1-0 lead on a goal from Travis Wilkie. But B.V. would battle back in the second scoring four goals to take a 4-2 lead into the third period.

Jacob Boyczuk scored 59 seconds into the middle frame with Kyle Hope and Devin Nemes assisting on Boyczuk’s 10th goal of the season. Hope would give the Hawks a 2-1 lead with a shorthanded marker at 11:37 taking a pass from Walker Sidoni and beating Rebel goalie Patrick Zubick. But Castlegar’s Dylan Ofner would draw the Rebels even finishing a setup from Dawson Haines with 3:44 to play in the period. However, 36 seconds later McLean notched his first on the night and would net the winner before the period was out.

The game was a typical Nitehawk-Rebel match with hard hits, and high intensity throughout the match up.

Wilkie scored his second of the night for the Rebels at 17:20 of the third period but Hawks defenceman Andrew Miller iced it with less than four minutes to play with assists going to Taylor Stafford and Sam Swanson.

The Hawks outshot the Rebels by a 52-31 mar-gin and went 0-for-5 on the power play while the Rebels were 0-for-2.

The Nitehawks played Nelson Tuesday night but the score was unavailable at press time.

Beaver Valley plays the Leafs in Nelson tonight at 7 p.m. and hosts Revelstoke at the B.V. Arena Friday at 7:30 p.m. and Spokane on Sunday at 1 p.m.

KIJHL

Hawks hold off Rebels

DAVOS, Switzerland - Canada is out at the Spengler Cup.

Defending champion HC Geneve-Servette held on for a 6-5 victory in today’s semifinal.

The Swiss team also beat Canada in last year’s semifinal.

HC Geneve-Servette will play Salavat Yulaev Ufa in Wednesday’s final.

The KHL club defeated host HC Davos 4-3 in a shootout in the early semifinal.

SuBMITTED PHOTO

On Dec. 11 the Trail-Rossland Smokettes women’s hockey team donated $250 to the Trail Food bank in hopes to make someone’s Christmas just a little merrier and brighter.

smoKettes score For Food banK

Canada oustedspengLer cup

Page 10: Trail Daily Times, December 31, 2014

A10 www.trailtimes.ca Wednesday, December 31, 2014 Trail Times

51Congratulations

from Ferraro FoodsKBRH’s first Baby of

2015 receives a$50 Gift Certificate

with Our Best Wishes

Downtown TrailRossland

51

Cheers to theBundle of Joy!We are pleased to present2015’s newest baby with a2 pc engraved Baby Set.

1355 Cedar Avenue Trail 368-9533

51To the First Baby of ‘15

we are pleased to present a

GIFT CERTIFICATE($50.00 value)

on any of our in-storeBaby Products

L’Bear’sHealth Foods Ltd.

1299B Cedar AveTrail 250-368-8318

51

CongratulationsWe would like

to welcome the New Year’s

baby with a Gift Basket.

($50 value)

AREA PRO LIFE SOCIETYRight to Life Box 1006, Rossland BC, V0G 1Y0

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

These community sponsors are all set to shower KBRH’s � rst 2015

arrival with lots of generous gifts!

oh baby!

NEW YEAR!NEW YEAR!2015

51Congratulations

to the fi rst baby of 2015

1599 2nd Ave, Trail BC

We are pleased to presentyour proud parents with a

$50 Gift certifi cate

51

We are pleased to donate a � ower

arrangementto donate a � ower

Ye Olde Flower Shoppe956 Spokane Street, Trail 250-368-8323 Toll free 800-368-7678 www.yeolde� owershoppe.ca

Congratulations!

Page 11: Trail Daily Times, December 31, 2014

Leisure

Dear Annie: I have relatives coming to visit later this month. A week ago, I received a list of necessities for their visit. Some seem reasonable for young children: cribs, high chairs and child-proof cabinets. But some seem rude and presumptuous: a gro-cery list of 20 organic items (including peeled shrimp and smoked salmon) and individual bedrooms for the chil-dren.

Of course, I will adhere to requests that keep children safe and comfortable, but I don’t feel I need to accommodate their food preferences. There are no allergies here. They just prefer organ-ic everything. I do not plan on purchasing the things they have asked for and would like to give them an earful on their lack of gracious-ness. They are, after all, guests. But I know that is not a good idea.

Please give me some advice on how to

respond when they find their demands are not met. -- Anonymous

Dear Anonymous: Notify them in advance that you have child-proofed your home but cannot accommo-date their more exotic requests. Let them know where they can purchase their organ-ic food and say you’ll make room in your fridge and cabinets for them. If you are feel-ing particularly peev-ish, you could also send them a list of local hotels and motels, say-ing you’re doing the best you can but will certainly understand if they think they’ll be more comfortable else-where. Be extremely

nice about it, but stick to your guns.

Dear Annie: I read your response to “Disgusted with My Sister in Texas,” whose mother and sister had an argument that resulted in Sis taking away the car that Mom had been making pay-ments on. I agree with you that legal action should be a last resort in this issue, and I’m glad you suggested that someone impartial mediate.

Mediation is an informal process where a neutral and impar-tial mediator facilitates two or more disputing parties in coming to a mutually agreed-upon resolution. The beauty of mediation is that the two parties are the decision makers and the trained and certi-fied mediator helps them dig below the surface to identify their true interests: “why” they have taken their opposing positions on an issue. More often than not, the two par-

ties find that their interests are not that far apart and, with the help of the mediator, arrive at a resolution.

There are several routes to mediation, and the laws and pro-cedures are different in each state, but there are attorneys who are mediators or who work with private mediators who can be of assist-ance. Additionally, the local courthouse staff may be able to assist the parties in procuring mediation for small-claims cases or higher (the dollar amount var-ies by state).

I highly recommend mediation because it is less expensive and less time consuming, and the individuals make the decision rather than a judge who will rule by statute. Of course, if they can-not resolve the issue through mediation, they still have litigation as the last resort. -- W.

Dear W.: Thank you for suggesting profes-sional mediation as a

way of working through these disagreements without resorting to a lawsuit. People are too quick to sue when sim-ply talking it out and reaching a compromise often creates a solution without additional ill will.

Dear Annie: I had

a similar experience to that of “Proud Grandma,” whose childless daughter criticizes the way her siblings raise their kids.

After hearing one too many criticisms, I finally came back with, “I hope, when you have children, they are as

good as you think mine ought to be!” My sib-ling was hurt, but it didn’t happen so often afterward. -- L.

Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers col-umn.

Today’s Crossword

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Solution for previouS SuDoKu

Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with sev-eral given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box con-tains the same number only once.

Today’s PUZZLEs

Annie’s MAilbox

Marcy sugar & Kathy Mitchell

Trail Times Wednesday, December 31, 2014 www.trailtimes.ca A11

Not necessary to oblige to guests’ exotic requests

Page 12: Trail Daily Times, December 31, 2014

Leisure

For Thursday, Jan. 1, 2015 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) You might overdo some-thing with a group of people today. (Could this be a Polar Bear swim?) Be sensible so that you don’t have regrets later on. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) Your ambition is aroused today, and this will allow you to accomplish a lot. However, don’t bite off more than you can chew, because you will be tempted to do this. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Travel plans look excit-ing today. In fact, you want to plan something quite ambitious and over-the-top. Others will be just as enthusiastic about training possibilities or taking a new course. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Don’t give away the farm today. If you have disputes about shared property,

make sure you get your facts straight. LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) You have lots of energy to schmooze with others today, especially with members of the general public. People will be attracted to you, because enthusiasm is contagious. VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Be realistic in your plans at work today, because you might overestimate some-thing. If you have to agree to a deadline, be realistic. (You can always finish ahead of time and look like a hero.) LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) You might overdo a social event today by eat-ing too much, drinking too much or spending too much money. Be aware so that you can stay realistic. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) You might want to begin an ambitious renovation project today or begin a family activity. Best to start

small and then finish big (not the other way around). SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) All your communications will be upbeat today, which is why this is a strong day for those of you who write, sell, market, teach or act. Yada, yada, yada. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Be careful with financial matters today because you might overestimate some-

thing or you might spend too much money. Better to err on the side of caution. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Today, fiery Mars is in your sign opposing Jupiter. This will tend to magnify all your reactions and actions. If so, you might feel like an emotional yo-yo today. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) You are a sympathetic sign who likes to help those

in need. Nevertheless, don’t go overboard. Remember: True generosity is giving what is needed. YOU BORN TODAY You are capable and organized, and you like a structured environment. Many of you work with your hands to create something practical and useful. At times, you are very ambitious about what you wish to achieve. You are sensitive to the comments of others. This year is the

beginning of a new nine-year cycle for you. Open any door! Start a new business activity. Birthdate of: Morris Chestnut, actor; Deepa Mehta, filmmaker; E.M. Forster, author. (c) 2014 King Features Syndicate, Inc.

Your horoscopeBy Francis Drake

A12 www.trailtimes.ca Wednesday, December 31, 2014 Trail Times

trailtimes.ca/eeditions

Misplaced your TV Listings?Find TV listings online in every Tuesday edition at

TuNDrA

MoTher Goose & GrIMM

ANIMAL crAcKers

hAGAr

BrooMhILDA

sALLY ForTh

BLoNDIe

Drive Safeon our roadsPlease

Remember to use your turn signal.Give the drivers behind and ahead of you

a heads up. Turn on your indicator before initiating your turn or lane change.

Page 13: Trail Daily Times, December 31, 2014

Trail Times Wednesday, December 31, 2014 www.trailtimes.ca A13

It’s a Boy!

A Keepsake for a LifetimeReceive a 2x3 birth

announcement for only $3000 GST included

Deadline: 2 days priorto publication by 11am.

The Trail Times will continue to publish straight birth announcements free of charge - as always

Drop in to 1163 Cedar Ave or email your photo, information and Mastercard or Visa number to [email protected] 250-368-8551 ext 204

Call Today! 250-364-1413 ext 206

FruitvaleRoute 362 20 papers 1st, 2nd, 3rd, Evergreen AveRoute 366 18 papers Beaver St, Maple AveRoute 369 15 papers Birch Ave, Johnson Rd, Red-wood Dr, Rosewood DrRoute 375 12 papers Green Rd & Lodden RdRoute 379 18 papers Cole St, Nelson AveRoute 380 23 papers Galloway Rd, Mill RdRoute 381 7 papers Coughlin RdRoute 382 7 papers Debruin Rd & Staats RdRoute 384 19 papers Cedar Ave, Kootenay

GenelleRoute 303 15 papers 12th Ave, 2nd St, GrandviewRoute 304 13 papers 12th & 14th Ave

West TrailRoute 149 7 papers Binns St, McAnally St, Kitchener Ave

WarfieldRoute 195 12 papers Blake Crt, Whitman Way

SunningdaleRoute 211 26 papers Hazelwood Dr, Olivia Cres, Viola Cres.Route 219 15 papers Hazelwood Drive

MontroseRoute 341 24 papers 10th Ave, 8th Ave, 9th AveRoute 344 17 papers 10th Ave, 9th AveRoute 345 12 papers 10th Ave, 9th AveRoute 347 16 papers 10th Ave, 9th Ave, 9th StRoute 348 19 papers 12th Ave, Christie RdRoute 346 27 papers 8th, 9th & 10th AveRoute 340 24 papers 10th Ave, 7th St, 8th St

PAPER CARRIERS WANTED

Excellent exercise, fun for all ages.

Rossland CARRIERS NEEDED FOR ROUTES IN ALL AREAS

Black Press in the West Kootenay region is seeking a regional Editor to oversee both the Nelson Star and the Castlegar News. The successful candidate will have Editor experience in the community newspaper industry. They will have a keen eye for layout, have an extensive photography resume, be an aggressive user of social media, understand the latest trends in digital media and be able to lead two newsrooms both from a print and digital perspective. This successful candidate will also be part of the senior team for the West Kootenay and will be part of setting the overall vision and goals for these newspapers and websites. This position includes active news and community coverage, engaging editorial and opinion writing, as well as understanding and leading change in our print products and on our websites. This position will be based out of Nelson, B.C. The West Kootenay is often considered one of the best places in B.C. to live and this position would suit any outdoor enthusiast, with spectacular skiing, mountain biking and hiking just outside your door. It is truly a wonderful place to live and to be involved in the community newspaper industry. This position offers a better than average compensation package, that also includes a strong benefits package. If this sounds like the right position for you please send your resume, a cover letter, references and some examples of your work to Karen Bennett at [email protected]. Please no phone calls.

Regional Editor

Gord & Dianne Menelaws, along with

Sean & Michele Donaghy

are thrill ed to announce the engagement of their children

Erin Nicole &Tyler Andrew

Wedding to take place August 22, 2015 in Trail, BC.

Announcements

Information

The Trail Times is a member of the British

Columbia Press Council. The Press Council serves as a forum for unsatisfied reader complaints against

member newspapers.

Complaints must be filed within a 45 day time limit.

For information please go to the Press Council website at www.bcpresscouncil.org,

write to PO Box 1356, Ladysmith, B.C. V9G 1A9

or telephone (toll free) 1-888-687-2213.

PersonalsALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS

250-368-5651

FOR INFORMATION,education, accommodation

and supportfor battered womenand their children

call WINS Transition House 250-364-1543

WEST KOOTENAY playmates escorts, in/out calls. 250-421-4198

Lost & FoundLOST: Black iPhone 4, down-town Trail on Saturday, De-cember 27th. Please call 250-231-7584

Help Wanted

Announcements

Lost & FoundLOST: Earring (multi-coloured sequins) the middle of Decem-ber Downtown Trail or Colum-bia View Lodge areas. Please call or bring to Trail Times of-fi ce. 250-368-8551

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

Help Wanted

Employment

Business Opportunities

THE DISABILITY Tax Credit. $1,500 yearly tax cred-it.$15,000 lump sum refund (on avg). covers: Hip/knee re-placements, arthritic joints, COPD. For help applying 1-844-453-5372.

Engagements

Help Wanted

Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted

250.368.8551

fax 250.368.8550 email [email protected]

Your classifieds. Your community

PHONE:250.368.8551 OR: 1.800.665.2382

FAX: 250.368.8550

EMAIL CLASSIFIEDS TO: nationals@

trailtimes.ca

DEADLINES 11am 1 day prior to publication.

RATES Lost & Found and Free Give Away ads are no charge. Classified rates vary. Ask us about rates. Combos and packages available - over 90 newspapers in BC.

AGREEMENT It 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 revise, 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 LEGISLATION Advertisers 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 i de requirement for the work involved.

COPYRIGHT Copyright 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 what-soever, particularly by a photographic or of set 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:

Give life ....register to be

an organ donor today!

for more information1-800-663-6189

www.transplant.bc.ca

Page 14: Trail Daily Times, December 31, 2014

A14 www.trailtimes.ca Wednesday, December 31, 2014 Trail Times

Wishing You Peaceat the Holidays

Wayne DeWitt ext 25Mario Berno ext 27Fred Behrens ext 31

Tom Gawryletz ext 26

Keith DeWitt ext 30

Thea Stayanovich ext 28Joy DeMelo ext 29

Denise Marchi ext 21

1148 Bay Ave, Trail 250.368.5000

All Pro Realty Ltd.

www.facebook.com/allprorealtyltdtrailbc www.allprorealty.ca

As the Holiday Season is upon us, we fi nd ourselves refl ecting on the past year and on those who have helped us shape our business.

We value our relationship with you and look forward to working with you in the year to come.

From all of us at Re/Max All Pro Realty.

We wish you a Happy Holiday Season and a New Year fi lled with Peace and Prosperity.

“It’s YOUR move. You want it handled with care”

Dawn Rosin realtor®[email protected]

1201 Columbia Avenue, Trail$169,500

Location, Location, Location! This home is located close to hospital, shopping, schools and Gyro Park.

MLS#2401023

3354 Laurel Crescent, Trail$198,500

This is one of the nicest townhouses in Glenmerry.

A must to view.MLS#2402056

#15 - 500 16th Avenue, Genelle$49,900

Located in Whispering Pines Mobile Home Park just steps away from the Columbia River. Perfect

starter or retirement home.MLS#2401489

4750 Highway 3, Salmo$225,500

Country roads take me home to this 1 1/2 storey mountain side chalet. Located on .83 of an acre

MLS#2400334

Employment

Help Wanted

Cook WantedCook & kitchen help required.

Apply in person with resume to

Benedict’s Steakhouse Scho eld i hway rail

250-368-3360

**WANTED**NEWSPAPER CARRIERS

TRAIL TIMESExcellent ExerciseFun for All Ages

Call Today -Start Earning Money

TomorrowCirculation Department250-364-1413 Ext. 206For more Information

Medical/Dental

Seeking full-time MOA/Practice Managerto join our team at a busy ophthalmology and retinal

subspecialty practice in Vernon.

We strive to provide high quality patient care in a friendly and team-oriented setting. Our offi ce is pa-perless and uses the latest in eye care technology. We are looking for an ex-perienced MOA who is highly organized, able to multi-task and communi-cates effectively.

This position fulfi lls a lead-ership role in our clinic and will command a high wage.

Please email cover letter and resume to

hhollands.offi [email protected]

Merchandise for Sale

Heavy Duty Machinery

A-STEEL SHIPPING DRY STORAGE CONTAINERS

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

sizes in stock. Trades are welcome.

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

Wanted to buy 300 size hydraulic excavator.

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

Delivery BC and ABwww.rtccontainer.com

Misc. WantedPrivate Collector Looking toBuy Coin Collections, Silver,Antiques, Native Art, Estates +Chad: 250-863-3082 Local

Rentals

Apt/Condo for Rent1/2 MONTH FREE RENT

WANETA MANORSuites

Avail NowPlease call

250-368-8423

Bella Vista, Shavers Bench Townhomes. N/S, N/P. 2-3 bdrms. Phone 250-364-1822

Ermalinda Estates, Glenmer-ry, spacious 1-2bdrms. Adults only. Secure building w/eleva-tor. N/S, N/P. Ongoing im-provements. Ph.250-364-1922

E.TRAIL, 2bdrm. apts. F/S, W/D. Yard. 250-368-3239

Rentals

Apt/Condo for RentFrancesco Estates, Glenmer-ry,spacious 1-3bdrms. Adults only (45+). Secure building w/elevator. N/S, N/P. Ongoing improvements. Ph. 250-368-6761Glenmerry 1bdrm. apt. F/S Heat included. N/S. $600./mo. 250-368-5908Glenmerry 2bdrm. apt. F/S Heat included. N/S. $750./mo. 250-368-5908GLENMERRY, 2bdrm apt, F/S, Laundry, No Smoking, No Pets. Available immediately. 250-364-2786PARKSIDE APARTMENTS. Large 1bdrm., insuite laundry, AC, secure quiet building. Call Richard 250-368-7897ROSSLAND, bach. apt. Gold-en City Manor. Over 55. N/S. N/P. Subsidized. 250-362-5030, 250-231-9777SUNNINGDALE, spacious, bright 1bd, perfect for couple/ senior, n/p,n/s. 778-515-1512 250-368-5695WARFIELD APARTMENTS. 2-bdrm, N/S, N/P. Long term tenants. 250-368-5888W.TRAIL, 1bd. plus, semi-en-closed balcony. 1Blk. to Down-town, $625./mo. 250-368-6076W.TRAIL 2-BDRM.. $725. N/S, N/P. F/S. Laundry.250-367-7919W.TRAIL, 2Bdrm. in 4-plex., enclosed parking. $580./mo. 250-368-6212W.TRAIL 2-bdrm. main fl oor. f/s,w/d,d/w, air conditioning. $700./mo. plus utilities. Avail. Jan. 1st. 250-368-1015

W.TRAIL, 2bd., tiny yard, suitable for small dog, 1blk. to shopping and bus. $695./mo. 250-368-6075

Houses For Sale

Rentals

Rooms for RentW.TRAIL, furnished room for rent. $450./mo. incl. util., inter-net, laundry. N/S, N/P. Ref. 250-608-4425

Houses For Sale

Transportation

Trucks & Vans1995 Toyota, SR5T-100, 4x4, V6, 3.4cc, short box, rear seat, 5 sp manual, cruise, PW, P door locks, opening rear win-dow, canopy w/window, liner, Boston Pro 5.5 speakers, 2 ch 250 wt amp, Eclipse 5441 CD, tow bar, many new parts, ex-tra’s, summer & winters on rims.Best Offer. 250-447-9513

Houses For Sale

FIND EVERYTHING YOUNEED IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

Classifieds

We can deliver your � yer right

to the door!

For as little as

we will insert and deliver your fl yer right to your customers’ doorsteps.

$$$$$$65 per 100065 per 100065 per 100065 per 100065 per 100065 per 100065 per 100065 per 100065 per 1000

We can design and deliver your fl yerinto other communities as well!

Call your rep today!250.368.8551250.368.8551250.368.8551

Lonnie ext.201 • [email protected] ext.203 • [email protected]

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Page 15: Trail Daily Times, December 31, 2014

WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!WE WILL NOT BE BEAT!

COMMUNIT

Y

EXPE

RTISE

BUYING POWER

PRICE

COMMUNIT

Y

Kelowna

Vernon

Penticton

Kamloops

Castlegar/Cranbrook/Nelson

PrinceGeorge

AndresCar Audio

PENTICTON101-2601 Skaha Lake Rd.

493-3800(250)

VERNON200-3107 - 48th Ave.

542-3000(250)

ANDRES WIRELESSCherry Lane Mall

(250) 493-4566

KELOWNA2153 Springfield Road

860-2600(250)

WEST KELOWNA#200 - 2180 Elk Rd.

707-2600(250)

CASTLEGAR200-1965 Columbia Ave.

365-6455(250)

NELSONChahko Mika Mall

352-7258(250)

CRANBROOK101 Kootenay St. North

426-8927(250)

TELUS KIOSK

KELOWNA2153 Springfield Road

860-2600(250)

WEST KELOWNA#200 - 2180 Elk Rd.

707-2600(250)

100 MileHouse

KELOWNA2153 Springfield Road

860-2600(250)

PENTICTON101-2601 Skaha Lake Rd.

493-3800(250)

VERNON200-3107 - 48th Ave.

542-3000(250)

WEST KELOWNA#200 - 2180 Elk Rd.

707-2600(250)

ANDRES CAR AUDIO1881 Harvey Avenue

(250) 860-1975

KELOWNA CAR AUDIO1881 Harvey Avenue

(250) 860-1975

KAMLOOPS CAR AUDIO154 Victoria Str

(250) 314-9944

WEST KELOWNA#200 - 2180 Elk Rd.

707-2600(250)

PENTICTON101-2601 Skaha Lake Rd.

493-3800(250)

VERNON200-3107 - 48th Ave.

542-3000(250)

WilliamsLake KELOWNA

2153 Springfield Road860-2600(250)

KAMLOOPS745 Notre Dame Drive

851-8700(250)

PRINCE GEORGE2591A Vance Rd.

563-4447(250)

WILLIAMS AKE299 Oliver Str.

398-8522(250)

L 100 MILE OUSE916 Alpine Ave.

395-4015(250)

H

KAMLOOPS745 Notre Dame Drive

851-8700(250)

ANDRES WIRELESSAberdeen Mall(250) 377-8880

ANDRES WIRELESS215 - 450 Lansdowne Mall

(250) 377-8007

ANDRES CAR AUDIO154 Victoria Str

(250) 314-9944

ANDRES BUSINESS300 St. Paul Str.

(250) 377-3773

PRINCE GEORGE2591A Vance Rd.

563-4447(250)

KAMLOOPS745 Notre Dame Drive

851-8700(250)

VERNON200-3107 - 48th Ave.

542-3000(250)

WILLIAMS AKE299 Oliver Str.

398-8522(250)

L 100 MILE OUSE916 Alpine Ave.

395-4015(250)

H

KAMLOOPS745 Notre Dame Drive

851-8700(250)

PRINCE GEORGE2591A Vance Rd.

563-4447(250)

100 MILE OUSE916 Alpine Ave.

395-4015(250)

H WILLIAMS AKE299 Oliver Str.

398-8522(250)

L

VERNON200-3107 - 48th Ave.

542-3000(250)

ANDRES WIRELESSVilliage Green Mall

(250) 542-1496

KELOWNA2153 Springfield Road

860-2600(250)

WEST KELOWNA#200 - 2180 Elk Rd.

707-2600(250)

KAMLOOPS745 Notre Dame Drive

851-8700(250)

VERNON200-3107 - 48th Ave.

542-3000(250)

Trail Times Wednesday, December 31, 2014 www.trailtimes.ca A15

Page 16: Trail Daily Times, December 31, 2014

A16 www.trailtimes.ca Wednesday, December 31, 2014 Trail Times

local

Art ForrestBill Craig Mary Amantea

Jody AudiaJody AudiaJody AudiaJody AudiaJody Audia Dan Powell

Christine AlboMark Wilson

HOLIDAY GREETINGS TO ONE AND ALL

KOOTENAY HOMES INC.1358 Cedar Avenue, Trail www.kootenayhomes.com www.century21.ca

The Local Experts™The Local Experts™

With best wishes and many thanks from all of us for your continued

business in the new year.

Deanne LockhartMary Martin Tonnie Stewart Terry AltonRichard Daoust Jodi Beamish

Dave Thoss

Amy Klit

B y S h e r i r e g n i e rTimes Staff

Police have released two names involved in a fatal inci-dent at a Fruitvale home Sunday night.

Scott Douglas Decembrini, 52, of Fruitvale, was rushed to Kootenay Boundary Regional Hospital that evening just before 10 p.m. where he succumbed to his injuries.

Jordan Brian Shimell, 24, has been charge with second degree murder following his arrest at the scene.

He is known to the local com-munity and to the victim, but listed, by police, as a resident of Rocky Mountain House, Alberta.

Shimell remains in police cus-tody and is scheduled to appear in Rossland Provincial Court on Jan. 5, according to a Tuesday RCMP news release.

The second degree mur-der charge was laid as it per-

tained to the details of the case, explained NCO Kris Clark, from the Southeast District RCMP. “In a crime as serious as murder, the charge is laid in consulta-tion with the crown based on the appropriate details we know at the time.”

The charge can be changed if new information comes to light, he added.

Local police received a call from the Fruitvale residence to report a man suffering ser-ious, life-threatening injuries.

However, to protect the integrity of the criminal case, the mechan-ism of injury will not be released.

With assistance from the Kootenay Boundary Regional District RCMP and Trail & Greater District RCMP, the BC RCMP Southeast District Major Crimes Unit continues to investigate. Anyone with information related to this crime is encouraged to call the police (and can remain anonymous) at 250.364.2566 or Crime Stoppers at 1.800.222.TIPS (8477).

Murder charges laid in Fruitvale deathPolice release names of

victim and accused Please remember

to recycle your past issues of

the Trail Times.