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Friday, September 19, 2014Vol. 10 No. 13
FREE
Bringing the mountain to the people
The only solely owned and operated newspaper on the Kamloops North ShorePublished weekly in Kamloops, B.C.
Phone: 250-819-6272 • Fax: 250-376-6272 • E-mail: [email protected]
Online: http://issuu.com/jmnews • Follow us on FaceBook
Take the Tranquille Tunnel Tours experience
The tunnel tours are back! This year, you’re invited to participate in
an hour-long moon lit 1914 love story, set against the magical land-
scape of the Tranquille King Edward Sanatorium, its mysterious un-
derground village and tunnel system.
From the chaos of WW1 trench warfare to the haunting peacefulness
of Tranquille a love story arose.
Nat Nesbith, a First World War lieutenant, and Mary Ferguson, a
nurse in training, meet at the Tranquille Sanatorium in 1914 when
Nat arrives for treatment of his tuberculosis. Their common love of
journalism brings them together as they seek to tell a story authorities
don’t want told through an underground newspaper called “The Tran-
quillian” – this is the story of the Tranquillian Soldier.
Tunnel tour visitors will experience a one-of-a-kind night through the
underground passages that connect the buildings.
The tunnel system was originally constructed to facilitate the deliv-
ery of laundry from the site Laundromat and food from the cafeteria
to patients and staff across the site. Electric carts, called “Tuggers”
were used to pull trailers loaded with food and laundry around. Four
of these carts have been preserved by Tranquille Farm Fresh. In addi-
tion the tunnels were used by patients and staff to move from building
to building. They also served as utility corridors.
Swedish furniture retailer IKEA on Tues.
Sept. 16, issued a global recall of its Gung-
gung children’s swing, saying it poses a risk
of serious injury.
IKEA said it is recalling the product world-
wide because the suspension fi ttings on it “do
not live up to IKEA quality requirements.”
The company said approximately 300 swings
were sold in Canada and approximately 2,000
swings sold in the United States since it went
on sale in Canada from July to August 2014.
Sales were stopped on Aug. 14 after the com-
pany received four reports worldwide, includ-
ing one in Germany, two in Austria and one in
Canada of the suspension fi ttings breaking in
use, of the suspension fi ttings breaking; one
incident involved an eight-year-old boy in Aus-
tria who fell, fracturing his leg in the process.
There have been no reports of injury in Canada.
The GUNGGUNG swing is sold for in-
door and outdoor use by children ages three
to seven years. It’s made of green polyester
fabric and hangs from a plastic suspension fi t-
ting attached to steel hooks. The full length
of the suspension strap, including the sling
seat, is 5.18 m (17 feet) and the width of the
seat is 24.4 cm (0.8 feet). A permanent label
is attached to one of the suspension straps,
showing age recommendation (3-7), IKEA
logo, Design and Quality IKEA of Sweden,
GUNGGUNG article number 302.439.74,
supplier number 17915 and Made in Vietnam.
The swing can be returned to any IKEA store
for a full refund, and proof of purchase is not
required.
For more information, contact IKEA Cana-
da at 1-800-661-9807 anytime or at IKEA’s
website and click on the Recall link at the top
of the page for more information.
Note, the Canada Consumer Product Safety
Act prohibits recalled products from being re-
distributed, sold or even given away in Canada.
IKEA recalls children’s swing
TUNNEL TOURSsee page 2
RECALLED. Consumers can return the Gung-
gung children’s swings for a full refund at any
IKEA stores. Receipts are not necessary to get
the refund. IKEA photo
Java Mountain News September 19, 20142
is independently owned and operated and published weekly by Racin’ Mama Productions.
Publishing Editor: Judi DupontReporter/Photographer: Judi Dupont, Lizsa Bibeau
Sales: Judi DupontProduction & Design: Judi Dupont
Deadline for advertising and editorial copy is 4 p.m. Wednesdays for publication
on Friday (except when Friday is a holiday, then deadline is 4 p.m. Tuesdays for
publication Thursday).
Submissions are gratefully accepted but Java Mountain News reserves the
right to edit all material and to refuse any material deemed unsuitable for
this publication. Articles will run in the newspaper as time and space permit.
Letters to the Editor must be signed and have a phone number (your phone
number will not be printed unless so requested). The opinions expressed
herein are those of the contributors/writers and not necessarily those of
the publisher, Java Mountain News, Racin’ Mama Productions or the staff.
All submissions become the property of Java Mountain News. Any error
that appears in an advertisement will be adjusted as to only the amount of
space in which the error occurred. The content of each advertisement is
the responsibility of the advertiser. No portion of this publication may be
reproduced without written permission from the publisher.
CONTACT JAVA MOUNTAIN NEWS
If you have an upcoming event or news story you would like publicized in a future edition or if you would like advertising information,
CALL: 250-819-6272 FAX: 250-376-6272 E-MAIL US: [email protected]
OR WRITE JAVA MOUNTAIN NEWS 273 Nelson Ave., Kamloops, B.C. V2B 1M4
ACCOUNTANT
ARCHITECT
CHEF
DENTIST
DOCTOR
FIRE FIGHTER
LAWYER
LIBRARIAN
MAIL CARRIER
MECHANIC
NURSE
OPTOMETRIST
PHARMACIST
PILOT
POLICE OFFICER
REPORTER
SECRETARY
TEACHER
CAREERS
WORD SEARCH
Ant iques &
Col lec t ib les Sa le
The North Shore Community Centre’s
Annual Fall
730 Cottonwood Avenue
Ph: 250-376-4777 • Fx: 250-376-4792
October 4 & 5Saturday 9 am - 4 pm Sunday 9 am - 3 pm
Admission $4Children under 12 free
More than 30 vendors
from across the Interior
Winds " # ange Counselling 7 years in private practice Affordable assistance with: • relationships/interpersonal confl icts • stress, abuse, depression/anxiety • anger, changes/challenges in your life
Lana Mineault, MSW, RSW#102 - 774 Victoria Street • 250-374-2100
Tunnel construction occurred over decades, and eventually was in-
tegrated into below ground fl oors of the Sage Building, the Greaves
Hospital, the main building, Laundromat, cafeteria, and other build-
ings. A barbershop, storage rooms, meeting rooms, offi ces, shower
facilities, and morgue are included in the tunnel system.
Urban legends about the Tranquille tunnels have grown to epic pro-
portions over the last 30 thirty years. Come and learn why.
Tours run from Sept. 5 to Nov. 2. Multiple tours are hosted each
night. Tunnel goers must be able to navigate stairs. The tunnel will
be minimally lit. There is a rest area in the tunnel. Participants are
encouraged to dress warm. Group bookings available during the week
during September and October, with a minimum group of 18 people.
Call 250-574-7474 to book a private tour.
Tickets are $28.80 from Kamloops Live Box Offi ce, https://tickets.
kamloopslive.com/TheatreManager/1/login&event=0.
from page 1
Tunnel tours ongoing through Nov. 2
Lizsa Bibeau
Mommyisms
HoroscopesSeptember 15 - September 21, 2014
Respond to any opportunity connected to leisure, pleasure or enjoy-ment this week. You could meet new people or discover things are taking a new path with those you already know. Be cautious about risk taking, especially if this is based on promises somebody else makes. What seems open now could become rather mysterious.
You would be wise not to rush anything this week. The need to be analytical continues, though perhaps on a different level. You have to learn to trust your own instincts. These will not be correct unless you spend enough time in contemplation. Make a new start with any changes, you know you need to make connected to health.
Your ideas can be well received this week, which you can feel well pleased about. Recommendations or opportunities that seem to follow on can encourage you to take a risk with something new. Where others are involved, you need to ensure that you are not left with greater responsibilities, while they maintain their freedom.
Some sort of turning point can begin to take place this week when it comes to the manner in which somebody else expects to control things. You need to focus on new foundations you want to put into place so that a situation becomes more balanced where you are concerned. Success with this will be an evolving process.
You can feel extremely optimistic about future possibilities this week. This can be attached to increased knowledge. New ideas can emerge as a result of anything you have been applying your mind to this month. Acting too quickly in any area of risk would not be wise as it will encourage you to look at things as you want to see them.
Whatever attention you have been giving to fi nancial matters this month can this week begin to take you down a path of new direc-tion in applying them. This might be connected to a realisation that somebody else is not as reliable as you had previously pre-sumed. Being proactive in decisions that affect you is necessary.
The New Moon this week occurs in your sign, providing you with the opportunity to take yourself down a new path of some descrip-tion. This will likely be connected to something you have been thinking about this month. You may not feel sure about the best way to fi ll in the details when it comes to initiating ideas. Don’t rush.
Creating new directions will be connected to dealing with in-creased obligations by bringing some things to an end. You have to realise this week that streamlining daily activities or routines is the only way you will cope effectively. A certain amount of rest is necessary if you do not want your general health to be affected.
You will want to move forward with anything that concerns you personally this week, but exactly how to do this may not be so clear. Taking out of character risks might be appealing but not necessarily wise. The support within a group of people or from somebody who is in a good position to recommend you will fare better.
There can be a new sense of commitment this week that would be best applied to matters that mean something to you personally, especially when it comes to how you want to see yourself evolve. Concentrate on any areas where you feel there is a lack of clarity. It might be a slow process but you can sort it out with persistence.
Your ideas could rather surprisingly appeal to somebody else this week, though what you need to be aware of is that they will ensure they maintain their freedom in some way. Guard against impulse when it comes to fi nancial matters and especially any long-term commitment. Take a balanced view with new future possibilities.
What somebody else wants from you could begin to take a dif-ferent direction this week. You need to be mindful about how this could alter daily routine as well as any extra commitment this may require from you. This does not necessarily mean you won’t want to go down this path but you must approach it realistically.
Java Mountain News September 19, 20143
It’s the time of year for changes:
the seasons, back to school, new
activities, new jobs. Something
big is on the horizon and it has
my head spinning.
In less than six weeks, my rou-
tine and my workload as a moth-
er, a very supportive wife, and a
woman take on an entirely new
role. I have had to change our
daily/weekly schedules including
get full-time daycare, plan every
meal, rally my girlfriends (who
happen to do my daycare), call
upon neighbours, for afterschool
care, and ensure each waking
minute of my day is accounted
for. . . which reminds me that my
alarm will have to be set to wake
me up an hour earlier. I will have
my hands full, and my brain will
be working overtime.
You see, all this change that
we’ve been bracing ourselves for
comes as my husband has decided
it’s time for a career change, and
will be heading back to school. . .
out of town. It’s temporary, but we
all have to make some sacrifi ces
for our new arrangement.
We have stock-piled our
Airmiles, set up Skype on the
computer and tablets, spoken
freely to the children up the up-
coming, temporary changes in
our house and family, and are
bracing for D-day. It’s a good
thing, a bit of a sucky thing, but
all-in-all, it will be a great thing!
The hardest sacrifi ce made is by
my husband whom will be away
from his home, and his family. Yes,
we will be away from a loving hus-
band, and our children’s devoted
daddy, but at least we will have
each other for those comforting
hugs on lonely nights, and our com-
fortable beds. (I can only imagine
that crap-tastic living arrangement
my husband will have to endure.)
To distract our entire family
from these dreaded changes, we
gave our family something excit-
ing to look forward to: one big
“hurrah” before this change. So,
why not celebrate our family . .
. at the Happiest Place on Earth?
I’ve already got my Mickey ears
packed!
More changes to come
DISNEYLAND BOUND. The
Bibeaus are all
smiles during their
last visit to the
Happiest Place on
Earth. The family
is planning another
trip in a month.Lizsa Bibeau photo
Java Mountain News September 19, 20144
• HAY BALE BARBECUE Sat. Sept. 20, 3 – 7 p.m. at Harper’s Trail
Winery. Enjoy a relaxing festive fi lled afternoon featuring hourly vine-
yard tours, wine tastings, & entertainment by MARGIT SKY PROJECT. Spit
roasted prime rib feast prepared by Chef David Tombs & his team. 19-
plus only. Tickets $65 from Terra Restaurant & Harper’s Trail.
• LOUISIANA HAYRIDE Sept. 20, 7:20 p.m. at Sagebrush Theatre. This
live music extravaganza re-creates the ambiance of the early days of coun-
try music & features songs made famous by some of the greatest country
music stars of the ‘50s & ‘60s. Tickets from Kamloops Live Box Offi ce.
• SABRINA WEEKS & SWING CAT BOUNCE: Sept. 20: as RYAN7
(Sabrina Weeks & Mike Hilliard) performs at the Kamloops Art Gallery
as part of the kickoff of an art exhibition, 6:30 – 8:30 p.m. Oct. 18: LIVE
CD RELEASE PARTY at Double Tree by Hilton Hotel (Coast Hotel), 339 St.
Paul St. Doors: 7 p.m. Tickets at Karateristics, 422 Victoria St.
• 4TH ANNUAL STAR GAZING FESTIVAL Sept. 20, 7 p.m. at Stake
Lake Observatory, hosted by the Kamloops Astronomical Society. Observato-
ry tours, speakers, & telescopes set up for viewing – weather permitting! Wear
sturdy footwear, dress warmly, & bring a fl ashlight. Admission by donation.
• POKOTILLO UKRAINIAN DANCERS PYROHY DINNER FUNDRAISER, Fri. Sept. 26 & Oct. 24, 6 – 8 p.m. at Odd Fellows &
Rebekahs Hall, 423 Tranquille Rd. Dinner includes pyrohy, Kobasa,
salad, beverage & dessert. Prices: $8/small dinner, $12/large dinner,
which includes borscht. For tickets, call 250-374-5734 or email hoy-
[email protected]. Pick up tickets at the door. Everyone is welcome!
• THE CANADIAN BREAST CANCER FOUNDATION CIBC RUN FOR THE CURE Sun. Oct. 5, at the Rotary Bandshell at River-
side Park. Registration/donation drop-off: 9 a.m. opening ceremonies:
10 a.m. warm up: 10:17 a.m. SURVIVOR PARADE: 10:30 a.m. start of
lead by survivors: 10:45 a.m. awards celebration: 11:45 a.m. Register
as a team or individual. FMI, 250-571-5050, or [email protected].
• LAUGHING STOCK THEATRE SOCIETY: Oct. 21 – 23: HAUNTED KAM-LOOPS, join us as we “historically” haunt some of Kamloops’ cemeter-
ies! Oct. 24 – 26: CREEPY CORN MAZE. In for a fright? Navigate your
way through the corn maze, but watch out for the unexpected! SNOW
WHITE – THE PANTO! Dec 24 – 31, matinees & evening shows, at
Sagebrush Theatre, 821 Munro St. Tickets at Kamloops Live Box Offi ce.
Contact Vance Schneider, 250-299-7325, [email protected].
• THE NORTH SHORE COMMUNITY CENTRE, 730 Cotton-
wood Ave. Tuesday is PIE NIGHT at 6:30 p.m. Pie & ice cream & tea/cof-
fee for only $3. Live entertainment. FRANKLY YOURS CONCERT: Sat. Sept.
27, 2 p.m. Come out & enjoy FRANK SINATRA classics. Admission by
donation, fundraiser to buy an automated external defi brillator. ANTIQUE
& COLLECTABLES SALE, Oct. 4 & 5. Admission $4. Call 250-376-4777.
• THE BIG LITTLE SCIENCE CENTRE, 655 Holt St., open for public
drop-ins Tues – Sat, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m., with daily hands-on fun in the explora-
tion rooms; interactive science shows Sat. at 11 a.m. & 1:30 p.m. Sat. Sept.
20: STATIC ELECTRICITY SHOW. Time for a Science Centre Hair-do! Discover
fun static activities that you can try at home, plus have the powerful van de
Graaf Generator make your hair fl y. ROBOTICS CLUB FOR KIDS aged 10 years
and older. Design program & test your own Mindstorms Lego robot. Two
fall sessions , with a choice of Thursday or Friday 2:45 – 4 p.m.: Sept. 18/19,
Oct. 2/3, Oct. 9/10, Oct. 16/17, Oct. 30/31 & Nov. 6/7 Nov. 13/14, Nov.
20/21, Nov. 27/28, Dec. 11/12. Call Gord, 250-554-2572, [email protected].
• Country artist AARON PRITCHETT performs at Cactus Jack’s
Night Club, Sept. 24. Doors: 8 p.m. Tickets at CJ’s.
• KAMLOOPS TRAVEL CLUB, an informal group that gets together
regularly to talk about travel at The Art We Are Oct. 2. Special meet-
ing with guest speaker, TERESA THE TRAVELER, at Maurya’s Fine Indian
Cuisine, Sept. 25, 7 p.m. Weekly meetings Call James, 250-879-0873.
• INTERIOR WELLNESS FESTIVAL at Thompson Rivers Univer-
sity, Sept. 26 – 28. Friday, 6 – 9 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m. – 6 p.m.; Sunday,
10 a.m. – 4 p.m. Free admission. Free classes, workshops, seminars,
healing garden, live entertainment, marketplace, cafe & more.
AROUND TOWN• MAKE YOUR COFFEE CUP COUNT on Fri. Sept. 19, 10 a.m. –
3 p.m. Join the Alzheimer Society at 405-231 First Ave. (Cornerstone
Building), & for a small donation, enjoy a cup of coffee & a muffi n.
Call Marg, 250-377-8200. SAVE THE DATE: Sun. Jan, 25, 2015, for the
Investors Group WALK FOR MEMORIES at TCC Indoor Track, 910 Mc-
Gill Rd. Call 250-377-8200, 250-376-8700, email kamwfm@hotmail.
com, [email protected], or go to www.walkformemories.com.
• WCT presents CLOSER THAN EVER at Sagebrush Theatre, 1300
Ninth Ave., Sept. 11 – 19. Pay-What-You-Can Saturday Matinee, 2
p.m. Sept. 13. Opening Night, Sept. 13. Pavilion Theatre pricing! Ka-
mloops Live! Box Offi ce, kamloopslive.ca, 250-374-5483.
• THE KAMLOOPS FLYING CLUB hosts a FLY-IN BREAKFAST & COPA FOR KIDS fl ying event Sun. Sept. 21, the KFC on Aviation Way. Weather per-
mitting, it’s an opportunity for anyone from 8 – 17 to experience a short
fl ight in a private aircraft with one of our pilots, entirely FREE. Pre-registra-
tion is not required but recommended. Go to www.kamloopsfl yingclub.com
& click the its Copa for Kids link. Contact Blake Farren, [email protected].
• 13TH ANNUAL VW TURTLE RIVER RACE, Sun. Sept. 21,
Tickets at Save-On Foods; Cooper’s; Ocean Pacifi c; Volkswagen of
Kamloops; Surplus Herby’s; Kamloops Live Box Offi ce; Purity Feed;
Home Hardware; Andre’s Electronics, or www.wctlive.ca/turtlerace.
htm. Proceeds to Western Canada Theatre. Call 250-374-3000.
• CAN-ITAL LADIES are celebrating 50 years with a DINNER & DANCE,
Sat. Sept. 20, at the Colombo Lodge, 814 Lorne St. Traditional Italian din-
ner. Music by A.M. ENTERTAINMENT. Doors: 6 p.m. Dinner 7 p.m. Tickets:
$50 from Danielle’s Silver & Gold, Sahali Mall, 945 W. Columbia St., Fran,
250-376-7794, or Linda, 250-320-5582. Proceeds to RIH Foundation.
• FORMER WWE WRESTLER & BEST-SELLING AUTHOR, MICK FOLEY
brings his one-man show titled TALES OF WRESTLING PAST, to the Coast
Kamloops Hotel & Conference Centre Fri. Sept. 19. Tickets at Kamloops
Live! Box Offi ce, 1025 Lorne St., 250- 374-5483, www.kamloopslive.ca.
• DEEP ROOTS (HIDDEN SPACES), a powerful exhibition that dis-
cusses the twists & turns of life, while giving each viewer a sense of won-
der in regards to nature featuring artists Tricia Sellmer, Steve Mennie,
& Ann Diehl, Sept. 11 – Oct. 17, at Chazou Art Gallery, 791 Victoria St.
• THE COMPASSION GAMES: SURVIVAL OF THE KINDEST,
an 11-day event (Sept. 11 – 21 ) culminating on the UN’s International
Day of Peace Sept. 21. Individuals & groups are encouraged to start
their own event or movement within this time period that promotes
kindness & peace throughout the city.
kamloops insurance
When you wantsomething covered.
t. 250.374.7466 | f. 250.374.7463
www.kamloopsinsurance.ca#220-450 Lansdowne Street (Next to London Drugs)
open Monday to Saturday til 6pmopen Monday to Saturday ‘til 6 pmSundays & Holidays 11 am - 5 pm
Java Mountain News September 19, 20145
Mainly Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny A Mix of
Sun & Cloud
25° | 13° 26° | 10° 27° | 11° 26° | 12° 25° | 13° 23° | 12°
Friday
September 19
Saturday
September 20
Sunday
September 21
Monday
September 22
Wednesday
September 24
Tuesday
September 23
• CULTURE DAYS at Kamloops Art Gallery, Sept. 26 – 27, a col-
laborative Canada-wide volunteer movement to raise the awareness,
accessibility, participation, & engagement of all Canadians in the arts
& cultural life of their communities. Free admission.
• KAMLOOPS SYMPHONY hosts a FREE DRESS REHEARSAL Sept. 27
at 1 p.m. Meet musicians, piano soloist Michael Kim & music director
Bruce Dunn; sit on stage with musicians; refreshments at intermission.
• GAMBLERS ANONYMOUS meetings Thurs, 10 a.m. at Desert Gar-
dens, 540 Seymour St. Call Wally, 250-679-7877, or Sunny, 250-374-9165.
• KAMLOOPS SENIORS ACTIVITY CENTRE hosts BINGO every Tues at the
Brock Seniors Activity Centre, 1800 Tranquille Rd. (by Coopers). Doors:
5 p.m. Games: 6:30 – 9:30 p.m. 19+ event; fully licensed concession.
• TIPPIN’ POINT TOUR 2015: DALLAS SMITH with special
guest, CHARLIE WORSHAM, Tues. Feb. 10, at Sagebrush Theatre. Tick-
ets: Kamloops Live Box Offi ce, 1025 Lorne St. 250-374-LIVE (5483)
or www.kamloopslive.ca.
• MONSTER X TOUR at Whispering Pines Sports & Recreation
Centre, Sept. 26 – 27. Friday, 7:30 p.m.; Saturday, 1:30 & 7:30 p.m.
Monster trucks, quad racing & tough truck competitions. Tickets: $20/
adults; $10/kids 3 – 12 yrs. Kids 2 & under/free, at NAPA Auto Parts,
476 Chilcotin Rd., or www.monsterxtour.com or at the gates.
• THE DISTINGUISHED GENTLEMAN’S RIDE, a fundraising ride
for prostate cancer research, Sept. 28, beginning at 11 a.m. behind Interior
Savings Centre, ending at 2:30 p.m. at Red Beard Coffee Roasters.
• GE-FREE KAMLOOPS HARVEST DINNER featuring locally
grown, organic food, silent auction & live music, Sat. Oct. 4, at ANA-
VETS, 9 – 177 Tranquille Rd. Doors: 6 p.m. Tickets : $35 or $60/2 at GE-
Free Kamloops Booth at the Saturday Farmers’ Market; Reubin’s Diner,
188 – 204 Tranquille Rd. Call 250-554-7885, gefreekamloops.org.
• LET’S DANCE, hosted by Thompson Valley Activity & Social Club
(TVASC), Oct. 13, 8 p.m. – midnight, at Kamloops Curling Club, 700
Victoria St. DINNER & DANCE. Music by the Evergreen Drifters. Tick-
ets: Dinner & dance: $20/members, $30/non-members; dance only:
$10, from Zonia, 250-372-0091, or Francoise, 250-372-3782.
• The hit CBC radio show, THE VINYL CAFÉ with STUART MCLEAN,
live on stage at Sagebrush Theatre Oct. 20, 7 p.m. Tickets at Kam-
loops Live Box Offi ce.
• FIRST ANNUAL FALL INTO CHRISTMAS CRAFT FAIR at
Dallas Elementary School Oct. 24 – 25. Friday: 12 – 7 p.m. Saturday:
10 a.m. – 4 p.m. Free admission.
• CIRQUE DU SOLEIL presents DRALION at ISC Dec. 24 – 28:
Dec. 24, 4 p.m.; Dec. 26, 4 & 7 p.m.; Dec. 27, 4 & 7:30 p.m.; Dec.
28, 1:30 & 5 p.m. Tickets at ISC Box Offi ce, 300 Lorne St., www.
cirquedusoleil.com/dralion, www.ticketmaster.ca or 1-855-985-5000.
• TREAT STREET 2014. Oct. 31, North Shore businesses & NSBIA are
opening their doors to invite Kamloops residents to dress up for Hallowe’en
fun & trick-or-treating, 3 – 5 p.m. Participating business will be marked.
• KAMLOOPS FARMERS’ MARKET at the 400-block of Victoria
Street, every Wed. ‘til Oct. 29, 8 a.m. – 2 p.m.
• UNPLUGGED ACOUSTIC JAM SESSIONS, on the 1st & 3rd
Monday of the month (Oct. 6 & 20), at the Alano Club, 171 Leigh
Rd., 7 – 10 p.m.; hosted by Perry Tucker & the Good Gravy Band. No
cover. All acoustic musicians welcome. Call 250-376-5115.
• BROCK CENTRAL LIONS CLUB meets the 1st & 3rd Thurs. of
the month (Oct. 2 & 16) at 6:30 p.m. at the Brock Centre for Seniors
Information, 1800 Tranquille Rd. New members always welcome.
Call Victor, 250-554-8031.
• MOUNT PAUL UNITED CHURCH THRIFT SHOP, 140 Labur-
num St., open Tues & Thurs, 9 a.m. – 3 p.m.
• RUBE BAND practises most Mondays, 7:30 p.m., at the Old Yacht Club,
1140 Rivers St. New members welcome. Call Bob Eley, 250-377-3209.
• KAMLOOPS QUIT SMOKING support group meets every Thurs
at Kamloops United Church, 421 St. Paul St.
• SHAMBHALA MEDITATION GROUP offers meditation in the
Shambhala Buddhist tradition. Sat drop-in 9:30 – 11:30 a.m.; Mon
7 – 8:30 p.m.; Thurs 7 – 9 p.m. with available meditation instructions.
433B Lansdowne St. Call Liz, 250-376-4224.
CHARACTER HATS FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY:NEWBORN, TODDLER, YOUTH, ADULT.ALSO BLANKETS, SLIPPERS, BOOTIES,
SCARVES, MITTENS, ETC. WILL MAKE TO SUIT.CALL JUDI TO ORDER • 250-376-3672
CROCHETED CREATIONS BY JUDI
AROUND TOWN
Java Mountain News September 19, 20146
CREATIVE FIREWOOD
BUSINESS CARD HOLDERS
PLAYING CARDS HOLDERS
BULL DOZERS
EXCAVATORS
HOES
BACKHOES
LOADERS
PADDLEWHEELER BOATS
TO ORDER,
CALL WALLY
250-578-0211
The MarketsMarket closes for Thursday, September 18, 2014
DOW JONES 17,265.99 +109.14 pts or +0.64%
S&P 500 2,011.36 +9.79 pts or +0.49%
NASDAQ 4,593.43 +31.24 pts or +0.68%
TSX COMP 15,465.54 +6.66 pts or +0.04%Canadian Dollar $Cdn $US
BoC Closing Rate 0.9144 1.0856
Previous BoC Closing Rate 0.9077 1.00923
Rates provided by Colin C. Noble BA (econ) RHU CLU CHFC CFPChartered Financial Consultant. Phone 250-314-1410
“Long Term Care Insurance ... you can’t stay home without it!”
Matt Needham scored on a pow-
er play with 1:36 remaining in
overtime to give the Blazers a 4-3
win over the Prince George Cou-
gars on Friday night. The Blazers
fi nished the WHL preseason with
a 4-1-0-0 record.
The fi rst period was uneventful
with both teams unable to create
a lot of offense. The Blazers held
the shot clock advantage at 7-6 in
a scoreless fi rst period.
Jake Kryski opened the scoring
1:10 into the second period. The
16-year-old forward blocked a
shot and scored on a breakaway
to make it 1-0 for the Blazers.
The Cougars responded with
two power play goals. The Cou-
gars tied the game at 1-1 on a
second chance on the power play.
Following the goal, the Blaz-
ers made a goaltender change as
Connor Ingram was solid stop-
ping 16 of 17 shots in the fi rst half
of the game. Cole Kehler played
the second half of the game turn-
ing aside 11 of 13 shots.
Following the goaltending
change, the Cougars took the
lead with 3:11 to go in the second
period on a point shot. The Cou-
gars took the 2-1 advantage into
the third period.
The Blazers have played their
best hockey in the WHL pre-
season in the third period and the
trend continued Friday night. De-
fenseman Patrilk Maier tied the
game up on a shot from the point
on the power play to make it 2-2.
The Cougars took the lead back
with 6:56 to go as Brad Morrison
made a dandy move and scored
high glove to make it 3-2 for the
Cougars.
The Blazers tied the game up
with 1:07 to go. Josh Connolly
put a shot on goal from the corner
and it snuck by Cougars goalten-
der Tavin Grant to tie the game
up at 3-3.
In overtime, the Blazers took a
delay of game penalty and killed
off the penalty. At the conclu-
sion of the penalty, the Blazers
were given a power play. It was
a tremendous play on the game
winning goal. Kryski set up De-
ven Sideroff for a one-timer and
Needham scored on the rebound
to give the Blazers a 4-3 win.
The Blazers fi nished the night
2-for-4 on the power play, while
the Cougars fi nished 2-for-7. The
Cougars outshot the Blazers 30-
28.
Home Opener this Friday against
Victoria
The Blazers open the WHL
regular season this Fri., Sept. 19,
when they host the Victoria Roy-
als at 7 p.m.
There will be a Party on the Plaza
starting at 5 p.m. and continuing
until the start of the game. There
will be live music, face painting,
fun factor infl atables and a vari-
ety of activities for families!
The Blazers travel to Kelowna
to take on the Rockets Sat. Sept.
20 at Prospera Place. Game tiem
is 7:05 p.m.
Blazers open regular season at home against Royals
KAMLOOPS CHRISTMAS
CASH & CARRY WINTER MARKET
Sat. Nov. 8 at Hal Rogers Centre, UTC-07 (2025 Summit Dr.)
VENDORS WANTEDCall Maree • 403-483-0056
Fri. Sept. 19: VS Victoria
Sat. Sept. 20: at Kelowna
Fri. Sept. 26: at Victoria
Sat. Sept. 27: at Victoria
Blazers schedule
Java Mountain News September 19, 20147
Promotions, Media Relations & Publisher of the Java Mountain News
273 Nelson Avenue Kamloops, B.C. V2B 1M4
Phone: 250-376-3672 E-mail: [email protected]
The Kamloops Storm are 1-2-
0-0 after the fi rst week of regular
season play in the KIJHL, after
being shut out in their home open-
er against the Summerland Steam,
then splitting a pair of games
against the Sicamous Eagles.
Sat. Sept. 13, saw the Storm
open the season at home and
be soundly trounced 5-0 by the
Steam. The Steam opened the
scoring 5:19 into the game and
led 2-0 after the fi rst period. The
Steam did the rest of their scor-
ing in the middle period, scor-
ing twice in 21 seconds halfway
through the frame then scoring
the fi nal goal with 22 seconds left
on the clock to take the decisive
5-0 shutout win.
After the fourth goal, the Storm
had pulled starting goaltender
Bailey De Palma, who stopped six
of the ten shots he faced, for Kol-
by Pauwels, who stopped 14 of
the 15 shots he faced in the game.
It was a different story for the
Storm on Sunday, as they faced
the Sicamous Eagles in the fi rst
of a pair of games in the week.
Felix Larouche got a hat trick
and an assist and Ryan Keis
scored a pair and a helper on their
way to an 8-0 shutout win over
the visiting Eagles.
Keis opened the scoring 14:10
into the game then Larouche
made it 2-0 4:15 later. Cole Mer-
rick gave the Storm a 3-0 lead
with 55 seconds remaining in
the fi rst period. Addison Bazian
scored 11:50 into the second pe-
riod before Keis made it 5-0 1:50
later. This goal led to a goalten-
der change by the Eagles as they
pulled starting goalie Logan Ed-
wards in favour of Liam Banks.
Brett Watkinson scored on the
power play 1:17 later to take a 6-0
lead after 40 minutes. Larouche
scored a couple power play goals
10 minutes apart in the fi nal frame
as the Storm clipped the Eagles’
wings in the 8-0 shutout win.
De Palma was stellar between
the pipes stopping all 24 shots he
faced for the shutout.
The Storm travelled to Sicamous
for the rematch Tues. Sept. 17, in
what turned out to be a close game
as the Eagles squeaked out a win.
The Eagles opened the scor-
ing 15:15 into the fi rst period to
take a 1-0 lead after 20 minutes.
The Eagles took a 2-0 lead 3:39
into the second period before the
Storm got on the scoreboard 2:41
later with a goal by Ian Chrystal.
The Eagles got that goal back 10
minutes later on a power play
goal to take a 3-1 lead into the
dressing rooms after 40 minutes.
The Eagles lengthened their lead
with a pair of goals 3:32 apart
just 48 seconds into the third
frame before Ian Chrystal scored
a pair of goals with 8:35 and 0:12
remaining to get within one goal,
but it was too little too late as the
Eagles held on for the 4-3 win.
The Storm continue their road
trip this weekend, in Nelson
to take on the Leafs Sat. Sept.
20, then to Spokane to face off
against the Braves Sun. Sept. 21.
Summerland steams over Storm in home opener
Take in our away
games at www.
kijhl.com
. . .
Sat. Sept. 20:
@ Nelson Leafs
Sun. Sept. 21:
@ Spokane Braves Have an item to sell? Looking for an item? Having a craft fair
or bake sale? Place your ad in the Java Mountain News Classi-
fi eds section for only $15/week (up to 30 words).
Send your information and payment to Java Mountain News, 273
Nelson Ave. Kamloops, B.C. V2B 1M4 or call 250-819-6272 at
least one complete week before the event.
Pre-payment is required.
USE THE JMNEWS CLASSIFIEDS
Sat. Sept. 20: at Nelson Leafs
Sun. Sept. 21: at Spokane Braves
Fri. Sept. 26, 7 PM:
VS Revelstoke Grizzlies
Sat. Sept. 27, 7 PM:
VS Osoyoos Coyotes
Stormschedule
JUST CHUGGING ALONG. The tugboat, Raven, hauls a boom full of
logs from its lakeshore landing near the north end of Adams Lake to the mill
at the south end of the lake. the round trip journey takes two days. Judi Dupont photo
Java Mountain News September 19, 20148
ADVERTISING PAYS
TO ADVERTISE HERE,
Call Judi at 376-3672 or 819-6272 or fax 376-6272
OR E-mail [email protected]
273 NELSON AVENUE
KAMLOOPS, B.C. V2B 1M4
When using a beer kit, keep
these helpful tips handy:
• To keep your brew on track,
create a written brewing schedule
and carefully record the time of
each step.
• Follow instructions provided
and remember to keep your
working area and equipment
sanitized.
• Hops, a key ingredient in beer,
can be poisonous for dogs. Keep
the ingredients and mixture away
from your canine friend.
• Once bottled, store your beer in
a dark, warm, temperature-stable
area for two weeks to allow for
proper carbonation. – NC
WANTED: ADVERTISING
REPRESENTATIVEJava Mountain News is seeking an
advertising representative to join the team.
The qualifi ed person will develop and maintain
a client base throughout the city.
Send resume and cover letter to:
Publishing Editor, 273 Nelson Ave.,
Kamloops, B.C. V2B 1M4
or E-mail [email protected]
Fun loving DIYers who pride
themselves on homemade qual-
ity and craftsmanship are ex-
tending this philosophy to a new
outlet, namely “home brewing.”
Best of all, this philosophy is
also impressing their friends.
Pride in the ability to create
their own signature craft beer
combined with easy-to-use at-
home beer kits plus the soaring
popularity of craft beer, is pro-
pelling many Canadians to cre-
ate their own signature
brews.
“Today there are a
variety of beer-making
kits available that re-
duce the guess work
and time requirements
for making beer from
scratch,” said Gavin
Hawthorne of Brew-
er’s Best Canada, a
leading name in this
fi eld. “Our company
offers a true, craft beer
making experience.
The kit comes com-
plete with instructions
plus all of the ingredi-
ents you need to make
a great tasting beer
such as India Pale Ale
or Gluten Free Ale.”
Home brewing is easy, but
people should follow the in-
structions carefully, according to
Hawthorne. The biggest mistake
people make when brewing is
not properly cleaning and sani-
tizing the equipment, bottles,
and utensils before use.
“You wouldn’t bake a cake
with dirty dishes, and the same
goes for making beer,” he re-
lated. – NC
Craft your own beer
With back-to-school promotions in the rear-view mirror, retailers
are already looking for ways to promote their brands for the holidays.
Last Wednesday, Wal-Mart released its second annual Chosen by
Kids Top 20 Toys List – a list it hopes will get parents spending on the
troubled toy category, and help it identify hot items to prevent out-of-
stocks and lost sales.
By putting hundreds of kids between ages 18 months and 12 years
old in a room to play with 80 toys – and then having them vote on
their favourites – the company identifi ed fi ve toy trends ahead of the
holidays:
• Creativity and crafts, such as the Spin Master Sew Cool Sewing
Machine ($34.97) and the Maya Group Make Your Case Cell Phone
Cover Kit ($24.99).
• Licenses, especially for items related to Disney’s “Frozen” and the
TV show “Doc McStuffi ns.”
• Electronic toys, such as the Leapfrog LeapTV gaming system
($149.97) that will be released later this year or the Spin Master Flut-
terbye Light Up Fairy ($39.88).
• Rebooted classic brands, such as Mattel’s Barbie Glam Camper
($83.78) and Hot Wheels Street Remote Control Flying Car ($54.86).
• Scooters and ride-on toys, such as the Razor Crazy Cart Spinning
Go Kart ($349).
Wal-Mart said it would promote the toys through in-store displays
that call them out as chosen by kids, on a landing page on Walmart.
com, and through online, social and print marketing.
What kids want this Christmas
MOST WANTED. The Disney Frozen Snow Glow Elsa Doll is expected
to be one of the hottest toys for this year’s holidays.
HOME BEER BREWING TIPS