March 4, 1990 |. WRITING PADS VELOPES OREN EACH 1 44 - TOWET DUCK each 1.44 500 mL. EASY OFF GLASS CLEANER 1.31 litre. EACH 1.44 ) FRESHELL DEODORIZER 60 mL. each 1.44 ' JETS . SOAP PADS 12 per pack. ., WAX PAPER 100° sexo. 2.44 2FOR 2.44 MARDI GRAS TOWELS INS OR NAPKINS oxo. 2.44 vxa. 2.44 oxa. 2.44 oxo. 2.44 each 2.44 EACH 2.44 EACH 2.44 800 mL cach 244 PALMOLIVE DISH DETERGENT | titre GARBAGE BAGS per pack. - FOAM PLATES 50 per pack. COIN TUBES 60 per pack. GIFT WRAP 5 sheets per pack . DRANO 900 mL. PINE SOL SPRAYER 650 mL ZERO POWDER SPIC & SPAN LIQUID cn 2.44 AM to STICK SERA a3 4 4 CASCADE auto" PETERGENT ach 3.44 FLEECY FABRIC SOFTENER ROLL & RACK DISPOSABLE atts each 6.44 PHOTO ALBUMS o. 3.44 1709 1.4k9g 5S litre. cach 4.44 Bags included 80 pages. each 9.44 SALAMI Makes great sandwiches HAM Great with Swiss cheese 54 100g = Serv tees nan 1.44 3PKG. 2.44 PAIR 2.44 Flowers or Vegetables Garden Corner 44 10 PKG. PAIR 2.44 Cotton and acrylic DOOR MATS 18"'x27" EACH 1.44 each 2.44 100% cotton. 2ron 3x44 each 3-44 xa. 3.44 each 4.44 each 4.44 SMART BRA AND BRIEFS White or beige. LADIES’ BRIEFS S-M-L. SIMPLICITY PATTERNS ‘Up to 6:50: FACE CLOTHS 6 per pack PILLOW CASES Classic. BATH TOWELS 100% cotton EACH 2.44 PAIR 2.44 PAIR 2.44 LADY PLUS HUGMATES XL LADIES’ NIGHTGOWNS S-M-L LADIES’ T-SHIRTS Short sleeved LADIES’ T-SHIRTS Environmental prints. 12.44 EACH 7.44 each 7.44 Red Grille Feature BREAKFAST SPECIAL Bacon & Eggs Two eggs any style, 2 strips of bacon and toast Served until 11:00 a.m cn 1444 DINNER INNER SPECIAL Fish and Chips Served with regular beverage Served until 4:00 p.m. ucn B44 MOZZARELLA CHEESE Great on pizza 64 100g @ Melt over your favorite 74 veggies 1009 « ROAST. EEF Great on rye bread 1009 O04 VIVA PAPER TOWELS 2 per pack. 2 per customer PKG. @ Wootcnesy cacn 94 MANDARIN ORANGES 264 mL. COCKTAIL SHRIMP 1139 JAM 750 mL. LIPTON’S POTATOES ND SAUCE foe aexa. 2.44 LIPTON'S NOODLES AND SAUCE 2PKG. 2 . 44 1049 each 2-44 UKRAINIAN ron 3-44 Men's & Boys’ Wea Le-ril —— PAIR 1.44 ran 1.44 ran 2.44 vxa. 2.44 vxa. 344 CORNED BEEF 3409 BOXED BRIEFS S-XL. SPALDING BOXED BRIEFS S-XL BOYS’ SOCKS 2 per pack. S-XL. BOYS’ BRIEFS AND VESTS 2 per pack. S-XL MEN'S WORK SOCKS 10-12. 2 per pack : exe, 3-44 MEN’S VESTS 2 per pack. S-XL exe. 4.44 BOXER SHORTS S-XL. zPan D ee MEN'S CASUAL PANTS 0-38 PAIR 10 44 WOOLCREST SANDWICH BAGS 100 per pack. PKG. « cxcn 94 EACH 94 Twin pack ROLL & RACK REFILLS ca 94 30 per pack Candy and Cookies Per} suees oie. 1 c 4 4 TROPH lv SUNFLOWER — 4 .44 400 g. WINDSOR hp tea 1.44 ox. 1.44 2FOR 2 .44 BARBARA DEE 450 g. ne 2.44 TROPHY BANANA CHIPS 2259 KERR’S CANDY 4009 zee. 3.44 xo. 3.44 NAME WRITING EGGS LILLIPUT EGGS 3759 . Infants’ We PUPPET FACE CLOTHS 2 per pack. PKG. 1 44 TODDLERS BIBS cach 2.44 LITTLE WONDER pIArEn® oxo. 7.44 CHILDREN’S JOGGING SUITS 46x. EACH 9 44 Family Footwear LADIES’ i CANVAS CASUAI 5-10. PAIR 5 44 INJECTED RUNNERS Ladies’ and Children’ * 9.44 Men's and Ladies’ PAIR 14.44 WOOLCREST LIGHT BULBS 4 per pack. 24 PKG. JAVEX BLEACH 3.6 titre. EACH 1 .64 POTTING 16 litre EACH 1 .64 FOAM Taro 1.74 NEILSON CHOCOLATE BARS favours. aron 1.44 aron 1.44 CAPRI BARS 429 2ron 1.44 DABBERS 71mt 2ron 1.44 WOOoLcOo ruses 200 per pack xo. 5.44 Hardware/Paints ELECTRIC 2ron 1.44 TAPE Vinyl ROCKET HEAVY DUTY BATTERIES each 1.44 TYETAC | EACH 2.44 xa. 3.44 EACH 3.44 PLASTIC POUCHES BINGO FURNACE FILTERS 3 per pack HAND TOOLS Pliers, tape, levels. Cameras DEO STORAGE BOXES. Single. SNAP-SHOT CAPTIONS} LP. RECORDS Various titles. COLOUR ENLARGEMENT x7. Colour neg. or slide COLOUR ENLARGEMENT 8x10. Colour neg. or slide on 1.44 EACH 1.44 each 1.44 aron 2.44 EACH 2.44 Automotive WINDSHIELD WASHER ARMOR-ALL PROTECTANT 125 mL each 2.44 FLANNELETTE 90cm. 1.94 METRE TROPHY MIXED. NUTS ae on 1.94 EACH PUREX BATHROOM 2.84 EACH Horticulture/Pets JIFFY ESAT opts 2FOR 1 44 DOG KOOKIES 2279 vxa. 1.44 TROPICAL Hint 2FOR 2.44 aron 3.44 2FOR 3.44 each 3.44 each 3.44 EACH 5.44 Sporting Goods 22 AMMUNITION 50 per pack 0. 1.44 1.77 CALIBRE PEI 4inch. CAT TOYS Wide variety, LLETS 250 per pack. ROWING EXERCISER Spring action. WILKINSON DISPOSABLE RAZ ornaltspray. each 1.44 JERGEN'S SOAP 5 er agg exo. 1.44 EACH 1.44 MERIT cueama DIAPER CRi 359 EACH 1.44 MERIT LOW CALORIE EETENER Tipe oxo. 1.44 ERIT s MAXI PAD: Lyerly oxo. 3.44 JEROME ALEXANDER » DRYER teoan EACH 12.44 SUNLIGHT LAUNDRY DETERGENT 5 . 74 10 litre. 2 per customer. EACH ORTS GET THE PERFECT Fir WiTHA KOOTENAY SAVINGS RRSP. 7 Kootenay Savings FRED JACK A 12-year-old forward for the Peewee House No. 2 team, Jack has 49 points, including 28 assists, in 15 games this season. Jack’s dream is to one day play with Wayne Gretzky, but in the short term he would settle for playing on a local rep team next year. RECORD BOOK TRIVIA: Who was the first player ever selected in the NHL’ entry draft? Hint: He played 11 seasons with the Montreal Canadiens, the team that drafted him. Answer at the bottom of stats on B2. Flames charcoal broil Canucks CALGARY (CP) — Calgary’s Doug Gilmour scored one goal and added three assists Saturday night as the Flames defeated the Vancouver Canucks 5-1. The victory enabled Calgary to clinch a playoff berth in the Smythe Division. The club has 77 points, 26 ahead of last-place Vancouver, which has only 12 games left. Anderson fined MONTREAL (CP) — Glenn An- derson of the Edmonton Oilers was fined $500 by the National Hockey League on Friday for deliberate in- jury in breaking the cheekbone of Los Angeles Kings forward Tomas San- dstrom with a punch. Anderson was handed a match penalty for the infraction in Wed- nesday’s game with Los Angeles, won 4-2 by the Kings. “In considering this incident, it is acknowledged that Sandstrom sustained a serious injury,’’ said league vice-president Brian O'Neill. GLENN ANDERSON KIJHL may allow 21-year- -olds to play next'Season By ED MILLS Staff Writer The Kootenay International Junior Hockey League willikely allow 21- year-old players in the league next season while restricting the number of QUOTE NOTE ‘anadian swimming is going to drown unless the ad- ministration shows some leadership,’’ said former Canadian ing star Alex idget-age players, league President Tan Currie said. ‘Currie-said-the-KIHHE-has-“‘to-do- something’? because minor hockey associations in KIJHL cities are com- plaining that their midget programs are on the verge of extinction because Bowman, who says Canadian swimming officials—“‘sugar coated’’ what was a lousy showing in the pool at the Commonwealth Games in Auckland last month. ONTAP First round selections in the 1990 CFL draft in Hamilton, Ont. Feb. 24. Listed in order by name, school position and town selected by. 1. Sean Millington (Simon Fraser) — RB — Edmonton. Tan Beckes (In- diana)—OL— 3. Glenn Scrivner (Kansas) — DL — Saskatchewan. 4. Jock Climie (Queens) — WR — Toronto. 5. David Sapunjis (Western) — SB — Calgary. 6. Steve Christie (William and Mary) — PK — Edmonton. 7,. Mark Dennis (Central Michigan) — LB — Hamilton. ———$—$—________ RADIO/TV SUNDAY 8:00 (TSN) AUTORACING™ — Players Challenge Series. 9:00 (KREM) COLLEGE BASKET BALL — Georgetown at Syracuse 9:30 (TSN) FIGURE SKATING — Skate Electric U.K. International 11:00 (KREM) NBA — Chicago Bulls at Boston Celtics. (KXLY) COLLEGE PM 1:00 (KXLY) COLLEGE BASKET BALL — Regional Coverage. (KHQ) LPGA — Final round, Kemper Open. 1:30 (KREM) PGA — Final round, Doral Ryder Open. 3:00 (KAYU) COLLEGE BASKET: BALL — Stanford at California 4:00 (TSN) CHL — Ottawa 67's at Kingston Frontenacs 7:00 (TSN) CURLING — Labatt Brier Canadian Men's Championships. Wolo alo WANETA PLAZA TRAIL, B.C. CHAHKO-MIKA MALL NELSON Monday to Saturday 9:30 4 Thursday and Friday 9:30 a. STORE HOURS: m.-5:30 p.m. m.-9:00 p.m. PRICE IS JUST THE BEGINNING idget-aged players (ages 15 and 16) are being ‘‘raided’’ by the junior B league. “Junior hockey is in some trouble because we're short of hockey players so we're robbing the midget leagues,” Currie said in a phone interview from his home in Creston. While Currie said there has been no “strict lobbying’ by KIJHL teams who-want 21-year-olds inthe league, “‘it’s something that’s on everybody's mind and it seems to be a fairly popular way to resolve our (the league’s) problem.”” “One of the ideas is that if we don’t have the midgets, we have to get (players) from somewhere,”’ he said. “So if you can’t get’them from the? younger end, go to the older end.”’ Castlegar Minor Hockey Association president Doug Coulson said ‘‘minor hockey would be ec- static’ if the KIJHL made such a move Coulson said minor never been against exceptionally skilled players, like Steve Bozek for instance, going to play in the junior leagues at midget age, but over the past few years the KIJHL has become less picky about the calibre of player it takes. “What's been happening in the last several years is it hasn’t been the ex- ceptional players, it’s been the fringe players called up just to fill out their (junior “teams) lineups,’’ Coulson said. ‘‘That puts a lot of pressure on hockey has Baseball ta TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Baseball's stalled labor talks will resume Mon- day after an eight-day layoff, union chief Donald Fehr said Friday on the final stop of his cross-country tour. Owners and players have not met us because without those players we can't form a rep team.”” Currie said the KIJHL, which has teams across the East and West Kootenays and one in Spokane,. has been hearing the same complaints from minor hockey associations in stops around the league. He said-a motion to allow 21-year- old players in the league will probably come up at the league’s annual meeting in June. If it is adopted there, the decision then has to be approved by the B.C. Amateur Athletic Association which is the governing body of junior hockey and other spor- ts in the province. Currie, who became KIJHL president in 1986 — the last year the league had 21-year-old players — said that while allowing overage players may be a way to solve the league’s problems, he personally isn’t in favor of the idea. “My first year . . ., I'd say three quarters of the problems we had with teams were with 21-year-olds. That's not to say all 21-year-olds are bad ac- tors, but sometimes they are,a lot of hassles,”’ he said. Besides discipline problems Currie associates with overage players, he said there will still be younger players in the league and that could be another problem area. “For the simple reason that if you take a 21-year-old and put him up against a 15- or 16-year-old, it’s just too big a spread — physically, men- tally and emotionally.” Despite his personal views, Currie said the pressure from minor hockey may be too strong for the league to eontinue its current practices. “1 think everybody realizes we (the KIJHL) have a problem. We're not sticking our heads in the sand, we're tryirig to resolve it.”” Castlegar Rebels players who could be affected by such a move are goaltender Rick Edxards, and defen- cemen Jeff Fletcher and Mike Woods. Iks resume since Feb. 24, and Fehr cancelled a scheduled meeting last Monday and left New York for his tour. He briefed players in Phoenix, Los Angeles and Tampa, rallying them “behind the union’s stand on salary arbitration eligibility Other scorers for the division- leading Flames were Joo Mullen, Al MacInnis, Brian MacLellan and Jamie Macoun. Paul Reinhart, a former Flame, replied for Vancouver. ‘Canucks goalie Kirk McLean faced 28 shots, two more than Rich Wam- sley of Calgary. Calgary skated to period leads of 2- O and 3-1. OILERS 5 FLYERS 3 EDMONTON (CP) — Mark Messier scored four goals for the third time in his 11-year career as the Ed- monton Oilers defeated the Philadelphia Flyers 5-3. Two of the Edmonton captain’s goals came short-handed in a game that left Messier with 39 goals and 74 as.ists for 113 points this season; two better than his previous best in 1987- 88. The game also marked the trium- phant | return to the Oiler net of Denis Raposo, egrede school, takes to 9 student at Stanley Humphries @ air with a little help from a roadside curb at goaltender Grant Fuhr, spectacular in stopping 35 shots in his first ap- pearance since Dec. 16 when he suf- fered a shoulder injury. RED WINGS 5 MAPLE LEAFS 2 TORONTO (CP) — Steve Yzer- man scored his 54th goal and assisted on three \as the Detroit Red Wings beat the Toronto Maple Leafs 5-2 for their third consecutive victory. Steve Chiasson, Dave Barr, Joey Kocur and Yves Racine also scored for the Red Wings, who beat the Leafs 3-2 Friday night in Detroit on an overtime goal by Yzerman. WHALERS 6 RANGERS 4 HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Har- tford centre Ron Francis scored his 26th and 27th goals and assisted on Pat Verbeek’s winner early in the third period as the Whalers defeated New York 6-4 to end the Rangers’ seven-game unbeaten streak. Francis’s second goal at 7:26 of the a os secendery the high school Friday afternoon. Raposo and friends Lonnie Foodikoff and Caleb Stanwood were all showing their stuff and that's @ sure sign that spring isn't far off for the West Kootenay. CosNews Photo by Ed Mills second period snapped a 1-1 tie to begin a three-goal barrage in a 6:12 span by Hartford to take control-of the game. BRUINS 4 BLACK HAWKS 3 BOSTON (AP) — Cam Neely scored his second goal of the game, his 47th: of the season, with 3:21 remaining as the Boston Bruins came from behind twice for a 4-3 victory over the Chicago Blackhawks. Brian Propp, who was acquired Friday from Philadelphia and ex- Flyer Dave Poulin had'a goal and an_ assist apiece in the Bruins’ league- leading 40th victory. STARS 3 CANADIENS 2 BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP) — Brian Bellows equalled a career high with his 41st goal and Jon Casey made 33 saves as the Minnesota North Stars beat Montreal 3-2, handing the Canadiens their third straight loss. BUFFALO 3 QUEBEC 3 ST. LOUIS 5 NY ISLANDERS 4 Patient Goring wins Hearts OTTAWA (CP) — Alison Goring waited patiently for the breaks Satur- day, and her Ontario rink was awar- ded at the end with a 7-5 victory over Nova. Scotia’s Heather Rankin and the Canadian women's curling cham- pionship. Goring, a 26-year-old auto supply clerk from Toronto, bided her time through three blank ends before get- ting a trio for a 3-1 lead in the fourth. A steal of two in the eighth proved the winning points againgt a feisty team from Halifax that refused to break under the pressures of their first trip to the Scott Tournament of Hear- ts. The win gives the Toronto rink a trip to Sweden later this month for the world championship. Goring, a former Canadian junior champion who tried to break out of the provincials for three years without success, finished the round robin with a 7-4 record for a second-place tie with Team Canada. Rankin’s young Nova Scotia squad, a crowd favorite through the event at the Civic Centre, finished atop the standings at 8-3 and had a bye to Saturday’s final. Goring eliminated Heather Houston’s rink from Thunder Bay, Ont., 8-3 in Friday's semifinal._The Houston group had represented Canada the last two years at the worlds. The Toronto skip, fighting valian- tly to restrain the flow of tears during the closing ceremonies, admitted the victory released a great weight from her shoulders. She had been so close in the provin- ce — finishing runner-up in 1987 and 1989 — and had acquired the reputation for not being able to win the big ones. She said the victory here was par- ticularly gratifying. “FINALLY CLICKED’ “*In the provincials those years we did lose a couple of games because we just didn’t have it together,’’ Goring said. ‘This year we finally clicked. “You have to deal with it. We've had a lot of it in Ontario. It did help coming here.”” Goring and her team of Kristin Turcotte, Andrea Lawes and Cheryl McPherson, will represent Canada in the women's competition at Vesteras, Sweden, March 31-April 7 Pressure on Browning at championships HALIFAX (CP) — Kyrt Browning has his hands full. Of the four events to be contested at the world figure-skating champion- ships beginning Monday, the men’s singles promises to be the most com- petitive. Browning was dazzling last March in Paris when he won the gold medal, and the Caroline, Alta., flash will have to be just as good this time if he’s to survive challenges from Viktor Petrenko of the Soviet Union, Peter Barna of Czechoslovakia, Christ- opher Bowman of the United States and Grzegorz Filipowski of Poland. “The other guys are so good, they pull the best skating out of me,’’ Browning ,says. ‘I have the kind of program I still believe will take away a gold medal, if it goes the way I want it to."" Defending champion Midori Ito of Japan is in a class by herself in women’s singles. Soviet entries Ekaterina Gordeeva and Sergei Grinkov, in pairs, and Marina Klimova and Sergei Ponomarenko, in dance, are favored to repeat. For color and controversy, the French-Canadian dance entry of Isabelle and Paul Duchesnay, Canadian skater faces tough test representing France, will be front and centre. Absent in the men’s event for the first time since the early 1980s will be Alexander Fadeev, the 1985 world champion. Newcomer Viacheslav Zagorodniuk, the 1989 world junior champion, bumped Fadeev off th Soviet team. “N Browning and Bowman have had able seasons. After third-place finishes in his major inter- national competitions, Browning barely, beat Elvis Stojko of Richmond Hill, Ont., to repeat as Canadian ‘champion last month. Bowman with- drew from the U.S. nationals with back spasms, opening the way for Todd Eldredge. Stojko and Mike Slipchuk of Ed- monton, ninth in Paris, have high hopes. New Canadian champion Lisa Sargeant of Edmonton makes her world debut and Canadian Figure Skating Association officials will be pleased if she squeezes into the top 10 and earns the second berth for the next worlds Canada has been sorely lacking. In pairs, Gordeeva and Grinkov, the Olympic and world champs, face their stiffest challenge from Cindy Landry of Pincourt, Que., and Lyndon Johnston of Hamiota, Man., the new Canadian champions and 1989 world’ silver medallists. ~ Of all the Canadian skaters, Browning is under the most pressure because he is the country’s only reigning world champion here. A suc- cessful title defence would give ‘Canada its first repeat victor in 30 years. The pairs team of Barb Wagner and Robert Paul capped a string of four straight world titles at the 1960 in V