a2 A8 Sewer monitoring equipment obsolete APPRECIATION Castlegar council learned Monday that equipment used to monitor the city’s sewer sys- tem is obsolete and will have to be replaced in 1992. After a review of the system by Emco Engineering Ltd., the equipment was found to be outdated and inefficient, said Barry Comin, the city’s super- Ss THURSDAY, SEPT. 26 10” Off Your Total Food Bill* * 10% off discount does not apply to fluid milk or cigarette purchases * 10% off discount applies to only those grocery orders with a minimum value of $15.00 to a maximum value of $75.00 (excluding milk and cigarette purchases) PRODUCE from the tropics golden ripe bananas #3. .89 Ibs. = California grown © ne. 1° 24 Ib. case 8.95 red ripe alarm points, was deemed by Emco Engineering as unreli- _able, expensive to maintain and impossible to expand. “We cannot effectively ex- pand on the existing system,” Comin said. The upgrade is expected to cost about $100,000, but should reduce callout costs due to alarms by 90 per cent, he said. The existing system was in- stalled in 1981, and Comin said a new system should be effective for another 10 years. Council also gave the go- ahead for further road main- , September 25, 1991 m tenence in the city. Roads on 6th Avenue from 24th Street to 27th Street will be paved at a cost ofless than $115,000. Paving on 4th Street from 3rd. Avenue to 4th Av- enue and on 6th Avenue from 4th Street to 5th Street was deleted from the proposal to ithi budget. white ¢ whole wheat ¢ unbleached © limit 1 © over limit 5.49 © 10 kg. bag Robin Hood Flour 4.99 gov't inspected poultry « frozen © Canada utility * 3-7 kg. Young Turkeys 2". Foot hills © grade ‘A’ limit 1, overtimit 2.29 creamery butter Saturday, Sept. 28, 1991. Le a aoe ean ean nel gov't inspected pork ¢ reg. cut ¢ family pack Lacs pork side ribs cutlets seas ADVERTISED PRICES IN EFFECT THURS., SEPT. 26 TO SAT., SEPT. 28 a We reserve the ight to lt als to retail retail quantities. FastLANE REBELS HOCKEY Junior B hockey action heats up again as the Castlegar Maple Saturday. Both games are 8 p.m. starts. Red Mountain Resorts is extending its deadline for season pass sales to Sept. 28. Public interest in Red’s new lodge, which is currently results in The Numbers, page B4. FOR THE RECORD _ Mike Pakula was jember 25, 1991 LocalSPORTS Rebels hopeful: Brad Schock looks on du (News photo by Ed Milis ring a scrimmage at the Rebels training camp Tuesday night. The camp continues all this week at the Community Complex with final cuts expected to be made after three pre-season games this weekend. SHSS not part of two-team show in high school volleyball tourney @ South Slocan school sweeps girls and boys finals while Nelson reaches final News Staff It was a two-school show and L.V. Rogers secondary school of Nelson and Mount Sentinel of South Slocan were the two final- ists in both the seniors girls and senior boys events in the seven- team tournament. And once it was pared to two, Mount Sentinel made it a clean sweep by beating LVR in both fi- nal matches in front of a crowd of 200 at the SHSS gym Saturday. “Like last year they (Mount Sentinel and LVR) came out strong at the beginning of the year as usual,” said SHSS senior boys coach Don Lust. The boys were knocked out by Mount Sentinel in the semifinals while the senior girls were upset by LVR in their semifinal game. Lust said team veterans Lee Malinek, Mitch Stoochnoff and Dan Kooznetsoff led the team while Grade 12 rookie Kurt Roberts was the best on a mostly rookie squad. om “Tve got so many young, new players they just don’t have any court sense yet, but they played very well for not having much ex- perience,” said Lust. “Since it’s the beginning of the year I thought they did very well.” Sandra Rogers, Carolyn Cher- noff and Ryanna Westoff were se- nior girls coach Stoch Uchida’s picks of the tournament. The senior girls, who were ex- pected to at least make the final, lost a 16-14 tiebreaker to LVR af- ter leading 14-12 with the serve. “It’s just sort of a learning pro- cess at this stage,” said Uchida. “We played poorly and we still al- most won. “I don't expect a lot from the kids early, we're going to be build- ing over time,” he said. Mount Sentinel’s Jamie Laktin was a one-man show for his team in the final match against LVR. for eight straight points and the first-game win. Teams from Rossland, Trail, White Rock and Princeton also played in the tourney, which was the first of the year for most teams in the region. Next up for SHSS’s two senior teams is a tournament at Mount Sentinel this weekend. Some games will be played at Selkirk 10’s wild for Rebs 110-3 loss produces 10 casualties as junior team makes first mass cuts of ig Camp Ed Mills SPORTS EDITOR Ten’s were wild for the junior B Castlegar Rebels last weekend. It started when the Rebels were pasted 10-3 Friday by the Beaver Valley Nite Hawks at the Commu- nity Complex in the team’s first ex- hibition game of the season in the Kootenay International Junior Hockey League. And continued after the game when the coaching staff handed out 10 pink slips to players in the first mass cuts since babes camp what we wanted, but we had a lot of guys who started with in- juries and we were just taking a look at some other guys,” said rookie coach Kevin Chevel- dave. “Most of the guys who got cut didn’t have a clue what they were doing in their own end and that was the reason the score was like it was.” All the locals players in camp survived the first cuts, said Cheveldave, who made the deci- sions along with assistant coach Kevin Koorbatoff and general manager Don Joice. Kevin Leimen scored twice for the Rebels while Mike Head had the other in the loss to Beaver Val- ley, which is the farm team of the junior A Trail Smoke Eaters. The noticeably missing Friday night included local midget star of last season Nino DaCosta, train- ing camp scoring leader Brad Shaw, 20-year-old defenceman Dave Dybal and goaltender Vaughn Welychko. At least six players will be get- ting walking papers from the club as the Rebels get down to a 20- The Rebels open the KIJHL regular season Oct. 4 at the Com- plex against.