Q:Is the series “China Beach” available to stream anywhere? Also, is Dana Delany in anything else right now? I loved that show. — I.N.
A:Twoyears ago, TVLine published their list of the 10 most-requested shows not yet available on a major streaming service. One of those was “China Beach,” the Vietnam-War-era drama starring Dana Delany and Marg Helgenberger that aired on ABC from 1988-1991. Since this wish list was posted, six of the shows have been picked up by streamers: “Homicide: Life on the Street,” “Knots Landing,” “Moonlighting,” “Sisters,” “Northern Exposure,” and now … “China Beach!”
Roku’s new ad-free streaming service called Howdy (subscriptions are just $2.99 a month) is the exclusive streamer of “China Beach.” As for Delany, she was a regular on the hit series “Desperate Housewives” from 2007-2012 before starring in another successful drama called “Body of Proof.” She’s also returning for her third season on the hit show “Tulsa King,” which returns to Paramount+ with new episodes beginning on Sept. 21.
As for the final four shows that made TVLine’s list two years ago? Fans of “Ed,” “Murphy Brown,” “Chicago Hope,” and “Boston Public” are still hoping that the shows will find their streaming homes, but it’s very likely that the usual obstacles, such as music clearances, are responsible for the delay. ***
Q:
I just read that there’s going to be another “Yellowstone” spin-off. Is this in addition to the one with Beth and Rip? I hope that one is still a go. — S.P.
A:There are at least two new and upcoming “Yellowstone” spinoffs since the flagship series from creator Taylor Sheridan ended last December. First up is “Y: Marshals,” where Luke Grimes will reprise his role of Kayce Dutton in his next incarnation as a U.S. marshal. As for a premiere date, Entertainment Weekly reported that the show will begin airing midway through the 2025-26 broadcast season on CBS.
As for Beth and Rip, their love story will continue sometime in 2026 with
stars Kelly Reilly and Cole Hauser on their new ranch in Montana. A series title hasn’t been announced, but the the show will air exclusively on Paramount+.
Q:
Are any of the original cast from “Buffy” going to be in the reboot series? I’ve only heard that Sarah Michelle Gellar is involved in some capacity. — K.S.
A:While
Sarah Michelle Gellar is expected to appear in the planned sequel series of “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” as a mentor to a new young slayer, no other actors from the original series have been announced. I would imagine that several will be asked to reprise their roles in a guest-starring capacity, but the Hulu series is still in its early stages of development.
Ryan Kiera Armstrong has been cast as Nova, the new slayer of Sunnydale. Her credits include “Stick,” “American Horror Story,” and “It Chapter Two.” The series will be produced by Gellar, along with Nora and Lilla Zuckerman (both producers of “Poker Face”) as the showrunners. The pilot episode will be directed by Oscar-winning director Chloe Zhao (“Nomadland”).
2. Freakier Friday (PG) Jamie Lee Curtis, Lindsay Lohan
TAX TIPS
If you meet the definition of a “first-time home buyer,” you can now make deductible contributions of up to $8,000 per year into a First Home Savings Account (FHSA) for a lifetime maximum of $40,000. Income earned in the planis not taxable and withdrawals are not included in income as long as they are used to buy a home.
365 Kindersley Air Cadets
Thursday evenings 7:00 PM at the Kindersley & District Plains Museum No charge to be a member (youth ages 12-18).
Must be a Canadian resident. Contact Ian Kehrer via text at 306-460-0057 or Sheila Kehrer via text at 306-604-9044.
“Come
Fly With Us”
3. Nobody 2 (R) Bob Odenkirk, Connie Nielsen
4. The Fantastic Four: First Steps (PG-13) Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby
5. The Bad Guys 2 (PG) Sam Rockwell, Marc Maron
6. Superman (PG-13) David Corenswet, Rachel Brosnahan
7. The Naked Gun (PG-13) Liam Neeson, Pamela Anderson
8. Jurassic World: Rebirth (PG-13) Scarlett Johansson, Mahershala Ali
It’s as though Carla Beck has not yet fully recovered from the “sunny ways” propaganda Justin Trudeau spouted in 2015 during his first election campaign as Liberal party leader.
Beck, the Leader of Saskatchewan’s NDP Opposition, naively assumes the united Team Canada response to the Trump tariffs recommended by Doug Ford and other elbows up Eastern Canadians will actually work.
Ford is promoting a “get tough on the Americans” response to our tariff problems. He imagines a pan-Canadian flourishing of hardnosed patriotism whereby we punish the US with counter-tariffs and export taxes.
Ford wants us to pull together as flag waving Canadians and kick American butt. Unfortunately, supporters of Team Canada from Central Canada are fixated on applying export taxes to Alberta and Saskatchewan’s exports of oil potash and uranium. They hope to win the trade war regardless of what it might cost Westerners.
Beck explained how successful the united Team Canada strategy could be in an August 8 interview with Tamara Cherry on 980 CJME radio’s morning talk show.
Ms. Beck indicated that a province like Saskatchewan had some very important cards it could play at the negotiating table. Beck said those cards include things like potash and uranium—commodities vital to the Americans. She assumes this sort of retaliation would leverage concessions from Donald Trump.
Tamara Cherry asked Beck if she supported making use of that leverage. The Opposition Leader answered with an obfuscating word jumble worthy of Mark Carney or Kamala Harris. She was certain that Canadians should join together and retaliate. And she was confi-
dent about the cards we should play. But then avoided saying whether the NDP are actually committed to doing either.
Pick a lane Carla.
Export taxes are applied to products on this side of the border. They increase the cost of those products to importers. If the export taxes are high enough our products can become too expensive relative to the prices our competitors are charging. As a result our exporters will need to lower the prices they charge their customers to account for the export tax. They have to do this to remain competitive at international market price levels. This reduces the level of revenues our exporters can earn. That, in turn, has a negative effect on corporate revenues and employment levels. Some manufacturing firms could find it difficult to remain solvent if they stay in Canada.
Applying export taxes to our oil, potash or uranium exports would no doubt get Trump’s attention. But he’s unlikely to throw up his hands in defeat. One option the US will consider is finding alternative sources for those commodities. That may not be all that easy for Americans to do in the short term, which is why the export tax weapon can initially be so powerful. However, over the long term the search for alternative sources might be successful. Take potash, for example. If export taxes on potash are high enough to hurt American farmers, the Trump administration will come under pressure to cover the farmers’ added costs. That would be a short term solution while the US looks for new suppliers.
For the past several decades Saskatchewan has competed with Russia and Belarus for the title of world’s largest potash supplier. After the outbreak of the Russia-Ukraine war, international trade sanctions were applied to potash from Belarus and Russia. (Belarus has cooperated with Russia by way of allowing Putin to assemble invasion forces on its territory.)
The sanctions have been a boon to Saskatchewan’s potash miners. But what are the chances Trump could do something outrageous like waive the sanctions on Russia and Belarus to reduce the pressure on American farmers and the US treasury? Canadian producers could be left scrambling to find new markets.
The net result is that export taxes are a tax on our exports and our exporters. Applying them is like punching yourself in the face to teach your opponent a lesson.
Similar outcomes, including reduced market share and revenue losses, can be expected if export taxes are applied to our oil and uranium.
Five days after her radio interview Ms. Beck had to take a position on what to do about the new 75.8% tariff on Canadian canola. Beck, along with other prairie politicians, appears to assume that the hands across provincial borders unity of Team Canada will ensure the prime minister will make dealing with our trade disputes with China a priority.
The real reason China hiked the canola tariffs is the 100% tariff Justin Trudeau placed on Chinese EVs.
Chinese government subsidies have in large measure been responsible for the incredible advances in Chinese EV technology. Chinese EVs are more technologically sophisticated, more energy efficient and far less expensive than EVs produced in Europe and North America—little wonder car makers in those regions have demanded their government impose stiff tariffs on Chinese imports.
In the absence of tariffs, the assumption is that many European and North American EV manufacturers will not be able to compete with Chinese models. They’ll get their clocks cleaned.
The federal government, automakers and EV battery manufacturers have invested billions in developing the capacity to manufacture batteries and to adapt assembly lines at auto plants. What are the chances they will want to walk away from those sunk costs and reduce or eliminate the tariff on Chinese EVs?
Furthermore, federal green transition mandates essentially forced the auto companies to make those investments. The car makers will be calling their lawyers if the Carney government sells them out on behalf of canola farmers.
Thousands of good jobs in Ontario’s auto assembly plants and auto parts factories are at stake.
The governments of Canada and Ontario will not support the elimination of the EV tariffs on behalf of canola producers in the West. The best we can expect is a modest amount
of temporary cash relief for affected farmers and promises about finding new markets and patching things up with China.
What the foregoing example illustrates is that the wheels will come off the Team Canada bandwagon as soon as the provincial governments involved discover that the cost of export taxes will rarely fall evenly on all provinces.
When Eastern Canadians call for export taxes on oil, potash or uranium they will run into a brick wall. Alberta and Saskatchewan will vigorously oppose any such measures.
If Ontario autoworkers imagined their EV tariff protection is being sacrificed to bail out prairie farmers they’ll go ballistic.
It is easy for the Doug Ford and the Eastern “patriots” to do the elbows up chicken dance to their hearts’ content if the cost of getting tough on the US is borne by oil, gas, potash and uranium producers from Saskatchewan and Alberta. Put the shoe on the other foot by threatening job losses in Ontario in support of farm incomes on the prairies and Ford will change his tune.
It’s the Canadian way.
Unfortunately, if the past is indeed prologue, when the economic interests of Central Canadians are in conflict with the fortunes of Canadians from Alberta and Saskatchewan, the East wins. If oil gets expensive in Central Canada like it did in the 1970s we get the NEP. Back in the 1980s when there was high inflation due to a boom in Ontario’s industrial sector, prairie farmers went broke paying the 18% interest rates imposed on all Canadians to fight inflation in Ontario
The Liberal government showed its hand again several weeks ago when it passed legislation that guaranteed supply management for dairy and poultry farmers would never become a bargaining chip in trade negotiations. Supply management for dairy farmers is a sacred institution in Quebec. It has the most dairy farmers per capita of any province.
As it happens, one of Donald Trump’s principal irritants when it comes to trading with Canada is the supply management system. He has identified it as one of the reasons he’s getting tough on trade with Canada.
Quebec takes a win while businesses in other sectors from other provinces bear the costs of US tariff reprisals in response to supply management.
It doesn’t require deep insight or a crystal ball to predict who the winners and losers will eventually be.
It’s a Liberal tradition, keep the voters in Ontario and Quebec as happy as possible. So what if the West gets annoyed, they have no power in parliament. That’s why Liberal elections strategy is based on the maxim “Screw the West we’ll take the rest.”
Jim Warren is an adjunct professor and lecturer in environmental sociology at the University of Regina and a regular contributor to PipelineOnline.ca
By Lucie Winborne
• Steve Jobs would eat the same fruit or vegetable for weeks on end, and believed that binging nothing but apples or carrots reduced his body odor to the extent that he would need to shower just once a week.
• Earth is the only planet in the solar system with rainbows.
CREDIT: Donna Erickson
• In 2020, researchers at Ohio State University found that smokers with better math skills were more likely to quit smoking, as they retained more of the risk statistics associated with the habit.
• A heatwave can make train tracks bend.
• “Mamihlapinatapai,” from the Yaghan language of Tierra del Fuego and defined as “a look shared by two people, each wishing that the other would initiate something that they both desire but which neither wants to begin,” was recognized in the 1994 Guinness Book of World Records as the world’s most succinct word.
• Until 1911, the MLB had a rule stating that if an umpire was “unable to see whether a catch has been fairly made or not,” he was free to appeal to the game’s spectators for a judgment.
• Silk is stronger than steel.
• If you want to listen to a song called “Chosen Priest and the Apostle of Infinite Space” by Bull of Heaven, you’ll need to reserve two months for the experience.
• Coconuts, in different forms, are antiviral, antifungal, antibacterial and antiparasitic.
• The eyes on Michelangelo’s statue of David look in different directions. Why is debatable, but some scholars believe the artist wanted to ensure the shepherd’s gaze was as impactful as possible from either side. ***
Thought for the Day: “There are three kinds of men. The one that learns by reading. The few who learn by observation. The rest of them have to pee on the electric fence for themselves.” — Will Rogers
Enjoy a Taste of Italy With Tomato Pie
It tastes like summer when it’s not. It looks like pizza, but it’s not. So, what is it? Tomato pie! It’s our new family favorite for when we long for something with a fresh and zesty Italian flavor. I serve it with a healthy green salad and crunchy French bread. Hungry yet?
Just pick up fresh tomatoes and garlic cloves, rub some fresh basil leaves between your fingers, and be transported to a different country as you prepare a tasty meal with your kids.
TOMATO PIE
Ingredients:
— 1 9-inch refrigerated ready-made pie crust, or prepare an easy homemade crust (see recipe below)
— 1 1/3 cups shredded Italian-blend cheese or mozzarella
— 2-4 cloves fresh garlic, minced
— 2 tablespoons fine dry Italian-seasoned breadcrumbs
— 2 pounds fresh ripe tomatoes, cut into slices or wedges (about 6 cups)
— 1/2 teaspoon salt
— 1/2 cup chopped fresh basil
Here’s the fun: Unfold pie crust. On a lightly floured surface, roll crust to a 12-inch circle. Place in a 9-inch pie plate or quiche dish. Flute edges with fingers. Bake according to product instructions until set and dry.
Remove from oven and sprinkle 1/3 cup cheese evenly over shell. Sprinkle garlic and 2 teaspoons of crumbs over cheese. Top with 1/3 of the toma-
to wedges or slices. Let kids repeat sequence to form three layers topped with the remaining 1/3 cup of cheese. It will be full!
Sprinkle with salt and bake in an ovenset to 375 F for 20-25 minutes, or until tomatoes are just starting to brown. Remove from oven and place on a wire rack.
Sprinkle with basil leaves. Let stand 10 minutes before serving.
ALTERNATE HOMEMADE CRUST
Ingredients:
— 4 ounces cream cheese, softened
— 1/2 cup butter, softened — 1 cup all-purpose flour
— Pinch of salt
Place the cream cheese and butter in a large bowl. Add flour and salt. Work together with a pastry blender. Gather the soft dough into a ball with your hands and press into a 9-inch pie pan. This is a perfect job for your child to do. Simply set the ball in the middle of the pan,and press the dough out in all directions to extend it slightly over the rim. Flute the edges with fingers. Prick holes with fork. Bake at 425 F for 8 minutes before topping it with the tomato pie ingredients.
Donna Erickson creates relationships and community through food and fun. Find more to nourish and delight you at www.donnaerickson.com.
Monday: 6:30-8:00 PM
Wednesday: 7:00-8:00 PM Thursday: 7:00-8:00 PM
FUNNY BUSINESS
Why Can’t You Come Into Work Today?
• When I got up this morning I took two Ex-Lax in addition to my Prozac. I can’t get off the john, but I feel good about it.
• I set half the clocks in my house ahead an hour and the other half back an hour Saturday and spent 18 hours in some kind of space-time continuum loop, reliving Sunday (right up until the explosion). I was able to exit the loop only by reversing the polarity of the power source exactly e*log (pi) clocks in the house while simultaneously rapping my dog on the snout with a rolled up Times. Accordingly, I will be in late, or early.
• I can’t come in to work today because I’ll be stalking my previous boss, who fired me for not showing up for work. OK?
• I am stuck in the blood pressure machine down at Shoppers Drug Mart.
• Yes, I seem to have contracted some sort of attention-deficit disorder and, hey, how about them Skins, huh? So, I won’t be able to, yes, could I help you? No, no, I’ll be sticking with Sprint, but thank you for calling.
• Constipation has made me a walking time bomb.
• I just found out that I was switched at birth. Legally, I shouldn’t come to work knowing my employee records may now contain false information.
• The psychiatrist said it was an excellent session. He even gave me this jaw restraint so I won’t bite things when I am startled.
• The dog ate my car keys. We’re going to hitchhike to the vet.
• I prefer to remain an enigma.
• My mother-in-law has come back as one of the Undead and we must track her to her coffin to drive a stake through her heart and give her eternal peace. One day should do it.
• I can’t come to work today because the EPA has determined that my house is completely surrounded by wetlands and I have to arrange for helicopter transportation.
• I am converting my calendar from Julian to Gregorian.
• I am extremely sensitive to a rise in the interest rates.
So Drunk He Can’t Stand Up ...
A man has been drinking at a pub all night. When he stands up to leave, he falls flat on his face. He tries to stand one more time, but to no avail. Again, he falls flat on his face. He figures he’ll crawl outside and get some fresh air and maybe that will sober him up. Once outside, he stands up and, sure enough, he falls flat on his face. The Irishman decides to crawl the four blocks to his home.
When he arrives at the door, he stands up and falls flat on his face. He crawls through the door into his bedroom. When he reaches his bed, he tries one more time to stand up. This time, he manages to pull himself upright but he quickly falls right into bed. He is sound asleep as soon as his head hits the pillow.
He awakens the next morning to his wife standing over him, shouting, “So, you’ve been out drinking again!”
“Why do you say that?” he asks innocently.
“The pub called. You left your wheelchair there again.”
Want to hear about that new do-it-yourself orthodontist? ... Brace yourself.
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MOMENTS IN TIME #12345_20250825 FOR RELEASE AUG. 25, 2025
~ Farmers near Yellowstone National Park, struggling with wolves attacking their livestock but prohibited from harming the protected animals, have turned to technology -- and Hollywood -- for help in keeping the predators away. Yahoo News reported on Aug. 4 that quadcopter drones equipped with speakers blaring AC/DC songs and audio from a Scarlett Johansson movie had been dispatched in the ongoing fight. Per the USDA, “people arguing is a distressing sound for wolves, and so the fight scene between Johansson and Adam Driver in the 2019 movie ‘Marriage Story’ is a perfect deterrent.” The music and film clips seem to be working: Since their deployment, the number of cows killed by wolves in southern Oregon has fallen from 11 over a 20-day period to two over the next 85 days.
Never Heard of Him
~ St. Jude the Apostle Roman Catholic Church in Erie, Pennsylvania, holds a Corvette raffle every year to raise money for the parish, and in 2024, one “Martin Anderson” came away with the top prize. But on Aug. 6, the Erie Times-News reported that an investigation by the Erie County District Attorney’s Office discovered that no such person exists. Father Ross Miceli is under investigation for making up the name of the winner as well as winners of other prizes. The church declined to comment but acknowledged there was an active criminal investigation underway. The reverend has been placed on administrative leave.
Sucky Situation
~ The South China Morning Post reported on Aug. 5 that adults in China are turning to pacifiers to ease their stress, improve sleep and stop smoking. The adult binkies are larger than the infant models and come in different colors, and shops say they’re selling more than 2,000 each month. “It’s high quality, soft, and I feel comfortable sucking it,” said one buyer. “It does not impede my breathing.” But Chengdu dentist
Tang Caomin isn’t a fan: “By sucking the dummy for more than three hours a day, the position of your teeth might change after a year.”
Might be of Concern
~ In Fort Collins, Colorado, residents have reported seeing rabbits with black, tentaclelike protrusions on their heads, KUSA-TV reported. Colorado Parks and Wildlife said the horny growths are caused by a virus that is not dangerous to humans or pets, but warned people not to touch them just the same. The “Frankenstein rabbits” are not in pain, CPW said, unless the spines grow on sensitive areas like the eyes. There is no known cure.
Do Not Consume
~ Dan Burton, owner of Urban Trapping Wildlife Control in Salinas, California, alerted officials of Monterey County and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife to a discovery he made while trapping wild pigs in early August. The Los Angeles Times reported that when Burton cut into one of the animals, he discovered that the flesh was ... off-color. “I’m not talking about a little blue,” he said. “I’m talking about neon blue, blueberry blue.” Fish and wildlife officials say the blue flesh is probably caused by exposure to a poison popularly used by farmers to control rats, mice, squirrels and other rodents. They are warning trappers and hunters not to consume the blue flesh, and some of the poison traps have been pulled from the fields because of pigs seeking them out.
Another Fear Unlocked
~ The Missouri Department of Health and Human Services is warning visitors to the Lake of the Ozarks about a rare “brain-eating” infection called Naegleria fowleri, KSHB-TV reported on Aug. 13. A man who had been water skiing in the lake is now being treated in intensive care at a Missouri hospital, officials said. The infection enters the human body through the nose, then travels into the brain.
• On Sept. 8, 2012, a pair of Elvis Presley’s undershorts, which had been framed under glass, failed to sell at a British auction, though they’d been optimistically expected to go for more than $10,000.
• On Sept. 9, 1942, a Japanese seaplane dropped incendiary bombs near Brookings, Oregon, in the first such attack on the U.S. mainland. The bombs were intended to start a forest fire, but fortunately caused little damage, due to wet conditions. Twenty years later, the pilot, Nobuo Fujita, visited Brookings in a gesture of reconciliation and friendship.
• On Sept. 10, 1920, F. Scott Fitzgerald published his first short story collection, “Flappers and Philosophers.” In a copy he sent to editor and critic H.L. Mencken, Fitzgerald labeled four of the stories “worth reading,” one “amusing” and the remaining three “trash.”
• On Sept. 11, 1841, American portrait painter John Goffe Rand received a patent for the first collapsible tin paint tube. Until then, artists had to mix their own oil paints, storing leftover supplies in animal bladders tied with string. French artist PierreAuguste Renoir later declared that “without paints in tubes there would have been no Cézanne, no Monet, no Sisley or Pissarro, nothing of … Impressionism.”
• On Sept. 12, 1972, cowboy actor William Boyd, best known for his role as Hopalong Cassidy, died at the age of 77. He was the first cowboy actor to make the transition from movies to television, after more than 50 successful B-grade Westerns in which he was accompanied by his faithful and exceptionally intelligent horse, Topper,
• On Sept. 13, 1940, Benito Mussolini’s forces crossed the Libyan border into Egypt, achieving what “Il Duce” described as the glory Italy had been seeking for 300 years.
• On Sept. 14, 1975, Elizabeth Ann Seton (née Bayley), who was raised Episcopalian but later converted to Catholicism after being left a widow with five children, was canonized by Pope Paul VI at the Vatican in Rome, becoming one of the first Americanborn Catholic saints.
• Rapid Access Counselling (RAC) for Children Youth/Caregivers
• Rapid Access for Counselling (RAC) for Adults
• Crisis Intervention & Debriefing
• Suicide Intervention & Suicide Impact Supports
• Sexual Assault Victim Support
• Trafficking Intervention
• Family Intervention Rapid Support Teams (FIRST)
• Client Advocacy
• Intimate Partner Violence Intervention
• Court Mandated Supports
The West Central Crisis & Family Support Centre’s mission is to provide support services to individuals and families experiencing trauma, violence, addiction, or crisis in their lives, as well as outreach programs to communities within our boundaries.
COLEVILLE
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28
one is welcome! 7:00 PM Curling Rink Lounge (upstairs). Hope to see some new faces!
4514.
• Coleville Fowl Supper at the Community Hall. Doors open at 5:00 PM until supplies last. For information or to donate, please contact Stacey (306) 430-7788 or Teneal (306) 430-1188. All proceeds go to supporting the Coleville Licensed Daycare Committee and Coleville Playschool.
EATONIA
- Every Thursday from 11:30 AM -1:30 PM come to the Eatonia Library for puzzles, visiting and grab your books for the week!
- Check out our TOPS Chapter … it’s free to try! Every Wednesday. Weigh in: 5:45 PM. Meeting: 6:00 PM at Corcoran Place. Contact Cora Knuttila 306-460-9047.
ESTON
THURSDAY, AUGUST 28
• Prairie West Historical Society is holding their annual Raspberry Tea from 2:00-4:00 PM in the Heritage Gallery on the lower level of the Evans House (946 - 2nd St. SE). Artwork by Anna Polsfut is currently on display in the Gallery, so come for cake, ice cream and raspberries and view the art show and tour the museum. Admission is by donation at the door. Contact 306-962-3772 for more info.
- Wheatland Centre Potluck Supper fourth Friday of each month 6:00 PM. $5.00. Bring your own utensils. Coffee & tea provided.
- Wheatland Centre Bingo - 1st & 3rd Thursday of the month 7:00 PM. Regular Bingo plus Bonanza, 50/50 Draw. Must be 14 years of age. Call 306-962-7117 (ask for Linda) for more info.
KINDERSLEY
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4
• Join us for the start of a new KIN year! You’re invited to check out our club’s first meeting of the new KIN year to see what we’re about (with no strings attached for attending). We are always looking for new members! Every-
FRIDAY & SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 & 6
• Energy Dodge Dakota Buttar Invitational Professional Bullriding (PBR) Event at the WCEC.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6
• Kindersley Community Connections presents 2nd Annual Meet A Machine! A free family-friendly event showcasing many different machines and the heroes that operate them! 10:00 AM - 2:00 PM at the Kindersley Museum. For more info contact Ang at 306-4308869.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18 - SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21
• Goose Festival Days. Watch for further details!
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19
• KCS Kobras Football vs Delisle 7:30 PM at KCS (under the lights).
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20
• Show & Shine hosted by Roadmen C.C. Saskatchewan from 12:00-4:00 PM on Main Street. Free Entry. Door Prizes. Open to special interest vehicles. Contact Darrell Fitterer 306-679-7147.
• Kinsmen and Kinette Club of Kindersley 5th Annual Duck Derby 2:00 PM on the corner of Main Street and 2nd Avenue East. Get your tickets NOW at https://www.rafflebox.ca/ raffle/kkck or any Kin member or Darren at Willowgrove Pharmacy for tickets. $10 each. Only 1200 sold.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27
• Kindersley Screen Arts presents our 10-Year Anniversary Screening - The Life of Chuck 4:00 PM at Sunset Theatre. $10 cash at the door. Wine & beer available for purchase. Attend for a chance to WIN a season pass. Sponsored by Speedy Auto Glass.
- Parkinson’s Support Group Meetings are held the second Wednesday of the month 1:30 PM at 401 - 4th Ave West (New Life Church). Everyone welcome! For more info call Nancy at 306-463-
- Monday Night Jam Sessions at the Norman Ritchie Community Centre. Doors open at 6:30 to set-up, then the fun begins at 7-11 PM. Call Keith 306-460-8633.
- Interested in a support group for weight management? TOPS meetings; every Monday at 6:00 PM in the Kindersley Senior Centre OR contact Jill at 306-463-4210.
- Pickleball meets Monday & Wednesday evenings 7:00-9:00 PM at the outdoor courts (in the Curling Rink if inclement weather). Cost is $50 for the season or $5 drop in. Our club is a part of Pathway To Wellness. More info call Teresa Knight 306-460-7304.
- Fit Fighter Group Class. Helping individuals with Parkinson Disease, Fibromyalgia, MS, Arthritis and mobility issues. Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00 AM at Anytime Fitness. Call Karen 463-3607 for more info.
- 365 Kindersley Air Cadets meet Thursday evenings at the Kindersley Museum. No charge to be a member, youth ages 12-18, must be a Canadian resident. Contact Ian Kehrer via text at 306-460-0057 or Sheila Kehrer via text 306604-9044. Come Fly With Us!
• Every Saturday: Mom N Tots Morning 10:00 - 10:30 AM at the Norman Ritchie Community Centre. Registration required: Kindersleymusic@outlook.com
• Every Tuesday: Community Badminton 6:30 - 9:00 PM at Westberry School. Everybody welcome.
LUSELAND
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13
• Luseland Harvest Festival 2:00 to 8:00 PM. To book a table or offer support in any way call Jean (306) 372-7367 or Bobbi (306) 430-7515
- The Luseland Homecoming Hall will be available for indoor walking on TUESDAY & THURSDAY mornings. Please pick up the key at the Town Office to unlock the door. Silver collection at the door.