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Missing Boys From Lundar Found

Two boys from Lundar, who were reported missing on
Sunday have been found safely by RCMP.

Mounties say they have found 13-year-old Isiah Sinclair and
11-year-old Binesi Kennedy near Scanterbury, which is nearly 200
km from the foster home where they live.

The pair told people they were running away from home on their
bicycles.

Police believed they were headed for Winnipeg.
 
Kings Home Opener Tonight
 
Credit Union Place is expected to be packed tonight as the Dauphin Kings open their Manitoba Junior Hockey League regular season.
 
It's all thanks to the Dauphin Clinic Pharamcy, who have sponsored the affair and bought all the extra tickets to give away to fans.
 
Myles Haverluck, Owner of the DCP, says the Dauphin Kings are a very important part of the community.
 
"If we didn't have them, I think a whole lot of other things that go on down at the Rec Complex wouldn't be happening or wouldn't be affordable. I think it goes beyond the junior hockey which I enjoy and support, but I think it's also looking at the whole big picture for what's good for our community as a whole."
 
Opening face off tonight at Credit Union Place is pegged for 7:00pm. For more on the game make sure you listen to the One Hour Power Play Show LIVE from Mr.Mikes this afternoon, it runs from 4 till 5pm.
 
Dauphin Students Taking Part In Terry Fox Run
 
Students will be running the track at Credit Union Place today for the school Terry Fox Run.

Organizer for the Parkland Region's Terry Fox Foundation Steven Roznowsky says that there will be prizes from McDonalds and Canadian tire being handed out to students from each school.
 
"We have draw baskets that we'll place them in, and it will be done school-by-school"
 
Roznowsky also says that this year's official headcount reached 47 people at the 35th annual Terry Fox Run last Sunday. This surpassed their expectation of 35 people.
 
Province Celebrating Farm And Food Week
 
Manitoba is celebrating agriculture and locally-produced food
this week and that will culminate tomorrow with an organic banquet in
Winnipeg.

Agriculture Minister Ron Kostyshyn says the celebration is about
growing and retaining food industries.

He says the goal is for the food processing sector in the
province to reach more than $5 billion.

Right now, about 32,000 jobs in Manitoba are in the
agriculture and agri-food industries, contributing $3.6 billion to the provincial economy.
 
Two Manitobans Facing Drug Charges In Alberta
 
Two Manitobans are facing drug charges after a traffic stop in
Alberta.

A Medicine Hat police officer searched a vehicle yesterday on the
Trans-Canada Highway and found about 8000 candies
containing the active ingredient in marijuana, along with 170
marijuana plants.

Two men, one 37 and the other 42, from St. Laurent, Manitoba, are
charged with possession for the purpose of trafficking and
production of a controlled substance.

Police say the ``Randy Candy,'' as the drug is called, is a worry
because of Halloween coming up. It looks like real candy and they
say kids could end up consuming it by accident.
 
Woman Gives Birth At Baseball Game
 
A woman who went to see the San Diego Padres left the game as a
brand new madre.

The baseball club's Petco Park announced that a baby boy was born
during last night's game against the San Francisco Giants.

The Padres later tweeted that a great crowd of 31,137
enjoyed the game -- not including the boy born around the third
inning.

 

KAP President "Disappointed" With Election News

The president of Keystone Agricultural Producers in Manitoba says
he's ``disappointed'' every day when he tunes into the federal
election news.

Dan Mazier says it's because he hopes for some mention of
agriculture.

Still, Mazier says he remains optimistic the parties and
candidates will realize agriculture is a major economic driver
that's responsible for one in eight jobs.

He says one way to engage the farm vote would be to address
Canada's grain transportation system.
 
Wet Fields Cause Problems For Manitoba Firefighters
 
Wet conditions are usually good for firefighters, but that wasn't
completely the case over the weekend in Manitoba when a forage
harvester caught fire in the middle of a field near Kleefeld.

Kleefeld fire captain Wendell Martens says the department's foam
truck had the flames out quickly, once the truck got there.

But Martens says the fields are wet this year, so a tractor was
needed to get the foam truck up to the scene.

No one was hurt in the fire.
 
TransPacific Partnership Negotiations Continue
 
Negotiation continues in Atlanta on the TransPacific Partnership.

Chief negotiators from Canada and 11 other countries will hold
sessions through to Tuesday.

Those meetings will set the stage for further talks involving TPP
trade ministers on Wednesday and Thursday.

Canada's supply management system has been a significant sore
point in the ongoing negotiations, with the US and New Zealand
pressuring Canada to reduce its tariffs on foreign dairy products.
 
Leader's Debate Tonight In Toronto
 
The three main political party leaders are in Toronto for their
fourth debate in the federal election campaign.

Tonight's debate will focus on foreign policy.

While his rivals spent Sunday away from the campaign trail, NDP
Leader Tom Mulcair was in Toronto announcing his party's plan to
address climate change.

He also denounced legislation the Conservatives introduced to
strip Canadian citizenship from dual citizens convicted of
terrorism.

It was learned this weekend the new law was used to revoke the
Canadian citizenship of a man serving a life sentence for his role
in a bombing plot in Toronto.

Mulcair accused Prime Minister Harper of timing the announcement
during the campaign to play to his right-wing base.
 
Obama And Putin To Meet During Summit
 
US President Barack Obama and Russian President Vladimir Putin
will meet face-to-face today for the first time in nearly a year.

The two are in New York for the annual United Nations Summit and
will have a chat on the sidelines.

Though there's no easing of Moscow's military involvement in
Syria or Ukraine, US officials say it's still worthwhile for the
two leaders to talk.
 
Supermoon Last Night
 
Many Canadians looked skyward last night hoping to see the rare
red-tinged lunar eclipse dubbed the ``Super Blood Moon'' -- but many
were disappointed.

The rare celestial event involved a ``supermoon'' -- called that
because of its nearness to the Earth -- coinciding with a full lunar
eclipse.

Most Canadians had good seats for the show, but the view was
obscured by clouds in some places, including Toronto and Calgary.

 

City And DRS Dealing With Dutch Elm Disease

The City of Dauphin and Dauphin Recreation Services are working together to control Dutch Elm Disease.
 
The province downloaded the management of the disease to urban municipalities, and CAO Brad Collett says there will be some costs to the city because of this.
 
“Unfortunately, they’ve identified 52 trees this year and they have to be removed, so DRS is costing that right now, they give us back about $182 per tree, but unfortunately, tree removal costs are substantially more than that so there is going to be a cost to this.”
 
Collett says the city is considering joining with other urban municipalities in the area to talk to other tree removal contractors, to reduce the costs for tree removal.
 
Prosecutors Seeking Jail Time For Drunk Driver On Perimeter Highway
 
Prosecutors want a Manitoba man who admitted to driving drunk
when he killed a young woman to serve a four-year prison term.

David Deslisle, who is 51, has pleaded guilty to impaired driving
causing death in the September 2012 crash on Winnipeg's Perimeter
Highway that killed 21-year-old Samantha Schlichting.

A passenger in her car was also left with permanent injuries.

Deslisle's pickup truck drifted into the wrong lane.

Court heard he refused a breathalyzer at the scene of the crash
so it's unclear how much alcohol was in his system.
 
Sexual Assault Conviction For Former Teacher's Assistant
 
A former teacher's assistant in Manitoba has been sentenced to
three years in prison for sexually assaulting a 15-year-old female
student.

The 31-year-old man was convicted following a trial earlier this
year in which he denied any wrongdoing.

The Crown was seeking up to four years behind bars for the man,
who has no prior criminal record.

Crown prosecutor Kyle Parker says the man has no remorse. Court
heard the man came into contact with the victim at the high school
of a remote Manitoba reserve.
 
Canada Closer To TPP Deal
 
The Conservative government hopes to have an agreement in place
before the weekend that would establish the world's largest
free-trade zone.

Should the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations in Atlanta
conclude successfully, Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz says it will
give Canadian farmers, ranchers and food processors preferential
access to that zone.

He says from beef to canola, pulses to pork, genetics to live
animals, and countless processed products, the agriculture and
agri-food sector in every province depends on exports to grow and
succeed.

Ritz says the government remains committed to continuing to
defend the supply management system.
 
Party Leaders Debate Foreign Policy
 
Four debates down and one to go.

The top three political leaders sparred over foreign policy at
last night's leaders' debate in Toronto, with featuring spirited
arguments over Trans-Pacific trade talks, security, immigration and
refugee measures, and climate change.

Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper was forced to defend
his government's record on combating climate change, and that not
enough is being done.

Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau criticized the NDP policy on
reducing our greenhouse-gas emissions and NDP Leader Tom Mulcair
attacked Harper over failing to convince the US to approve the
Keystone XL pipeline project.
 
Obama And Castro To Meet During UN Summit
 
Old Cold War adversaries continue the effort today to warm things
up.

US President Barack Obama and Cuban President Raul Castro are
scheduled to meet for the second time this year on the sidelines of
the United Nations General Assembly in New York.

The two countries are trying to normalize relations after decades
of animosity.

 

Wind Warnings For Lake Manitoba

Lake Manitoba is under a strong wind warning from Environment Canada.
 
Winds coming out of the south at 15 knots or 28 km/h are forcasted for today, and are expected to increase to 20 knots or 37 km/h after midnight.
 
By Friday, wind speeds are expected to hit 25 knots or 46 km/h before diminishing to 10 knots or 19 km/h by Saturday evening.
 
Wind warnings are also currently in effect for both the north and south basins of Lake Winnipeg.
 
Trudeau Makes Campaign Promises During Stop In Winnipeg
 
Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau has made another visit to Winnipeg,
where he has promised millions of dollars in new money for research
and development, as well as for small technology businesses.

Trudeau made the announcement at a factory in Winnipeg Centre __
one of the poorest ridings in the country and one the Liberals are
hoping to steal from the NDP.

New Democrat Pat Martin has had a stranglehold on the riding
since 1997, but the Liberals are pinning their hopes on
Robert-Falcon Ouellette, an aboriginal candidate with a military
background.

Trudeau is also hoping to regain former Liberal strongholds in
Winnipeg South-Centre and St. Boniface-St. Vital, which have been
won by the Conservatives in recent years.
 
Canada Moves Up In Competitiveness Report
 
Canada has moved up two notches to 13th place in the latest
Global Competitiveness Report issued today by the Geneva-based World
Economic Forum.

The report says Canada improved its ranking mainly because of a
lower budget deficit based on 2014 data, and a more favourable
assessment of its financial market development.

It says Canada's competitiveness is also built on ``highly
efficient labour markets'' and a sound banking system, but cautions
that exposure to a potentially overvalued housing market could soon
become a risk.

The forum also says in order to counter the effects of lower
energy prices, Canada should continue to foster innovation at the
company level, noting Canadian company spending on R&D is ranked
26th and has the capacity to do better.
 
Farmers Demonstrate In Ottawa Over TPP Negotiations
 
Tractors clogged a street in front of the Parliament buildings in
Ottawa as dozens of dairy farmers from Ontario and Quebec staged a
demonstration over the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations.

Some farmers were leading cows down the street and others were
splashing milk on the pavement.

Negotiations are currently underway on the ambitious trade deal
involving Canada and 11 other countries.

Farmers fear the federal government will make concessions on
supply management, which shields the dairy market from foreign
producers, but Prime Minister Stephen Harper is promising to
preserve protection of the industry.
 
New Photos Released From Halifax Plane Crash
 
The Transportation Safety Board has released new photos showing
damage to the passenger cabin of an Air Canada plane that crashed at
Halifax's airport during a heavy snowfall last spring.

The photos are part of an update that also detailed the weather
and flying conditions when Air Canada Flight 624 hit the ground
short of the runway March 29th, severing power lines and smashing
through an antenna array.

One image shows punctures to the cabin floor, with metal jutting
up between seat rows near the back of the plane.

All 138 people on board survived, although 25 people were
injured.
 
Google Releasing New Smartphones
 
Google is adding two new smartphones to the growing number of
iPhone alternatives set to hit Canadian shelves before the start of
the holiday season.

Both the Nexus 5X and Nexus 6P were unveiled by Google
yesterday and use the ``Marshmallow,'' Android's latest update of
its operating system.

The phones are to be available before the end of October.

Crown Royal Strike

Picket lines have gone up at the Crown Royal whisky distillery in Gimli, Manitoba.

The workers voted 98 per cent on Friday night to reject the final offer from the company, Diageo Canada. Union president Jeff Traeger says wage increases, vacation time and health and welfare benefits were the sticking points in negotiations.

A spokesperson for Diageo says in an email it's disappointed with the strike, saying it believes the offer it made was a fair one.

Trudeau 60 Minutes 

C-B-S is describing its interview with Prime Minister Trudeau airing tonight on ``60 Minutes'' as a candid profile.

Host Lara Logan asked Trudeau what Canadians do not like about the U-S. He replied that Americans should pay more attention to the world, a comment that prompted Conservative M-P Jason Kenney to go on social media and call the remark ``regrettably smug.''

Trudeau will be in Washington later this week, and will be the guest at a state dinner at the White House.

 Assisted Dying and Mental Health 

Mental health experts are wondering how people with mental illnesses will be affected by any legislation on
doctor-assisted death.

Whether the mentally ill should be eligible to end their lives with a doctor's help is one of the most contentious issues in the assisted-death debate.

Last week, a parliamentary committee recommended that Canadians with psychiatric disorders should be included in any right-to-die regulations.

The head of the Canadian Psychiatric Association says people should not be treated differently because they have a mental illness, rather than a physical one.

But Doctor Sonu Gaind says his organization wants to ensure proper safeguards are in place to protect the vulnerable.

In a landmark decision last year, The Supreme Court of Canada ruled that those suffering ``grievous,'' incurable conditions should be able to end their lives.

It made no specific pronouncement about medically assisted dying for those with psychiatric illnesses.

Huge Snow Storm To Hit Newfoundland

 

Glad that this isn’t happening here.

Environment Canada has issued a winter storm warning for much of Newfoundland.

Forecasters say Gander and some other areas could get up to 30cm of snow and winds of more than 100km an hour.

The storm forced Marine Atlantic to delay at least four of this weekend's ferry sailings between Port aux Basques, Newfoundland and North Sydney, Nova Scotia.

 

Two Parklanders and two Dauphin Kings prospects have been named to Team Manitoba for the upcoming Under-16 Western Canada Challenge Cup.

The organization that ran the Chase the Ace event in Winnipegosis didn't expect the jackpot to get as big as it did.
 Many residents of Winnipegosis gathered together last night to voice their concerns.
Mossey River is planning to finish installing smart water meters in Winnipegosis by the end of April.
There's plenty on tap for today's town hall meetings in Mossey River.
The Mossy River Municipality is aiming to focus more on economic development in the community.
Improving safety in the motor vehicle industry is the main goal of a new organization started by Safe Work Manitoba.
Manitoba Public Insurance is reminding motorists to keep their eyes on the roads.
 
An average of 25 Manitobans are killed because of distracted driving every year, according to MPI data.
Manitoba Public Insurance representatives will be at the Dauphin Marketplace Mall until 5 today fielding questions and looking for feedback on Manitoba's proposed all-in-one personal ID cards.

Manitoba motorcycle owners are getting more options for insurance coverage.

There will be an increased police presence on Manitoba highways starting this long weekend.
Western Manitoba is the second-worst region in the province for deer-vehicle collisions, according to Manitoba Public Insurance.
Manitoba Public Insurance will soon be waiving the deductible on vehicle vandalism claims.
The Parkland chapter of the MS society is bringing a special guest to Dauphin for MS Awareness Month.