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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Sandpoint, Post Falls face off


Residents of Guardian Homes, an assisted-living center, chat while waiting for the start of a mock shootout between Post Falls Mayor Clay Larkin and Sandpoint Mayor Ray Miller on May 10 in Post Falls during an event sponsored by the Mary Willeford Allstate Insurance Agency. 
 (Photo by JESSE TINSLEY / The Spokesman-Review)
Hope Brumbach Staff writer

In Post Falls, with a drawl that would make John Wayne green with envy, Post Falls Mayor Clay “White Shirt” Larkin slung his jacket back and adjusted the pair of guns strapped on his hips. “Well, well, well, leave it to Sandpoint to send a kid to do a man’s job,” he called out to Sandpoint Mayor Ray “Kaniksu Kid” Miller. Then in a clink of spurs, pop of gunshots and a haze of smoke, the gunslingers and their posses opened fire. It could have been a Wild West scene lifted from the pages of a Louis L’Amour novel – except for the blank gun cartridges, the twitters of laughter from the audience and the “applause” sign lofted by a cowboy hat-wearing high school student. In the end, Miller and Larkin were the only ones left standing last week in Post Falls’ first “Mayoral Showdown,” a cowboy-themed community night of fun and entertainment. Dozens of residents chowed down on free vittles, hooted at hammed-up skits, heard a gun safety presentation and voted in a cowboy costume contest. The event, which also featured the Panhandle Gunslingers group, was sponsored by Mary Willeford Allstate Agency and held in the company’s parking lot in Post Falls.