Serving the communities of Rimbey, Bentley, Bluffton, and Hoadley
Tuesday, October 20, 2015
Volume 17 Number 43
Rimbey Minor Hockey Novice 1 and 2 teams practice, Oct. 7. At the younger levels the organization looks to instill a variety of life skills beyond just playing hockey. For full coverage see page 8. Amelia Naismith Photo
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2 RIMBEY REVIEW
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2015
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The Community Calendar Proudly Presented by Rimbey Dental Care and the Rimbey Review BINGO BINGOS:
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4th Wednesday, 6:00 p.m. Rimbey Curling Club BingoGS: MEETIN at Ponoka Bingo Plaza Thursdays, 7:30 p.m. West Pine Lodge Bingo in Winfield. - 7 pm at the New Life Fellowship Addicts in Recovery Anonymous Mondays Food 1st and 3rd Mondays 7:30 at Hoadley Hall Bingo doors open at 6:30 (non smoking) building. Call 403-843-4570 for more info. Church nd 2 Saturday, 6:00p.m. Rimbey Historical Society Bingo, Ponoka Bingo Plaza of each month at #264 - Regular meetings the 2nd Monday of Bentley Purple Royal Drop-In Bingo at Ponoka Bingo Plaza 3rd Saturday, Rimbey Hall (old Oxford School). New members welcome. Legion Bentley the in 73rdp.m. Sunday, Rimbey Legion at Ponoka Bingo Plaza
Rimbey Hospital Ladies Auxiliary meeting 2nd Tuesday every month, 1pm MEETINGS Hospital Conference Rm. Super 8 meeting TOPS ( Take off Pounds Sensibly) meets Wed evenings, Rimbey pm atChurch - 7United each month y of Rimbey Fish and Game 1st Wednesda basement. You are invited to an open house. Oct 17 @ 7pm Nancy 843-0067 room. Bentley Minor Hockey Annual Oct 17 atthe 7pm at Wed. Drop-In Centre. month. Truck each 1st Club meetings Saddle Meeting&General Wagon, Sleigh, Rimbey Call 748-4838 or 748-2078 for info. 236 for info. 403-704-4 at president) (the Denise Museum @ Pas-Ka-Poo Park. Call Bentley Curling Club Annual Fall General Meeting- Oct 17 at 7:30pm at The Email: RimbeySWSClub@gmail.com Curling Club Lounge. New and Returning curlers invited. Alcoholics Anonymous Wednesdays- 8:30 pm at the Rimbey Anglican Church. 403Blindman Valley 4_H Beef Club Parent Oragnizational Meeting- Oct 17 at 7:30 pm 843-3662 info. at Bentley Ag Centre. Call 748-2374 or 748-4739. New members welcome. 3rd Wednesday each month- 7:00 pm at the Agriplex. Ag Society RimbeyElementary Rimbey School Parent Council Meeting- RES room Oct 16 at 7:00pm of Commerce, 3rd Wednesday. Bluffton Hall 7 pm. Chamber District & on Blufft nd 2 Tuesday each month 1 pm Rimbey Health Centre Rimbey Auxilary Hospital Group, meet 3rd Wednesday of month. 10 am @ Horticultu District & each month, 7:30 p.m.ral st 1Rimbey Thursday Regular Members Meeting, Rimbey Legion 843 2539 for info. 403 Call Centre. In Drop Rimbey the #36. of each month, 7:30 pm Rimbey ursday meeting1s nd Legion Royal Thursday eachCdn. monthRimbey Ag Societyt Th 7:00pm at the agriplex 2Rimbey rd St. 50th 5019 Legion, 3 Tuesday each month- Caregiver Support Group 10am at Rimbey Health Family Counseling, call 1-403-347-8844 & say you would like to be seen in Rimbey. Centre. and informational meeting, for anyone affected by MS Rimbey Table Talk - A social ACTIVITIES MS, every 3rd Thursday of the month @ 1pm, the Grand Hotel, Rimbey. Bentley Library Society DinnerGeneral Theatre- Event to take place tickets nowmuseum. on at the 7 p.m. at 20, 20Oct - Oct. Meeting Bentley Museum Annual sale. Call Arlene 748-4429 welcome. Everyone Bentley Carpet Bowling- Wednesday on mornings. Bentley Hall. 9:30 am. New Players Bentley “Coffee with Council” Oct. 29 from 6:30 - 8:00 p.m. in the Bentley Senior invited. Call Harry or Georgina 748-3404 for more info. Drop-In Centre. “ Food For Fines Week” at the Bentley Municipal Library Oct 22-27. Donate dry
O F T H E W E E K
IES: Pantry. foods in lieu of library fines. Will be givenACTIVIT to Bentley Blessing night @ 7pm. Tuesday every Centre, In @ West Pine Jammers’ Lodge In WinfieldSupper Oct 19 5:00pm. For more info call Drop @ Rimbey DancesChicken Regular in the old a.m. 10:00 at starting Wendy @ 780-682-3960 Bentley Carpet Bowling - Wednesday mornings at 403Arnold Call invited. players Winfield Playground FundraiserSupper & Silent Auction, Oct 19 @ 4:30,Winfield returning and New Hall. ty Bentley Communi Rec Centre.for Skating,Crafts, Clown and more. Call 682-3788 for more info info. 748-2744 Concert, every Christmas Annual thefrom for 27 practices Family Halloween and starts Silent Auction on Oct 5-9 pm at the Bentley Chorus Comm.Dance Rimbey 843 3115 403 info more for Annette Church. United Community Hall. Hosted by Bentley Nursery school. Call Tina 748-4407 for info. Rimbey pm. 7:30 @ Wed., Rimbey Community Chorus- Starts practice for Christmas, Wednesday Oct 10 8:45pm at United Church. New singers welcome. Annette 843-3115 Rimbey United Church is planning a Memorial Hymn sing Nov 4 at 2:00pm. For info call Alice 843-6732 or the church 843- 2458.
A huge mushroom was brought in this year Submitted by Andrea McKenzie
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RIMBEY REVIEW 3
MLA Nixon discusses caucus, other concerns with council BY AMELIA NAISMITH Keeping good on an election promise, Rimbey-Rocky Mountain House-Sundre MLA Jason Nixon dropped in for a short, scheduled visit with the Town of Rimbey council during its Oct. 14 meeting. “One of the commitments I made during the election is I would meet with all 15 elected bodies in the district at least twice a year,” said Nixon.
Nixon told council government sessions resume Oct. 26 and Albertans can expect more debt than the province has had to face in a long time. “We know they are going to table the budget on Oct. 27. Nixon says another challenge with the caucus is it is “light on rural representation.” “And we worked very hard to educate them,” he added. Council feels this is sig-
nificant because it recently received a letter from the Government of Alberta awarding Rimbey with another $806, 333 for a series of projects; including but not limited to an emergency generator, well water construction and well water generator installation. Mayor Rick Pankiw says at first the projects were not a priority for the government but now funding is being given. This follows
FCSS receives high scored from Accreditation Canada BY AMELIA NAISMITH Despite accreditation not being mandatory, Rimbey FCSS decided to undergo an accreditation review by Accreditation Canada to see how it stacks up against other similar organizations. “We embarked on the whole accreditation process … particularly in the health care field,” said director Peggy Makofka. The decision was made a year and a half ago and surveyors came out earlier this month to see how the organization scored in approximately 57 different standards. “We were able to meet or exceed 88 per cent,” said Makofka. Makofka says areas including client safety, quality, education of staff, technology, disaster planning, leadership and community involvement were all looked at. After first entering an agreement with Accreditation Canada Rimbey FCSS was given a framework template to follow in order to further improve itself. “And then we pulled together our policies and practices,” said Makofka. During the surveyors inspection a number
of groups related to FCSS were interviewed for a full picture of its impact; including staff, managers, clients, board members and community partners. Makofka says the next step will be for FCSS to receive a formal letter from Accreditation Canada, in part summarizing its findings. While she cannot be certain, Makofka thinks the letter will say Rimbey FCSS needs just a little more work before accreditation can happen. Makofka feels the largest benefit coming out of the process is the guarantee it provides to the community that rural Rimbey can provide the same standard of care expected across the country. “I think that’s reassuring to people living in a small community.” Rimbey FCSS is also a vendor with Alberta Health Services and Makofka says the outcome is also a reassurance for them, especially if there comes a time in the future when the home care contract becomes a competition. For those interested in learning more about Rimbey FCSS Makofka encourages them to contact the organization, which is located in the provincial building in Rimbey.
bureaucratic representation of Rimbey to the government, including Nixon. “It’s ironic two weeks after they go and meet on our behalf we have a grant … whether or not they have anything to do with it.” Nixon told council he is unwilling to play politics with municipal issues until given go-ahead from councils. He says if MLAs and municipal-
ities are on the same page saying the same things there is a chance for better results. Pankiw also told Nixon he is concerned counties are receiving the bulk of the money from linear assessments and he wants to know where the Opposition stands on the matter. “I know the old Opposition was in favor of it.” “The Opposition’s prima-
ry concern is rural Alberta still getting its fair shake of whatever comes out of that,” said Nixon. He feels there needs to be a balance between towns and counties but says the larger concern is making sure the majority of the money is not funneled into Calgary and Edmonton. “Rural and urban Alberta have to work together.
Town of Rimbey looks to create new mission and vision statement BY AMELIA NAISMITH Creating a mission statement, vision statement and core values for the Town of Rimbey was tabled at council’s Oct. 14 meeting, as Mayor Rick Pankiw wanted staff to be able to take the duty home and come up with individual ideas. Interim CAO Donna Tona provided a series of questions in an engaging workbook to help council and staff work through their ideas. Tona feels the town’s old mission statement is too wordy. “Nobody understands what we do.” “Part of a mission should be short and easy to memorize.
People need to understand who we are and what we do,” she added. Tona told council a vision statement, different from the goal of the mission statement, needs to relay what the town
inspires to be. Tona was looking to possibly have all three hammered out by the end of the evening but Pankiw wanted more time and discussion were pushed until council’s next meeting.
The committee of the Rimbey Lions Golf Tournament, would like to Thank, the Best Western Hotel, for their donation.
Community
Halloween Dance
At Rimbey Eye Care, Rocky Eye Care and Red Deer Eye Care Centres
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Oct. 26-30th
4 RIMBEY REVIEW
Connie Johnson Sales
sales@rimbeyreview.com
Treena Mielke Editor
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2015
Holiday aren’t meant to be perfect, they’re meant to be real
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Michele Rosenthal Publisher
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Letters to the Editor Policy The Rimbey Review welcomes letters to the Editor, especially those dealing with topical or local issues. Letters should be a maximum of 500 words in length and must have the writer’s signature over printed name, along with the writer’s address and telephone number. The address and telephone number will not be printed. This newspaper reserves the right to edit letters for length and legal considerations. Deadline is noon the Thursday prior to publication. Send your letter to: The Editor, Rimbey Review, Box 244, Rimbey, AB T0C 2J0 or email: reporter@rimbeyreview.com
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Amelia Naismith The older you get the more complicated the holidays become. When I was a young child I couldn’t wait to grow up and graduate from the ‘kids table’, pulled of its hiding place for family Thanksgiving dinner. Not only was the ‘grownup table’ made of actual wood rather than colored plastic with Fisher Price stamped on the side but it sat in the fancy dining room rather than the regular old kitchen. When I finally hit mid-
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Red Deer, Alberta Published every Tuesday by PNG Prairie Newspaper Group in community with: President: Mary Kemmis
tional quirks that because they’re so glaring opposite of what a holiday is painted as seem all the more offensive during the holidays. Been an adult at Thanksgiving means noticing two sisters excitedly plan their Black Friday adventure while the third pretends not to hear and painstakingly focuses her attention anywhere else because she can’t go. Being an adult means having to bite your tongue when a cousin’s less than
liked boyfriend turns masochistic over dish-washing culture because adult can refrain from making a scene and treat someone with respect, even if they don’t deserve it. But being an adult at Thanksgiving also means watching the light in someone’s eyes as they think about their future children possibly growing up in Australia. It means being equal enough to lift someone’s spirits when they’re feeling low over what’s really under that
missed shopping trip and it means knowing enough to respect a person’s life and partner choices — even if he acts more like a turkey than the bird did. The world was never meant to be black and white and the good without the bad wouldn’t be nearly as special or appreciated. Amelia Naismith is the new reporter for the Leduc/Wetaskiwin Pipestone Flyer and writes a regular column for the paper.
Thinking of something to write
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teens and was allowed to move up in stature I spent my first few holidays in a haze of self-congratulatory pomp, cushy chairs and actual elbowroom. But being an adult, especially around the holidays, when stress and tensions run higher than usual, isn’t the glamorous cakewalk it looked like from the other side. Now conversations turn to the future as much as they do the past and it just doesn’t always seem as rosy. Lessons I’ve learned include being grateful for health, goodwill and freedom, and graciously putting on a happy face while standing on the brink of change; even if it means families moving across the country or even world for love. Change like that is always bittersweet but as people grow their worlds can be expected to grow too. No family is perfect and each one has its dysfunc-
Every once and a while I manage to smuggle a contraband copy of the Rimbey Review out of the Ponoka County. I have some family and friends in the neighbouring communities that like to read my column from time to time. One of those friends is Hobbes, whose own father manages to piece together a column of his own for the Saturday printing a Red Deer newspaper. Hobbes has witnessed firsthand
the difficulties a writer can have each week in conjuring up a new piece of writing — I can empathize with Hobbes’ father. Hobbes and I were having one of our infamous weekly steak sandwich debriefs in Red Deer: we basically update one another on each other’s lives and try, with our limited collective knowledge, to understand current affairs. My friend asked me how I was managing the academic life at RDC and still contributing a column each week. It is easy I replied: I usually self-acknowledge a unique thought I may have and if that thought keeps appearing over a couple of
days, I wrestle that thought into a Word processing document file, sleep on it, reread it a few times, edit, and then e-mail (what now is a column) to my editor. Other times I rely on something crazy that to happen that is worth writing about. Maybe a bull will attack me in a parking lot, or maybe I decide to ride my motorcycle through the Bower Mall, or maybe I suffer from a severe allergic reaction from bee sting while writing a mid-term at RDC. None of those things have happened yet though. The conversation Hobbes and I were having shifted from what I write about to some of Hobbes’ scary
notions towards a pending world war three. It wasn’t a direct conversational leap — the topic to topic flow of our casual discussion had some intermediate steps. I asked Hobbes if he would ever join the military if a large scale global conflict broke out. He said no. And then he redirected the question to me; and I answered that I didn’t know if I would enlist or not… The bill came and Hobbes and I went on our separate ways. I had the commute from Red Deer to Rimbey to think; and maybe, I was thinking, I would write something more philosophical than political or pop cultural.
As fast as a thought can come and go, a couple of deer came out of the Blind Man River valley near the intersection of highway twenty-two and highway twelve. I struck the second deer dead on in the truck I was driving. I watched the body of the deer skid sideways off the west side of the road. I pulled over and inspected the truck. There was minimal damage to the front bumper; nothing was leaking. I looped back and did my best to scan for any signs of the animal. The vanquished deer had vanished into the tall grass of the ditch. Life is fragile — I thought.
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Rimbey volunteer received Seniors Service volunteer award BY AMELIA NAISMITH A long time Rimbey volunteer was recently awarded a coveted Alberta Senior’s Service Award, receiving recognition at the Alberta Government House by Sarah Hoffman, Minister of Seniors, and MLA Jason Nixon. The service award is an accolade an individual or group must be nominated for and when Gladys Johnson returned from holidays earlier this year she found the papers were already drawn up in her name. “There were four groups involved in my nomination,” said Johnson, referring to the Wooddale Ladies, the Rimbey Hospital Auxiliary, Rimbey and District Old Timers and the Rimbey and District Drop In Centre. “(I’m) very humbled and a little bit unbelieved (sic),” said Johnson. The Government of Alberta received a total of 81 nominations this year, says Johnson, and chose eight recipients. Johnson says the actual banquet and celebration was quite elegant with other recipients came from as far away as Grande Prairie and Youngstown. “I found all the others were people that did wonderful contributions.” In the name of volunteering, Johnson first joined the Wooddale Ladies 60 years ago for the social aspect as well the benefits it would provide to the community. “I think the overall picture is you start of volunteer because you see a need and a purpose rather than going along for the ride.” Johnson joined the Hospital Auxiliary in the 1980s, the Old Timers in 1994 and the Drop In Centre in the early 2000s. “The Drop In Centre was the biggest thing because Rimbey has so many seniors,” said Johnson. “The old drop in they had was purely inadequate in size.” Johnson teamed up with another Rimbey woman, who now serves as the president of the Drop In Centre to get the ball rolling on a project to create something better. While admiring the other recipients Johnson says they were mainly focused on manors and extended care, which differs from her views on seniors’ volunteerism impacts. She highlights the goal of the Drop In Centre it to keep seniors as active as possible for as long as possible. “And I think that’s the big purpose.”
Gladys Johnson (center left) received a 2015 Minister’s Seniors Service Award for her volunteerism in the community, Oct. 6. Submitted Photo
RIMBEY REVIEW 5
6 RIMBEY REVIEW
Letter Dear Editor, To all of the Good People in Alberta, and especially those in Rimbey, and the immediate surrounding area: I am a native Albertan, born in Innisfail, and spent most of my life on the farm just East of Innisfail. I moved to the Rimbey area just over five years ago. This is a gorgeous area to live in, and the people are awesome! I have been here to watch the fiasco with Joe Anglin begin and end. It was good to see the end of that era, as it was an embarrassment for the constituency. The difference between Joe and the government we have now is, Joe wasn’t dangerous, just arrogant and stupid. Now we have a majority government who is dangerous because most of the elected members have no clue how to run anything, and yes, some are simply stupid. Unfortunately, there is no fix for stupid.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2015
Did Albertans make the right decision? Now we get to the reason for my letter. I’m not a politically minded person, and I have never written a letter to any paper, for any reason, let alone a politically motivated one. This is my first, and I am expressing my disappointment and disgust with the government our fellow Albertan’s have chosen. No one I have had a conversation with has admitted to voting NDP, but someone did, so they must be too embarrassed to admit it, or my world is too small. I’m sure the real fact is my world is too small. The NDP won the election with brilliant use of Social Media. For them it was a secret election. Nobody knew where they were or what they were doing until it was way too late to do anything about it. Shame on the PC’s! They recruited the last generation and a half of young Albertans. The ones who have lived a lifetime of entitlement,
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and have no idea what it means to actually work for a living or pay their own way. They fit right into the NDP mentality. The government will take care of me, I don’t need to work hard or take any risks. Life will be good if I vote for the NDP. I know because they told me so. As a native Albertan, I’m embarrassed! I’m embarrassed that my fellow Albertans have elected a Socialist Government. It goes against every fiber of my being to accept that the entrepreneurial spirit of my fellow Albertans has been overshadowed and outvoted by the other Albertans who feel so entitled that they want $15/day childcare and all the other handouts promised by the NDP government. My question is who is going to pay for this? Seriously folks, who will pay? Our new government has barely been seen, but they’ve managed to pass a substantial pay-raise for themselves, promise that no public employees will
lose their jobs, and promise an ongoing energy royalty review. The NDP have been in office for half a year now! What is our tax money paying these people to do? I don’t know if it’s true, but I heard our Environment Minister traveled to BC and campaigned with a friend against Alberta pipelines. That’s awesome, isn’t it? That shows support for the Alberta economy from one of our sitting members of parliament, not! How can this government make the statement that no public sector jobs will be lost, when the people who pay the taxes that support these jobs are losing their jobs by the thousands? I’m simply asking the question. How is that possible, and how does that compute? This governments ongoing royalty review, refusal to table a budget until after the federal election in hope that a Federal NDP government will be elected, has stopped all oil and gas energy related work. As a result, Albertans have lost thousands of jobs,
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and all of Canada, not just Alberta, have lost their primary revenue source. If Canadians elect an NDP government, we as Albertans, and eventually all of Canada will be the laughing stock of the primary economies of the world. The energy giants will likely be prepared to deal with an NDP government in Alberta, for what amounts to 3.5 years now, as they have already wasted 10% of their mandate. However, I can assure you, if Canadians elect an NDP Federal Government, the billions in energy royalties and all the financial benefits all Canadians enjoy, will be gone! And lastly, Mr. Hart. Mr. Hart states right in his article that 70 per cent of Alberta’s exports are from the oil and gas industry. Mr. Mulcair’s people say that to meet the NDP’s environmental goals that Alberta’s energy might just have to stay in the ground. I guess that means Alberta has just lost 70 per cent of its income. How much of that revenue goes to the rest of Canada in transfers? I can tell you it’s a lot!! I don’t know what the numbers are, but the NDP does. But they won’t tell you because if they did, you wouldn’t vote for them in a thousand years. Agriculture has not been forgotten about. I am an Alberta farmer, and we farmers benefit just as much as anyone else from a strong economy. Do I think we need to diversify our economy in Alberta? Of course I do, and I can likely speak for almost every other Albertan as well. No one in Alberta enjoys the highs and lows in the energy industry. But “HELLO”! We can’t shut down 70 per cent of our economy and then start to come up with diversification plans. We need to work into it so it becomes a seamless transition.
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Mr. Hart is way off the mark if he thinks for a moment that other countries have lost confidence in Canada. Canada maintained a strong economy longer that any of the other major economies in the world. Canada has in fact been envied by many other countries for their ability to maintain a strong economy with so much global turmoil. Our dollar hasn’t dropped because our economy is weak; our dollar has dropped because the American dollar has the appearance of being strong. Could that have something to do with the trillions of dollars the Federal Reserve is printing and injecting into the American economy? Nobody cares about the silly little scandals, Mr. Hart. People care about the economy and their livelihoods. They care about how they are going to feed their families. Do you think anybody really cares about Mike Duffy or the Senate? I doubt it. Will you personally volunteer to sit across the table from an ISIS member wearing a suicide vest and packing an AK-47 to diplomatically resolve the conflict in the Middle East? I think not but if so, you have my vote! And you Mr. Hart, have you ever had a real job where you had to be accountable for something? You’ve served on boards and committees and councils and blah, blah, blah. Not to mention your strong Labor Union association. I don’t see anything in here where you could be held personally accountable for anything you’ve done. As you can see, I am not a union supporter, and I doubt you will find very many strong union supporters in Alberta. Even the young naïve voters who voted NDP in the Alberta election aren’t likely strong Union Supporters. My guess is they likely didn’t even think about it. That’s my rant Folks, I hope I haven’t offended too many of you. I had to get it off my chest, and if I didn’t make it heard then I would have no right to complain about it. My sincere hope is that the Albertans who elected an NDP government realize what a huge mistake they made, and the people of Canada wake up in time to avoid making the same mistake federally, as 40 per cent of Albertans made provincially. Gerald Ernst Rural Rimbey
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2015
Harper muzzled Canada
Letters Dear Editor: The various results of the past years of Stephen Harper’s Conservative government give me grave concern. His government seems to have a strong theme of muzzling and restriction, with decisions being made at one level
RIMBEY REVIEW 7
(the top) with little or no debate and discussion. MPs have been muzzled as they are instructed to vote along party lines — which does not allow for them to listen to their constituents and represent them appropriately in government. Effective debate in parliament is muzzled through
burying key pieces of legislation in omnibus bills of massive length— so that it is impossible to read them and cogently respond and debate. Scientists have been muzzled as their funding is cut and as they are prevented from sharing important research both with their colleagues
Get off the sidelines Dear Editor, I wanted to share my excitement regarding the fitness opportunities in Rimbey. I see we have Zumba, Taekwon Dow, Functional fitness, boot camps and various other drop-in opportunities. My class on Tuesdays and Thursdays has a really nice dedicated group that works hard to schedule fitness into their week. I am excited for them. More can be done in our little community. With heart disease the second leading cause of death in Canada (behind #1 cancer) it is interesting to note that it is 100 per cent preventable (provided you have no pre-existing congenital issues). I challenge you parents who take the time to drive your kids to Taekwon Dow and then sit on the sidelines watching to get in there and join. Children notice what you do in your spare time. Children do not gain self-esteem from parents watching them, but from doing things that challenge them and becoming proficient. There are no studies that state,
“parents need to watch their kids exercise to support them”. As a matter of a fact dance studios often will not allow parents to watch, kids in music lessons don’t have their parents watch. Even when my kids were in gymnastics I was astounded at the number of parents sitting watching. Why not leave and go for a big walk or hit the gym and lift weights? In 30 minutes you have enough time to complete a full body workout that will improve cardio vascular function, lower blood pressure, increase bone density and elevate your mood. Imagine a whole hour? Fitness is not about weight, looks or vanity. It is about showing our children we love ourselves as much as we love them and we are willing to take care of ourselves and make time for fitness for ourselves, and them. Join something for yourself, join something with your kids, but seriously, don’t let them see you sitting on the sidelines doing nothing.
Rimbey is going to see an influx of cowboys this Halloween as the Invitational Bronc Riding and Tie-down Roping Jackpot is scheduled to be held at the Rimbey Agrim Centre on Oct. 31. Event organizer Tim Edge says champion bronc rider Frank Wyzykowski is supplying the horses and his brother Dean Edge will bring the calves. “It’s just a chance for the public to come and watch an event at the center in conjunction with some Halloween activities for the kids,” said Edge. The jackpot also gives the community a sneak peek at this year’s Canadian Finals Rodeo (CFR) contenders, as Edge says the event is invi-
tational only and is putting a priority on the world’s top rodeo athletes. Held 15 days before the CFR starts Edge says this jackpot is also giving the cowboys a kind if practice run before they saddle up. “It’s giving them an opportunity to get on some world class bucking horse,” said Edge. For the ropers, they will be able to test their skills on topnotch cattle in front of the Rimbey crowd. “It gives them an opportunity to tone up and bone up before what could be the biggest rodeo of their careers,” said Edge. The festivities begin at 7 p.m. with those 10 years old and younger getting in free. “Kids are welcome to come dressed up, with the possibility of a costume
I hope all Canadians thoughtfully consider how they vote in this election. In a climate of reducing the average citizen’s ability to express his or her opinions, voting gains even more significance. A variety of worrying measures have been introduced under Stephen Harper, at many levels, which have radically changed the nature of Canadian government and decision-making and it is time for a change.
For myself, I would act on my concerns and vote anything but conservative, but my family was transferred out of the country through work, and — in spite of being a Canadian tax payer, a Canadian citizen born and bred, and a current student completing graduate work at a Canadian university — I am not allowed to vote. Muzzled indeed. Sincerely, Jennifer Bell
GOOD HEALTH ISN’T CONTAGIOUS. INFLUENZA IS. CHANCES ARE YOU WILL BE EXPOSED TO INFLUENZA THIS SEASON.
Protect Yourself. Protect Others. Get Immunized.
Upcoming Immunization Clinics in Your Area DATE:
TIME:
LOCATION: Lacombe 15103KA0
Melinda McLauchlin
Rimbey to host Bronc Riding and Tie-down Roping Jackpot BY AMELIA NAISMITH
and with the general public — meaning that our society makes decisions (on an individual level, as well as at the level of policy-making) without a full and clear understanding of the consequences of those decisions. Even voters have been muzzled— as is evidenced through the events of the electoral irregularities during the “robocalls scandal” and the subsequent (worrying) changes to Elections Canada.
Ponoka Rimbey
Buck Lake
*Appt required for Nov 9. Call 403-783-4491 for appt.
contest,” said Edge. As more information on the event is made available it will be posted on the Mountain Edge Productions and Rimbey Agricultural Society Facebook pages as well as the Rimbey Agricultural Society website.
Ponoka
#whychanceit? | www.ahs.ca/influenza | Call Health Link 811
Rimbey Denture Clinic 30 years of experience to better serve you
Complete • Partial • Relines • Immediates • Repairs
Danny Jones
403.843.2777 4915 – 50 Ave, East of Rimbey Value Drug Mart
8 RIMBEY REVIEW
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2015
Rimbey Minor Hockey looks to create well-rounded players BY AMELIA NAISMITH Rimbey Minor Hockey’s pre-season is already underway and the organization is looking to host another year filled with instilling a love of the sport into athletes of all ages and levels. President Jason Ryden says the organization focuses as much on life skills, such as teamwork and confidence building is it does actual hockey. “For the most part, until Peewee, you’re developing kids to play to the next level or hockey for life,” said Ryden. Hockey for life is the concept young players have such a positive experience in minor hockey they continue to play after they have aged out of the program in any level, from competitive
’RE ! WE C K
to recreational, purely for love of the sport. “For us that’s our goal … to give them development skills,” said Ryden. This season Rimbey Minor Hockey has approximately 11 teams playing, ranging from Mites to Midget. Ryden says some of the teams are split small enough skill development can become an even bigger focus than what it has been in the past. Smaller teams also allows for half-ice games, which gives players more opportunities to get on the ice. Ryden says this practice will see many benefits. “The more times kids are on the ice and the more repetition the more they’ll enjoy it.” More games on the ice leads to more shifts per
player and Ryden says this will help players who did not always have a chance to get their sticks on the puck to be more engaged and make a difference with their team; rather then only the fastest and strongest players. “In the end it might attract more people to play hockey,” said Ryden. “It’s not just for the success of wins and loses and compete, compete, compete. It’s about those life skills,” he added. Ryden explains having half-ice games will also help alleviate ice time scheduling, which have been an issue in the past as Minor Hockey is not the only group in town looking to use the ice. “It’s a challenge but I think the coaches and the parents are open to the opportunity.”
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Rimbey Minor Hockey Novice 1 and 2 teams practice their offensive and defensive skills, Oct. 7. Amelia Naismith Photo
2015 FALL PRODUCER MEETINGS & ELECTIONS
Public Sale of Land (Municipal Government Act) Town of Rimbey Notice is hereby given that, under the provisions of the Municipal Government Act, Town of Rimbey will offer for sale, by public auction, in the Council Chambers, of the Town of Rimbey Administration Building on Monday October 26, 2015, at 11:00 a.m., the following parcels:
Roll No 11270 14750
Lot 21 18
Block 16 F
Plan 234KS 6114HW
C of T 022 247 662 932 262 550
Reserve Bid $103,230.00 $119,760.00
Redemption of a parcel of land offered for sale may be effected by certiÀed payment of all arrears, penalties and costs at any time prior to the auction. Each parcel of land offered for sale will be subject to a reserve bid and to the reservations and conditions contained in the existing certiÀcate of title. The lands are being offered for sale on an “as is, where is” basis, and the Municipality makes no representation and gives no warranty whatsoever as to the suitability of the lands for any intended use by the successful bidder. GST will apply to all properties subject to GST sold at the auction. The purchaser of the property will be responsible for property taxes for the current year. The successful bidder must, at the time of the sale, make a non-refundable ten percent (10%) deposit in cash, certiÀed cheque or bank draft payable to the municipality, with the balance of the purchase price due within thirty (30) days of the sale. No terms or conditions of sale will be considered other than those speciÀed by the municipality. The auctioneer, councillors, the chief administrative ofÀcer and the designated ofÀcers and employees of the municipality must not bid or buy any parcel of land offered for sale, unless directed by the municipality to bid for or buy a parcel of land on behalf of the municipality. If no offer is received on a property or if the reserve bid is not met, the property cannot be sold at the public auction. Once the property is declared sold to another individual at public auction the previous owner has no further right to pay the tax arrears. The risk of the property lies with the purchaser immediately following the auction. The purchaser will be required to execute a Sale Agreement in form and substance provided by the municipality. The purchaser is responsible for obtaining vacant possession. The purchaser will be responsible for the transfer registration fee. The municipality may, after the public auction, become the owner of any parcel of land that is not sold at the public auction. Lori Hillis, Acting Chief Administrative OfÀce Managed by TAXervice Town of Rimbey
ZONE 6
(MEETINGS 7 p.m. START, FREE SUPPER AT 6 p.m.)
OCT 27
CAMROSE, REGIONAL EXHIBITION
OCT 29
PONOKA, LEGION HALL 15103AA2
NOV 2
BRETON, COMMUNITY HALL
ZONE 6 INCLUDES: Ponoka County; Beaver County; County of Wetaskiwin; Strathcona County; County of Camrose; Leduc County; Parkland County; Brazequ County; Improvement District No. 13; Edmonton.
403.275.4400
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2015
RIMBEY REVIEW 9
Long time Bentley volunteer moves on BY JUNE NORVILA She was Queen of the Hill and an honored guest for an afternoon. Long time volunteers are sure to be missed and it is no different at the Bentley Care Centre. A farewell tea was held honoring Alice Park who has given of her time for 21 years. “She didn’t want anything formal or too big as she doesn’t like that kind of thing,” said Donna Park, the Bentley Care Centre Rec Therapy Assistant, so the farewell tea with residents, staff, other volunteers and a few other guests was planned. Donna Park presented the humble Alice with a floral table centerpiece and a framed certificate from the town of Bentley that stated ‘in recognition and appreciation of 21 years of dedicated service to the Bentley Care Centre’. A collage of photos of Alice assisting at different types of events over the years was on display. Alice Park started volunteering on November 10, 1994 when the Bentley Care Centre was still the Bentley General Hospital. She started by setting and combing out hair for three ladies on a weekly basis. There was no hair salon on site at the time. Her volunteerism branched out and expanded from there. She helped with outings and events of all kinds and aided with decorating the place both inside and out, especially for different times of the year. She assisted with ongoing horticulture programs, bus trips and tours, around town events, special events, and just in general did whatever she could to help enhance the resident’s
quality of life. “She was strategically placed so she could help a number of residents at the same time with (weekly) bingos,” explained Donna. “Anything asked of her she willingly did. I was never turned down.” When Alice was asked what part she liked best she answered, “I enjoyed everyone (all the different Care Centre projects that she helped with). I loved the kids (when the Mom and Tots Intergenerational program was active). I especially enjoyed the RCMP dog tours and going to greenhouses.” Alice and husband Dale moved from Edmonton to Bentley in 1969. The Parks always saved space on the sidewalk in front of their house for care centre residents to park chairs and wheelchairs to view the annual parade. That way, care centre residents and staff never had to worry about lining up early to get a good spot for viewing. The Park’s residence was right across the street from the care centre and directly on the parade route. The Parks have sold their Bentley home and are now renting a condominium in Red Deer. “The house and yard work just got to be too much work. There will be no more grass to mow, no snow to shovel,” she says. Alice says she has two daughters so close by that she can walk to their place. When asked if she will volunteer in Red Deer Alice said, “I haven’t thought it through. The first thing is to get settled. I will miss them (the residents and the other people).” Over the 21-year span, Alice has seen five different recording systems and three different volunteer
Richardur’sant
Familyy Resta
Richard’s Family Restaurant at the Best Western Rimstone Ridge Hotel Hours of Operations 11:00AM - 8:30PM CLOSED on TUESDAY’S ONLY, reason ... gone for flapper pie at the Auction Mart!!! Prime Rib Special Every Saturday Night don’t miss it!
coordinators so some of her volunteer hours were probably lost, and sometime Alice just did not officially record her hours. Her documented hours of volunteerism had reached 1948.75 but it is estimated that it is probably only about 2/3 of the actual time she helped. Her volunteerism at the Bentley Care Centre officially ended September 29 but she told some residents she would try to come back for a visit. Alice Park will be greatly missed by residents, and staff, and other co-volunteers alike. She has touched the lives of so many.
Alice Park (right) was honored for her volunteerism at the Bentley Care Centre at a farewell tea on October 8 in the resident’s dining room. Donna Park, the Bentley Care Centre Rec Therapy Assistant, thanked her for 21 years of devoted service and presented her with flowers and a framed certificate. June Norvila Photo
FortisAlberta to purchase VNM REA electricity system assets
VNM Rural Electrification Association (REA) members have voted to sell their electricity system assets to FortisAlberta. At a recent special general meeting, 97 per cent of members voted in favour to sell these assets. VNM REA is located in the Barrhead and Westlock County area, northwest of Edmonton. The sale, valued at $16.0 million, has been approved by the Alberta Utilities Commission (AUC), the agency responsible for the regulation of electricity distribution utilities in Alberta. VNM REA members, who collectively own the REA’s assets, will receive more than $25,000 for each service. This sale follows the acquisition of Kingman REA by FortisAlberta, also recently approved by the AUC.
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“Selling VNM REA’s electricity system assets to FortisAlberta is the most appropriate course of action for our members,” says Richard Hadley, President, VNM REA. “We are proud of our long history and what we have accomplished, however, times have changed and our membership understands the enormous complexity of running an REA. We are selling our assets to a trusted partner and a qualified and reliable electricity utility and this was overwhelmingly supported by our members.” FortisAlberta has a long-standing relationship with VNM REA and has partnered with them to operate their electricity distribution system for 65 years. “It has been a privilege to serve the VNM REA members since 1950 and work alongside the VNM REA Board of Directors throughout this process,” says Phonse Delaney, President and CEO, FortisAlberta. “We appreciate the overwhelming show of support from VNM members and we look forward to continuing to provide safe and reliable electricity distribution service to them as customers of FortisAlberta.”
FortisAlberta serves the electricity needs of farms, businesses and homes in more than 200 communities across rural Alberta. The Company’s focus is the safe and reliable delivery of electricity with more than 120,000 kilometres of power lines.
10 RIMBEY REVIEW
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2015
Church
Directory Diirec Directory D irect i ec ctory ct y
Grace Lutheran Church Bentley - ELCIC Worship 11:15 a.m. 4th Sunday of the month 5 p.m. Reverend David Holmes 403-843-2502 5 miles west, 1.5 miles south, 1 mile west of Bentley
“Sharing New Life in Christ”
Rimbey New Life Fellowship Sunday 10:30 a.m. Children’s Church 11:30 a.m. Midweek Service - Wednesday 7 p.m. Ladies Meeting Friday 2 p.m. Pastor Reg Darnell 403-843-3336 (Office) 403-782-2694 (Home) 5038 - 49 Ave. • www.rimbeynewlife.com
Practice time: The Rimbey Spartans practice for the tougher and second half of the season. The team takes on Brooks in an away game on Oct. 22. Amelia Naismith Photo
Church of the Nazarene, Rimbey
BUYING OR SELLING? We do it all!
Sunday Worship & Sunday School 10:30 a.m. (on Radio 93.3 FM) Multiple listing service
5214-51 Street, Phone: 403-843-2029 Pastor Grant Rainey
ANGLICAN CHURCH OF THE EPIPHANY 5211 52 St., Rimbey
Service & Sunday School: 9:30 a.m. 4th Sunday Family Service: 11:00 a.m. Reverend David Holmes: 403-843-2502
Stuart Adams: 403-843-6164 or Arlene Edwards: 403-843-6077 www.churchofepiphany.ca
Th e Rimbey Seventh-Day Adventist Church Saturdays
Evangelical Missionary Church 1/2 mile East of Hoadley on Highway #611
Sabbath School at 9:45 a.m. Worship Service at 11:00 a.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
Pastor David Beaudoin 403-783-2499
Pastor: Rev. Barry Klassen 403-843-6461
Zion Lutheran Church
OFFICE: 403-843-7736 ICE! NEW PR
5312 Drader Cre Crescent. New laminate flooring throughout, h h new carpeting, master with ensuite, fireplace in livingroom. All appliances are stainless and included, Large shed, private patio area. 5 Bed, 3 baths. Quick poss. MLS CA0061486 $240,000 Call Dawna for viewing
33018 Iola Rd Bluffton, CA0062688 Only $280,000 15 acres, 3 bed, 2 baths 1452 sq ft. Privacy galore is provided with this acreage. Each bdrm has a walk in closet, beautiful deck, 2 extra balconies, vltd ceilings, jetted tub. Walkout bsmt & attic that could be used as an add’l awesome living space. Call Dawna for viewing
THIS IS A BEAUTIFUL 2 storey family home. In floor heat, oversized garage, fireplace in family room, high quality standards of construction. 4630 53 Ave. MLS CA0044701 Call Dawna for viewing
4625 54 Avenue, Rimbey. MLS CA0062543 $189000 Freshly painted, 3 D car garage, beds, eds, 2 baths,S 1368 ft Single OsqL large rge lots, large sunroom, quick possession. Call Dawna for viewing.
9.74 Acres, well treed, no exit road. Close to Parkland Beach. 3 bdrms, 1 bath, appliances, hot tub, pellet stove, and a huge deck! Call Wendy for More Info.
REDUCED!! IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! Starter Home Or Revenue Property. Large Corner Lot, Zoned R2. $99,900 Call Wendy.
4921 58 Ave. 5 bdrms, 3 bath, completely ompletely finished basement, GREAT floor plan,S all appliances, OLDback deck, nicely icely landscaped QUICK Possession! Call Wendy For A Viewing.
Excellent Starter Home Or Revenue Property! 3 bdrms, all appliances, Open floor plan. Move In & Enjoy! REDUCED To $174,900 Call Wendy for more info.
NEW PRICE 6 beds, 6 baths. 2.5 acres, double garage, in town. BEAUTIFUL HOME, wrap around covered deck and so much more. $799,000. Call Jeff.
3 bed, 3 bath, full size basement, lots of extra fenced yard well kept, double garage, cement driveway, NEW ROOF. Quick POSSESSION. $335,000. Call Jeff.
CEDAR LOG HOME on full quarter, close to pavement, fenced and cross fenced. Very Good Steel Corrals, great for horses, well treed. $997,000. Call Jeff.
Nice size home with lots of extras 2 car garage double lot recent upgrades and more $249,000. Call Jeff Today.
JEFF’S FEATURES OF THE WEEK
Lutheran Church Canada Divine Service at 10:30 4521 - 54th Ave. Rimbey
G
ISTIN NEW L
Pastor Mark Schultz Office - 403-843-2767 Home - 403-843-4420
Rimbey Christian Reformed Church 5506-51 Ave Service at 10:00 a.m.
Nursery Provided
403-843-2585 Pastor: Bill Nieuwenhuis
NEW LISTING feels like home this 4 bed home has a full basement nice open floor plan good size dining and kitchen Jeff Collins fenced back yard GREAT VIEW $349,000 Cell: 403-783-0216 Call Jeff Home: 403-843-2193
GREAT LOCATION fenced yard finished basement beautiful landscaping double garage new shingles quick possession great view ONLY $329,000. Call Jeff
This 5 bedroom home comes with all appliances, double heated garage, fenced yard, close to schools, covered deck. QUICK POSSESSION. $279,900. Call Jeff
WENDY’S FEATURES OF THE WEEK
Rimbey Alliance Church 4620 - 54th Avenue, Rimbey 403-843-3727 10:30 a.m. Worship Service with Children’s Church Last Sunday of the month, service held at Parkland Manor at 10:00 am
RomanMass Catholic Church Times:
Saturday Evening: Sunday Morning: Sylvan Lake - 5:00 p.m. Rimbey - 9:00 a.m. Sylvan Lake -11:00 a.m. Last Sunday of every month:
Sylvan Lake 9:00 a.m.
Wendy Stevenson Cell: 403-704-5520
GREAT LOCATION! Close To Rimbey & Bentley. Great Family Home! 4bdrms, 3 bath, 1.72 acres, nicely landscaped, fenced & a detached Nice Location, Detached 26 x 28 heated garage. The home has 3 bdrms, 2 bath, garage, huge deck, fenced backyard, open floor plan, heated addition & a covered deck. RV parking. QUICK Possession! Quick Possession! $310,00 Call Wendy. $259,900 Call Wendy.
4bdrms, 3 bath, MANY Upgrades, all appliances, Great Landscaping, HUGE Yard! Detached Garage, RV Parking & so much more! Quick Possession! $249,900
DAWNA’S FEATURES OF THE WEEK
Rimbey 11:00 a.m.
Parish Priest: Father Les Drewicki Administration Offi ce: 403-843-2126;
Y
IT RTUN
O T OPP GREA
EWING
NA FOR VI
CALL DAW
Dawna Providenti Cell: 403-350-2706
24 Rolling Drive (Rimbey ey Ridge) 5.21 acres. In floor heat in the basement, hi efficient wood stove, boiler, furnace. Master with walk in closet, ensuite, private balconies throughout. Attached and detached heated garages. 840 sq ft cottage as well. MLS CA0053202. Only $399,000.
RICE NEW P
333018 Iola Rd Bluffton, CA0062688 0062688 Only $280,000 15 acres, 3 bed, 2 baths 1452 sq ft. Privacy galore is provided with this acreage. Each bdrm has a walk in closet, beautiful deck, 2 extra balconies, vltd ceilings, jetted tub. Walkout bsmt & attic that could be used as an add’l awesome living space. Call Dawna for viewing.
OW! ACT N
PARK YOUR RV AND BUILD UILD YOUR DREAM HOME WITHIN 3 YEARS. Modular homes are accepted. Serviced lots. Bigger and better, family friendly. Subdivision offers convenience, beautiful views, minutes to Gull Lake. Call Dawna.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2015
RIMBEY REVIEW 11
Right: Rudy Neiborg placed third in the Foothills Cowboys Association Cowboy Classic with his horse Banjo, who was awarded steer wrestling horse of the year. Below: Rudy Neiborg takes down one of three steers for an average of 21.6 points during the Foothills Cowboys Association Cowboy Classic. Photos courtesy of the Neiborg’s
Rimbey steer wrestler takes third at Cowboy Classic BY AMELIA NAISMITH Rimbey area steer wrestler Rudy Neiborg placed third in the Foothills Cowboys Association (FCA) 60th annual Cowboy Classic, held in Red Deer Oct. 9 to 11. Neiborg was not the only one of his team to come home successful. “My horse was steer wrestling horse of the year. He’s been one of the best horses going down the rode for years.” Neiborg’s horse, Banjo, is so suited for steer wrestling two other cowboys also asked to ride him during the Classic; Brendan Laye and Troy Pollitt, who won first and second, respectively. “I thought that was neat,” said Neiborg. “That’s the finals so that’s were we end up for the year.” “I’ve made it to the finals every year since I’ve had this horse. For me the highlight is my horses,” he added. While Mark Heggie’s Boston took home hazing horse of the year, Neiborg says he is also proud to own
one of the best hazing horses in the business in Drifter. Neiborg rode away from the Cowboy Classic with an average of 21.6 points, approximately $1,600 and 75 season points. These may be the last points Neiborg ever earns through the FCA, as he is looking to retire come the end of the year. “The grind and the bump and the bruises are starting to take their toll.” Neiborg says coming to that conclusion was an incredibly hard decision. “That’s where my friends are at. Basically these guys are my family.” While he will wait and see what spring brings Neiborg says he feels done. He is ready to take more time to ride his horses in the mountains rather than the rodeo arena. Neiborg says he rodeod as a kid but quite for 12 years. He got back into it a decade ago for some great times. “Every spring feels like a family reunion.”
Dedicated 2 You!
Tarney
Bob & Rhonda
Bob’s Cell: 403-704-0110 Rhonda’s Cell: 403-704-0408
E
SIV
U CL
EX
Year round paradise at lake, ½ acre lot, 3 bdrm, 1.5 storey home, dble det’d garage, heated workshop $335,000.
MUST SEE! 1300+ sq. ft. bungalow, 3 bdrm, 3 bath, double detached garage, partially developed bsmt. $244,700.
Quiet, year round retreat SV of Parkland Beach. 4 bdrm, 2 bath, fireplace, detached garage, fenced, garden, & more. $355,000.
WARM & INVITING 4 bdrm, 3 bath bi level, open floor plan, main fl laundry, fenced & more. $359,900.
COMMERCIAL LOTS AVAILABLE! 1600 plus sq ft bungalow c/w 5 bdrms, 2.5 baths, on lot with 150’ frontage close to all amenities. $264,900
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Panoramic View! Amazing natural light in this 4 bdrm 3 ½ bath completely finished bungalow. $358,000.
NEWLY BUILT SENIOR’S CONDO! 2 units available. Spacious, modern décor, large master with shower in ensuite, den & full bath, 24x12 garage. $250,000.
FARM LAND 78.26 acres west of Rimbey, Nature Conservation Reserve directly to the north $160,000 46.43 acres high hay land with gentle slope lots of potential for dream home $225,000
5.91 acres in Bluffton, room for horses, walk to school $124,000.
Central location, 1 block south of main street, $97,000. High profile location on main artery with service road access In high traffic area $165,000.
ICE
PR
Investment potential! Cozy little bungalow with small garage on R2 lot close to downtown. $95,000.
Website: www.mrandmrsrealestate.ca
BEST PRICED residential lot in Rimbey at $59,500. Level lot with full alley access, all services, rear faces south.
Office: 403-843-0100
12 RIMBEY REVIEW
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2015
Compensation available to landowners and farmers for Wetland restoration with DUC (Camrose, Alta.—Oct. 5, 2015) Drained sloughs could be a cash cow for farmers and landowners when they restore these wetland areas with Ducks Unlimited Canada (DUC). And there couldn’t be a better time. DUC is ramping up its presence and activity in Alberta in response to increased priority given to mitigating the effects of drought and flood conditions. Recently, the conservation organization and leader in wetland restoration received additional funding from the Government of Alberta’s Watershed Resiliency and Restoration Program to restore more wetlands in Alberta. As a result, DUC opened a new office in Strathmore and added more field and GIS technical staff to their wetland restoration team to expand their reach. Two DUC wetland restoration programs best suited to farmers and landowners, particularly those who use their land for grazing and/or cropping, are the 10-year lease program and the Revolving Land Purchase (RLP) program. The 10-year lease program provides compensation to landowners based on current fair market value for the restored wetland area. DUC pays for all wetland restoration costs associated with a 10year lease while allowing the landowner to manage the restored area which may include haying or grazing. Alternatively, the RLP program involves the purchase of land from landowners, restoration of wetland and upland habitat, and registration of a conservation easement on the land title. The land is then sold back to the local agricultural community with the assurance that valuable wetland function and natural ecosystems will be maintained for long-term benefit. Proceeds of the land sale are then used to fund more restoration projects by DUC. continued on page 18
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Tuesday, October 20, 2015
RIMBEY REVIEW 13
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announcements Obituaries
Obituaries
ANDERSON METRO On Sunday, October 11, 2015, our dear mother, grandmother, and great grandmother, Ethel Marie Metro of Rimbey, Alberta passed away peacefully at the Rimbey Hospital and Care Centre at the age of 93 years. Ethel was born in Bashaw, Alberta on February 19, 1922, and was the youngest of 19 children. She attended school at the Calumet Country School. Upon completing her schooling, Ethel worked for a family in the Ferintosh area before returning home to look after her mother. After her mother’s passing, she worked on area farms with various family and friends for a few years, as well as traveled to Taber to work on a sugar beet operation. Ethel loved music and dancing, and was known to play the guitar with her sister, Margaret. In 1946, she was united in marriage to Alex Metro, and they began farming together in the Lockhart District west of Bentley. They began their loving family in 1949 with the birth of their daughter, Marlene; their son, James in 1951; and another son, Larry in 1959. Ethel enjoyed a life of hard work and dedication to family, faith and her friends. She enjoyed a good laugh, great food, and a rousing game of cards. Ethel was an active member of the Catholic Women’s League and the Lockhart Ladies Club. In 1979, Ethel and Alex left the farm and moved into Rimbey, where Ethel went to work in the kitchen at the Rimbey Auction Mart for a few years. She moved into the Parkland Manor in 2003, and later to the Rimbey Long Term Care Centre. Ethel loved to go out to the farm and visit with her kids and grandkids…they were each a special light in her life and she enjoyed them all immensely. When the great grandchildren started to come along, she was one very proud great grandma! Ethel will always be remembered for her caring hand, and her kind and loving nature. She will be greatly missed. Ethel will be lovingly remembered by her son, Larry (Bonnie) Metro of Bentley; and her son-in-law, Ray (Lora) Walker also of Bentley. Her legacy will live on through her treasured grandchildren: Cherie Johns, Karen Jaffray, Linda Schneider, Adam Metro, Ashley Campbell, and Amber Walker; as well as her 12 cherished great grandchildren. Ethel was predeceased by her beloved husband, Alex in 1986; her son, James in 1968; and her daughter, Marlene in 1993. Mass of Christian Burial was celebrated at St. Margaret’s Catholic Church, Rimbey on Friday, October 16, 2015 at 11:00 a.m. with the Reverend Father Les Drewicki, Celebrant. Interment followed at 2:30 p.m. in the Bentley Cemetery, Bentley. If friends desire, memorial tributes in Ethel’s Memory may be made directly to the David Thompson Health Trust, c/o Rimbey Hospital and Care Centre ~ Long Term Care, Box 440, Rimbey, Alberta T0C 2J0; or to the charity of one’s choice. Condolences to the Metro Family may also be expressed by e-mail to: special_reflections@telusplanet.net Funeral and Burial Arrangements for the Late Ethel Marie Metro entrusted to the care of OBERHAMMER FUNERAL CHAPELS LTD.
1-403-843-4445
CLASSIFIEDS ANNOUNCEMENTS
1-877-223-3311
Florence May Anderson of Rimbey, Alberta passed away on Sunday, October 11th, 2015 at the age of 78 years. Florence was born on October 26th, 1936 to parents Charles and Olga Irwin. She and her brothers William (Willy) and Albert (Bud) Irwin and sister Hazel grew up on a farm near Gilby, Alberta. She rode her horse to school nearly every day and worked along with family on the farm. After meeting and marrying her husband, Andrew (Andy) Anderson, she applied all of her skills and knowledge that she learned from her devoted mother and hardworking father to raising her four children; George (Ronda) Anderson, Kathy (Barry) Maser, Cheryl (Bob) Langmuir and Carol Anderson on the Anderson family farm East of Rimbey. Florence was a devoted mother and respected rancher whose quality calves that she sold each fall were admired and brought top dollar. She grew grain and baled the hay herself. She grew the best garden and was meticulous about her yard which bloomed with beautiful flowers and had manicured lawns, trees and shrubs. After divorcing and retiring, she remained on the farm. She met a wonderful, intelligent companion, John Crooks of Veteran, Alberta. After losing him, tragedy continued with the loss of her sister, Hazel, and daughters Cheryl and Kathy. She found strength and joy in her nine grandchildren, eleven great-grandchildren, and devoted her time to her garden, flowers and shrubs right until her passing. Funeral Services were held from Wilson’s Funeral Chapel in Rimbey, Alberta on Thursday, October 15th, 2015 at 1:00 pm with Reverend Deborah Laing officiating. Interment followed in the West Haven Cemetery in Rimbey, AB. If friends desire, memorial donations may be made to S.T.A.R.S. Alberta: (Shock Trauma Air Rescue Society) Southern Alberta 1441 Aviation Park N.E. Box 570 Calgary, Alberta T2E 8M7. Expressions of sympathy may be forwarded to the family by visiting www.wilsonsfuneralchapel.ca WILSON’S FUNERAL CHAPEL & CREMATORIUM
serving Central Alberta with locations in Rimbey and Lacombe in charge of the arrangements. Phone: (403) 843-3388 or (403) 782-3366 “A Caring Family, Caring For Families”
Let Your News Ring Ou t A Classified Wedding Announcement Does it Best! 1-877-223-3311 309-3300
14 RIMBEY REVIEW
announcements
Tuesday, October 20, 2015
52
Coming Events
Peace River
LIBERTY HALL
Fall Potluck Supper
Obituaries
SCHOW Annie Jean Aug. 8, 1936 - Oct. 8, 2015 Mrs. Anne Schow formerly of Bentley, Alberta passed away peacefully at the High River Hospital on October 8, 2015 at the age of 79 years. Anne is survived by her daughters Cary (Donald) Northwest, Linda (Roger) Sundquist and Elaine (Richard Gullison) Schow; grandchildren Sara (Mike Terry) McGonigal, Owen (Laken) Rudy, Kirsten Rudy, Skyla Northwest, Heather (Zac Morvis) Rudy and Aspen Northwest; great - grandchildren Ethan, Harper, Sophia, Chloe, Kaylee and Jazlyn; siblings Dorothy Siska and Bruce Herrington. Anne was predeceased by her husband Chris; sons Wayne and Jerry; brother and sister-in-laws John Siska, Robyn Herrington, Vivian and Ken Morrison, Doris and Norm Davis as well as her parents Lydia and William McCurlie. A Funeral Service will be held at the Bentley Grace Lutheran Church in Bentley, Alberta on Thursday, October 15th at 1:00 p.m.. In lieu of flowers memorial donations may be made to the Bentley Grace Lutheran Church (Box 298, Bentley, Alberta, T0C 0J0) or the charity of the donor’s choice. To send condolences and view Anne’s Tribute Page please visit www.lylereeves.com Caring for the family is LYLE REEVES FUNERALS OF HIGH RIVER (403.652.4242).
I would like to thank all of the Emergency Doctors and Nurses at the Rimbey Hospital, as well as the super Home Care Nurses, for all of the good care I received during and after my surgery. We are so fortunate in this community to have such capable, caring and compassionate medical personnel and I am grateful.
Coming Events
#50 - # 70
Arts & Crafts Shows ..................50 Class Registrations....................51 Coming Events ..........................52 Lost ............................................54 Found ........................................56 Companions ..............................58 Personals...................................60 Bingos........................................64 Fitness & Sports ........................66 Happy Ads .................................70
Coming Events
52
Hoadley Annual Meeting Monday, Nov. 9 at 8 pm. Everyone Welcome!
Coming Events
Hoadley Hall Bingo November 2 Doors open at 6:30 Bingo starts at 7:30 Payout pots for Ànal bingo.
52
CAN WEST AAA HOCKEY Free tryouts November 11 Edmonton Kinsmen Arena “B” for Novice Minor 2008 and Novice Major 2007
To qualify for the free tryouts register on the http://canwesthockey.com website. (Players who do not pre register; there will be a $30.00 charge at the door.)
59
ALATEEN
Weekly meetings Tuesdays @ 8 p.m. Neighborhood Place 5110 - 49 Ave. Ponoka For more info. 403-783-4557 or 403-783-8371 Tired of Standing? Find something to sit on in Classifieds
GET MORE COVERAGE WITH YOUR AD
St. Margaret’s Parish
Fall Supper Sunday, Nov. 1 5:00 -7:00 pm Rimbey Community Centre Adults - $14 (11 years & older)
JUST ASK FOR THE
CLASSIFIED N.W. BUY • • • • • •
Ponoka Rimbey Eckville Sylvan Lake Lacombe Pipestone Flyer
Starting at 25 words for $45.90
Ages 6-10 - $6 5 & under - Free Family Rate - $40
Christmas Lights Rimbey
Coming Events
52
will be in Rimbey Sat., Oct. 24th Morning-Evening 3kg - $25 15kg - $100
Meetings
djamesfulton@hotmail.com
CALL NOW TO FIND OUT MORE HOW k
Jim Anderson
DENNIS FULTON
780.864.6285
Whatever You’re Selling... We Have The Paper You Need! CLASSIFIEDS 1-877-223-3311
ANDERSON
HONEY
SILENT AUCTION TO FOLLOW
+
Card Of Thanks
What’s Happening
OCT. 25, 2015 5:30PM
52
Coming Events
Call toll free 1-877-223-3311 or Local 403-309-3300
59
Meetings
AL-ANON WEEKLY MEETING FOR FRIENDS AND FAMILY OF ALCOHOLICS. Tuesdays 8 p.m. Neighborhood Place 5110 - 49 Ave., Ponoka For more info 403-783-4557
This paper is
1Re0cyc0la%ble
52
LOOKING FOR CURLERS Men’s League $200 Monday 7:00 Ladies League $200 Tuesday 7:00 Mixed League $200 Wednesday 7:00 Senior League $150 Thursday 10:00 $100 for each additional league No Experience Necessary! We can teach you the game. rimbeycurlingclub@gmail.com or call Gail @ 403-843-6911 (day)
Employment #700 - #920 Caregivers/Aides................710 Clerical ..............................720 Computer Personnel ..........730 Dental ................................740 Estheticians........................750 Hair Stylists ........................760 Janitorial ............................770 Legal ..................................780 Medical ..............................790 Oilfield ................................800 Professionals......................810 Restaurant/Hotel ................820 Sales & Distributors ..........830 Teachers/Tutors..................840 Trades ................................850 Truckers/Drivers ................860 Business Opportunities......870 Miscellaneous ....................880 Volunteers Wanted ............890 Positions Wanted ..............895 Employment Training ........900 Career Planning ................920
Medical
MEDICAL TRAINEES needed now! Hospitals & doctor’s offices need certified medical office & administrative staff! No experience needed! We can get you trained! Local job placement assistance available when training is completed. Call for program details! 1-888-627-0297.
Restaurant/ Hotel
710
IN HOME caregiver for elderly parents, optional accommodation avail. at no charge on a live in basis, this is not a condition of employment, driving req’d, F/T on farm near Rimbey, $15.75/hr. Equal opportunity employer. Encourage all applicants. email: sbhumphry@gmail.com
Medical
790
HUGE DEMAND for Medical Transcriptionists! CanScribe is Canada’s top medical transcription training school. Learn from home and work from home. Call today! 1-800-466-1535; www. canscribe.com info@ canscribe.com. MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION! In-demand career! Employers have work-athome positions available. Get online training you need from an employertrusted program. Visit: CareerStep.ca/MT or 1-855-768-3362 to start training for your work-athome career today!
Coming Events
52
820
Cameron Bay Holdings Inc. o/a McDonalds’s in Ponoka and Red Deer (Gasoline Alley East and West) is now hiring full time and part time Food Service Supervisors. Wages are between $13.95 to $16.00 per hour, depending upon experience and qualifications. Candidates must be able to work a variety of shifts and have 3 to 5 years previous experience. Must be able to supervisor up to 20 crew. Part-time applications will be accepted from Canadians and Permanent Residents. Apply in person 4419 Hwy 2A, Ponoka, 37479 Hwy 2, Red Deer, and 37428 Hwy 2, Red Deer or email resume to cbay22@telus.net or fax to 403-783-4251. Start your career! See Help Wanted
Oilfield Caregivers/ Aides
790
850
Trades
INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT Operator School. In-the-seat training. No simulators. Real world tasks. Weekly start dates. Funding options. Weekly job board! Sign up online! iheschool.com. 1-866-399-3853. REQ’D IMMEDIATELY EXPERIENCED Sheet Metal and Furnace Installers Top wages, hourly wages. Openings in new home, replacement and service dept. Great working conditions. Please call or e-mail. brent@ comfortecheating.com 403-309-8301
Business Opportunities
870
GET FREE VENDING machines. Can earn $100,000. + per year. All cash-locations provided. Protected territories. Interest free financing. Full details. Call now 1-866-668-6629. Website: www.tcvend.com. GREAT CANADIAN Dollar Store franchise opportunities are available in your area. Explore your future with a dollar store leader. Call today 1-877-388-0123 ext. 229; www.dollarstores.com. Classifieds...costs so little Saves you so much!
800
CONTRACT OPERATOR
A Canadian oil and gas junior is looking for a Contract Operator to work in the Rimbey, Pigeon Lake area at a sour facility. Operator should have at least 5 years of experience in a sour facility and preferably have experience with compression. Shift rotation is 7 and 7. Operator must have valid industry-standard safety training and certifications and will provide own tools and truck. Send resumes to: contractoperatoropportunity@gmail.com on or before October 27, 2015
Trades
850
Quality 2009
IS CURRENTLY SEEKING
• JOURNEYMAN AUTOBODY TECH • AUTO DETAILER Must be self motivated and perform duties w/minimal supervision We offer competitive salary & benefits packages. Please apply in person at 6403 - 44 Avenue, Ponoka, AB or send via e-mail at qpaint@telus.net
Tuesday, October 20, 2015
RIMBEY REVIEW 15
880
Misc. Help
880
Misc. Help
880
Misc. Help
ACADEMIC Express IMAGINE WORKING for a
BEST WESTERN RIMSTONE RIDGE HOTEL
ADULT EDUCATION AND TRAINING
NOV. START • Community Support Worker Program
ROOM ATTENDANT We are seeking an individual who is confident, reliable and has a professional presentation to join • GED Preparation our Housekeeping Team. Gov’t of Alberta Funding You must have attention to detail, strong organizational skills and ability to multitask, communicate with hotel guests, staff and management in a professional manner.
may be available. 403-340-1930 www.academicexpress.ca
This shift will rotate and includes some weekends. Wages are competitive with benefits. Please apply in person or drop resume at front desk: Attention Valerie Business Opportunities
870
Give yourself the gift of owning your own business while helping others create the perfect gift this holiday season • • • • • • •
Have FUN Earn a generous income – set your own hours Be a part of an amazing Team No experience needed/training provided No inventory to purchase Recognition & Rewards Join with Me get a Locket for FREE
Call or text your Independent South Hill Artists Patrice 306-536-2162 or Deb 780-994-9300
Squeeze the
MOST out of your advertising dollars
Place your ad in this newspaper and12345 province wide $ with a combined circulation of over 800,000 for only...
995 plus GST/HST
Value Ad Network
Alberta Weekly Newspapers Association toll free 1-800-282-6903 x228 email andrea@awna.com or visit this community newspaper
Misc. Help
880
NOW HIRING Lydell Group Inc.
WANTED: CLASS 1 DRIVERS FOR LOG HAUL, PROCESSOR OPERATORS 12345 (HORNET,WARATAH, LOGMAX), HEAVY DUTY EQUIPMENT MECHANIC Based out of Drayton Valley Alberta. Competitive wages based on experience, benefits, accommodation, & drives to airport provided. Good equipment.
company that truly believes in their customers. The Grocery People Ltd. (“TGP”) believes in independent grocery retailers and foodservice operators and has been supporting them through the wholesale supply of goods and services for over 50 years. We are currently adding to our retail operations team. You are relaxed and reliable with a demonstrated ability to connect with customers and build lasting relationships. You understand how business works and can think outside the box to create and execute innovative solutions that drive results. Grocery Manager at High Prairie Super A. Located in High Prairie, Alberta, you will be responsible for all aspects of managing a grocery department including marketing, merchandising, gross margins, controlling and human resources management. The successful applicant will have five years of grocery department management experience, along with the ability to be customer service focused, show selfinitiative and leadership skills to achieve the required results. A Grade 12 Diploma (or equivalent) would be an asset and a Clean Security Clearance is required. It offers a competitive compensation and benefit package as well as the opportunity for personal and professional development. If you are interested in a rewarding, challenging career; if you can provide creative solutions through team problem solving while focusing on providing excellent customer service, we would like to hear from you: Human Resources, The Grocery People Ltd., 14505 Yellowhead Trail, Edmonton, AB, T5L 3C4. Fax 780-447-5781. Email: humanresources@tgp.ca. We thank all applicants for their interest, but only those candidates considered for an interview will be contacted.
Employment Training
900
SEEKING A CAREER in the Community Newspaper business? Post your resume for FREE right where the publishers are looking. Visit: awna.com/for-job-seekers. WANT A RECESSION proof career? Power Engineering 4th Class. Work practicum placements, along with an on-campus boiler lab. Residences available. Starting January 4, 2016. GPRC Fairview Campus. 1-888-539-4772; www.gprc.ab.ca/fairview.
Fax: 780-542-6739 Email: info@lydellgroup.ca
1260
Legal Services
CRIMINAL RECORD? Think: Canadian pardon. U.S. travel waiver. Divorce? Simple. Fast. Inexpensive. Debt recovery? Alberta collection to $25,000. Calgary 403-228-1300/ 1-800-347-2540.
1290
Misc. Services
ADVERTISE PROVINCE WIDE CLASSIFIEDS. Reach over 1 million readers weekly. Only $269 + GST (based on 25 words or less). Call now for details 1-800-282-6903 ext. 228; www.awna.com. EASY ALBERTA DIVORCE: Free consultation call 1-800-320-2477 or www.canadianlegal.org CCA Award #1 Paralegal. A+ BBB Reputation. 26 years experience. Open Mon. - Sat.
Painters/ Decorators
Pet Services
MacDonald Old Kennels Animal services for Ponoka County
Dog Shelter Boarding Dogs for adoption Dogs to surrender www.pawsandclawsanimalrescue.ca click courtesy adoptions
Phone (403) 783-7447 Roofing
METAL ROOFING & SIDING. 32+ colours available at over 55 Distributors. 40 year warranty. 48 hour Express Service available at select supporting Distributors. Call 1-888-263-8254.
1310
“When Ralph’s done brushing you don’t feel rolled” Journeyman painter, serving the area: since 1984
Buy & Sell #1500 - #1990
403-843-4172 Personal Services
1315
CANADA BENEFIT GROUP. Do you or someone you know suffer from a disability? Get up to $40,000. from the Canadian Government. Toll free 1-888-511-2250 or www.canadabenefit. ca/free-assessment. HIP OR KNEE Replacement? Arthritic conditions? Restrictions in walking/dressing? Disability Tax Credit. $2,000 tax credit. $20,000 refund. For Assistance: 1-844-453-5372.
Well Drilling
1400
Auctions
Celebrate Your Marriage With a Milestone Announcement • 1.877.223.3311 Remember to share the news with your friends & family!
JKC MEATS MEATS JKC
Licensed Mobile Mobile Butchering Licensed Butchering Custom Cutting Cutting &&Wrapping Custom Wrapping Beef,Pork Pork and Beef, andWild WildGame Game
Paul Taylor
843-4383
miles EE & & 1.5 1.5 22 miles miles N of Hoadley AB.
1530
Auctions
1530
BIG STRAPPER AUCTIONS
UPCOMING SALES Wednesdays @ 6 pm. Oct. 14, Oct. 28 & Nov. 4, Nov. 18 & Nov. 25
Sunday, Oct. 25 at Noon
5910 60 Ave., Ponoka (by the General Hospital) Antique sewing machine, piano, organ, coal shuttle, globe, sofa & chairs, large selection of retro furniture, stereo equipment, pinwheel crystal, pots/pans, silverware, knife set, glassware, lamps, kids chairs, games, puzzles, jar of change, kitchen stool, beds, dressers, bedding, large desk, file cabinets, books, over 1,000 VHS movies, fans, freezers, shop vac, lawn/garden tools, and more! Payment: Cash or Cheques. No buyers premium. Visit our website www.bigstrapperauctions.net to view items
For a complete listing call 403-304-4791
1400
Well Drilling
1400
For all your
WATER WELL NEEDS Call The Experts With Over 30 Years Experience
1-888-396-6389 FREE ESTIMATES www.blackdogdrilling.com
Quality Workmanship You Can Count On
LICENSED WATER WELL DRILLER SERVING YOU SINCE 1978
1530
1530
GUN & SPORTSMAN AUCTION. Oct. 24, 10 a.m. Firearms, ammo, accessories & more! Unreserved! No buyers fee! Hwy 14 Wainwright, Alberta. Scribner Auction 780-842-5666; www. scribnernet.com.
HIGHWAY COMMERCIAL LOTS in High River, Alberta. Ritchie Bros. at The Moose Hall, 2 Auctioneers Unreserved miles south of Ponoka on Auction, October 29 in Hwy. 2A Edmonton. 2 parcels ~~~~~ Paved street, zoned Direct TO BOOK YOUR SALE Control/Highway CALL 403-782-5693 Commercial Industrial. Jerry Hodge: Check website for full listings 780-706-6652; www.bigstrapperauctions.net rbauction.com/realestate. ESTATE AUCTION INDUSTRIAL/ For Art Pochopsky of AGRICULTURAL LAND in Innisfail Fort Saskatchewan, Sunday Oct. 25- 10 a.m. Alberta. Ritchie Bros. Bowden Lions Hall Auctioneers Unreserved Bowden A.B. Auction, October 29 in Collectibles, Household, Edmonton. 4 parcels Power & hand tools, 240.9+/- Acres, $12,439 Furniture, New items. Surface Lease & Power Just too much to mention. Line Revenue. Jerry Check web for full listing Hodge: 780-706-6652; Pilgrim Auction Service rbauction.com/realestate. 403-556-5531 www.pilgrimauction.com LAKE FRONT HOME at Jackfish Lake, Alberta. FARMLAND/GRAZING Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers LAND near Keephills, Unreserved Auction, Alberta. Ritchie Bros. October 29 in Edmonton. Auctioneers Unreserved 6400 +/- walkout Auction, October 29 in bungalow, interior to be Edmonton. 6 parcels completed, 2.08 +/- title 855+/- acres West of acres. Jerry Hodge: Stony Plain. Jerry Hodge: 780-706-6652; 780-706-6652; rbauction.com/realestate. rbauction.com/realestate. MEIER GUN AUCTION. Saturday, October 31, 11 a.m., 6016 - 72A Ave., Edmonton. Over 150 guns - handguns, rifles, shotguns, hunting and sporting equipment. To consign 780-440-1860.
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLD DISPERSAL SALE
Well Drilling
Auctions
NO SALE Nov. 11Remembrance Day
BIG STRAPPER AUCTIONS
UNDEVELOPED COUNTRY RESIDENTIAL LOTS at Baptiste Lake, Alberta. Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers Unreserved Auction, October 29 in Edmonton. 2.05+/- and 1.62+/- title acres, power & natural gas at property line. Jerry Hodge: 780-706-6652; rbauction.com/realestate. UNRESERVED AUCTION OCT 28 - GLM Industries (Battleford, Saskatchewan). Cranes, welding, construction equipment, metalworking, tools, shop, tank Mfg, inventory, office complex. Phone 403-870-1177; www. CenturyServices.com. UNRESERVED AUCTION SALE for Thunder Lake Ranches (Estate of Ed Paull). Saturday, October 31, 2015. Sale Starts: 11 a.m. 175 - Black & Red bred cows. 9 - 4 year old Black & Red Angus bulls. Selling at 12 Noon. Selling a very large selection of cattle handling equipment plus tractors, trailers, trucks, grain bins, construction equipment & much much more. Call Allen for more info: 1-855-783-0556; www. allenolsonauction.com.
EquipmentMisc.
1620
A-CHEAP, lowest prices, steel shipping containers. Used 20’ & 40’ Seacans insulated & 40’ freezers, Special $2200 Wanted: Professional wood carver needed. 1-866-528-7108; www.rtccontainer.com.
Business Services #1000 - #1430
1055
1370
RALPH’S PAINTING
Auctions
Butchering
1318
12345
Misc. for Sale
1760
BEAUTIFUL SPRUCE TREES. 4-6ft. $35.00 each. Machine planting:$10/tree (includes bark mulch and fertilizer). 20 tree minimum order. Delvery fee $75-$125/ order. Quality guaranteed. 403-820-0967
16 RIMBEY REVIEW
Tuesday, October 20, 2015
RIMBEY BUSINESS DIRECTORY Action Autobody Rimbey Windshields - Heavy Equipment Glass Residential & Commercial Mobile • Pickup & Delivery • In Shop Owner: Jamin Sargeant
403-843-4527
“We’re in the Business of Making You Look Good” 3 kms North & 3 kms East of Rimbey on Hwy #53
Owner Carey Anderson
403.843.3030
Rimbey Implements Ltd.
COUNTRYSIDE DENTURES º
Janice Cameron DD
TERRY GRIEMAN Home Centre Manager
Al York General Manager Cell: (403) 783-0593 5410 - 43 Street Bus: (403) 843-3700 Fax: (403) 843-3430 Rimbey, AB
Hillbilly Tree Mulching Ltd. • • • • • •
FENCE LINES CUT LINES POWER LINES PIPELINES BRUSH & BUSH STUMPS MULCHING TO SUIT ALL NEEDS
Doug Casey
P. O. Box 260
Business Ext. Fax Cell terrygrieman@rimbeycoop.com
Rimbey Co-op 4625 51st Street Association Rimbey, AB T0C 2J0 Canada Ltd.
(403) 843-2258 #111 (403) 843-4242 (403) 704-0271
MOBILE - to your door GLASS SERVICE
We have moved to a new location in Ponoka. Now located in downtown Ponoka north of the Dollar Tree store. Call for your appointment today:
403-790-2700 ROGER MASUR
Rimbey & Area Sales Representative 780-360-9552 • rogerm@hilinecnh.com
VISIT US AT www.hilinecnh.com Can do trees up to 15” wide
1.403.318.0498 1.403.358.0452
780-388-0216
Alder Flats • Buck Lake
Business: 780-352-9244 Toll-Free: 1-888-644-5463 4723-39 Avenue, Wetaskiwin, AB T9A 2J4
"LUFFTON 6ETERINARY 3ERVICES -IXED !NIMAL 0RACTICE
www.blufftonvetservices.com
• Photo Comparative Blood Analysis • Body Balancing • Young Living Essential Oils • Raindrop Technique & Vitaflex • Nutritional Supplements, Vitamins, Minerals, Herbs & Homeopathy
$R 0AT "URRAGE " 3C $6$R !NDREA &ALT " 3C $6$R 3TACEY 7HITE $6 !SSOCIATES P.O. Box 14 #4 50th Street 0 / "OX -AIN 3TREET Bluffton, AB T0C 0M0 "LUFFTON !" 4 # -
Tel: 403-843-8463 Fax: 403-843-8465 &8 www.blufftonvetservices.com
e: body_connections@hotmail.com
Location: North west of Rimbey on Highway 20 to Tsp Rd. 432 Medicine Lake Road 5.5 km west to #31055
Distinctive D istinctive IInteriors nte Ltd. Lyndon L yndon Andrychuk An 403-782-1615 403 Your Insul Insulation, Drywall, Tapeing & Texture Specialist Serving the Central Alberta Area.
ASPENWORKS MECHANICAL Plumbing Gasfitting Hot Water & Forced Air Heating Water Analysis & Treatment Systems
Outdoor Wood or Coal Boilers High Efficiency Wood Gasification Boilers Doug Madu 5034 45 Avenue Box 2040, (403) 843-2635 Rimbey, AB., TOC 2J0 Cell (403) 350-5901 email: rgcourse@gmail.com
HOMEWARD BOUND KENNELS
º
BOARDING & GROOMING RR#1 Lockhart Road Rimbey, Alberta T0C 2J0
Ph: 843-7794 Cell: 704-5039 dbfranklin@telus.net
BRIAN GODLONTON Petroleum Manager
Rimbey Co-op Association Ltd.
P. O. Box 260 4625 51st Street Rimbey, AB T0C 2J0 Canada
Business Ext. Fax Cell
(403) 843-2258 #104 (403) 843-4242 6982 (403) 704-0271
Rimbey
CARPET CLEANING
Home, Auto, Business 403-843-6637
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2015 Wanted To Buy
1930
FIREARMS. All types wanted, estates, collections, single items, military. We handle all paperwork and transportation. Licensed dealer. 1-866-960-0045; www.dollars4guns.com.
Agricultural #2000 - #2290 Farm Equipment ..............2010 Haying Equipment ............2020 Tractors ............................2030 Combines & Headers ......2040 Fertilizer Equipment..........2050 Misc. Farm Machinery ......2060 Equipment Wanted ..........2070 Farm Custom Work ..........2080 Farm Auctions ..................2090 Livestock ..........................2100 Livestock - Exotic..............2110 Sheep ..............................2120 Poultry ..............................2130 Horses ..............................2140 Horse Boarding ................2150 Riding Supplies ................2160 Horse/Stock Trailers ........2170 Pasture Wanted ................2180 Grain, Feed, Hay ..............2190 Seed Grain ......................2200 Seeding & Tillage ............2210
Horses
2140
WE BUY HORSES: broke, un-broke, or unwanted. Jerry Dodds 403-783-0303
Houses/ Duplexes
RIMBEY REVIEW 17
3020
APPLICATIONS TAKEN FOR 1 BDRM HOUSE 2 appl., nice yard, no pets, n/s, no partiers. $700mnth & $700 DD Includes all town utilities. Call: 1–306-571-9297 Classifieds...costs so little Saves you so much!
FOR RENT
HOUSE FOR RENT
$3.00/BALE.
403-340-0065
LOCATED JUST WEST OF BENTLEY. CALL OR TEXT
ask for Yvonne.
403-350-3329
PONOKA, Crossroads area, large, furnished bedsitting room with cable tv. $450/mo., $200 dd, Ron 403-783-5785
Pasture
3180
PASTURE & HAY LAND. 400 - 8000 acres of year round water supply. Full operational with management available. Central Saskatchewan. Crossfenced & complete infrastructure. Natural springs excellent water. Shortly ready to locate cattle. Other small & large grain & pasture quarters. $150k - $2.6m. Call Doug Rue 306-716-2671.
Suites
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KITCHEN FOOD 2 BDRM bsmt. suite in HEATED CANOLA buying PONOKA incld’s util’s, SERVICES operation Green, Heated or Spring- washer/dryer, no pets, non available Apr. - Oct. 2016. thrashed Canola. Buying: partier, N/S. Long term Tender Deadline - Nov. 9, oats, barley, wheat & peas working tenants and sen2015. Contact Don for feed. Buying damaged iors McPherson for Tender welcome. Avail or offgrade grain. “On Details 403-975-5406. Box immed. 403-704-1645 Farm Pickup” Westcan 1509, Vulcan, AB, T0L Feed & Grain, PONOKA, 2 bdrm. suite 2B0 or email: 1-877-250-5252. in Riverside. Fridge, stove, vulconian@hotmail.com. shared laundry. $675.. rent/dd. gas & water incl’d. Buildings Absolutely N/S, no pets, Avail. Nov. 780-242-0924 For Sale
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Financial #4400 - #4430 Investments ......................4410 Money Wanted ................4420 Money to Loan ................4430
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Girls’ volleyball teams hold strong season beginning BY AMELIA NAISMITH It was a triumphant night for Spartans volleyball as two girls’ teams dominated and won their home games on Oct. 13. Junior A Girls The Junior A girls team won all five sets against the Clive B team; 25-12, 25-14, 25-20, 25-7, 15-8. Coach Pat Burrage says there may have been thoughts at the beginning of the game the teams may have been more evenly matched but it did not take long for the coaches to see Rimbey was the superior team. As of Oct. 13 the Junior A team was yet to lose a regular season game, even against other A teams. Burrage says one of the challenges the girls face is the stigma that comes it being part of a small rural team. “We have to let league officials know Rimbey comes
to play A ball.” In the future Burrage hopes to ensure the team will have the opportunity to square off against more evenly matched teams of a higher caliber. Many of the players are also new to tier A volleyball and Burrage says all but one girl played junior B last year. “It’s a really big step up for them.” “We have a pretty good team,” he added. “The biggest improvement we’ve seen in this team is their offense, their ability to attack.” Burrage says the girls’ defensive and passing abilities are improving as well, which is leads to opportunities to use aggression. JV Girls The Spartans JV Girls team also won their game against Pigeon Lake, losing only the fourth set, 25-27. The girls’ winning sets came in at 25-15, 26-24, 25-10 and 15-10.
In regular league play the team has won two of its three games and recently placed second in a JV tournament held in Ponoka. “They’re doing well,” said coach Karen Skeels. Skeels says the team has a lot of strengths, which are coming out in games. “They are honestly playing volleyball like rock stars.” “It’s a good group of kids that work together as a team,” she added. Skeels says the biggest thing the team is looking to work on over the season is passing. “I don’t think any team tries to stop getting better at that.” Skeels says one of her focuses for the season is to give the girls as many big volleyball opportunities as she can, such as the recent joint practice held with the Red Deer College team and coaches. The next JV home games are Oct. 27 and Nov. 3.
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Public Notice #6000 Public Notices ..................6010 Special Features ..............6050
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Chelsey Johns tips the ball past Clive’s players during a Junior A Spartans home game, which the girls dominated and won. Amelia Naismith Photo
18 RIMBEY REVIEW
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2015
Wetland restoration with DUC
Rimbey senior high school awards BY AMELIA NAISMITH Rimbey Junior Senior High School held an senior awards
continued from page 12 Wetlands, as proven by research, have the ability to store water, slow the release of water into surrounding streams and rivers, filter excess pollutants into watersheds, and recharge groundwater. They also serve as a water source for livestock and provide habitat for wildlife and waterfowl. Landowners and farmers who have engaged in either DUC program report several benefits, and use them as part of their long-term land management strategies. They are also able to accrue a higher return on investment on land that was formerly viewed as unproductive. Anyone interested in DUC’s wetland restoration programs should contact their area conservation program specialist by calling 1 866 479 3825 or emailing restoremywetlands-ab@ducks.ca-
Grade 9 Honour Roll: Shi-Jiuan Du Shelby Fehr Zachary Froehlick Alice Hehli Triana Hohn Indiana Jones Keyanna Levie Elijah Maddox Leah Trenson Citizenship Award: Leah Trenson and Cassie
Mannix Most Improved Student: Odin Obray Highest Academic Average: Triana Hohn Blaine Salomons Award: Elijah Maddox Grade 10 Alexander Rutherford Scholarships: Over 75 per cent: Hannah Falt Madison Howard
assembley on Oct. 14 honouring a variety of academic and other awards corrisponding to last year’s marks. Keaton Lapointe Meagan McFadden Connor Paul Gillian Payson Dylan Ranchuk-Howe Sydney Stratton Over 80 per cent: Megan Belt Joel Bender Evan Buist Josie Burrage Amanda Cameron Meghan Cameron
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Hardworking Rimbey senior high students received Alexander Rutherford Scholarship certificates during the school’s awards assembly, Oct. 15. Amelia Naismith Photo
4915 - 50 St. Rocky Mtn House
DID YOU KNOW? You can have your photo featured in page 2’s Photo of the Week in the Rimbey Review! Simply, email your photo and name for consideration to: admin@rimbeyreview.com
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Directions: From Rimbey go west on HWY 53 to HWY 766 then south 1.5 km RAY BORLEY Century 21 Westcountry Realty Ltd. (403) 845-7772 or (403) 844-5662 c21rayborley@gmail.com www.century21.ca/raymond.borley
Kelsey Coston Josh Cote Ashton Franklin Mitchell Giebelhaus Journey Giesbretch Selena Grutterink Madison Kitchen Courtney Holtkamp Mackenzie Johnson Elizabeth Jones Lora Lee Brittany Lukos Jared Matson Nicole Oliver Betancourt Corey Rudnik Samuel Rufenacht Bryce Sargeant Sidney Stout Reis Stutheit Megan Thebeau Taylor Towle Sylvia Trautman Philip Van Velsen Gary Waldron Maiji Weening Leanne Weinhold Highest Academic Average: Courtney Holtkamp Grade 11 Alexander Rutherford Scholarships: Over 75 per cent: Tanner Cameron Reid Fryan Emma Harris John Hartman Travis Hunt Shae-Lynn Knight Kristeena Meinema Darby Neiborg Naithan Schultz Matthew Schwieger Connor Shantz Bradley Walker Braydon Walker Maddy Younger Over 80 per cent: Andrea Anderson Randall Baker Amy Bartko Erin Burrage Eve Coers Kennedy Coston Joel Czarnecki Kaiden Eadie Kelcie Garnick Krystal Goltz Casey Potts Kelsey Hunt Spencer Jordan Whitney Keessar Carson Klugkist Sierra Littke Rebecca Lohmann Carson Lukos Johanna Lunzmann Katy Maconochie Ashley Matson Kristin Norstrom Laura Rasmussen Jayme Russell Becky Swanson Ben Trenson Tina VonGunten Melissa Waldron Natalie Weenink Highest Academic Average: Ben Trenson For grades 9 through 11, 45 students total received top marks in individual course subjects. The junior high students also held an awards ceremony the same day but a list of recpients could not be acquired by press time.
ON NOW AT YOUR ALBERTA CHEVROLET DEALERS. AlbertaChevrolet.com 1-800-GM-DRIVE. Chevrolet is a brand of General Motors of Canada. Offers apply to the finance of a 2015 Cruze LS 1SA, Equinox LS AWD, and Silverado 2500HD/3500HD WT 2WD with gas engines. License, insurance, registration, administration fees, dealer fees, PPSA and taxes not included. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Limited time offers which may not be combined with other offers, and are subject to change without notice. Offers apply to qualified retail customers in Alberta Chevrolet Dealer Marketing Association area only. Dealer trade may be required. * Offer available to qualified retail customers in Canada for vehicles delivered from October 1st and November 2nd, 2015. 0% purchase financing offered on approved credit by TD Auto Finance Services, Scotiabank® or RBC Royal Bank for 84 months on all new or demonstrator 2015 Spark LS 1SA, Sonic LS 1SA Sedan, Cruze LS 1SA, Malibu 3LT, Volt, Impala 1LZ, Camaro 1LS & 2LS, Trax LS Manual, Equinox LS AWD, Traverse LS FWD, Colorado 2WD, Silverado 1500 Double Cab 2WD WT / Crew Cab 2WD WT and Silverado HD’s WT 2WD with gas engine. Participating lenders are subject to change. Rates from other lenders will vary. Down payment, trade and/or security deposit may be required. Monthly payment and cost of borrowing will vary depending on amount borrowed and down payment/trade. Example: $40,000 at 0% APR, the monthly payment is $476.19 for 84 months. Cost of borrowing is $0, total obligation is $40,000. Offer is unconditionally interest-free. Freight and air tax ($100, if applicable) included. License, insurance, registration, PPSA, applicable taxes and dealer fees not included. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Limited time offer which may not be combined with certain other offers. GMCL may modify, extend or terminate offers in whole or in part at any time without notice. Conditions and limitations apply. See dealer for details. ®Registered trademark of The Bank of Nova Scotia. RBC and Royal Bank are registered trademarks of Royal Bank of Canada. ^$ 11,000 is a combined total credit consisting of a $1,000 Owner Cash (tax inclusive) and a $10,000 manufacturer to dealer cash credit (tax exclusive) on 2015 Silverado HD Double Cab with gas engine (except WT 2WD) which is available for cash purchases only and cannot be combined with special lease and finance rates. By selecting lease or finance offers, consumers are foregoing this $10,000 credit which will result in higher effective interest rate. Discounts vary by model. †† Offer applies to eligible current owners or lessees of any model year 1999 or newer car that has been registered and insured in Canada in the customer’s name for the previous consecutive six (6) months. Credit valid towards the retail purchase or lease of one eligible 2015 model year Chevrolet car, SUV, crossover and pickups models delivered in Canada between October 1 and November 2, 2015. Credit is a manufacturer to consumer incentive (tax inclusive) and credit value depends on model purchased: $500 credit available on Chevrolet Spark, Sonic, Volt, Trax, Malibu (except LS); $750 credit available on others Chevrolet vehicles (except Cruze, Colorado 2SA, Camaro Z28, Malibu LS, Silverado 1500 and HD); $1,000 credit available on Chevrolet Cruze and on all Silverado models. Offer is transferable to a family member living within the same household (proof of address required). As part of the transaction, dealer may request documentation and contact General Motors of Canada Limited (GMCL) to verify eligibility. This offer may not be redeemed for cash and may not be combined with certain other consumer incentives. Certain limitations or conditions apply. Void where prohibited. See your GMCL dealer for details. GMCL reserves the right to amend or terminate offers for any reason in whole or in part at any time without prior notice. ‡ $2,000/1,750 is a combined credit consisting of $1,000/$750 Owner Cash (tax inclusive) and $1,000/$1,000 manufacturer to dealer finance cash (tax exclusive) for a 2015 Cruze /Equinox which is available for finance offers only and cannot be combined with special lease rates and cash purchase. † $4,000/$4,950 is a combined total credit consisting of $1,000/$750 Owner Cash (tax inclusive) and a $3,000/$4,200 manufacturer to dealer cash credit (tax exclusive) for a 2015 Cruze (except LS 1SA)/ Equinox (except LS AWD) which is available for cash purchases only and cannot be combined with special lease and finance rates. By selecting lease or finance offers, consumers are foregoing this $3,000/$4,200 credit which will result in higher effective interest rates. Discounts vary by model. ~ Visit onstar.ca for coverage maps, details and system limitations. Services and connectivity may vary by model and conditions. OnStar with 4G LTE connectivity is available on select vehicle models and in select markets. Customers will be able to access OnStar services only if they accept the OnStar User Terms and Privacy Statement (including software terms). OnStar acts as a link to existing emergency service providers. After the trial period (if applicable), an active OnStar service plan is required. ¥¥ Based on GM Testing in accordance with approved Transport Canada test methods. Your actual fuel consumption may vary. ‡‡ Government 5-Star Safety Ratings are part of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s (NHTSA’s) New Car Assessment Program (www.SaferCar.gov). ¥The Chevrolet Equinox received the lowest number of problems per 100 vehicles among compact SUVs in a tie in the proprietary J.D. Power 2015 U.S. Initial Quality StudySM. Study based on responses from 84,367 U.S. new-vehicle owners, measuring 244 models and measures opinions after 90 days of ownership. Proprietary study results are based on experiences and perceptions of U.S. owners surveyed in February-May 2015. Your experiences may vary. Visit jdpower.com. ** The 2-Year Scheduled Lube-Oil-Filter Maintenance Program provides eligible customers in Canada, who have purchased or leased a new eligible 2015 MY Chevrolet (excluding Spark EV), with an ACDelco® oil and filter change, in accordance with the oil life monitoring system and the Owner’s Manual, for 2 years or 40,000 km, whichever occurs first, with a limit of four (4) Lube-Oil-Filter services in total, performed at participating GM dealers. Fluid top offs, inspections, tire rotations, wheel alignments and balancing, etc. are not covered. This offer may not be redeemed for cash and may not be combined with certain other consumer incentives available on GM vehicles. General Motors of Canada Limited reserves the right to amend or terminate this offer, in whole or in part, at any time without prior notice. Additional conditions and limitations apply. See dealer for details. ^^ Whichever comes first. See dealer for details.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2015
+
RIMBEY REVIEW 19
%
0 84
0%
RECEIVE UP TO
$
4000 ,
Safety
10 Airbags
0%
$
RECEIVE UP TO
11000 , FOR
PURCHASE FINANCING
PURCHASE FINANCING FOR
$2,000 TOTAL CREDIT ‡
OR (INCLUDES $1,000 IN OWNER CASH††)
PURCHASE FINANCING FOR
84
Fuel Efficiency ¥¥
L/100km hwy
6.6
84
ALL 2015s COME WITH CHEVROLET COMPLETE CARE:
2
YEARS/40,000 KM COMPLIMENTARY OIL CHANGES **
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OR
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2015 CRUZE LS 1SA
MONTHS*
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IN CASH CREDITS ON OTHER MODELS† (INCLUDES $1,000 OWNER CASH††)
4G LTE Wi-Fi ~
‡‡
LTZ MODEL SHOWN
2015 EQUINOX LS AWD
(INCLUDES $750 IN OWNER CASH††)
OR
IN CASH CREDITS ON OTHER MODELS† (INCLUDES $750 OWNER CASH††) Fuel Efficiency L/100km hwy
8.2
¥¥
4G LTE Wi-Fi~
2015 SILVERADO
MONTHS
ON SELECT MODELS*
TOTAL CASH CREDIT ON SILVERADO 2500HD/3500HD^
(INCLUDES $1,000 OWNER CASH††)
2500HD HIGH COUNTRY DOUBLE CAB MODEL SHOWN
YEARS/160,000 KM ROADSIDE ASSISTANCE ^^
AlbertaChevrolet.com
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20 RIMBEY REVIEW
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2015
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“Let your Legacy start here.”
www.legacyfordrimbey.ca
Pat Boardman General Sales Manager
Curt Notland Sales Manager
Mark Schreiner Sales/Finance
Tyler Nicholl Sales Consultant