Yorkton news review july 18, 2013

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Thursday, July 18, 2013 - Volume 16, Number 22

Richardson’s expands – in the oats business By DEVIN WILGER N-R Writer

Richardson International is best known in the Yorkton region for oilseeds, with a canola plant being one of two constructed in this region. Now, with the acquisition of Viterra’s oat and specialty grain business, the company recently announced the founding of Richardson Milling. Pat Van Osch, Senior Vice-President of Quality Assurance and Manufacturing, says that the main impact for local producers will be another company in the market for their product, as Richardson needs oats to accomplish goals for the new business. “This puts us in the oats processing business, and we as an organization are going to be in the market to buy more oats to feed into our oat milling plants in Canada and the US,” Van Osch says. The decision to get into the oats business was one driven by the market, Van Osch explains. He says that as more people want to eat healthier products, things like oats are a good fit for Richardson. The canola product is one side of a healthier alternative and the oats business will be another. Since that’s what people are demanding from their food, Van Osch says it makes sense to look into the alternatives and try to capitalize on consumer desire. He notes that it fits in with their more familiar canola processing division, and the expertise from one can transfer into the oat processing. “We liked the demand side of it, we liked how it compliments our grain handling business, and we’re always looking to expand our agrifood footprint in western Canada.” For Richardson Milling’s operations, the Yorkton area will be served by two processing facilities, Van Osch says, one in Martensville and one in Portage la Prairie. He adds, that they will both be drawing from the region as they buy oats for their operations.

MUSEUM DAY – Local children had an opportunity to connect with the past recently, as the Western Development Museum hosted its annual Museum Day event. Kids were able to enjoy crafts, stories and games as well as a museum search and making food in the old fashioned way. Pictured above, they participate in butter churning.

WILD WEATHER – Intense weather patterns have been a cause for concern in the province, attracting attention from around the country including a visit to Yorkton by Dominator 3 – a storm hunting vehicle manned by renowned tornado hunter Greg Johnson. On Monday a tornado watch was bumped to a warning with residents advised to take precautions. Fortunately, while a funnel cloud was reported about 15 kilometers outside of Yorkton, in the end the result was heavy rain.

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Page 2A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 18, 2013

Ingenuity nets great recycling option for homeowners By DEVIN WILGER N-R Writer The summer is a time when many home owners start thinking about their yard and garden, and keeping them looking fresh. A couple of Yorkton neighbors say they have a solution to get the water needed in a “green way”. Mark Skowronski and Brett Franklin have installed systems to connect their sump pumps to outdoor tanks, and they use that water for their lawns, plants and gardens. Skowronski has had his in place for two years, and he says it began when he was realizing how much water was going down the drain.

He said that some high water bills also demonstrated just how much water was being used for yard maintenance, and since so much water was being pumped out of the house, it made sense to figure out how to take advantage of it. “It’s never a good thing to waste water, and if we weren’t doing this we would be using the city’s water to water our plants,” he points out. The system will collect about 300 gallons of water daily, Franklin estimates. The tank holds 150 gallons and he drains it twice a day. The amount of water would vary in different areas of the city. “You really find out how much you use for

the trees and shrubs when you see it going down in the tank,” Skowronski adds. Franklin and Skowronski estimate that the system would cost around $400-500, depending on how complicated the owner wanted to get. They note that all of the parts are easily available locally, whether it’s the pumps or the tanks. Another advantage of the system is that it takes a large amount of water out of the sewer system, putting it to use elsewhere. Franklin suggests that the more people who use a similar system in their own homes, the better off it is for the city, especially in the situation of a storm,

where a lot of water is accumulating at once. “In the case of the flood, where everyone is putting water down the drain and there’s already a strain on the system, we now have a way to discharge it right out of

the house. You’re helping,” Franklin says. Skowronski notes that adding a half cup of bleach to a 150 gallon tank can keep mold and algae in check, something which he had a problem with when he

first installed his unit. The neighbors believe this is something more homeowners in Yorkton should look into, as the impact of getting so much water out of the system could be substantial.

Photo radar up and running

It’s one photo you don’t want to be in, and the Government of Saskatchewan doesn’t want to see you in. Starting this week, photo radar will be in place and operational in random highway work zones throughout the province, taking photos of vehicle license plates of drivers observed exceeding the speed limit of 60 km/hr. “Our only goal here is to motivate drivers to obey the law, which will ultimately make the work zone safer and potentially save the life of a worker or motorist,” Prince AlbertCarlton MLA and Chair of the Provincial Traffic Safety Committee Darryl Hickie says on behalf of Minister responsible for Highways and Infrastructure Don McMorris. “If we don’t collect one dime of revenue from photo enforcement, that’s a good thing – it means people are doing what they’re supposed to.” Photo radar will be set up in random highway work zones throughout the province with locations changing periodically and as needed. This means photo enforcement could be set up in any work zone at any time. Where the automated speed equipment is present, photos will be taken of the license plates of vehicles driving faster than 60 km/hr. Tickets will be mailed to the registered owner of the vehicle. Previously, fines for speeding in the work zone started at $140 and increased by $2-$4 for every km/h over the speed limit. Now, the base fine is $210 and will increase by $3-$6 per km/h over the speed limit. Also included in the fine is a victim’s surcharge which increases in severity

by speed. For a driver who speeds through a work zone at just 70 km/ hr, this would result in a total fine of $300. At 100 km/hr, this would result in a total fine of $530. ACS Public Sector Solutions, a Xerox company, was selected to provide photo enforcement through a competitive tender process and will be paid on a fee for service basis – not based on the number of tickets issued. The RCMP will verify and determine if there is enough evidence to issue a ticket in each instance. Since the death of flag person Ashley Richards in August 2012, the Ministry of Highways and Infrastructure, Ministry of Justice, Saskatchewan Government Insurance, RCMP, Saskatchewan Heavy Construction Association and other partners have been working together to improve safety in work zones. Measures that have been taken to clear up confusion and keep workers and drivers safe in work zones are based on the “three E’s” of traffic safety – education, engineering and enforcement. In addition to photo radar, they include new black and white speed signs that make it clear to the driver exactly when to slow down, heavier fines for drivers who are caught speeding, rumble strips and gates to alert the driver they are entering a work zone, and increased enforcement by both the RCMP and provincial Highway Traffic Officers. For more information on work zones and the implementation of photo speed enforcement, go to www. highways.gov.sk.ca/workzone/

SAVING WATER is the goal of a system used by Brett Franklin (left) and Mark Skowronski, which pumps water from their basement sump pumps into a 150 gallon tank, for use in their lawns and gardens.

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CRUISE THE PARKLAND – Key Chevrolet held its annual Cruise the Parkland event recently, which gave people the opportunity to take the latest GM products for a spin. The event also featured a bbq, with proceeds going to the Soup Haven. Pictured above, the Jones family takes a look at the new 2014 GMC Sierra.

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THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 18, 2013 - Page 3A BUDGET BLINDS – Budget Blinds of Yorkton recently held its grand opening. The store, which sells a wide variety of window coverings, celebrated the day with a garage sale as well as a hot dog bbq, with proceeds going to the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation. Owner Dominic Rampone says that Yorkton is a great city in which to live, and he’s proud to do business in the region. Pictured at the left are Installation Manager Lindsay Wolkowski, owner Lina Rampone, Mayor Bob Maloney, owner Dominic Rampone, and Office Manager Shaina Szauter.

Watch out for West Nile The Sunrise Health Region is reminding local residents to be aware of mosquitoes that may carry the West Nile Virus. With wet weather followed by hot weather throughout the region this year, experts are anticipating the mosquito population carrying the virus to increase. The West Nile Virus is carried by Culex Tarsalis mosquitoes, a species that has been found in this area and caused illness in previous years. The risk of West Nile Virus is anticipated again this summer, but it is impossible to predict whether this summer will be worse or better than in previous years. Culex Tarsalis mosquito numbers usually peak in late July and through the month of August. Precautions to help reduce your exposure to mosquito bites include: • Plan for outdoor activities at times other than dusk and dawn, when mosquitoes are the most active; • Wear light colored, long-sleeve clothing; • Use an appropriate mosquito repellent containing DEET; • Ensure rain barrels are covered with mosquito screening or are tightly sealed around the downspout; • Mosquito-proof your home by checking and repairing window screens; • Keep your property free of standing water when possible, watch for pockets where rainwater can collect and mosquitoes can breed such as inside old tires, empty flower pots, eaves troughs and bird baths; • Keep bushes, shrubs and lawns clear of overgrowth and debris. Most people who become infected with West Nile Virus experience no symptoms or mild illness (fever, headaches, body aches). However, the virus can result in serious neurological illness such as encephalitis (inflammation of the brain) which can have long-term complications and can even cause death. For updates on West Nile Virus, including updated surveillance results, risk maps and the weekly “West Nile and Culex Reports” visit: www.health.gov.sk.ca/ west-nile-virus

13073CP00


Page 4A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 18, 2013

THE NEWS REVIEW The News Review is published every Thursday at 18 - 1st Avenue North, Yorkton, Saskatchewan S3N 1J4. e-mail: editorial@yorktonnews.com sports@yorktonnews.com read us online: www.yorktonnews.com

I NSIGHTS EDITORIAL

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Ken Chyz Diane St. Marie Shannon Deveau Devin Wilger Chase Ruttig ADVERTISING: Renée Haas Buddy Boudreault PRODUCTION MANAGER: Carol Melnechenko PRODUCTION: Diane St. Marie Joanne Michael CIRCULATION: 306-783-7355

Celebrate Sask. Parks Week! There’s plenty to see, do and celebrate without ever leaving Saskatchewan’s borders and the province wants to remind residents of that fact. July 14 to 20 is Saskatchewan Parks Week and all are invited to experience what the province has to offer through a diverse range of park programs from geo-caching, astronomy, canoeing, hiking and camping while protecting the natural, cultural and historical landscape of our province. “Parks are key to our strong quality of life here in Saskatchewan,” says Minister responsible for Parks, Culture and Sport Kevin Doherty. “One of the advantages of our growing province is the ability to invest in our provincial parks. I encourage everyone to check out the upgrades and new facilities and celebrate our fantastic parks.” This is a special year for Saskatchewan’s provincial parks as three provincial parks will celebrate milestone anniversaries. Saskatchewan Landing and Douglas Provincial Parks, located on Lake Diefenbaker, will each celebrate 40 years. Buffalo Pound Provincial Park, located 20 minutes northeast of Moose Jaw, will be turning 50. Additional park celebrations mean that park visitors can enjoy programs like kite-making, guided nature hikes and the musical troupe Saskatchewan Express which will be touring throughout the parks. A full events calendar can be found on www.saskparks.net. Doherty joins with parks ministers across Canada to designate Saturday, July 20 as Canada’s Parks Day. This is an annual event where thousands of people participate in fun, educational, family-oriented events in parks and historic sites across the country. Many activities highlight the important role that parks play in maintaining healthy and resilient ecosystems, protecting critical habitat for speciesat-risk and contributing to human health and well-being.

It’s a girl! Oh but look at what Kate has on Honestly, who cares?!? Do people really have nothing better to do with their time than to speculate what Kate will, or will not, be wearing when she leaves the hospital with her new baby? I hate to pick on the royal family AGAIN, and really this isn’t about that, rather it’s about the faithful followers who appear to have no life outside of fantasizing about the Queen and her crew. For about a month now, the royal princess – Kate Middleton – has not been seen in public as she awaits the birth of her first child. It’s a big day in a persons life. That is for sure. It’s a joyful, life changing experience and a time for celebrations as well as new beginnings. Naturally people would want to share in the good news. But can you imagine adding to all that the thought of a world full of people awaiting what you’ll be wearing as you head home? Yeesh... “The wee Prince or Princess of Cambridge’s debut will be another iconic fashion moment for the new mom, as memorable as her engagement announcement and the royal wedding...” I read. “So, what will she pick for the special occasion? Kate’s former stylist Nikki Pennie predicts it will

be “something comfortable, low-key, conservative, and appropriate. ‘I’m pretty sure it will be a dress and maybe a jacket... She loves wrap dresses, empire waists, and V-necks dresses.’ Nikki predicts she will wear “a figure-hugging Shannon Deveau number” that’s still very streamline and elegant.” Did you know that Kate wore polka dots at least twice throughout her pregnancy? Wow. But don’t expect them as she leaves the hospital. “Nikki thinks that for the royal baby debut she will go with a solid color dress, just as she did for her engagement press conference. ‘She will probably pick a very classic neutral or a pretty summer color like emerald.’ One thing that Nikki is beyond sure of: The ensemble will sell out. ‘Her looks always sell out because she wears clothing that is straight from her closet, very accessible and effortless’.” So there you have it. The baby may be born with two heads, talking and walking or be the next big child prodigy but all that the world will see and hear first is what Kate was wearing as she departed the hospital. What’s wrong with that picture?

The way I see it... Column

The consequences to making a tasteless joke In February of this year, Justin Carter made a joke. It was a bad joke, in exceptionally poor taste, as the then 18-year-old made a comment about shooting up a school in a Facebook comment, replying to someone who said he was “messed up in the head.” Now, the Texas teenager is charged with making a “terroristic threat” and could face up to ten years in jail for the comment. Let it be known that what Carter did was incredibly stupid. The comment would be in poor taste at any point, but this was very soon after the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, which meant that people were still on edge about the subject. He was trying to shock through the comment, part of a larger online argument, and those tend to get quite stupid quite quickly. He likely didn’t realize just how much he could shock, and he has been in prison since. On one hand, it’s easy to see why he was being investigated. It was a time when people took such threats seriously, and nobody wanted another Sandy Hook. Then again, no weapons were found in his home, and in context it’s clear that it’s just a teenager saying stupid things on the internet, seemingly oblivious to the fact that what he types might have consequences. Now, he’s in jail, for making a bad joke. Which is not to say that what Carter did was okay,

Things I do with words... Column Devin Wilger he did the online equivalent of shouting fire in a crowded theatre. But, he’s not the only one to make tasteless comments online. Take a trip to a popular site like Youtube and you get hundreds, if not thousands, of comments which are of similarly poor taste. It makes one think that a case like Carter’s was inevitable, as people seemingly say things with no realization that there is someone on the other end of the line, and that person might honestly believe he intended to do what his comment said. There’s this sense that people don’t realize that their words could have consequences, or that people are simply unaware of how people could interpret their words.

The issue here is that people don’t realize the impact of what they’re actually saying. A joke that might play in a certain group of people could be easily misinterpreted. The problem is, in the online space, there are not as many social cues to indicate when people have gone too far. Many people will break out their most offensive material because they think they can get away with it, the relative anonymity and the lack of direct feedback making it feel safe to be as offensive as possible. That is why you see people who are normally calm and sane often become terrible people online, the social environment that filters out their bad ideas is removed, and they say things without thought to the way people react. While I don’t think Carter should be in prison for a bad joke, as I do not believe he had any intent on harming an elementary school, I think he does remind us of the importance of choosing our words carefully. Jokes that would fly in some contexts don’t work in all of them, and provoking people who are already on edge often does not end well. If there’s a lesson to be taken from this case, it’s that we must consider our words online just like we would in any other public space, because it’s easy for others to hear what they’re saying. Like our regular life, we need to consider what everyone else thinks too.


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 18, 2013 - Page 5A

to the editor

LETTERS PAGE

Your letter of the Week

What’s in Canada’s best interest? RCMP mistrust

To the Editor:

Public debate about the proposed Northern Gateway pipeline to transport bitumen from Alberta to the west coast of British Columbia brings the controversial notion of the national interest into bold relief. In this case, those who invoke the national interest, and who generally support pipeline access to the west coast, see the national interest as a trump card, indeed the ace of trumps. The national interest, it is asserted, should prevail over interests that are merely local or provincial, or environmental interests that are local or international. This is not to say that the national interest should be invoked casually or in the absence of extensive consultation. Surely, however, the meaning of the term is that when push comes to shove, the national interest should prevail. Admittedly, articulations of the national interest are almost always contested, and should be. Only in times of war would we expect a sweeping consensus, and even in the First and Second World Wars there were significant pockets of pacifist and ethnic dissent. (Quebec was a rather large pocket when it came to conscription for overseas military service.) In the domestic “wars” of more recent years – the wars on drugs, crime, poverty and terror – societal consensus has been much weaker. Still, to invoke the national interest implies that such an interest does exist, that we are more than the sum of our parts. What, then, can groups do when

they confront an articulation of the national interest with which they do not agree? First, they can try to win the street fight on defining the national interest, accepting there is a national interest but not as articulated by project proponents. They might argue, for example, that environmental protection is more in the long-term national interest of Canadians than is a particular resource development. Second, they can shoot the messenger, arguing that would-be articulators of the national interest, including the government of Canada, lack the legitimacy to do so. A troubling variant of this argument is to say that because the Conservatives won only 39.6 per cent of the vote when elected to office in 2011, and because only 61.1 per cent of the electorate voted, the Conservative government was supported by only 24 per cent of the national electorate. Third, environmentalists confronting an articulation of the national interest with which they do not agree can play their own trump, arguing that the interests of the international community must trump more narrowly defined national interests, that the planet must come first. Fourth, and particularly troubling for me, groups confronting an articulation of the national interest with which they do not agree can reject the very notion of a national interest. They might argue, as do many First Nations and Quebec nationalists, that the Canadian national interest has no application to their own communities. Others

might argue that Canada is so complex that any articulation of the national interest can be no more than the sum of often conflicting provincial interests. However, if we abandon the very notion of a national interest, we will be left in a very uncomfortable position for the same logic that rejects the national interest challenges any articulation of an overriding provincial or municipal interest. Certainly the provincial and local communities in which we live rival the national community in their complexity. Moreover, and more importantly, we would be left with the conclusion that policy direction should be set only by the interplay of private interests. This would lead to an impoverished political debate, and to the conclusion that we share little beyond divergent private interests. Although there may be some on the ideological right who are comfortable with this, I am not, and I suspect that neither is the centre left or environmental community. In disputes such as that over the proposed Northern Gateway project, we should recognize that the national interest will be contested while at the same time acknowledging that there is a national interest, that we are groping for something that reaches beyond our own pocketbook or geographical location. The notion of a national interest should not be thrown out with the Northern Gateway bathwater. Dr. Roger Gibbins, Troy Media Corp.

Does a shuffle change the spots?

To the Editor:

There’s been much chatter about Stephen Harper’s “massive” cabinet shuffle as a “new beginning” for a government that has squandered a lot of the public’s trust. Amid the fuss about the makeover, it’s good to keep things in perspective. To start with, here’s the basic question – why are such changes necessary? Mr. Harper is not rearranging his deck chairs as some voluntary amusement. He’s changing things because he has to. Increasing numbers of Canadians believe his government is taking this country in the wrong direction. Conservative popularity has dropped. Mr. Harper’s personal credibility is suffering. So how has this government become so out of sync with so many Canadians? The causes are

likely threefold: • Their behaviour is just too antagonistic and relentlessly partisan; • Many of their key policies are at odds with most Canadians’ expectations; • There’s mounting evidence of serious wrongdoing. Does a cabinet shuffle change all that? No. A few new faces may create a diversion that allows Mr. Harper to change the channel, for awhile. But after the novelty wears off, the same underlying problems remain – abusive tactics, cross-threaded policies and ethical failures – because the only Minister who matters, Mr. Harper himself, will still be calling all the shots. He was the one who approved the procurement strategy for the F-35 fighter-jets, which both the Auditor-General and

the Parliamentary Budget Officer called incompetent and deceitful. He was the one who decided to cut frontline services for such things as immigration, employment insurance, agriculture, and public health and safety. It was Mr. Harper who eviscerated environmental protection, undermined the census, eliminated any meaningful federal role in healthcare, limited Old Age Security, and refused to meet the provinces on any topic from job training to energy policy. It’s also Mr. Harper who sets the template for not answering questions in the House of Commons, blocking public access to information, wasting millions on government advertising, and personally attacking public servants, scientists, church groups, charities, public interest watchdogs, even Officers

of Parliament. On Mr. Harper’s watch, his Conservatives have had to plead guilty to election financing offences. They’re under investigation for numerous other campaign violations in Labrador and Peterborough. And there’s the “robocall” electoral fraud scam which began with Conservatives in Guelph, and may have contaminated more than 200 other ridings. A cabinet shuffle doesn’t change any of that. Neither does it fix an operating mentality in the Prime Minister’s Office which leads senior Harper officials to believe it’s okay to cut a big cheque to a sitting legislator – which altered the course of a forensic audit and is now under criminal investigation. Ralph Goodale, MP, Wascana, SK.

Weak jobs market for youth hurts parents To the Editor: Today’s weak labour market for youth is not only hurting young Canadians. It’s also taking a financial toll on their middle class parents. There are still 200,000 fewer jobs for young Canadians than before the recession. According to TD Bank, young Canadians are not only losing out today, they also face lower wages for more than a decade as they try to catch up on missed work experience. A growing number of twenty-somethings are now competing for unpaid internships in an attempt to get ahead. While job prospects for young

Canadians have deteriorated, the price of everything from tuition to rent and groceries has gone up. Yet student debt levels have remained relatively constant. So who is picking up the tab? It’s middle class parents – and in some cases, grandparents – who are stepping in to financially support their adult children. According to TD, more than half of baby boom parents have continued to financially support their adult children, even after they leave school. 43% let their adult children live at home rent-free. Many Canadians were struggling to make ends meet even before their children boomeranged home. Now parents are taking out

personal lines of credit and delaying their retirement plans to help their adult children. Instead of listening to Canadians on this issue, the Harper Conservatives have cut the number of youth jobs in the Canada Summer Jobs Program by more than half, and frozen the skills training budget at 2008 (pre-recession) levels without allowing for either inflation or population growth. It’s time for the federal government to recognize the depth of the problem, help young Canadians and give their middle class parents a break. Scott Brison, MP Liberal Finance Critic.

To the Editor:

Should the RCMP have done it? I’m talking, of course, about its seizure of firearms from evacuated High River homes. That the seizures came during a state of emergency situation doesn’t matter as much and the legality of the seizure isn’t the main question. Central to the rule of law is that those involved in its administration use caution in its application. Judges or law enforcers, for example, should adjust their judgement to context and circumstance. In that sense, a judge who gives a lenient sentence to a repentant teenager prudently adapts to the circumstance of contrition. Context matters. In the wisdom of our legal tradition context matters because the purpose of justice is not the blind application of the law but the promotion of goodness and fairness. In that tradition, there have been instances in which police have ignored calls to action or refused to enforce laws against protestors blocking roads. To their discretion, the enforcement of the letter of the law might put people in greater danger and undermine the public’s perception of police neutrality which, if true, erodes in turn the fairness that justice seeks to promote. The smoke screen of “just following orders” or simply applying the law, therefore, is insufficient. So, when the RCMP announced seizing “large quantities of weapons” in High River because they were improperly stored, we have to look at the circumstances and not only the law’s application. The Mounties claim that, during their sweep of evacuated High River homes to check to see if there were people left behind, they discovered the regulation-violating firearms. They quickly “secured”, as they like to phrase it, the firearms. The broader context is known but it needs to be spelled out. The homes were vacant because people were ordered to evacuate by the same authority that forced its way in to locked homes. The police claim it seized the firearms because of the risk of the items being stolen, which begs the question as to what it did with the valuable porcelain and silverware they encountered and that was also “in plain view.” As there had been no reports of looting in High River since it was sealed off, the ironic justification for violating privacy and property in order to protect property is unconvincing. It makes you wonder about the RCMP’s judgment: first, order and enforce an evacuation, then seize private property from people’s vacated homes, then inform the evacuees of the seizure while at the same time ignoring their pleas for permission to return to their homes in their hopes of retrieving some of their prized possessions themselves. But the greater effect of the RCMP’s actions is that people are questioning its motives. Is the federal police more interested in boosting their incident report statistics than in protecting the rights of vulnerable citizens? Most reasonable people understand the need of police or firefighters entering our homes in an emergency, even when we are not home. But that is quite different thing from allowing them to bust down doors, pick locks and seize our property. Although no charges may be laid and the items are returned, there is a violation of trust in knowing that the Mounties have been through our drawers. The colossal lack of RCMP judgment in this incident will likely have an even greater impact outside of High River. The repercussions will be national. In future disaster and emergency situations, its crafty seizure of firearms will make people even more reluctant to leave their homes. The imprudent firearms roundup has eroded public confidence in the federal police. In going through the evacuees’ closets, the Mounties have exposed themselves to greater mistrust. And that sentiment, in the long run, may endanger more lives rather than safeguarding them. Marco Navarro-Genie, Troy Media Corp.

Letters welcomed The News Review accepts Letters to the Editor. Any information or ideas discussed in the articles do not reflect the opinion or policies of our paper in any way. Authors of Letters to the Editor must be identified by including their full name, address and phone number where they can be reached during business hours. Letters to the Editor should be brief (under 350 words) and may be edited for length, grammar and spelling. The News Review reserves the right not to publish Letters to the Editor.


Page 6A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 18, 2013

New rules for senators – added accountability Since Canada’s earliest days, the Senate has played an important role in the business of Canadian lawmaking – that of reviewing and sometimes revising legislation put forward by the House of Commons. If you’ve ever been to Parliament Hill or watched Senate proceedings on television, you know that one only has to enter the Senate chamber to feel its significance. Every elaborately appointed decoration, from its gold ceiling and colossal bronze chandeliers to its exquisitely carved stonework and plush red carpet, speaks of a place of high esteem. The Senate is often referred to as a “chamber of sober, second thought.” Sadly, in the last few months Canadians themselves have likely spent more sober – and negative – thought on the Senate than in the last decade – or longer. Over my almost two decades in Ottawa, I’ve become well acquainted with many of Canada’s Senators and their work, both in Canada and outside our borders. Despite the fact that the Reform Party, which I originally was a part of, hoped to reform the Senate, I have great respect for many of our Senators.

Parliamentary Report Op-Ed Column by Garry Breitkreuz Nevertheless, the problems “that Other House” has had of late – also distress me. I’d like to believe that Senators serve with integrity, but because people and circumstances change, and abuse has taken place, I understand the necessity for firmer oversight of Senate travel and expenses. The changes the Conservative Senators proposed and the chamber has passed will make the Senate more transparent and accountable to Canadian taxpayers. They include: • removing the assumption that a Senator is presumed to act honourably when claiming expenses;

• requiring a Senator to provide a detailed purpose for travel; • restricting international travel; • requiring Senators to produce mileage logs and taxi receipts for claims; • restricting access to per diems; and • restricting the number of trips not between Ottawa and a Senator’s home province. Many Canadians and parliamentarians would like to see the Senate abolished. But our Constitution requires the consent of every province. However, under the leadership of Prime Minister Harper, our government has already passed the toughest accountability legislation in the history of the country, the Federal Accountability Act. In 2010, the government also strengthened accountability in the Senate by requiring Senators to publicly report their expenses quarterly. While I wish the recent events hadn’t happened, only time will reveal the truth of this sober Senate story. Meanwhile, I encourage every Canadian to look beyond this and see the wonderful Canadian story of a great, blessed, strong and thriving country.

Take a walk into the wild west: the Rawhides experience By SHANNON DEVEAU N-R Writer It’s a leisurely drive from Yorkton and its doors are open to welcome you in for everything from great eats, to entertainment to a warm country atmosphere. It may be small town Saskatchewan but Stenen is home to a world class saloon serving up five star cuisine and offering a unique dining experience for the whole family. Last summer a Star City Saskatchewan area couple decided to open a restaurant. Having travelled extensively they had a vision of what they wanted, the key was to make it all come together. First off was location. Hearing the old Stenen hotel/bar was for sale the pair jumped on it and made the purchase. It wasn’t to be though. Sadly, the very day after the deal was inked, the bar burned to the ground. The old Stenen school

building was next on the radar and just weeks after with plenty of hard work and perseverance, the dream unfolded and became a reality. Doug and Brenda took on Doug’s son – who had been training as a Judo expert while going to school in Montreal – as a partner and the trio hasn’t looked back. Son Frazer Will says business is great and he looks forward to even more growth into the future. It’s not everyday you jump on the move from Montreal to Stenen but Will says he was looking for a career that would both challenge and stimulate. “I just finished my degree in human resource management and business and this just seemed like a great challenge and good opportunity... the way Dad explained it to me is, you never know how things will go when it comes to the risk/reward

situation so I risked a lot and the rewards have been coming in...” Opened exactly a year ago, Will says it was quite the process going from school to saloon in under two months. Not to mention the fact, plenty of people questioned the rationale behind opening such a business in a small town. “A lot of people ask that,” says Will but the logic is simple he believes. Stenen is surrounded by a fair size trading area and it was clear there was room for growth. Building costs were cheaper as was the facility, the biggest challenge is serving up a top

quality experience and building a loyal customer base. Good planning and business sense helps. “They could picture how they wanted it to look and with hard work they were able to follow through... they’ve been to a lot of bars and a lot of restaurants (all over the world) so they took a little of everything they liked and found a way to get the school to look a piece out of the wild west.” Will says when diners walk through the doors they are greeted to a western feast for the eyes. “The idea is, when you walk in it’s like entering a small country

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and western town from way back in the day... you have your main street and then off to the sides you have your saloon, a little bank, a jailhouse... that’s kind of the theme behind it. At night we’ll turn off the main lights and then it’s lit with lamp posts... and you decide where you want to go.” Will compares the food to a hybrid between Moxies and the Keg. The trio hired a Red Seal

Chef from Montreal who stays current and serves up everything from small town favorites, to bar eats, to high end dining. “We have to be everything to everybody.” From kids, to adults, to seniors Will assures there is something for everyone to enjoy on the Rawhide menu. “We can take care of entire families.” And the food isn’t all. Visitors are often treated to live bands and the plan is to step up things on the “experience” side to create the ultimate dining atmosphere. There is an on site campground, a beach volleyball court, a playground for the kids and an August event planned to make sure everybody has the opportunity to find out about it all. From August 2-4 Rawhides is playing host to “Summer Fest,” three days of live entertainment, prizes, volley ball and a slow pitch tourney. Slo-pitch teams are encouraged to get in on the action. To register or to learn more about the event call (306)548-2009 or visit rawhides,ca. If you haven’t yet made the trek to Rawhides, Will says you won’t be disappointed and he looks forward to showing you why.


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 18, 2013 - Page 7A

It’s grilling season! How to do it right... In my last column I discussed my five Golden Rules of grilling on your outdoor gas BBQ. If you missed that column, I will be more than happy to email it to you. Please contact me at dez@chefdez. com. To round off this information session about outdoor gas cooking, I want to focus on a few more areas: using a thermometer, using tongs, and also address the age old question “lid open or closed?” A thermometer is an essential tool for meat cooking of any sort, but especially on your outdoor grill. It is crucial to make sure that meat is cooked enough, but also not cooked too much. We all know poultry, for example, needs to be cooked thoroughly in order for it to be safe to eat, but when was the last time you had a chicken breast that was overcooked and dry? This happens far too often because people become afraid of serving meat under-done. It is wonderful that you won’t be poisoned by salmonella bacteria, but it would be even more wonderful if your dinner was still juicy and cooked to perfection. Spot checking with an instant-read thermometer will help you achieve these perfect results. These devices can be easily purchased from a variety of food and kitchen retailers. Digital ones are the easiest to read and operate, but keep in mind that usually the more you spend, the better the quality. The most important thing to remember is to not insert the thermometer too many times as each puncture will result in lost juices. This brings me to my next pointer: use tongs, not a fork, to turn your meat on the grill. Although BBQ

Chef Dez on Cooking by Gordon Desormeaux www.chefdez.com forks are a common inclusion with grilling utensil sets, frequent use of this tool will cause more punctures in the meat than necessary and will result in an excess of lost juices. Using tongs (or a flipper as in the situation of flipping a burger) will help to keep the precious juices in the meat. Whenever I do a cooking class that requires the use of an outdoor gas grill, many people are amazed that I do 99 per cent of the cooking with the lid open. When they inquire as to why I am cooking with the lid open, I ask them “why do you close it?” Some say because the manual tells them too, but most don’t have an answer. For the most part, lid closed cooking should be reserved to larger cuts of meat where you want to cook indirectly (meat not directly above the flames) so your gas grill will perform more like an oven. This will help to cook the meat internally to the degree you want without burning the outside. Mostly for small pieces of meat like chicken breasts, steaks, pork chops, etc, I will grill with the

lid open to achieve better crusting (grill marks) on both sides. The main reason why we grill meat (instead of boil it, for argument sake) is because of the flavor of the browning of the outer crust. Better crusting of the meat will always happen when raw meat hits the hot grates of the gas grill. Closing the lid will result in both sides of the meat cooking at the same time: the underside by flames and the hot grates, and the topside by trapping hot air. Ideally when we turn the piece of meat over we want the topside to still be raw so we can achieve that same degree of searing and crusting of the meat. This won’t happen as well if that topside is already partially cooked from the trapped hot air. In closing I want to remind you that your outdoor gas grill is an appliance. It needs regular cleaning and maintenance in order to perform its best for many years. For example, burners should be inspected at least at the beginning of each grilling season. Look for corrosion and carbon buildup that may block the burner gas ports and clear them with a paper clip. If you have never performed a burner inspection on your grill, chances are your grill is due for maintenance or perhaps even a complete overhaul. Send your food/cooking questions to dez@chefdez. com or P.O. Box 2674, Abbotsford, BC V2T 6R4 Chef Dez is a Food Columnist, Culinary Instructor & Cookbook Author. Visit him at www.chefdez.com The next “Chef Dez on Cooking” column will appear approximately August 2/13.

Caring for Kenya, buy a bracelet build a well

By SHANNON DEVEAU N-R Writer

He’s a man on a mission. If Vic Hamer gets his way, no child will go without clean drinking water and the people of Kenya will have the opportunity to lead better, more productive lives and look forward to a healthy future. With strong ties to the Yorkton and Good Spirit areas, Hamer hails from the states but spends much of his time in Kenya, a location that’s grown near and dear to his heart. In Yorkton this week raising money for his cause, Hamer gathers funds to build wells where people have to walk miles for water and struggle daily to make ends meet. “Water is key before anything else can flourish,” says Hamer who

fundraises under the “Give Me Water Lord” (not for profit) foundation. “We support schools and churches, inoculate

cattle, provide corn shellers, educate gardening, and help anyone in our path when on a mission.” And he builds wells.

Grandpa says that his new stumpgrinder chews like a beaver

782.3582 or 641.5559

YORKTON, SK

THE IMPOSSIBLE JOBS TAKE JUST A LITTLE BIT LONGER!!

• Landscaping • Pile Drilling (6 to 24”- up to 15’) • Trenching • Grapple • Demolition • Land Leveling • Sand & Gravel • Top Soil • Tree Removal • Screw Piling

Each one is personal, with the one currently in the works being dedicated to an Ebenezer friend who recently passed away. Travelling to Kenya for years, Hamer says he was last there in January and he is planning to make the trek again. “I got to see the last well completed in an area where the teachers and students were suffering from typhoid and now they have clean drinking

water.” Prior to the well people in the area drank from a lake that is surrounded by villages with no septic systems, creating heavily polluted water and causing illness. “I’m going back this January and I’ll hopefully see my next well completed... two hours south of Nairobi... it’s being mostly funded by the Ebenzer Baptist Church and it’s in memory of Chess Patzer who was a

member of that church and a dear friend of mine...” The people of the community where the well is to be constructed are currently walking two to five miles for water. “And where they gather the water, the cows, the zebras, the donkeys and everything else drink from the same spot... it’s also heavily polluted...” Continued on Page 12.


Page 8A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 18, 2013

Community Events

Kingdom Rock VBS Summer Camp Aug. 19-23 @ Heritage Baptist Church 9 a.m. to noon for ages Kindergarten to Grade 5 • games, crafts, snacks, bible stories, songs and fun! Preregistration is encouraged. Call 306783-7912 or email: office@hbcyorkton.ca or kingdomrockvbs13@ gmail.com. Free Outdoor Family Movie Night Showing: Big Miracle July 19, 9:15 p.m. @ the Parkland Community Church (across the tracks from the Co-op grocery store) Free chips & pop. Call Rachel at 306-782-2890 for more details. Jewelry & Craft Items From Kenya Available for sale at the Canora Library July 19 & 20 Proceeds for drilling water wells and assisting orphans with food, clothes, & education Presented by Vic Hamer.

Art entries sought In recognition of the 35th annual SUNFLOWER, the Yorkton Arts Council is inviting creative expressions in any medium for HELIANTHUS XXXV, an exhibition at community pARTners gallery at the Yorkton Public Library. Detailed guidelines can be found online at www.yorktonarts.ca, as well as at the library or arts council office. Register your interest by July 21, with work to be submitted the week of August 21st, for display till the 21st of October. Collaborate, experiment, recycle, commemorate, reminisce, decorate, delight, celebrate! ( Work must be ready to hang or stand alone, with some sunflower in it somewhere.)

Library Summer Programs • Storycrafts – ages 3-7, Mon. & Thur., 10:30 -11:15 a.m. • Activity Days – ages 6-12, Tuesdays 2-3:30 p.m. Must pre-register. • Movie Day – Wednesdays @ 2 p.m. Free popcorn and juice, all are welcome! • Game Day – Fridays @ 2 p.m. Join in for boardgame fun! All are welcome!

“Stars For Saskatchewan” Early Bird Subscriptions Early-Bird Subscriptions are now available for the Yorkton Arts Council “Stars For Saskatchewan” 20132014 concert series! Nine great concerts, with an exciting variety of performers! Subscribers can enjoy substantial savings by purchasing their tickets before July 31. For more information visit the Yorkton Arts Council office on Smith Street, or call (306) 783-8722. New at pARTners Get more spring in your step! Ramble on down to community pARTners gallery to swing into ABSTRACT RHYTHMS, composed by area artist Maryanne Tomashewski. Fans of Maryanne (after her 2009 exhibition “In Festive Dance”) wish her well in her upcoming move to warmer climes, where she will, of course, keep her painterly “jazz” compositions flowing. These newest dynamic explosions in polychrome acrylics are guaranteed to perk up your day.

Yorkton’s Sunrise Cycling Club – a group of adults that want to share the joy of cycling in a non competitive way with club rides and events. Weekly rides on Wednesday night start at 7:00 p.m. from the Yorkton Public Library. Depending on the participating riders, the rides are approx 1-2 hours and about 20-40 km in distance. All are welcome but riders are to wear a helmet and have a bike that is good condition. Other events are planned as the weather permits. Contact Barry Rogers at 782-3147 or email sunrisecyclingclub@gmail. com

Music & Movement – new program coming to Yorkton for children – a fun research-based early learning program for children ages newborn to Kindergarten and their parents. 10 week semester begins September 9. Learn more and register by visiting: www.musictogetherph.ca.

Dart League Attention dart players, steel-tip action is underway for the 2012-13 season at Gunner’s Lounge at Royal Canadian Legion. This is a fun league for all ages, so beginners are encouraged to come out. For more information call 782-1783.

Habitat for Humanity Volunteers Wanted – looking for volunteers in a number of areas. To get your name on the volunteer list for the build or to be part of a committee, go to www.habitatyorkton.ca and click on “Volunteer Now”.

Tot Spot Boys & Girls Club Drop-In Centre @ SIGN on Broadway Mon., Tues., Thurs., & Fri., 9 a.m. to noon. Tues., Wed., Thurs., 2-4 p.m. Free to participate!

CAVALCADE OF KITTENS – If your family needs a kitten to become complete, the SPCA has many different ones to choose from. They are different sizes, colors and sexes, but they all have one thing in common, they need a permanent, loving, responsible home. To learn more come visit the SPCA or call 306783-4080.

New Horizons Friday Night Dances New Horizons Friday Night Dance 78 First Ave. North Yorkton, Sk. Great night of dancing Every one is welcome Lunch is included Time: 8:00 p.m. to 12:00 Doors open at: 7:00 p.m. Music by: • July 20th. Ron & Sandra Rudoski • July 27th. Country Sunshine Contact Peter at: 306782-1846. Admission: $7.00 per person. Grief Share The Grief Share support group is sponsored by people who understand what you are experiencing and want to offer you comfort and encouragement during this difficult time. Every Tuesday at St. Peter’s Hospital Melville In the McLeod Conference Room at 10:00 a.m. ALL ARE WELCOME! Register with either: Margaret Yost 728-4744 Ralph E. Hale 728-9205.

Here's how it works: Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken down into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle! Answer:

Refreshing DESTINY INTERNATIONAL CHRISTIAN DESTINY IINTERNATIONAL CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY,YORKTON YORKTON ASSEMBLY, Presents

2013 ANNUAL CONFERENCE

Themed:

Times of

BLUE JAYS/TWINS

Baseball Tour September 5 to 9

Trip Includes: • Deluxe motorcoach transportation • 4 nights hotel accommodation • Reserved seating for 3 Blue Jays/Twins baseball games in Minneapolis • Duty free shopping enroute • Transportation to The Mall of America

Join us and expect: Spiritual refreshing; Impartations; Transformation and Empowerment ★ FREE Admission

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Venue: Destiny Building, 109 Maple Avenue, Yorkton, S3N 1V8

$ 689

Pastors Pre and Tina Ovia (General Overseers Destiny International Christian Assembly worldwide)

Hosts: Pastors Dag & Bukky Lawale

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Book Now as Seats are sold on a First Come - First Served basis.

Only 4 seats left!!

Single, triple and quad accommodations also available. Call Ken at

783-7355 (Mon. - Fri. days) or 782-9584 (evenings weekends)


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 18, 2013 - Page 9A

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Page 10A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 18, 2013

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

115 - 41 Broadway W. Yorkton, SK

306-783-9461

306-786-6636 Congratulations Grey & Peter

63 Broadway Street E. Yorkton, SK

(306) 786-4800

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

94 Broadway St. W. 240 Hamilton Road Yorkton, SK

Tracy's on Broadway

HAAS NISSAN (across from the Parkland Mall)

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Ladies & Bridal Fashions Flamingo Square Mall 108 Myrtle Avenue Yorkton, Sask.

#2 - 84 Broadway St. E. Yorkton, SK

80 Smith St. W. Yorkton, SK

306-783-8991

306-783-6360

306-786-6644

306-783-5600

2013 Football Canada Cup schedule unveiled The Football Canada Cup (FCC) is the premiere pre-university football tournament in Canada which annually showcases the top under-18 football players from across the country. The event kicks off at Moncton’s Rocky Stone Field with a triple header on Monday, July 15 beginning at 12:00 pm Atlantic Time (AT). The second game day begins with a series of three mini-games followed by two semi-final showdowns at 4:00 pm and 7:30 pm respectively. The final game day opens at 11:00 am on Sunday July 21 with a second series of mini-games followed by the bronze medal game at 4:00 pm and the gold medal game at 7:30 pm.

Congratulations Grey and Peter

PARKER QUINE

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

HANCOCK

Wheatland Water Conditioning

PLUMBING LTD.

LLP

C HARTERED A CCOUNTANTS B USINESS A DVISORS

Innovation never felt so good.™

12-4th Ave. N. Yorkton, SK

71 Broadway St. E. Yorkton, SK

306-782-1011

306-782-4333

306-783-3028

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

West Broadway, Yorkton Across from Gallagher Center

73 Myrtle Avenue Yorkton, Sask.

306-783-8531

306-782-7667

Congratulations Grey and Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

310-41 Broadway West

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Yorkton, SK

ON BROADWAY

York Auto Supply Ltd. SALES & LEASING

YRHS Football Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

57 Broadway St. E. Yorkton, SK

306-783-0544

134 Broadway St. E.

306-782-2215

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

1-877-783-2772

71 Dracup Ave. Yorkton, SK

www.capitalkiayorkton.com

306-783-9433

306-782-2262

HACKMAN Feeds Ltd.

Yorkton, Sask.

See us for all of your livestock needs 306-786-7713

Canadian Immigration & Consulting Office 1 - 89 Broadway St. East. Yorkton, SK

306-782-1833

www.lintsinternational.ca

75 Broadway St. E., Yorkton, Sask.

Phone 306-782-3456

Congratulations Grey and Peter

Royal Honda 64 Broadway St. East. Yorkton, SK

Congratulations Grey and Peter

385-5th Ave. N.

35 Smith St. W. Yorkton, SK

306-782-8282

CAPITAL KIA 386-7th Ave. N. Yorkton, SK

Auto Parts Plus

Lints International

Congratulations Grey and Peter

across from Superstore

306-783-8080 Congratulations Grey and Peter

Best of Luck in Moncton from

Yorkton Minor Football

39 7th Ave. S., Yorkton, SK

306-782-3842 “THE UGLY ORANGE BUILDING”


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 18, 2013 - Page 11A

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Vaughan's Moving Systems Member of

240 Hamilton Road inside Wal-Mart

parklandcollege.sk.ca Toll Free:

1-866-783-6766

306-782-0503 1-866-782-0503

421 Ball Rd. Yorkton, SK

278 Myrtle Ave. Yorkton, SK

25 Broadway St. E. downtown Yorkton

306-782-2447

306-782-2396

306-786-6678 1-800-667-8892

website: www.vaughansmoving.com

website: sharpauto.mechanicnet.com

Parkland Mall 277 Broadway St. E. Yorkton, SK

306-786-7555 We saved you a spot!

Congratulations

Box 1715. Yorkton, SK

306-783-1555 Check us out on Facebook!

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Grey McKen &

Peter Kozusha

44 Dracup Ave. Yorkton, SK

for being selected to

306-782-6677

Team Saskatchewan

website: audiowarehouse.ca

in the football

Canada Cup

Grey McKen Height - 6' 1" Weight - 208 lbs. Position - Defensive End Elementary School - Yorkdale Grade - Going into Grade 12 High School - YRHS, graduation class 2014 Years Playing Football - 6 Future Aspirations - CFL Football, Pharmacy, attending the U of S for football as well as schooling.

Peter Kozushka

being held in Moncton, NB

July 15 to 21, 2013 Thank you to all these sponsors for your support

Congratulations Grey and Peter Your Insurance Broker Understands

WE OFFER… • COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE • MOTOR VEHICLE LICENSE ISSUING Website: www.farrellagencies.com 24 Hr. Claims Service Office Hours: 7:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. COMMITTED TO YOU AND YOUR COMMUNITY

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Height - 6' 6" Weight - 270 lbs. Position - Offensive Tackle Number 68 Elementary School - St. Michaels Grade - 10 High School YRHS Years Playing Football - 6 Future Aspirations - Play university football, pro football, become a teacher, coach football.

Congratulations Grey & Peter

WAGNER’S FLOORING LTD. 46 Myrtle Avenue Yorkton, SK

306-783-8392

SALES • RENTALS PARTS • SERVICE 200 York Rd. East, Yorkton, Sask. 306-783-3678

wagnersflooring@sasktel.net

www.loganstevens.ca

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

C.J. Audio

and Truck Accessories #4 - 76 7th Ave. S., Yorkton, Sask S3N 3V2

Phone

306-783-8511 Congratulations Grey & Peter

Highway 16 E. Yorkton, Sask.

Phone

306-783-1689 Toll Free

1-888-296-2626

Phone

306-783-8567 www.fountaintire.com

Congratulations Grey & Peter

K.W. Men’s Wear Ltd. 27 Broadway St. E., Yorkton, SK

306-782-2722

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Hwy #10 East Yorkton, SK

306-786-2886

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

(1976) Ltd.

COUNTRYSIDE MOTORS

Manager

Hwy. # 10 E. Yorkton, Sask.

306-783-3037

306-782-2999

Bruce Yont 4 Palliser Way Yorkton, Sask.

ASPHALT SERVICES 516 Broadway St. E., Yorkton SK

39 Smith St. W. Yorkton

306-782-6050 Congratulations Grey & Peter

Bryce & Della Arnold

569 Broadway St. E. Yorkton, Sask. Phone

191 York Rd. W. Yorkton, Sask.

306-783-2277

306-782-2645

www.pcplace.ca

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Congratulations Grey & Peter

Hearns Westview Pharmacy

Lakeview Land & Cattle Co. Ltd.

ACTION GLASS LTD.

265 Bradbrooke Dr. Yorkton, Sask. Phone

63-7th Ave. S. Yorkton, Sask.

Box 447 Yorkton, Sask. S3N 2W4

306-783-4331

Phone

306-782-1434

hearns@pharmachoice.ca

306-786-2888

Owners/Operators

#7-84 Broadway St. E. Yorkton

306-783-9000

141 Palliser Way Yorkton, Sask. Phone

306-786-7944


Page 12A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 18, 2013

Clean water for Kenya Con’t from Page 7.

He used to collect shoes to help out with his cause, this time Hamer is selling eye catching Kenyan made jewellery. He will be in Yorkton on Friday, July 26 at Yorkton Exhibition grandstand area from about 5 p.m. until 8 p.m. A Canora sale has also been planned where people can view the pieces and make purchases to support the cause. This sale takes place at the Canora Library July 18, 19 and 20. If you can’t make it to either event but would like to learn more or even make a financial donation, you can do so by con-

tacting Hamer at: vichamer@gmail.com. You can also send a cheque to the Ebenezer Church made out to the church. On the cheque he says write that it is for “Chess’s well.” If you’re interesting in making the trek to Kenya to volunteer, skilled people are being sought and Hamer says he can help get you set up. “Just contact me... they are always looking for nurses and doctors naturally, construction workers...” “I really appreciate the support the people from Yorkton and surrounding areas have given this cause,” he says and he hopes it will continue.

13073DS01


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 18, 2013 - Page 13A

NEWS REVIEW SPORTS Sport notes Sports Bank Drop-in The Yorkton Sports Bank is collecting used sports equipment on Wednesdays at the City Hall Basement from 4-8 p.m. Come out and check out the assortment of sports equipment, including hockey gear, or donate your old equipment. Appointments are also available. Contact Amber Zaharia for more information by phone at 828-2401 or by email azaharia@yorkton.ca.

Sunrise Cycling Club Yorkton’s Sunrise Cycling club is a group of adults that want to share the joy of cycling in a non competitive way with club rides and events. Weekly rides on Wednesday night start at 7:00 from the Yorkton Public Library. Depending on the participating riders, the rides are approx 1-2 hours and about 20-40 km in distance. Everyone is welcome but we ask that all riders wear a helmet and have a bike that is good condition. Other events are planned as the weather permits. Contact Barry Rogers at 782-3147 or email sunrisecyclingclub@gmail. com

YRHS Jr. Football Camp The YRHS Jr. Football team will be starting training camp for players starting on August 6th. Practice will start at 5:30 and equipment pickup will be arraigned for those who need. Anyone who is interested can email icoachfootball@hotmail.com for further details.

Cards Home Games The next homestand for the Cardinals will be July 25 when the Cardinals host the Saskatoon Yellow Jackets before closing out their season with games against the Melville Millionaires July 28/29. Come support the Cardinals as they continue the chase for the WMBL Playoffs.

Want your story covered in Sport Notes? Have a local sports tip for The News Review sports staff? Email sports@yorktonnews. com and your local event could be in the paper.

WEYBURN BEAVERS celebrate one of their five runs as they earned a huge 5-2 win over the Cardinals to take a one game lead for the East Division’s final playoff spot. Yorkton will now play seven of their final ten games of the regular season on the road.

Beavers best Cards again in tight playoff race By CHASE RUTTIG N-R Writer It has been a long while since Bill Sobkow led the Yorkton Cardinals to the Western Major Baseball League Playoffs, the Weyburn Beavers are doing the best to ensure that the Cardinals long streak of missing the playoffs continues. After a huge Alnardo Rodriguez walkoff double gave the Cardinals a huge Sunday win over the defending champion Regina Red Sox capped off two straight walkoff wins at home after an extra innings win over the Saskatoon Yellow Jackets Friday, Yorkton would

have a rematch with the Weyburn Beavers at Jubilee Park Tuesday with the East Division’s final playoff spot on the line with the two teams neck and neck in the final month of the season. With the season series and a huge win in the standings on the line, Sobkow handed the ball to David Toth with the hopes that the starting pitcher from the University of Southern Indiana would be able to get them a huge win at home. Playing seven of their final ten on the road including two four against division leaders Swift Current and Medicine Hat, Tuesday’s game was almost a

must win with things becoming very difficult for Yorkton with a loss. Weyburn would continue their trend of piling on the Cardinals early with a three run top of the first giving Cardinals fans deja vu after their five run first in the previous game. Chris Manning would continue to haunt the Cardinals, getting a clutch two out double on a ground ball down the middle right over second base to extend the Beavers inning and earn the second run of the three run onslaught. Toth would allow another run in the top of the third be-

fore eventually settling down to last six innings allowing four runs on nine hits and striking out six Beavers batters. Toth’s opponent on the mound, Ben Moore out of Tulsa, Oklahoma was in command for Weyburn for much of the game shutting down the Cardinals offense. Weyburn would add an insurance run in the top of the eighth inning as a Dallas Monk single would score Manning to give Moore a five run lead to work with as he looked to find the final three outs to wrap up the complete game shutout. Cont. on Page 16.

Kade Johnson finishes second at golf provincials By CHASE RUTTIG N-R Writer After a second place finish at 2012 Saskatchewan Gold Provincials, Kade Johnson knew that going into the 2013 tournament held at Hillcrest Golf Course in Moose Jaw he would have a serious chance at earning a provincial title. “After finishing second the year before I felt I had a really good chance to compete for the tournament title if a few more shots went my way (compared to 2012),” says Yorkton’s Johnson who has been competing in tournaments across Canada and the United States over the past two years working on his game and developing as an up and coming golf talent in the province at the U-15 division. Johnson had played at Hillcrest this season prior to the three round provincial tournament, shooting an early season mark of 79-85 by Johnson’s account, something that he thought he could build on going into the tournament. “I had the benefit of shooting a couple of rounds at a prior tournament this season and even though I didn’t shoot the greatest I felt that having a feel and knowl-

edge for the course would give me an edge over the competition,” says Johnson. That knowledge of the course and confidence after finishing second place the year before seemed to pay huge dividends as during the opening two rounds Johnson showed why he is one of the best young golfers in the province rattling off a 74 in Round One before hitting a sparkling even 70 in Round Two to head into the final day with the lead over the field. Sadly a provincial title was not in the cards for the young Johnson as Noah Kozak came out strong at the final day at Hillcrest and Johnson’s 79 was just not enough to seal first place and hold off the streaking Kozak who had his day in the final round. Still proud of a second place finish, Johnson felt that his final round simply fell on the usual downfall of most rounds of golf, lady luck. “I felt that my shots were on point like the other two days, but I just couldn’t get any bounces or breaks on the course,” says Johnson. “Kozak played a great round which didn’t help, but I felt that I shot the same as I did the other two days in the final round, but it

just wasn’t going my way.” Now a two time runner up at the provincial level who has golfed all over North America improving his game, Johnson is showing signs of an emerging top level golf talent in the city. With ample time left before the golf’s seasons end and the provincial final over, John-

son plans to continue to get on the course and work on the game that he loves. Johnson will head out to tournaments in Saskatoon and in Manitoba over the coming months before starting the school golfing season where he is Sacred Heart High School’s top golfer.

KADE JOHNSON continued a strong summer of golf in the U-15 ranks by earning his second straight runner up finish at Sask. Golf Provincials, keeping all three round scores in the 70’s.


Page 14A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 18, 2013

Jordan Matechuk’s CFL story reaches happy return Ruttig’s rants

Once a local hero, it had been nearly three years since Yorkton’s Jordan Matechuk stepped on a CFL field to start a regular season game. A 2011 drug bust at the United States border where Matechuk was found with 543 anabolic steroid pills and assorted other illegal drugs including small amounts of marijuana and oxycotin resulted in Matechuk’s immediate release from the Hamilton Tiger-Cats and some jail time. Prior to that, Matechuk was living his dream by all accounts. One of the best high school football players to ever play for the Yorkton Regional High School, Matechuk parlayed a stint with the Victoria Rebels into an eventual starting role with the Hamilton TigerCats. Listed at 5’ 10’ and 245 pounds of ripped muscle, Matechuk was a freak of nature when compared to most linemen and long snappers, in addition to snapping Matechuk’s athleticism landed him on the kickoff team where he would show his ability to make tackles on occasion in Hamilton. In the offseason he

would hold a yearly football camp every May to kickoff the YRHS’ spring camp as well as to introduce young players to the sport. Due to his success and support of local football, a photo of Matechuk in action with the TigerCats was erected on the Century Field scoreboard overlooking the highway leaving the city. That all changed and after two months in jail and a year away from football, Matechuk began having to face the music. He spoke to Yorkton and faced his hometown, as well as doing the media rounds and giving his side of the story, admitting to having bipolar disorder and now still taking prescribed mood stabilizers, Matechuk allowed mental health issues to consume his life, something that he self prescribed with the combination of performance enhancing drugs, painkillers, and marijuana, eventually nearly costing him his career. Sending an apology letter to the GM’s of every CFL team, Matechuk successfully lobbied his way onto the Winnipeg Blue Bombers practice

Column Chase Ruttig squad last season, spending time on their injured reserve while becoming a spokesman for the Canadian Mental Health Association and attempting to restore his public image at the same time as getting the word out about a health issue that affects many men and young adults in Canada. This year Matechuk was given a tryout with his childhood team in Saskatchewan after some good words put in to head coach Corey Chamblin by his former YRHS coach Roby Sharpe, in Regina and Saskatoon for training camp Matechuk couldn’t quite impress enough to make the 46 man active roster as a longsnapper/ linebacker. It was looking like another year of

low pay and a humble lifestyle for Matechuk as he agreed to stay in Saskatchewan for the time being on their practice roster, hoping that they would experience longsnapping issues and that he would get a chance to showcase his skills. He would get his chance sooner than he thought, but it would require quite the drive. Early last week Matechuk was claimed off waivers by the B.C. Lions after Tim Cronk had some communication issues with new rookie punter Hugh O’Neill that resulted in costly field position turnovers during the opening two weeks of the CFL season. Those problems were enough for the Lions to break an unwritten CFL rule and claim

a player off of another team’s practice roster, something they hadn’t done as a franchise since 2003. With CFL rules dictating that Matechuk would have to be activated to switch to the Lions, Matechuk got his first chance to play in the CFL regular season since his bust at the border, putting an end to a journey that saw Matechuk go from jail to the practice roster of two CFL teams before now finally getting his chance. Lowell Ulrich of The Province was critical of the Matechuk story upon his arrival in B.C. last week, commenting “In football, long-snapping is a snap. Do it well enough and you can have a rewarding career — even if a small part of your life has been spent in a jail cell.” To some Matechuk may be a criminal, a man who made a mistake at a dark point of his life that will define him forever in the mind’s of narrow minded individuals. His bipolar disorder and mental health insecurities drove him to cheating and breaking the law to achieve his

CFL dreams, and yes “a small part of his life was spent in a jail cell” but he has faced those who judge him on more than one occasion and has asked for forgiveness. He has had his life completely fall apart before working hard and humbling himself in the process to earn a second chance. Shouldn’t that be enough? Yes many people in the world don’t get a second chance when placed with Matechuk’s circumstances, but that still doesn’t mean it is right. There is more to the story of Jordan Matechuk’s path back to the CFL than steroids and jail. The path of a young man from a troubled life to newfound redemption took another step in the right direction at Commonwealth Stadium when Jordan Matechuk stepped on the field in a B.C. Lions uniform. Those who have been following Matechuk since his arrest and using him as easy target should take notice, his troubles and return to success can teach us all about forgiveness and learning from one’s mistakes.

Riders 3-0, but Durant injury looms heading into Week Four By CHASE RUTTIG N-R Writer Each week of the CFL season, The News Review Sports will recap the week that was in Rider Nation as well as preview the upcoming week’s action in a weekly segment called Rider Report. For most of Week Three at the CFL’s worst stadium in the Rogers Centre (is there honestly an uglier place to watch a football game on TV?) what Roughriders fans saw was another exhibit of just how far the team has game since a lengthy losing streak and first round exit raised questions heading into the winter. Now after retooling for a run at making the final Grey Cup to be hosted at Taylor Field/ Mosaic Stadium, the Riders looked like the team that went to three Grey Cups at the turn of the decade. Saskatchewan picked apart to defending Grey Cup champions after falling behind to the Argonauts in the first quarter with Durant registering an impressive night in the air in leading the Riders. A first quarter touchdown pass to Rob Bagg capping off Bagg’s return from ACL injuries on both knees started what was a dominant performance from Durant as he connected on two deep touchdown passes with Taj Smith that were the difference maker in a 39-28 win. Smith’s 70 yard touchdown in the third quarter gave the Riders a 29-14 lead and they never looked back from

that point as a 37 yard touchdown run from Kory Sheets and a 21 yard field goal from Chirs Milo in the fourth quarter was enough to preserve the Riders undefeated record and another impressive win over a top team from 2012. Without Geroy Simon, the Riders still looked like one of the CFL’s best teams pounding the Argonauts in the run game with 229 rushing yards to just 75 and getting a strong statline from Durant with 14/19 completions, 246 yards, three touchdowns and most importantly no interceptions. Yet all of that excitement was replaced with injury speculation as Drew Willy was forced to replace Durant to close out the fourth quarter before Rider fans worst fears were confirmed when Durant showed up with a walking boot to Riders practice and confirmed that his status for Sunday against the Hamilton Tiger-Cats is up in the air. “I’m definitely not going to put this team in a bad situation or put myself in a bad situation,” Durant said to the media on Tuesday. “If I can’t be myself and can’t play at a high level, then I won’t go.’’ That sentiment was echoed by head coach Corey Chamblin who sees no use in risking the 30 year old quarterback if he can’t be his mobile self with backup Drew Willy ready in case of emergency. “Darian has to be Darian, and he has to be well enough to help us win,” said Chamblin. “It’s no different than things on the defensive side of the ball. We’re looking for healthy players. Like I told the guys today, all that ‘backup’ means is, ‘You’re the next guy up and we expect

you to do as well as the guys who are playing. That’s why we kept you here and if (Durant) is not 100 or what we think to be a good enough percentage for him to play, he won’t play.’’ Drew Willy is a more than capable backup quarterback with a memorable Banjo Bowl comeback against the Winnipeg Blue Bombers to his name last season, but with two straight games against the Tiger-Cats looming Roughrider fans are going to be hopeful that Durant can manage to play in at least one of those games and carry the momentum he has been building in what has been a much better 2013 season that has Durant leading the league in passing touchdowns with eight while managing to avoid throwing an interception, benefiting from an improved offensive line and a new scheme under offensive coordinator George Cortez. With Kory Sheets and the offensive line racking up the rushing yards, the load on Drew Willy won’t be as big of a burden, but with the Riders playing the patient approach with Geroy Simon and a looming bye week coming after the two game series with the Tiger-Cats there is a possibility that should Durant remain day to day these two weeks that the Riders operate with their most healthy option in Willy. Still with momentum riding high, a Jonathan Williams sack has derailed what has been a bullet train of momentum to start the Roughriders 2013 season. If Durant’s sprained right foot doesn’t heal fast, that momentum may be put on ice until he can return.

Brayden Jarvis earns All-Star honours at Red River Cup By CHASE RUTTIG N-R Writer When Football Saskatchewan released its list of players for Team South Saskatchewan it was no surprise that Brayden Jarvis was amongst the YRHS Jr. Raiders who made the team. After all, Jarvis won gold the year before with Team Sask at the 2012 Red River Cup and that experience led him to being named alongside Lukas Muir and Noah Zerr as the three YRHS players named to the U-16 South Sask roster, something that Jarvis takes as a serious honour. “Everytime you get the chance to represent yourself and your city for your province at the national level is a

huge honour and opportunity that I take really seriously” says Jarvis. “We all love our province and after a disappointing opening to the tournament we knew that we all needed to elevate our play for our province and we came together as a team.” That disappointing start came to the tune of a 26-7 loss to Winnipeg West on Day One followed by a 14-6 loss to North Saskatchewan in the final game of the round robin that eliminated the two teams in the tiebreaker after a three way tie with eventual tournament champions Lower Mainland B.C. and put both North and South Saskatchewan in the bronze medal round despite South Saskatchewan’s 14-0 win over the Lower Mainland, a letdown for Jarvis after winning gold

the previous year. “It was a disappointment after the second day not being able to defend the gold we won the year before, but we all came together as group before the medal round knowing that we couldn’t lose,” says Jarvis. In the bronze medal round robin, Team South Saskatchewan finished the Red River Cup on top, getting revenge on their rivals from the North with a 10-7 win and clinching bronze with a 27-13 victory over Winnipeg east who finished the tournament without a win. Jarvis, who registered two sacks at defensive tackle was named to the tournament all-star team, an added bonus for what he mentioned was a great and unforgettable experience. “Going to the Red River Cup two years

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in a row I got to see what playing at an elite level is about at a young age and when I was named to the All-Star team it finally sunk in that I was one of the best players in my position,” says Jarvis who will be playing Jr. Football for the Raiders again in the fall. Lukas Muir, who was named to the tournament’s Pre-Red River Cup Players to Watch list for South Saskatchewan, had six tackles according to the Cup’s game sheets. Jarvis, a tailback for the Jr. Raiders will continue to learn his second position at the University of Regina Rams camp starting July 29 before Jr. Raiders training camp for the Regina Minor Football league kicks off on August 6.

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THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 18, 2013 - Page 15A

Yorkers improve, but can’t come up with win to end losing skid By CHASE RUTTIG N-R Writer Following less than stellar performances three weeks straight in what has been a trying month of play after registering their first victory, the Yorkton Yorkers finally showed some form in Saskatchewan Cricket League play on July 13 when they took on the Tigers, something that impressed Faisal Anwar. “Although we lost both of our T-20s last Saturday, I’m glad we are back on track,” says Faisal Anwar, Yorkers captain. “The team spirit, which I was looking for since our last and only win against the Jaguars, we’ve got it back.” That increase in team morale had the Yorkers excited to take on the Tigers in an attempt to snap their three game losing streak. In Saturday’s first match against the Tigers, Anwar won the coin toss and chose to bat first for the Yorkers. Led by a strong halfcentury (52 runs) performance by reserve squad all-rounder Akhil Kucheriya, Yorkton put a decent 20-over total of 123 on the board for the loss of only six wickets, enough points to have the Yorkers confident in their ability to hold on to a result. In the first half of the Tigers’ innings, it continued to look promising that the Yorkers could defend the score. With wickets in the third, sixth and seventh overs, Yorkton held the Tigers to 59 runs by the end of 10 overs, needing to keep the Tigers to under 64 runs in the second half of the Tigers The Tigers bats got hot however as the duo of Noyon Rahman and Mohsan Raza produced 60 runs including five maximums (six runs) and four boundaries (four runs) to torture the Yorkers who were desperately trying to quietly put out the Tigers in the final 10 overs. By the 17th

over, the team in red had all but chased down the Yorkers total with three overs left. On the third ball of the over, needing only two runs to win, With the win in his grasp, Rahman put the game away with a boundary for a total of 126 for four wickets giving the Tigers match one of the Yorkers doubleheader. In the second match the Yorkton squad came up against a hard-hitting Team Midway. Lead-off Midway batsmen S. Khan and A. Zaman put up 80 runs combined with 21 extras for a total of 101 by 9.4 overs when the sky opened up leading to a lengthy rain delay in the day’s second match for the Yorkers

by the SCA. Still, despite falling short on two occasions over the weekend Anwar was very pleased with the effort, taking the positive look that the Yorkers were noticeably better than in the previous three weeks where they were much worse off. “I don’t mind losing when we play the way we did today,” the captain said in a postgame pep talk. “The way we batted in both matches, especially in the second match was marvelous. Please keep the spirit high and try to play fearless cricket.” With the losing streak continuing, Anwar is hoping that the Yorkers will be able to take positives from their losses while maintaining the confi-

dence to continue to chip away at teams as they have lost some close results in their lengthy losing streak. Given the Yorkers first year existence and their lack of a home ground it is understandable, but Anwar’s comments have shown that the Yorkers will maintain a fighting spirit for the rest of the summer’s season regardless on how the rest of their matches turn out. Spirits will certainly be high next week as the Yorkers prepare for their demonstration match in Yorkton on July 24. The demonstration match will mark the Yorkers first cricket match played in their home city as they lack a proper ground to host

official league play. The Wednesday evening demo event is scheduled for 6:00 p.m. at the Heritage Heights Park. “We’re really excited to bring the game to the folks here in Yorkton,” says Thom Barker, Yorkers public relations manager. “We’ve had a tonne of support from the community and there seems to be a lot of curiosity about how cricket is played. Wednesday will be very informative, but most of all fun.” The match will be a

short-format 12-over intra-squad challenge with captain Anwar leading the Yorkers and vicecaptain Raja Ramachandran captaining the other split squad team that will be dubbed the Sunrisers. Following the demonstration match, the Yorkers next league games are Saturday, July 20 against the Panthers and Lions in Regina where after two close encounters they will try to snap their now month long losing streak.

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YORKTON YORKERS attempted to scrap out a win to end their losing streak, but fell short in both of their Saskatchewan Cricket League matches this weekend in Regina losing to the Tigers and Team Midway. Following the break, the Saskatchewan Cricket Association calculated, using a formula known as the Duckworth-Lewis Method designed to establish fairness for both sides, that the Yorkers target to win would be 127 runs in 13 overs. With the magic number calculated, the Yorkers batsmen in yellow made a valiant go of it led by Mandeep Singh’s 27 runs and Anwar’s twenty runs, but by the end of 13 overs had only managed to put up 100 on the rain-soaked pitch falling 27 runs short of the calculated number

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Page 16A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 18, 2013

McKen/Kozushka help guide Team Sask to first win at FCC By CHASE RUTTIG N-R Writer It was a promising opening to the 2013 Football Canada Cup for Team Saskatchewan as they shutout Team Nova Scotia in the tournament’s first game in Moncton. On a day of blowouts to open the tournament, Team Saskatchewan set the pace in the game that was played at noon on the east coast, shutting out Nova Scotia and racking up what was a rather easy 16-0 win. Yorkton’s Peter Kozushka and Grey McKen were instrumental in the win as Kozushka opened up some wide holes on the line, including on the biggest play of the game for Team Sask when they scored a long touchdown on a swing pass directed to Kozushka’s side of the field. That touchdown would be the tuning point as it would put Saskatchewan up 13-0 and they would never look back, adding a fourth quarter field goal to advance to Thursday where they will play

Quebec. Kozushka’s blocking helped chew up the field as Saskatchewan controlled the ball for much of the opening game of the tournament, only putting up 16 points in a scoreline that was much closer than the talent of the two teams indicated. Chipping in on a strong defensive performance by Team Sask, Grey McKen had a impressive start to the tournament at rush end. With the score close in the game’s earlier stages, McKen beat the Nova Scotia offensive line and registered a huge sack to give Saskatchewan momentum. After a good first showing, McKen and Kozushka as well as the rest of Team Sask will have to elevate their games as they take on Quebec in the battle of two very proud and talented football provinces. With a huge disparity in first day scorelines expect the game between Saskatchewan and Quebec to be much tighter. The game will be livestreamed online and will start at 7:30 p.m. Atlantic time.

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TEAM SASKATCHEWAN featuring Yorkton’s Peter Kozushka (r) and Grey McKen, opened their round robin at the 2013 Football Canada Cup strong with a 16-0 win over Nova Scotia. The two will be back in action Thursday when they play Quebec.

Cards playoff race a tight one Cont. from Page 13 Yorkton would manage to end Moore’s shutout with two runs in the bottom of the ninth, but it would be too little too late as they couldn’t find a way to extend their late inning magic to a third game, losing 5-2 and falling behind to the Beavers by a game with two games at hand. The loss earned the Beavers the season series win over Yorkton with the two teams playing two more time on the final week of the season in Weyburn in what could potentially be a playoff deciding game for the two teams who have been neck and neck for most of July. Yorkton will now have to deal with what is an extremely difficult schedule this week as a road trip to Swift Current and Medicine Hat sees the Cardinals play two of the WMBL’s division winners in the Central and West Division leaders in the Indians and the Mavericks at the same time as busing the long distance between Yorkton and Medicine Hat before playing the Beavers on Monday in the

sixth straight game in six days. Pitching is going to be the key during the next two weeks as the Cardinals will need quality starts to ease the workload on the bullpen with ten games over an 11 day span bound to put a strain on pitching arms. Normal outfield pitchers have stepped in at times for the Cardinals in relief to varied success, but the Cardinals are going to need the best of their everyday pitchers if they are going to outlast Weyburn for the final playoff spot. The games against Weyburn July 22 and 26 will be circled on Cardinals fans calendars as key games at the two teams chase down a playoff spot that would mean the world to a Cardinals ballclub that has not seen the postseason since the turn of the decade. First the Cardinals will have to survive a weekend against two of the WMBL’s title favorites, a test at their ability to compete for a title come playoff time is on deck this weekend. Whether or not the Cardinals get that far may just hinge on showing that they can pull off an upset.

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­the news review - Thursday, July 18, 2013 - Page 17A

CLASSIFIED ADS ANNOUNCEMENTS

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT

WORK WITH US & GROW A CAREER

Deadline for Applications: September 6, 2013

Glacier Media Group is growing. Check our job board regularly for the latest openings: www.glaciermedia.ca/careers Are you interested in working in the RAIL industry?

RAILWAY TAMPER OPERATORS

CANDO, an employee-owned company supplying specialized rail services across Canada, is looking for Tamper Operators to operate a Mark IV Tamper, EJ6 Tamper, or equivalent. Successful candidates will lead small teams responsible for aligning tracks, spreading ballast and tamping ties. Top candidates will have a minimum of five years experience operating a tamper, possess and maintain CROR and TIG certifications, work independently and have experience working on Class1 railways. Full time position with wage range of $25 to $30 per hour. Requires extensive travel throughout Western Canada. Accommodations and living allowance provided when on the road. candoltd.com

TO SUBMIT RESUME

WW1326

For more information, please contact Cecile Brass at the YMCA of Regina at cecile@regina.ymca.ca or by phone at (306)757-9622 Ext. 256

Fax: 204-725-4100 Email: employment@candoldt.com

WW1327

ANGOVE - Born to Jennifer and Roger Angove of Yorkton, SK, a son, Fergus Vance, July 9, 2013.

No need to relocate! Independent study plus monthly classes in Calgary or Edmonton. Our grads are in great demand throughout the west. Excellent instructors, great results.

BRASS - Born to Erin Watson and Roland Brass of Yorkton, SK, a son, Roland Nicholas, July 3, 2013. DANYLUK - Born to Desiree Danyluk and Alex Andrusiek of Yorkton, SK, a son, Dryden Alex John, June 29, 2013.

$1000 Distance Grant.

DENEKA - Born to Tanya and Dale Deneka of Roblin, MB a daughter, Kelsey Dawn, July 4, 2013.

Earn up to

100

$

Carriers Wanted

• Logan Cres. W. • Bailey Dr., Barbour Ave., Lincoln Ave, Wallace Ave, Green St. • Irwin Ave., MacFarline Ave., Reaman Ave. • Marquis Cres. S., Sunset Dr. S., Willow Cres. • Dalebrooke Dr., Clark Ave., Bradbrooke Dr., Alexandra Ave., Victor Place • Dalebrooke Dr., Deerwood Cres., Dogwood Cres., Northfield Bay • Dalewood Cres., Lakeview, Calwood Cres. • Canwood Cres., Circlebrooke Dr., Mossfield • Henderson Drive, Dunlop St. • Myrtle Ave., Betts Ave., 1st, 2nd, Collacot • 3rd N., 4th N., 5th N., 6th N., Smith St., York Rd. • Dunning Bay, Blackwell Cres., Morrison Dr., Caldwell Dr., Garry Place, Laird Bay • 2nd Ave. N., 3rd Ave N., 4th Ave. N., 5th Ave. N., 7th Ave. N., Darlington, Smith St. • Switzer Bay, Spice Dr., Steele Bay, Spice Dr., Morrison Dr.

13073AT00

Call

783-7355 RELIEF CARRIERS NEEDED IN ALL AREAS

Become a Paramedic!

MALCOLM - Born to Krista Pawlik and Jonathan Malcolm of Yorkton, SK, a daughter, Sofia Joy, July 4, 2013.

per month

or more of Extra Cash

1-866-491-0574. www.mhvicarsschool.com

KERR - Born to Chelsey and Chris Kerr of Yorkton, SK, a son, Camden Charles, June 30, 2013.

Classes start August 19, 2013 in Humboldt! Deadline to Apply: July 31, 2013.

SEVERIGHT - Born to Quintania and Clayton Severight of Kamsack, SK, a daughter, Libertee Morning Star, July 8, 2013.

Call CTRC Humboldt at

1-800-667-2623!

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES FEDOROWICH CONSTRUCTION is a family owned paving company; we have been serving Yorkton and the surrounding area for over 100 years. Our quality of work and our commitment to our employees has made us one of the most sought after paving companies for both clients and workers. We are currently seeking the right people to join our Company as Experienced Paving personnel, Experienced Grader and Track-hoe operators. If you are dependable, like a new challenge every day and working outdoors, we may have place for you. Experience and a valid license are essential. Our positions are full-time, 5-6 days per week and seasonal. Fedorowich Construction Ltd. is an equal opportunity employer; we offer competitive wages, employee benefits as well as employee incentives.

CAREER TRAINING

WELL-PAID/ LOW-STRESS CAREER IN MASSAGE THERAPY

BIRTHS

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT

DELIVER

If you live in Rural and Remote Saskatchewan and are currently working with the homeless or those at risk of homelessness, please read the following: YMCA of Regina and the Rural and Remote Advisory Board, in partnership with the Homelessness Partnering Strategy, are requesting applications for Small Capital Expense Projects up to $25,000 and up to $10,000 for Local Homelessness Plan development.

WINCH TRACTOR OPERATORS. Must have experience operating a winch. To apply fax, email or drop off resume at the office. Phone 780-842-6444. Fax 780-842-6581. Email: rigmove@telus.net. Mail: H&E Oilfield Services Ltd., 2202 1 Ave., Wainwright, AB, T9W 1L7. For more employment information see our webpage: www.heoil.com.

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT BROADWAY INVESTMENTS Co. Ltd. o/a A&W, 39 - 275 Broadway St. W., Yorkton. Food Counter Attendants. Full Time/Shift Work. Days/Evenings/Mornings/Weekends. $11.30/hr. Apply in person or email awyorkton.hr@gmail.com.

NAMAKA FARMS INC.

HELP WANTED Farming operation near Outlook, SK looking for full-time employee. Competitive wages including O.T. and other Benefits. Valid driver’s licence and good attitude a must. High school diploma an asset. Send Resume to: Namaka Farms Inc. Box 1312 Outlook, SK, S0L 2N0 Email: nfisask@namakafarms.com Fax (306) 867-2250 WW1325

CHEVALLIER GEO-CON LTD Rocky Mountain House, Alberta requires experienced Cat, Hoe, Mulcher Operators, servicing Western Canada. Safety tickets required. Fax resume to 403-8442735. DRIVERS WANTED AZ, DZ, 5, 3 or 1 with airbrakes: Guaranteed 40 hour work week + overtime, paid travel, lodging, meal allowance, 4 weeks vacation/excellent benefits package. Must be able to have extended stays away from home, up to 6 months. Experience Needed: Valid AZ, DZ, 5, 3, or 1 with airbrakes, commercial driving experience. Apply online at www.sperryrail.com under careers. Click here to apply, keyword: Driver. DO NOT FILL IN CITY OR STATE. EOE.

THE NEWS REVIEW GUIDE OUTFITTING opportunity. Learn to guide in the prestigious Eastern slope of the Rocky Mountains. On the job training. Horse experience a huge asset. sean@prophetmuskwa.com (250) 789-9494. HELP WANTED!!! $28.00/hour. Undercover Shoppers Needed To Judge Retail And Dining Establishments. Genuine Opportunity. PT/FT. No Experience Required. If You Can Shop - You Are Qualified! www.MyShopperJobs.com. Help Wanted!!! Make $1000 weekly mailing brochures from home! No experience required. Start immediately! www.TheMailingHub.com. NEED A HOME PHONE? Cable TV or High Speed Internet? We Can Help. Everyone Approved. Call Today. 1-877-852-1122 Protel Reconnect.

Experience a…

FABULOUS SUMMER VACATION IN MOOSE JAW Check out our web site for great summer deals on guest rooms and packages Visit the Tunnels of Moose Jaw Casino Moose Jaw Historic downtown shops Western Development Museum Yvette Moore Gallery Ride the trolley Book now at

www.templegardens.sk.ca or 1-800-718-SPAS (7727)


Page 18A - Thursday, July 18, 2013 - ­the news review

Advertisements and statements contained herein are the sole responsibility of the persons or entities that post the advertisement, and the Saskatchewan Weekly Newspaper Association and membership do not make any warranty as to the accuracy, completeness, truthfulness or reliability of such advertisements. For greater information on advertising conditions, please consult the Association's Blanket Advertising Conditions on our website at www.swna.com.

TENDERS

TENDERS

13073DM03

9 AM SHARP!

Directions: From Hudson Bay Go 3 Miles West, 3 Miles South & ½ Mile West

TRACTORS: "QQSPY 50 53"$5034 t +%T t %" $"4& t -" $"4& t .JOOFBQPMJT t '"3."-- t )"35 1"33 t ."44&: )"33*4 t ."44&: '&3(640/ t "--*4 $)"-.&34 t $"54 t2 SWAMP BUGGIES t COLLECTABLES: "VUPDBS 5SVDL t 35 +/- $0/4536$5*0/ &26*1 "55"$).&/54 t BOMBARDIER Single Man SideXBML 1MPX t $"5 %P[FS 'SBNFT t COMPACTION: #0."( 8BML #FIJOE 1BDLFS t 3"(&- 30.1&3 t FARM EQUIPMENT: .PXFST t #JOEFS t (SBJO %SZFS t 3BLF t 5SVDL .PVOU 'FSUJMJ[FS (SBJO )PQQFS t %SJMMT t 4XBUIFST t /) 4UBDL t 4UFFM 5SBDUPS 8IFFMT t 3PE 8FFEFS t 1BDLFST t 3PDL 1JDLFS t 4XBUI 3PMMFS t (SBJO "VHFST t )BZ $POEJUJPOFS t $VMUJWBUPST t $PODSFUF 8BHPO t '063 %P[FS #MBEFT t *SSJHBUJPO 1JQJOH t #BMF &MFWBUPS t 5)3&& ćSBTIJOH .BDIJOFT t 5SBJMFST t .BOVSF 4QSFBEFS t 'SPOU &OE -PBEFST t 5)*35&&/ 1MPXT t )BSSPXT t 5BOEFN %JTDT t 15) 1VMM #MBEF t 4OPX #MPXFS t '*7& )PSTF %SBXO 1MPXT 0MEFS 4MFJHIT t 'BOOJOH .JMM t CARS & TRUCKS: %0%(& 5PO %VBMMZ t '03% ' t 580 */5&3/"5*0/"- )BMG 5POT t +&&1 3&/&("%& t $IFW $PVQF t TRAILERS & CAMPERS: "5$0 Y t 1308-&3 UI 8IM 'U t &OE %VNQ 5SBJMFS t 5SBJMFS X $PNNVOJDBUJPO 5PXFST t BINS & BUILDINGS: )PQQFS #PUUPN #JOT t SHOP EQUIPMENT t LAWN & GARDEN: +% ' 'SPOU .PVOU .PXFS t

HOT TUB (spa) covers. Best price, best quality. All shapes & colors available. Call 1-866-6526837. www.thecoverguy.com/news paper.

1-800-667-2075 hodginsauctioneers.com

HUGE GARAGE Sale, 162 Laurier Ave., Fri., July 19, 10-6. Sat., July 20, 10-4. Furniture, small appliances, etc. Rain or shine.

WANTED UNIVERSITY OF Regina. Research participants needed for study of experiences of foreign trained teachers. Teachers who got their teacher education outside Canada and are presently teaching in Saskatchewan schools for one hour interview. Receive $25 gift certificate. Please contact Jim Oloo, Faculty of Education (306) 653 0249, (306) 880 4722 (Text). Email: oloo200j@uregina.ca.

BUSINESS SERVICES

MOBILE/ MANUFACTURED

CANADIAN MANUFACTURED backed by 10 year warranty -multi family, single section, motel style homes -Qualify for C.M.H.C.Financing FOR MORE INFO CALL 1.800.249.3969

www.medallion-homes.ca Hwy 2 South Prince Albert HOMES, COTTAGES & More. RTMI - Ready to Move in. Call 1888-733-1411; rtmihomes.com. Red Tag Sale on now!

REAL ESTATE SERVICES CANCEL YOUR timeshare. NO RISK program. STOP Mortgage & Maintenance Payments Today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. Free Consultation. Call us NOW. We can Help! 1-888-356-5248.

TOWNHOUSES FOR SALE ONLY A FEW UNITS LEFT! 55 PLUS ADULT COMMUNITY Ground Level Ranchers. www.diamondplace.ca 306 241 0123 Warman, SK.

Autobody & Painting Ltd.

Don’t Just Get “R� Done! Get “R� Done Rite!

391 Ball Road

782-9600 LOTS & ACREAGES FOR SALE LAKE LOTS For Sale by Owner at Lake of the Prairies: Prairie Lake Lodge, Russell, Manitoba is offering a good selection of treed, non treed lots and acreages with views and privacy adjacent to a 18 hole, par 3 golf course suitable for R.V. or cottage use. Contact: 204-7730380 Gerald or 204-773-6819 David. keating@escape.ca. SUN HILLS RESORT at Lake of the Prairies, SK has 12 prime lots in Phase 1 to offer. Priced $56,000 - $69,000. We are located 40 min. east of Yorkton near the Togo bridge. More info www.sunhillsresort.com. Call 306-597-4660.

(VWDWH RI

PROVINCE-WIDE CLASSIFIEDS. Reach over 550,000 readers weekly. Call this newspaper NOW or 306-649.1400 for details.

GARAGE SALES

AUCTIONS

THE ESTATE OF JIM HOLLAND WED. JULY 24 @ HUDSON BAY

EVERY WATER WELL on earth should have the patented "Kontinuous Shok" Chlorinator from Big Iron Drilling! Why? Save thousands of lives every year. www.1800bigiron.com. Phone 1-800-BIG-IRON.

VITAMIX BLENDERS $499 & up, Omega Juicers, Bamix hand Blenders $169 & up, Nut Milk Bags, BUNN Home Coffee Makers, KITCHENAID 7 QT 1.3hp Mixers Call Hometech Regina 1888-692-6724.

AUCTIONS

ANTIQUE TRACTORS, FARM & CONSTRUCTION EQUIP.

DISCONNECTED PHONE? ChoiceTel Home Phone Service. No One Refused! Low Monthly Rate! Calling Features and Unlimited Long Distance Available. Call ChoiceTel Today! 1-888-3331405.

PING RAPTURE V2 Irons (RH). Top of the line Ping Irons. 3 to PW plus U wedge and sand wedge. Originally sold for over $1,500.00 plus tax. Will sell for $500.00. Call Ken at 306-783-7355 (days) or 306-782-9584 (evenings & weekends).

AUCTIONS

SPACE FOR LEASE FOR LEASE: For commercial, office or retail space available, downtown, 828 sq. ft. For more info call 306-621-1119 or 306-6218007.

ADULT PERSONAL MESSAGES TRUE PSYCHICS For Answers CALL NOW 24/7 Toll FREE 1877-342-3032 Mobile: #4486 www.truepsychics.ca.

RENOS & HOME IMPROVEMENT FINISHING CARPENTER: Will do floors, drywall, frame work, windows, doors, siding. Call Edward 306-647-2736.

SK PL # 915407 AB PL # 180827

FOR SALE - MISC

CLIFFORD VARGA

FEED & SEED

Yorkton, SK :HGQHVGD\ $XJXVW _ $0

Buying/Selling FEED GRAINS heated / damaged CANOLA/FLAX Top price paid FOB FARM

Western Commodities 877-695-6461 Visit our website @

www.westerncommodities.ca

HEATED CANOLA WANTED!! - GREEN CANOLA - SPRING THRASHED - DAMAGED CANOLA FEED OATS WANTED!! - BARLEY, OATS, WHT - LIGHT OR TOUGH - SPRING THRASHED HEATED FLAX WANTED!! HEATED PEAS HEATED LENTILS "ON FARM PICKUP" Westcan Feed & Grain 1-877-250-5252

STEEL BUILDINGS / GRANARIES STEEL BUILDING - DIY SUMMER SALE! BONUS DAYS EXTRA 5% OFF. 20X20 $3,998. 25X24 $4,620. 30X34 $6,656. 32X42 $8,488. 40X54 $13,385. One end wall included. Pioneer Steel 1-800-668-5422. www.pioneersteel.ca. STEEL BUILDINGS/METAL BUILDINGS 60% OFF! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206 www.crownsteelbuildings.ca.

AUCTION LOCATION: From Yorkton Go 8 Miles (13 Kms.) South West On Hwy. 10 To Otthon Road, Then Go 3.5 Miles (6 Kms.) West, Then 1 Mile (1.5 Kms.) North & 1/2 Mile (1 Km.) West FEATURED EQUIPMENT INCLUDES: -RKQ 'HHUH 7LWDQ ,, ‡ -RKQ 'HHUH ‡ &KHYUROHW & ‡ -RKQ 'HHUH ‡ -RKQ 'HHUH ‡ -RKQ 'HHUH 7UDFWRU ‡ %HUJHQ +RUVH 7UDLOHU ‡ %RXU

JDXOW Z FDUW ‡ 1HZ +ROODQG ‡ %HKOHQ %X %LQV ‡ %HKOHQ %X %LQV ‡ +LJKOLQH %DOH 3URFHVVRU ‡ $VVRUWHG /LYHVWRFN (TXLS ‡ &XOWLYDWRUV ‡ *UDLQ $XJHUV

)RU PRUH LQIR IXOO OLVWLQJV YLVLW RXU ZHEVLWH hodginsauctioneers.com

1-800-667-2075 4, 1- t "# 1-

Classified Ad Order Form Classified Ad Rates

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MAIL TO:

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WRITE ONE WORD IN EACH SPACE

STEEL BUILDINGS/METAL BUILDINGS UP TO 60% OFF! 30x40, 40x60, 50x80, 60x100, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call: 1-800-457-2206. www.crownsteelbuildings.ca.

EXTRA WORDS

MOTORCYCLES GUARANTEED APPROVAL drive away today! We lend money to everyone. Fast approvals, best interest rates. Over 500 vehicles sale priced for immediate delivery OAC. 1-877-796-0514. www.yourapprovedonline.com.

AUCTIONS 2ND COTTAGE Country Antique Auction Sale Saturday July 20, 2013 @ 10:00 AM Christopher Lake Legion Hall, Christopher Lake, SK 1-877-494-2437 PL# 318200 www.bodnarusauctioneering.com.

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _______________________ Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _______________________ Postal Code _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Phone_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

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THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 18, 2013 - Page 19A

Congratulations from

Congratulations from

Congratulations from

See us for teething tabs & other related baby products!

• Drinking Water Systems • Bottled Water • Water Softeners

Carmen’s

Elegance in Flowers We Appreciate You! 152 - 3rd Ave. W., Melville, SK

306-728-2929 Follow us:

Linden Square Mall Yorkton, SK

306-782-5300

#1 - 76 7th Ave. S. Yorkton, SK

306-782-2648

Congratulations from your friends at

Congratulations from

Diane Rusnak 306-621-1535

Yorkton, SK 306-783-3601

®

Blue Chip Realty

Congratulations from

306-783-4331 or 306-783-3988 Congratulations from

HOURS: Monday to Friday 8 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Corner of Smith & Myrtle Ave., Yorkton

306-782-6050 Congratulations from

306-783-6995 oss2002@sasktel.net

Congratulations from

SHU-BOX Accounting Services For All Your Bookkeeping Needs

Born in June 2013 at the Yorkton Regional Health Centre LOWE - Born to Tracy Brass and Dylan Lowe of Melville, SK a daughter, Jaelyn Kenzie, June 4, 2013. ---------------------------------STANLEY - Born to Courtney and Brett Stanley of Melville, SK, a daughter, Georgia, June 5, 2013. ---------------------------------BREARS - Born to Kayla and Dustin Brears of Yorkton, SK, a daughter, Arilyn Nicole Beth, June 7, 2013. ---------------------------------GREGORY - Born to Rebecca Musqua and Joshua Gregory of Yorkton, SK, a son, Weston Brady, June 7, 2013. ---------------------------------PROPP - Born to Amy and Jamie Propp of Melville, SK, a daughter, Paisley Ella Skye, June 8, 2013. ---------------------------------EXNER - Born to Karalyn and Andrew Exner of Yorkton, SK, a daughter, Danilyn Louise, June 8, 2013. ----------------------------------

KOZIE - Born to LOCKHART - Born to Alicia Miller and Ryan Kozie Jennifer Lockhart and of Yorkton, SK, Graham Ottenbreit of a son, Daxton Anthony, Yorkton, SK, June 9, 2013. a son, Liam Tyler, ---------------------------------June 20, 2013. BRASS/BEAR - Born to ---------------------------------Chrissa-Leigh Bear and Tyler ANDERSON - Born to Brass of Yorkton, SK, a son, Ashley and Tyler Anderson Treyton Tyler, June 10, 2013 of Lintlaw, SK, a daughter, ---------------------------------Tayla Elizabeth Alice, STEVENS - Born to June 25, 2013. Pamela Galvin and Jake ---------------------------------Stevens of Yorkton, SK, DERKS - Born to a daughter, Echo Athena Rain, Leah Murphy and Leon June 12, 2013 Derks of Yorkton, SK, ---------------------------------a daughter, DOUHANIUK - Born to Quinn Murphy, Sarah and Eric Douhaniuk of Yorkton, SK, a son, June 26, 2013. Drake John Eric, June 13, 2013. ------------------------------------------------------------------BERGMAN - Born to STATCHUK - Born to Carly and Aaron Bergman Melissa Basaraba and Eric of Langenburg, SK, Statchuk of Yorkton, SK, a son, Cade, a daughter, Jordyn Raeann, June 27, 2013. June 15, 2013. ------------------------------------------------------------------DANYLUK/ANDRUSIEK DUTCHESHEN - Born to Born to Desiree Danyluk Raelynn and David and Alex Andrusiek of Dutcheshen of Yorkton, SK, Yorkton, SK, a son, a daughter, Abby Joyce, Dryden Alex John, June 19, 2013. June 29, 2013 ------------------------------------------------------------------RITCHIE - Born to Alicia Wolkowski and Nathan KERR - Born to Chelsey and Chris Kerr of Yorkton, SK, Ritchie of Bredenbury, SK, a son, Camden Charles, a daughter, Harper Marie, June 19, 2013. June 30, 2013. ---------------------------------- ----------------------------------

Our warmest congratulations to all the families!

12B-1st Ave. N. Yorkton, SK

16 Broadway St. E. and 5F-275 Broadway Street E. Yorkton Congratulations to all the new Parents!

LOUCKS

PHARMACY 115-41 Broadway W.

Phone

306-786-6636 Congratulations from

UPHOLSTERY & CARPET CLEANING

306-783-4131

Congratulations to all the New Parents

WAL-MART Check out our baby department. 240 Hamilton Rd., Yorkton, SK

306-783-2985

306-782-9820

shubox@sasktel.net

Congratulations from

SCOTT & VIOLET TAYLOR Toll Free: 1 (877) 782-5151

Congratulations to the Proud Parents from

HEARN’S WESTVIEW PHARMACY 265 Bradbrooke Drive, Yorkton

Congratulations to all the New Parents

Congratulations from

Dream Weddings Bridal & Formal Wear Barb Cox - Owner

Congratulations to the new parents from all the members of NEW LOCATION!

Full Family Salon

Karen Renton Insurance Broker - Home - Auto - Farm - Business

Greg Ottenbreit

306-782-6000

MLA Yorkton Constiutency 306-783-7275 gregottenbreit.ca yorkton.mla@sasktel.net

Fax: 782-6001 91A Broadway St. E. Yorkton, Sask.

Ph 306-783-6618

306-783-7737

www.dreamsanddresses.com

209 Broadway St. W.

www.lrfuture.com


Page 20A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 18, 2013

$

N o Pa

3rd ANNUAL

NG I V A PS

DEE

yments

Don't Make 00 A $ 3000 MisOtAaCke!

FOR

3 Mo

nths OAC

AT

OUR LOT IS LOADED WITH H GREAT GREAT DEALS. DEALS S. STOP STOP IN AND TAKE A LOOK TODAY! 50+ MPG

2013 RIO

$

0 Down $116 B/W

DOOR CRASHER

$

Stk#Y3080A. Fresh off Dodge lease with only 48,000 km. Lots of warranty remaining on this 4x4 with 20 inch wheels, limo tinted glass and YES, it has a Hemi. This truck won't last at the BEST PRICE IN SASKATCHEWAN. Was $29,900

$

24,881

or

$

Stk#YE011 k Y

0 Down $136 B/W $0 Down $179 B/W

2012 DODGE RAM SLT

SALE

2014 SORENTO AWD AAW

2014 FORTE EX

Stk#YD099

WHY Y CAPITAL KIA

1. One of the highest ighest resale value on the market 2. IIndustry 2 d t leading l di 5 yr. 100,000 100 000 km k Bumper to Bumper Warranty 3. One of the most fuel efficient fleets in the world 4. 5 year, 100,000 km Roadside Assistance 5. 0% financing 5 fi i on all ll models d l 6. No payments for 3 months 7. SUV of the Year/Car of the Year 8. Non-commissioned Wholesales staff 9. On-site financing 10. Because we're Great People, No. B.S.

204 B/W

SASKATCHEWAN'S #1

DOOR CRASHER

2012 CHEVY MALIBU

AUTOMOTIVE CREDIT SUPERSTORE

%

100

Stk# Y3112A. Fresh off GM Lease. Full power group, automatic transmission, A/C, auto headlight, full size sports sedan that delivers 40+ mpg. Balance of Gm's 5 year 160,000 km warranty. Only 45,000 kms. Was $18,900.

APPROVAL IS OUR BUSINESS

ALL CREDIT APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED

NO PAYMENTS FOR 90 DAYS ON ALL VEHICLES OAC

$

13,994 or $129 B/W

Wholesale to the Public

WE WILL GET YOU APPROVED

FRESH UNITS ARRIVING DAILY - HUGE SAVINGS ON CERTIFIED PRE-OWNED CARS 2013 FORD MUSTANG GT CONVERTIBLE

Rare color, GT pkg, leather, loaded, only 11,000 km. Was $39,900. Stk#Y3056A ....................... Wholesale $34,886 OR $278/BW 2013 DODGE AVENGER SXT

Only 39,000 kms, alloy wheels, heated seats, full power group. Save $$$. Was $19,860. Stk#Y3129A .............................. Wholesale $16,821 OR $138/BW 2012 ACURA TL SH

Like new, only 18,000 kms, all wheel drive, nav., roof, must see and drive. Was $47,900. Stk#Y3128A. ................. Wholesale $41,683 OR $315/BW 2012 CHRYSLER 300 TOURING

Local trade, PST PAID, only 45,000 km, jet black, hot sedan. Was $25,870. Stk#YD011B ................................................. Wholesale $22,812 OR $179/BW 2012 KIA FORTE KOUP SX Local trade, PST PAID, roof, leather, only 2,480 km. Like new. 2 sets wheels, Was $23,881 Stk#YD092A ................................................. Wholesale $21,862 OR $178/BW 2012 KIA FORTE SX

Local trade, PST PAID, only 10,000 kms, leather, moonroof, limo tinted glass. Was $20.900. Stk#Y3117A. ................... Wholesale $17,642 OR $138/BW 2012 HYUNDAI SONATA Fresh off Hyundai lease with only 47,000 km, bumper to bumper warranty to 100,000 km. Was $19,900. Stk#Y3090A ................................................. Wholesale $16,883 OR $137/BW 2012 CHRYSLER 200 TOURING Only 41,000 km, full power group, alloys, heated seats. Was $16,902. ......... Wholesale $14,983 OR $138/BW 2012 DODGE CALIBER SXT

Full power group, auto. trans., htd. seats, great crossover, only 38,000 km. Was $17,900. Stk#Y3079A ...................... Wholesale $14,916 OR $136/BW 2012 CHEVY MALIBU Only 47,000 km, auto, power group. Was $17,640, Stk#Y3082A ................................................ Wholesale $14,809 OR $129/BW 2012 FORD FOCUS SE

Local trade, PST PAID, only 58,000 km, tinted window, auto power group. Was $16,800. Stk#Y3107B. ................... Wholesale $14,491 OR $126/BW 2012 FORD FIESTA SE

SOLD

Power group, auto. trans, A/C, CD, only 49,000 km, balance of Ford Warranty, Was $15,600. Stk#Y3113A. ........................ Wholesale $13,889 OR $113/BW 2012 CHEVY IMPALA Fully loaded, alloy wheels, dual exhaust. Was $16,900, only 47,000 km. Dare to compare at ............ Wholesale $13,994 OR $128/BW 2012 NISSAN SENTRA Only 32,000 km, auto., A/C, wheels, spoiler, pwr. group. Was $17,840. Stk#Y3025A .... Wholesale $13,979 OR $124/BW 2012 TOYOTA COROLLA

SOLD

Only 1 left Auto. trans., A/C, power group, only 37,000 km. Was $16,991. Don't make a $3,000 mistake! .................... Wholesale $13,872 OR $118/BW 2011 KIA OPTIMA SX Local trade, PST PAID, turbo charged, leather roof, only 21,000 km. Was $29,870. Stk#Y3087B ... Wholesale $25,667 OR $284/BW 2011 KIA OPTIMA LX

SOLD

Local trade, PST PAID, with only 28,000 km. Heated seats, power group. Stk#YD078A. Was $19,945 ........................... Wholesale $17,854 OR $159/BW 2011 HONDA CIVIC Just arrived. Alloy wheels, auto trans, full power group, only 87,000 km. Was $16,720. Stk#Y3109A . Wholesale $14,969 OR $131/BW 2011 DODGE AVENGER SXT

Local trade, PST PAID, with only 60,000 km, alloys, great condition, won't last. Was $16,800. Stk#Y3073B ................................ Wholesale $13,952 OR $126/BW 2010 TOYOTA PRIUS

2010 KIA SOUL 4U Local trade, PST PAID, only 33,000 kms, moonroof, low profile wheels, bumper to bumper warranty to 100,000 kms. Was $17,600. Stk#Y3091A ................................................. Wholesale $14,872 OR $130/BW 2009 DODGE CALIBER SXT Local trade, PST PAID, only 99,000 km. Was $13,800. Stk#Y3059B.... Wholesale $11,881 OR $109/BW

2012 SORENTO LX AWD

SOLD

Local trade, PST PAID, in like new condition, only 32,000 km. All wheel drive. Was $25,881. Stk#YD061A ....................... Wholesale $22,869 OR $182/BW 2012 JEEP LIBERTY SPORT Trail rated 4x4, ready to roll with only 38,000 km. Was $23,900. Stk#Y3010A .............. Wholesale $20,882 OR $178/BW

2009 SATURN ASTRA HATCHBACK

2012 GMC ACADIA SLE

Local trade, PST PAID, with only 93,000 km, hot trade in! Was $13,702. Stk#Y3095A .....................................................Wholesale $10,876 OR $98/BW

All wheel drive, 8 passenger, wheels, auto. power group, only 37,000 km. Was $34,908. Stk#Y3034A ...................... Wholesale $27,853 2011 KIA SORENTO AWD Local trade, PST PAID, V6, all wheel drive, only 90,000 km, still has bumper to bumper warranty. Was $22,900. Stk#YE024A ................................................ Wholesale $19,812 2011 JEEP LIBERTY SPORT Local trade, PST PAID, only 69,000 km, trail rated 4x4. Was $20,909. Stk#YE021A ......................... Wholesale $18,682 2009 KIA RONDO Local trade, PST PAID, only 80,000 km, 7 passenger, excellent condition, amazing crossover. Was $15,870. Stk#YE004A.. .............................................. Wholesale $12,909

2008 FORD TAURUS LIMITED

One owner, local trade, PST PAID, leather, roof, mint condition, only 67,000 km. Was $11,900. Stk#YE012A ...................... Wholesale $13,877 OR $139/BW 2007 AVEO Local trade, PST PAID, auto. trans., A/C,

only 160 km. Was $8,620. Stk#Y3008B .....................................Wholesale

$

$

5,962 OR 94/BW

2006 CHEVY IMPALA SS

Local trade, PST PAID, with only 119,000 km, fully loaded, leather, wheels, Bose sound system. Was $13,900. Stk#Y3073C.....................Wholesale $9,621 OR $129/BW 2006 PONTIAC G6 Local trade, PST PAID, full power group. Was $9,900. Stk#Y3011B............................Wholesale $5,882 OR $131/BW 2006 CHRYSLER PT CRUISER

Local trade, PST PAID, with only 123,000 km. Auto power group. Was $5,521. Stk#Y2178C. .........................................................Wholesale $3,960 OR $66/BW 2005 SMART FORTWO CONVERTIBLE

Local trade, PST PAID, diesel engine and the ultimate commuter, only 106,000 km. Was $9,881. Stk#YD022A ............................Wholesale $5,611 OR $89/BW 2003 FORD TAURUS SEL

Local trade, PST PAID, only 193,000 km, nice clean car. Won't last. Was $6,581. Stk#YD112B .......................................Wholesale $4,626 OR $98/BW

VANS 2013 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN STO'N'GO

Rear heat, A/C, 36,000 km. Stk#Y3110A. ........................... Wholesale $20,896 2012 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY Stk#Y3991A. TV, DVD, navigation, moonroof. Was $31,900. ................................. Wholesale $27,880 2012 GRAND CARAVAN SE All quad. Only 48,000 km, Stow’n Go, Was $21,900. Stk#Y3062A ...............................Starting at $17,991 2010 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY Rear heat & air, quads, only 130,000 km. Was $17,800. Stk#Y3042A ........ Wholesale $15,891

$

198/BW $ OR 228/BW $ OR 169/BW $ OR 135/BW OR

SOLD

OR

OR OR

OR

$

219/BW

$

168/BW

$

159/BW

$

128/BW

2008 PONTIAC TORRENT GXP

Local trade, PST PAID, fully loaded, leather, roof, AWD, only 130,000 km. Was $18,900. Stk#Y3072A. .................... Wholesale $14,870 OR $159/BW 2008 SATURN OUTLOOK Local trade, PST PAID, with only 103,000 km. 8 passenger. Was $18,700. Stk#YC002A ...... Wholesale $14,968 OR $162/BW 2008 KIA SPORTAGE LX 4X4 Local trade, PST PAID, with only 150,000 km. Was $16,700. Stk#YE011A ............ Wholesale $12,621 OR $125/BW 2003 FORD EXPLORER 4X4

Local trade, PST PAID, only 100,000 km, V8, 4x4, won't last with low kms. Was $10,900. Stk#YE026A ............. Wholesale $8,971 OR $171/BW 2002 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE

Local trade, only 151,000 km, 4x4 trail rated. Was $9,900. Stk#Y3098A. ..................................................... Wholesale $6,842 OR $135/BW

TRUCKS 2012 GMC SIERRA SLE CREW CAB 4X4

5.3L V8, only 42,000 km. Was $29,800. Stk#Y3127A......... Wholesale $26,903 OR $209/BW 2012 DODGE RAM QUAD SLT 4X4

20 inch wheels, Hemi, 4x4, only 49,000 km. Was $29,900. Stk#Y2284A. 4 to choose from . .........................................Starting at $24,881 OR $204/BW

2007 CHEV UPLANDER

2011 FORD RANGER SPORT

Local trade, PST PAID, only 107,000 km, TV, DVD, power doors, very clean, won't last!. Stk#Y3086B. Was $15,870 ............. Wholesale $12,872 OR $133/BW 2007 PONTIAC MONTANA Local trade, PST PAID, only 130,000 km. Was $9,961. Stk#Y2174B ..............................Wholesale $7,996 OR $91/BW

Local trade, PST PAID, only 29,000 km, r. boards, tonneau cover, wheels, auto. Was $17,900. Stk#YD073B. ........................ Wholesale $15,809 OR $142/BW

SUVS

Local trade, PST PAID, with only 83,000 km. nav., roof, 22's, power boards, RARE TRUCK. Was $38,600. Stk#YD073A ................................................. Wholesale $35,876 OR $298/BW

SOLD

2013 FORD EXPLORER 4X4

SOLD

Leather, roof, p. liftgate, wheels, 8 passenger, only 33,000 km. Was $39,900. Stk#Y3041A .. Wholesale $34,991 OR $275/BW 2013 FORD EDGE LIMITED

Only 42,000 kms, moonroof, nav. wheels, Save Huge! Was $36,900. Stk#Y3209A. ................................................ Wholesale $33,609 OR $246/BW 2013 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE

Fresh off Jeep lease, only 37,000 kms, 4x4, Save Huge! Was $33,900. Stk#Y3124A. ................................................ Wholesale $29,996 OR $227/BW

2010 F150 HARLEY DAVIDSON

2010 GMC SIERRA DENALI

SOLD

Jet black, loaded Denali, 6.2L V8, head turning unit, only 88,000 km. Was $36,900. Stk#Y3064A ...................... Wholesale $33,641 OR $298/BW 2010 CHEVY AVALANCHE LTZ

Fully loaded, nav, roof, wheels, tonneau cover, only 83,000 km. Was $35,900. Stk#Y3112A. ............................................... Wholesale $30,961 OR $267/BW

2013 FORD ESCAPE TITANIUM

2004 DODGE RAM QUAD

All wheel drive, EcoBoost, nav., moonroof, only 43,000 km, SAVE HUGE. Was $34,900. Stk#Y3111A .................... Wholesale $29,804 OR $220/BW

Local trade, PST PAID, Hemi, 4x4, only 121,000 km, won't last! Was $16,900. Stk#Y3103B ................................................. Wholesale $13,881 OR $165/BW

2013 KIA SORENTO LX V6 AWD

2002 GMC SIERRA 2500

Local trade, PST PAID, 4x4, 6.0L, V8, only 192,000 km. Nice clean 4x4. Was $13,908. Stk#Y3072C ............................Wholesale $9,720 OR $171/BW SOLD THIS IS ONLY A PARTIAL LISTING. All payments are $0 Down And Taxes Included.

Local trade, PST PAID, with only 68,000 km, 70 + mpg. Was $19,870. Stk#YE021B. ............................... Wholesale $17,621 OR $158/BW

Local trade, PST PAID, with only 34,000 km, V6, 4x4, like new. Was $32,500. Stk#Y2176B ................................................ Wholesale $25,892 OR $194/BW

134 Broadway St. E. Yorkton, SK S3N 3K4

REAL DEALS. REAL SERVICE. REAL PEOPLE.

www.capitalkiayorkton.com

306-783-2772 or 1-877-783-2772 Non Commission Wholesales Staff!!! No Pressure


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