Yorkton news review july 25, 2013

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Thursday, July 25, 2013 - Volume 16, Number 23

Armed robbery in Canora The Canora/Sturgis RCMP is currently investigating an Armed Robbery that occurred at approximately 12:40 a.m. on Monday, July 22nd, 2013. Two armed and masked male suspects entered through the off sale door of the LUNN hotel located on 2nd Avenue East in Canora. The suspects then gained entry to the bar and demanded cash. The male suspects then made off with an undisclosed amount of cash. The first male suspect was described as being between 5’8” and 5’10” and as wearing a grey plaid jacket and grey balaclava that covered his face. The second male suspect was described as being approximately 6’00”, and was wearing all black clothing including a black balaclava that covered his face. If you have information about this or any other crime, please contact Canora/Sturgis RCMP Detachment at 306-563-4700 or if you wish to remain anonymous Saskatchewan Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477, *8477 on Sask-Tel Mobility, text TIP206 plus your message to CRIMES (274637) or submit a tip online at www.saskcrimestoppers.com where you can also view information on other unsolved crimes.

ROLLING THUNDER CRUISERS – The Rolling Thunder Cruisers’ annual Show and Shine brought out a wide variety of unique and notable cars, ranging in size from a small Crosley wagon (above) to a big Plymouth Fury. See more on Page 2.

TWO MEN are being sought out in connection to an armed robbery in Canora.

Collision kills two

At approximately 3:00 pm on July 23, members of the Yorkton Rural Detachment, Yorkton Regional Traffic Services, Foam Lake Fire and Rescue and EMS responded to the scene of a fatal, head on collision between a semi unit and passenger car on Hwy #16 approximately 4 km E. of Theodore. The east bound car collided with the west bound semi unit. Two occupants of the car were declared deceased at the scene and a third was transported to Yorkton Hospital with non-life threatening injuries. The driver of the semi unit was unharmed. Highway #16 was closed at the scene and traffic was re-routed for approximately 6 hours as the cause of the collision was investigated. The family has granted permission to release the names of the deceased, 37 year old Deloris Taniskishayinew of Tisdale and 28 year old Tracey Taniskishayinew of the Yellowquill First Nation.

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Page 2A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 25, 2013

Show and Shine brings out some rare metal By DEVIN WILGER N-R Writer The Rolling Thunder Cruisers Show and Shine is an opportunity for people in Yorkton and area with unique and notable cars to show their metal and meet other people with a similar passion. The show, hosted at Royal Honda, brought out a variety of cars, new and old. The most Canadian car at the event was Larry Kopan’s 1967 Beaumont. The car was a Canadian exclusive in the ‘60s, built in Canada, taking a Chevelle and giving it a unique grille and a dashboard. It’s that slightly different style that attracted Kopan to the model. “I’ve always had a passion for the Beaumont because of the dash and the grille, they’re unique,” Kopan says. While only under 3,500 were made overall, Kopan owns two, the grey model brought to the show itself as well as a white and red one. He says the second car is perfect for any patriotic event, since it’s a Canadian car in a Canadian color scheme. It’s a car that inspires passion in its owners, and Kopan says he’s part of a club with about 1,200 members that surrounds the model. The club also is a way for owners to keep their cars in good shape, as the unique trim pieces are often hard to find, given how rare it has become. Kopan notes that B.C. seems to be the province where the majority of Beaumonts were sold. “You can’t buy new parts for these cars. They didn’t reproduce parts, because there weren’t many being made and not very many being restored,” Kopan says. The car was last restored in 2005, and Kopan says it’s a car for special occasions. One model that one might not regularly see in the Yorkton area is Dale McGillivray’s 1974 Rolls Royce Silver Shadow. McGillivray says that owning

a Rolls Royce was always a dream of his, and he bought this one “sight unseen” in the United States in order to have one of his own. “I’ve wanted one of these since I was 20 years old, and I bought it a year and a half ago, so I finally got my dream car,” McGillivray says. Driving a Rolls Royce is different from driving most other cars, McGillivray says. It’s heavier than some trucks, but it’s a smooth ride. It’s also a car with presence, and McGillivray says even a short drive can attract a crowd. “You’re always going to get people taking pictures, it’s kind of a rush just owning one... This is probably the only one around, so it gets noticed,” McGillivray says. While it was expensive to buy new, at over $33,000 in 1974 – near $151,000 in today’s money – McGillivray says an older Rolls Royce is actually less expensive than you might think. He says that you can get a good one for $20-25,000, and it’s easy to find parts online. There are some challenges with running a Rolls Royce in Saskatchewan, McGillivray admits. Since there aren’t any around, and it does have unique systems like completely hydraulic suspension in brakes, McGillivray expects that he’ll have to learn how to work on it if anything goes wrong. He also admits that parts can sometimes come with a sticker shock of their own. A new hubcap, for example, goes for about $1,100, though used parts are available for much less online. McGillivray admits that it’s the internet that made his dream of owning a Rolls Royce possible, since it's the only way to find many of the harder to source components. The challenges are worth it, because McGillivray is in love with the car and the brand, collecting memorabilia and information as well as owning the car itself. “Any time I find any information on a Rolls I buy it,” McGillivray says.

TWO UNIQUE CARS at the Rolling Thunder Cruisers' annual show and shine were Larry Kopan's 1967 Beaumont (above), and Dale McGillivray's 1974 Rolls Royce Silver Shadow. They were just two of many unique and notable cars on display at the event.

Yorkton Municipal Airport to host open house By DEVIN WILGER N-R Writer The Yorkton Municipal Airport has both a long history and a vital part to play in the city today. In August, the Airport will be hosting an open house to highlight the role the airport has played in Yorkton’s past, and its future, taking place August 24 and 25. Keith Vaughan, chairman of the Yorkton Airport Authority says that the goal is to show the value of the airport. He notes that there’s a lot of commerce going through the airport every day,

and they are working to get more all the time, as well as starting a passenger service. The headline attraction will be a B-17 Bomber coming in from Arizona. Tours of the aircraft will be available for $5. There will also be vintage aircraft from the Brandon Commonwealth Air Museum, an A26, Harvard and Tiger Moth. Vaughan says aircraft similar to the Harvard and Tiger Moth would have been part of the training program back when Yorkton Airport was a Commonwealth Air Training airport. “[The B-17 is] something not a lot of

people get to see, especially to get in and walk around it. If you’ve got the dollars and you want to go for a flight in it, that would be a once in a lifetime thing,” Vaughan says. Going for a flight in the B-17 will cost $850 to be in the nose, and $450 to sit in the “belly” of the aircraft. The day will cap off with a hangar dance, with people encouraged to dress

THE YORKTON MUNICIPAL AIRPORT will host an open house in August, featuring vintage aircraft and a hangar dance. Councillor Larry Pearen (left) and Yorkton Airport Authority Chairman Keith Vaughan announce the event.

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in period clothing. There were frequently hangar dances back in the ‘40s. The hope is to see the yard full, Vaughan says, and that they would like to see continuing to do the event into the future. He says the ultimate goal is to do an air show at the airport, which he says is complicated to put together, but something which he would like to see happen in the future.


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 25, 2013 - Page 3A

It is time to discuss investment fees

Lately, buzz in the investment world has revolved around trailer fees paid to advisors. This follows a recent roundtable discussion held by the Ontario Securities Commission and the release of a

report late last year from the Canadian Securities Administrators deliberating the issue. Currently, some advisors are compensated by mutual fund companies via trailer fees embedded in management

LEANNE MARIN waits out the rain with her car at the Prairie Thunder Drags. The event was rained out for the first time in its 10 year history.

Prairie Thunder rained out By DEVIN WILGER N-R Writer It was the wrong kind of thunder at the Prairie Thunder Drag Races this year. For the first time in its 10 year history, the event was rained out, as storms made the track much too wet for racing. One of the racers who waited through the rain was Leanne Marin with Insomnia Racing. Marin was hoping to race her 1999 McKinney midengined dragster, a car that was recently rebuilt over winter. The car has 1073 horsepower and 830 lbs-ft of torque. Marin says that it’s the adrenaline, and that’s why she’s a drag racer, as well as the pride that comes from building a machine and seeing it run. She’s been racing for six years, but the new car is a change from what she was driving before, a 1979 Malibu. She says that it’s an entirely different ball game between the two cars, as the new one drives and launches completely different from what she was driving before. “I’ve picked up speed quite a bit, I’ve jumped to a seven second car from a ten second car. I just licensed in May with it and I don’t think I will ever give it up,” Marin says. While women still aren’t a common sight behind the wheel of a racer, Marin says that it’s something more women are trying, and more women should try. “You’ve seen the change from people being skepti-

cal of it to being supportive of it. It’s statistically proven that women are better at the lights with the reaction time, and being better at handling high horsepower machines, so it’s something you can see change in the last few decades.” Marin has been coming to the Kambuster event for the past six years, and she says it’s usually a highlight of the season. “It’s relaxed, the people are great, there is nothing like it anywhere else,” Marin says. “I’m just glad the Kambusters do this every year, it’s a great place to race.” Kambusters President Frank Pohozoff thanks all of the sponsors and fans for their support every year, and says it was unfortunate that the weather didn’t cooperate. The current plan is to open the September Test and Tune to the public, held September 14. He says that the most recent test and tune attracted about 90 cars, and hopefully it’ll give people who are missing the racing an opportunity to see the crews show their stuff.

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expense ratios. This is typically done in lieu of charging clients a separate fee for investment services and professional advice. For the most part, these advisors do not earn a salary but instead rely on this compensation structure. Investor advocates argue that this practice lacks the transparency investors need to make educated decisions about their portfolios. I believe the argument has merit, although I think the focus is somewhat misdirected and the discussion should be wider than trailer fees. The key issue isn’t whether or not advisors should be paid. Advisors provide a professional service and should be compensated according to the quality of their advice. Simply put, fees are paid in any industry, trade or profession for services rendered. Nobody works for free. The focus of the debate should instead be directed toward educating investors and creating

Financial freedom by Kim Inglis

www.reynoldsinglis.ca an environment where fees are openly discussed and completely disclosed. Investors should be fully apprised of the cost of doing business and they should understand what they are getting in return for the fees. These are important issues, which must be addressed accordingly. Surveys have shown that many investors are unaware of the fees they pay. The number of investment products has increased, translating into a variety of fees with some embedded in the cost of the product and others charged separately. It’s no wonder investors are confused. To remedy this, inves-

tors should have the entire fee structure clarified in detail and provided in writing. When contracting for any kind of service a customer gets a price, and investing should not be different. Neither should advisors wait for investors to ask before disclosing fees. Costs should be part of the discussion before the investor signs on as a client. Advisors should fully explain what the fees are paying for. What services can the investors expect in return? Is the fee associated purely with the cost of the investment transaction or will other services be included, such as finan-

GET IT ON THE WEB Our website has a complete package of local, national and international news plus many other features such as: • TV listings • Horoscopes • Events Calendar • Markets • Weather & Travel • Classifieds • Sports • Opinions • Entertainment

cial planning? All too often fees are an afterthought that is only discussed when an issue arises. This needs to change. Advisors must take a more active role in the fee education process. No matter what the industry, there is always a cost of doing business. However, in the investment world, a change is needed and that change is transparency. Investors must fully understand their costs so they can be confident in their investments and can make informed decisions. Without that openness the industry will remain mired in distrust and there will forever be a disconnect between advisor and client. Kim Inglis, CIM, PFP, FCSI, AIFP is an Investment Advisor & Portfolio Manager. She can be contacted via www.reynoldsinglis.ca. The views in this column are solely those of the author.

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Page 4A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 25, 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

GENERAL MANAGER: OFFICE MANAGER: EDITOR: WRITERS:

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: Mindy Gaber

A small problem, handled poorly In March, in anticipation of the birth of the royal baby, the federal government passed a bill that took gender out of the equation for the line of succession. This was an adaptation of a British bill which fulfilled the same function – it was, in fact, the exact same bill. It was passed unanimously and with little fanfare. Yet it became controversial, with Quebec launching a legal challenge against the bill. Quebec is doing this not because they hate the idea of more queens, but because the bill was passed without consultation with the provinces, and as it makes a change to the Canadian constitution they feel that was a major oversight. The problem is, Canadian law is built around precedent, judges are instructed to go back to previous cases in order to render judgment. This allows the court to remain consistent and fair across different cases, but it also means that this particular case is going to draw the ire of a province most concerned with provincial power. It’s easy to understand why the federal government wanted to push the bill through with minimal fuss. It needed to be done to align the constitution with the country that actually selects the monarch, but it’s not a pressing issue. As of now, it will be over 20 years before it is relevant. However, the provinces should have been quickly consulted, even if they would all quickly approve anyway. It is not because this is important, but because of other constitutional changes in the future. Quebec’s concern is that if this is unchallenged, it will not be consulted on those.

A hero or a traitor, you make the call Hero or traitor? What do you think? Aside from Facebook and the like, over the past few decades of technological evolution, the internet has become so vast that people can use it with ease to steal, spy, terrorize and do almost anything else the mind can conjure up. (Well, the technologically savvy can anyway – and they do.) This fact has the tendency to make a government as protective as the USA nervous and rightly so. Access to private government information can be a dangerous weapon in the wrong hands, but as we look to the supposedly “freest country in the world” which has written a constitution on freedom of the press and the right to speak your mind, you have to wonder how far a government should be able to go before they are breaking every oath and reason to govern there is. During a recent scandal National Security Agency “leaker” Edward Snowden revealed to the public critical, top-secret information about the NSA’s (National Security Agency) surveillance programs, including the fact that major U.S. phone and Internet companies were implicit in

providing massive amounts of data about Americans to the NSA. It has also since been revealed that the Canadian government is performing similar surveillance. Apparently, the 30 year old high-school drop-out Shannon Deveau was able to attain the information while holding a three month job at Booz Allen Hamilton, the recipient of billions in secret government contracts. Snowden is now in hiding (reportedly in Russia) and faces life in prison if returned to the US but the whole situation leaves both Canadians and Americans to ponder – is Snowden in fact a hero or a traitor? What Snowden did not only shows the government’s interest in the activities of its own citizens, but that someone with very limited security access can easily obtain the documents to incriminate it. So I say HERO. Someone who puts other people’s freedoms and rights above his own life can, by all means, be considered by definition a hero. How many of you would like to live in a society where the government has so much unchecked power? Not I for one.

The way I see it... Column

Think about the information you spread around A few weeks ago, some people I know began circulating a rumor. This surrounded a mysterious dog fighting ring, which stuck stickers on the fences of homes in order to steal their pets and eventually make them fight each other. It spread from person to person, each one horrified that someone would actually do this. Nobody actually does this. It doesn’t make much sense, your beloved family pet would make a terrible fighting dog, if it was aggressive enough to be a fighting dog you would not want it in your home. If someone was prone to making dogs fight, it would make more sense to find a half-feral stray or find a shady breeder than snatch a dog that people would miss, from a home that is relatively protected, which would not want to fight other dogs anyway. But, it strikes a chord with people. They love their dogs, they hate the idea of dog fights and the idea that their dog could be snatched by a low life who would force it to do terrible things is a frightening proposition. So, the rumor spreads, just like any other rumor that gains traction online. These aren’t the only ones. You will have celebrity quotes which were never said by the celebrities in question. You will have medical advice backed with no evidence at all. You have crime sprees which are scary, but don’t actually make much sense. And they’re all

Things I do with words... Column Devin Wilger spread, often by good-natured people who just want their friends to be safe, healthy and happy. It’s a frustrating thing for those of us who see our friends spreading these rumors without actually thinking. Each step of the way, it’s not too difficult to stop these rumors. A quick search will often find sources that refute the various outlandish claims. But, most people don’t actually look for a source. Their friends believe it, and their friends are trustworthy, so they spread it to more people and it eventually makes it around the world. The crazy rumors are suddenly something everyone has heard and many people believe.

This is nothing new, but it’s something that has become progressively worse as people are more connected with each other. Strange rumors spread rapidly because people assume they can trust their friends, so we get stuff that, while frightening, doesn’t quite pass the sniff test. Many of the crime rumors don’t make sense from the criminal point of view. Much of the medical advice is rooted in fear tactics, but the actual solutions are a bit too simple. The celebrity quotes are usually too on the nose, and never quite sound like something the celebrity in question would say. We need more people to think critically about what they’re reading. They need to look for evidence to back up the claims before they spread them to their friends and family. Believing anything that is spread around the internet means eventually one could encounter a rumor that is genuinely destructive, something which could legitimately harm their family. The dog rumor is ultimately harmless, at worst it causes people to keep a closer eye on their pet. But what if there is a piece of medical advice that is actually more harmful than anything? Or, someone could be implicated in a crime they had no connection with, which has happened more than once already. That’s the problem, we need to think about what we spread around, rather than post it blindly.


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 25, 2013 - Page 5A

to the editor

LETTERS PAGE The price of eliminating poverty

To the Editor:

What would it cost to eliminate poverty and ensure that each person on the planet enjoyed a ‘living wage’; enough income to meet their basic needs for a descent and good life? First, the world’s leaders, along with the world’s billionaires, would have to issue a declaration that all people on the planet are deserving of a sufficient ‘living wage’ that would meet their needs for a good life. What is a living wage? A living wage is the income required to meet the basic needs for a reasonable good life of clean water, good air, good food, comfortable shelter, clothing and some healthy degree of autonomy. The Catholic 13th century theologian Thomas Aquinas (building on the ideas of Aristotle) said what is required of a good life is sufficiency of material needs (and hence sufficiency of income to finance those needs) and virtuous action). Based on Plato and Aquinas, the key virtues to act upon are moderation, courage, justice and wisdom. Here are the facts: • The current estimated global poverty line is $1.45 per day or $530 per year. • Two dollars and 50 cents per day ($912 per year) is the estimated poverty level in developing countries. In 2005, according to poverty facts, currently roughly 50 per cent of the world’s people (over 3.2 billion) live on that amount per day while 80 per cent (5.15 billion) live on $10/ day or less. That $10 dollar a day (US$3,650 per year) figure is close to

poverty levels in the U.S. • The poorest 40 per cent of the world’s population accounts for 5 per cent of global income. The richest 20 per cent accounts for three-quarters of world income. • In 2005, the wealthiest 20 per cent of the world accounted for 76.6 per cent of total private consumption. The poorest fifth just 1.5 per cent. • The poorest 10 per cent accounted for just 0.5 per cent of all consumption while the wealthiest 10 per cent accounted for 59 per cent of all the consumption. • About 0.13 per cent of the world’s population controlled 25 per cent of the world’s financial assets in 2004. The total wealth of the top 8.3 million people around the world “rose 8.2 per cent to $30.8 trillion in 2004, giving them control of nearly a quarter of the world’s financial assets.” • A conservative estimate for 2010 is that at least a third of all private financial wealth, and nearly half of all offshore wealth, is now owned by world’s richest 91,000 people – just 0.001 per cent of the world’s population. • The next 51 per cent of all wealth is owned by the next 8.4 million – just 0.14 per cent of the world’s population. Almost all of this financial wealth has managed to avoid all income and estate taxes, either by the countries where it has been invested and or where it comes from. • The world’s gross domestic product in 2006 was $48.2 trillion in 2006. • The world’s wealthiest countries

(approximately one billion people) accounted for $36.6 trillion dollars (76 per cent). • The world’s billionaires – just 497 people (approximately 0.000008 per cent of the world’s population) – were worth $3.5 trillion (over seven per cent of world GDP). • Low income countries (2.4 billion people) accounted for just $1.6 trillion of GDP (3.3 per cent) • Middle income countries (three billion people) made up the rest of GDP at just over $10 trillion (20.7 per cent). How much would this cost to eliminate poverty around the world (with 7.074 billion people and assuming the same distribution of poverty)? • To double the income level of roughly 5.64 billion (80 per cent of the world’s population who live on less than $10/day) to $10.00/day would cost $29.39 billion per year. (I have not included people in the developed countries who may not be earning $10/day). • That $29.39 billion is equivalent of 0.5 per cent of the total estimated wealth of the world’s billionaires (according to Forbes latest wealth estimates). If we bumped this up to my estimate of a ‘good life’ living wage of roughly U.S. $4.00/work hours or roughly $20/day (averaged over 365 days), then the annual price tag would jump to $85.7 billion per year or 1.6 per cent of the total wealth of the world’s wealthiest billionaires. Mark Anielskiis, Troy Media Corp.

Tax on credit unions just a cash grab

To the Editor:

Credit Unions have always been crucial to the commercial success and community strength of my home province of Saskatchewan, and the same is true right across Canada. They provide highcalibre financial services and valuable choice in the marketplace. Because they are locallyowned by their members and have a customer-service business model, Credit Unions also provide a range of services in places and to population groups that large commercial banks would never reach. Over 11-million Canadians are Credit Union members, including half of Saskatchewan’s total population. In addition to the extensive “caisse populaire” system spanning Quebec and parts of Ontario and New Bruns-

wick, there are 348 Credit Unions, large and small, across the country operating at 1,762 locations. The largest is “Vancity” on the west coast. “Conexus” in Regina is Number-6. For 40 years, Credit Unions have been taxed on their income as small businesses. This preferential tax rate recognizes that even the largest Credit Union is 16-times smaller than the smallest of Canada’s five Big Banks. Those five banks dominate 90 per cent of the Canadian banking sector. A lower tax rate for Credit Unions also acknowledges their local, community-based ownership and the fact that their only source of capital is their members and customers, whereas the banks raise large volumes of capital on public markets. The first obligation of the banks is to their shareholders. The

first duty of Credit Unions is to their members. That’s all to the good, but here’s the bad news: Buried deep in Stephen Harper’s 2013 budget, now being forced through the Senate, the income tax system for Credit Unions is being changed – to treat them more like Big Banks. This constitutes a massive Conservative tax increase, and a big hit on the retained earnings which Credit Unions use to grow, lend money to small businesses and farmers, and fund community development. Competition and customer service will inevitably be impaired. The timing couldn’t be worse because this tax grab comes just when Credit Unions, like all financial institutions, are grappling with more stringent capital rules imposed on the whole industry in the wake of bank failures dur-

ing the recent recession. There was no consultation whatsoever. This tax hike is entirely unilateral. It’s driven by the Harper government’s political “need” to concoct the illusion of a “balanced budget” by 2015. That’s why Credit Unions are being slapped with this new tax burden of about $75-million every year. That’s also why taxes on small business owners are going up by some $550-million per year, and tariff-taxes on consumer goods are going up by $333-million per year, and EI payroll taxes are going up by more than $600-million per year. Altogether, it’s massive. It’s also counterproductive and fundamentally dishonest. Ralph Goodale, MP, Wascana, SK.

Dog’s head out the window a dangerous habit To the Editor: For most pups, the best part of a car ride is feeling the breeze in their furry faces as they stick their head out the window. Despite the feel good nature of this pleasurable experience, it’s actually a very dangerous habit. In the early days of automobiles, most cars did not have windshields and their top speed was approximately 45 mph. Given those conditions, drivers wore goggles to protect their eyes. Now that we have windshields to protect us, you wouldn’t consider sticking your unprotected head out the window at 45 mph. Then why let your dog? Allowing your dog to let it stick its head out the window is a very dangerous habit. Their eyes are exposed to dirt, rocks, dust and other debris. These materials can easily puncture

and scratch your dog’s eyes. A line of pet goggles have come out which are to help prevent these types of injuries. However, even if you can train your dog not to paw them off his head, there are still many other dangers when your dog’s head is out the window while driving. Damage to the ears is another big concern. When the dog’s ears flap in the wind, his soft ear flaps (pinnae) can easily become irritated, swell and become very tender. The constant and rapid flapping of the pinnae against your dog’s head from high-speed winds causes trauma to the ear and results in swelling. Repeated trauma such as this can cause lifelong problems for your pup. Allowing your dog to stick its head out the window can also lead to more severe outcomes, such as falling out of the car or getting his head stuck in the window opening. Taking a turn

a bit too fast, traveling over bumpy terrain or an overly excited pup can cause your dog to lose balance and easily fall out of the window. These types of incidents occur more frequently than one might imagine and can cause severe injury or death to dogs. It should go without saying; but another very dangerous idea is to allow your dog to ride in the bed of a pickup truck. The best place for your dog to ride is in the back seat or cargo area of your vehicle, properly restrained of course. Utilizing a pet safety belt, car seat, vehicle pet barrier, or a travel crate is the best ways to ensure that your pup’s travels are happy and safe. Sure, crack the window, but no heads out! Kim Salerno, TripsWithPets.com.

Your letter of the Week Does us no favors To the Editor: Is there a Canadian, or a significant group of Canadians, unaware of Canada’s historical connection with Great Britain? I ask the question because the Harper government seems almost obsessed with reminding Canadians that the nation was once a British colony, as if we had somehow forgotten. Recent announcements by the Canadian government regarding a review of provincial Canadian history curriculum, the ongoing rebranding of the Canadian Forces to reflect British military tradition, and the campaign to celebrate the anniversary of the War of 1812 all speak to a curious effort about why it is felt Canadians do not understand history. As someone who identifies as a staunch Canadian patriot, I have no problem with reflecting on our country’s proud history, but a significant part of that history seems to escape the Harper government: that is, the post-1945 version of Canada that came into its own. Following the Second World War, Canada never lost its British roots, but took great strides in asserting its independence from both the British Crown and also from its American neighbours to the south. The creation of a uniquely Canadian flag and national anthem, the repatriation of the Canadian Constitution, the involvement in international peacekeeping and peacebuilding missions, and strides in human and economic development all signify the evolution of the Canadian identity since 1945. A major fear throughout these reviews of history and return to British traditions is that the Conservatives are trying to selectively erase or overshadow what they perceive as Liberal legacies in the nation’s history. Such a concern is highlighted in the areas of foreign affairs and national defence, as many of the alterations made by Harper are aimed at events or policies enacted during eras when Canada was governed by a Liberal Prime Minister. For instance, the rebranding of the Canadian Forces back to British ranking and insignia work in direct contrast to the amalgamation of the Forces during the late 1960s; Harper’s continued refusal to use the language of Responsibility to Protect, or R2P, on the international stage, while approving missions that would seem to be premised on the same principles, is based on the fact that R2P and human security were prominent ideas during the Chrétien and Martin eras; and the Harper government’s confounding withdrawal from multilateral institutions seems to be nothing more than an effort to promote a sense of Canadian identity divorced from previous Liberal governments. Further, the review of Canadian history curriculum announced in May of 2013 is disturbing and unusual, considering education curriculum in all subject matters is a provincial mandate. To think that a government would intervene and possibly seek to rewrite history serves little purpose at all. The committee of federal parliamentarians that would initiate the review, dominated by Conservative MPs, made note that emphasis needed to be placed on battles in modern Canadian history. If there is a history curriculum somewhere in this country that is not teaching the War of 1812, the First and Second World Wars, the Korean War, peacekeeping, the Cold War, the Afghan conflict or humanitarian intervention missions, that is absolutely a problem which should be immediately rectified. However, no evidence has been presented to indicate there is a problem with how students are being taught Canadian history. Remembering Canada’s past is integral, but proper scholarship is not selective in its memory. Love or hate the governments, Prime Ministers or decisions of the past, they all account for and impact the Canada we have today. Our history is so important precisely because our contributions to international society extend far beyond Britain, the United States and battles. My hope is that all Canadians take pride in that legacy, and not just what the government of the day deems relevant. Robert W. Murray, 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 25, 2013

Deferred Payment of Old Age Security now available Canadians are living longer, thanks to global advances in health, fitness and science. People today are taking many different paths to retirement, and some seniors are choosing to work longer. This means all kinds of choices and adjustments, from personal decisions about careers and retirement, to the need for governments to develop and amend policies and programs. To improve flexibility and choice in retirement planning, the Government of Canada announced the new voluntary deferral option for the Old Age Security (OAS) pension. As of July 1, 2013, Canadians have now been given the option to voluntarily defer their OAS pension for up to five years. Doing so concentrates their total payments into a shorter time frame, meaning a higher monthly amount. For every month they delay receipt of their OAS pension,

Parliamentary Report Op-Ed Column by Garry Breitkreuz they will receive an increased monthly benefit of 0.6 percent per month, up to a maximum of 36 percent at age 70. People can defer their OAS pension for as little as one month, or as much as 60 months. For example, if you were to turn 65 today and decided to

delay receiving your OAS pension for one year, your monthly amount would increase by 7.2 percent (0.6 percent x 12 months). A deferred OAS payment isn’t for everyone, though. People should consider their personal situations when deciding when to start receiving their OAS pension. Some things to consider are financial status, life expectancy, wants and needs. Something else to keep in mind is that delaying the OAS pension means a similar delay in the receipt of Guaranteed Income Supplement. In addition, a spouse or common-law partner will not be eligible to receive the Allowance until their OAS pension begins. You can find out more about voluntary deferral and how it may affect your retirement plans at the Service Canada website: www.servicecanada.gc.ca/ oaschanges.

ArcheoCaravan highlights Saskatchewan's history By DEVIN WILGER N-R Writer People of all ages had an opportunity to learn about archeology in the province recently, as the ArcheoCaravan made its way to the Western Development Museum. Loni Williams with the Saskatchewan Archaeological Society says that the goal was to get people to learn more about what is going on with archeology in the province. The day had activities for kids, with hide painting, pottery reconstruction and pottery making, activities made to illustrate how the province’s indigenous people lived, or how archaeologists figure out what an item is and where it comes from. There was also a display of the different artifacts found in the province to highlight what is going on with archaeology in

Saskatchewan. The focus of most archaeology is on indigenous people in the province, specifically in the pre-contact era. Typical artifacts found are the objects people used every day, Williams says. Things like knives, pottery, hammer stones and projectile points are the most common finds in the area. “Sometimes people are surprised that pottery was made so long ago. Two thousand years ago is a long time, and to know that they are making pottery, and to know that the archeological history in Saskatchewan can go back upwards of 10,000 years is usually pretty shocking to people,” Williams says. She uses the example of the projectile points to show how archaeology can show how a culture develops and technology

changes. An arrowhead, for example, is a relatively recent invention, within the past 3,000 years. Before that, it was darts and spears, so by looking at a point, Williams says, one can tell when it was made and how it was used, based on the shape and construction. Williams notes that many of the artifacts are broken, which indicates something about the people who created them. As everything was difficult to make, people would use their tools until they could not use them any more, and would sometimes adapt them to a second use to ensure they were not wasted. She notes that pot shards were often used to temper new pots when they were made. The ArchaeoCaravan’s job is to raise awareness of both history and arche-

ology in Saskatchewan. Williams says that it’s important that people know about history, and the groups like the Saskatchewan Archaeological Society as well as museums which work to

learn more about the history of the region. “We try to foster an appreciation of history. We do this in conjunction with local museums because we want them to learn that the local histo-

ry is also really important. Not just pre-contact, which is what our focus is, but also the historic items of the people who settled here from Europe... and to respect that history,” Williams says.

GIVING BACK – John Anderson, General Manager of the Days Inn and Suites in Yorkton (above left) recently announced the hotel’s sponsorship of The Health Foundation’s Charity Road Race event with a donation of $1,000. “The Days Inn & Suites is proud to be a part of the Yorkton community,” says Anderson. “We intend to be part of this community, and are very pleased to have the opportunity to partner with The Health Foundation and to assist them in putting on a very worthwhile event in the Charity Road Race.” “This is a wonderful donation,” says Ross Fisher, Executive Director of The Health Foundation (above right). “It is terrific to see that the Days Inn & Suites plans to be part of the community. Proceeds of the Charity Road Race will help us to purchase medical equipment we need for the new stroke clinic in the regional hospital. We are very appreciative of the support the Days Inn is providing our Charity Road Race, as well to our efforts to improve our local healthcare.”

KIDS LEARN about indigenous pottery and how it was made during the recent visit of the ArcheoCaravan to the Western Development Museum. The program, put on with the Saskatchewan Archaeological Society, aims to educate and foster an appreciation for the province's history.

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COOL CAT – Hi there, my name’s Lily. I’m a one year old spayed female cat. I’m one cool customer, and I just love people of all ages. You’re not going to find a cat more affectionate than me! If you’ve got a responsible, permanent home, and will love me as much as I’ll love you, make sure to come on down. To learn more come visit the SPCA or call 306-7834080. The SPCA is also in need of a few supplies, such as canned cat food and old newspaper to line cages. Be sure to call if you can help out.

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Page 8A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 25, 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. 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 Jewelry & Craft Items From Kenya Available for sale at the Yorkton Exhibition Grandstand July 26, 5-8 p.m. Proceeds for drilling water wells and assisting orphans with food, clothes, & education Presented by Vic Hamer. 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! Yorkton Branch of the Saskatchewan Genealogical Society Monthly Meetings Yorkton Public Library For info. call Sharon Lindsay at 783-7054.

“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. 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. 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, any time during regular opening hours at Yorkton Public Library. 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.

Cribbage & Pool The Yorkton Retired Citizens Inc. group invites interested cribbage and pool players to come out to St. Gerard’s Church – lower level – Tuesdays and Thursdays from 1:15 to 4 p.m. $1 for the afternoon for crib, $1.25 for the afternoon for pool, price includes light lunch. For info. call Helen at 783-0802 or Angie at 783-7838. Call for Art In recognition of our 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. Please register your interest by August 15th, 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 a sunflower in it somewhere.) Habitat for Humanity Volunteers Wanted Habitat Yorkton is excitedly preparing for another build and is 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”. 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. Calling all Bridge Players! The Yorkton Duplicate Bridge Club has started up. The club meets weekly on Thursdays at 1:00 p.m. at the Yorkton Public Library. Call 7834220 for more details.

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! 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 27. Country Sunshine August 2nd. Andrew Mariniuk & Boys August 9th. Memory Lane August 16th, Parklanders August 23rd. Old Country Lads August 30th. Ron & Sandra Rudoski Contact Peter at: 306782-1846. Admission: $7.00 per person. Community Adult Band Rehearsals Tuesdays 7 p.m. at Yorkton Regional High School Band Room. Two bands - Community Concert Band and Yorkton’s ALL THAT JAZZ Big Band New members welcome! For more information, contact Larry Pearen, Director 786-2582 (day time) 782-4182 (evenings). Yorkton and District United Way • looking for dedicated people interested in taking part of a growing organization that helps agencies and crucial services in and around the Yorkton area. To learn more call Kristin Parsons at 782-9389 or email yorktonunited way@sasktel.net. SIGN Parenting Education Classes LAPS (Literacy and Parenting Skills) • Weekly Parent and Preschooler Program for 3 and 4-year-olds, their parents and younger siblings • crafts, snacks, games, songs and positive parenting info. Call Janet at 783-9424 for more information or to register.

Crossroads – a support group for women who are experiencing or have experienced violence. Group is held at SIGN on Broadway every Thursday from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. For more information contact 782-0673 or 782-5181.

Kinette Club of Yorkton • meets the second Wednesday of every month at 7 p.m. To learn more or to attend, contact either Lana Matechuk, Club President at 782-9717 or Marcia Sedor, Membership Director at 782-2053.

Treasure Chest Toastmasters Club • meets weekly on Wednesday evenings from 7:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. at SIGN on Broadway. Impact your world by enhancing your communication and leadership skills. Guests and new members welcome. For more information contact: Faye - 782-2994; or Joanne - 783-3034.

The Torch Club – leadership, growth and empowerment program for youth ages 10-13 Call Erin at 783-2582 for details.

Save the Yorkton Brick Mill Become a member and be a part of a great historical venture. Learn more or get involved by visiting: www.yorkton brickmill.org Interested parties can also call 783-0290 or 783-6211. St. John Ambulance First Aid Classes OHS Standard First Aid/ CPR classes. Personalized courses and online training also available. For more info. or to register call Judy at 783-4544 or email: sjayyorkton@sk.sja.ca. Singers Unite! Yorkton Community Concert Choir Practices every Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the choir room the YRHS (use parking lot entrance) Contact Laurene at 782-0460, Shanni at 783-9145 or Anna at 744-2729 for details. Club DJ Heritage Baptist Church Thursday evenings 6:30-7:45 p.m. • for children Grades K-6 • a mid week program designed to engage local children with church • Bible stories, crafts, games, music and more... Call 783-7912 for details.

Adult Dance Group (Troyanda Ukrainian Dance Ensemble) Ukrainian Orthodox Auditorium Wednesdays, 6:15 to 7:15 p.m. Call John Denysek at 782-1559 or email: jdenysek@sasktel.net to join or to learn more. Parkland Therapeutic Riding Association Horseback riding and other activities for children and adults with physical and intellectual disabilities. Meets Tuesdays at noon Shadow Stables. For more info call 7827930 or 782-7782 or email mbozsik@sasktel. net. Al-Anon Al-Anon meets Mondays, 8 p.m. at St. Paul’s Lutheran Church, and Wednesdays at the Westview United Church. Big Brothers Big Sisters In-School Mentoring Be a Mentor – spend one hour a week. Play games, do crafts, read books... Make a difference in the life of a child. For info. call 782-3471. To place your Community Event contact The News Review at 783-7355, fax 782-9138, or e-mail: editorial @yorktonnews.com.

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THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 25, 2013 - Page 9A

Vacations offer a time of refreshment and healing Vacations offer us a time to get away from our everyday life style. Life can become very monotonous for both adults and children when we do the same tasks each day. We long to get away from life’s routine to rest body, mind and spirit. Within our busy work place there is little time for relaxation. In today’s world, many adults do not get more than 4-5 hours sleep each night. The body needs time to physically refresh and restore itself. The mind and the spirit also need time to rest. We carry many emotions with us that come from life experiences and we need that quiet time to rest and refresh. A real vacation is when we leave all work and stress behind and enjoy the present moment. We leave behind our worries, fears and all other emotions that seem to rule our day and often our nights. As a child, my parents never took us on long vacations. It seemed that the farm work was never done and one season rolled into the next. The work seemed endless. We went from seeding into haying, fencing, gardening, harvest in a very short period of time. The closest we got to a vacation was to visit my dad’s brother in Manitoba. Just getting away for a day gave everyone a wonderful rest, and gave us the opportunity to enjoy the company of our aunt, uncles and cousins. It was preparing for this event that gave us much pleasure. To this very day I still remember those great times we enjoyed with our

FROM MORNING UNTIL EVENING... Column by Margaret Anne Yost family. Many people do not get vacation pay and for them vacations are few and far between. When vacation pay is not offered with our job many just can’t afford to go away. So how can these people be refreshed and restored? We do not have to go far or stay long to be refreshed. The planning that goes into the vacation is already part of the excitement of getting away. Getting maps, planning the route or the activities are the first steps of vacationing. One need not go away for a 6 week vacation. We may be able to plan a few short weekend retreats during the year- we will always have something to look forward to and something to plan for later in the year. The length of the vacation does not bring the happiness; the part of the vacation that brings us joy is being together with family and friends and leaving the

Aviva makes call for entries Yorkton’s new skate park proved the benefits of applying and once again the opportunity to garner funding has arrived. The Aviva Commuity Fund has announced it will be giving away $1,000,000 – again! Will you donate an idea? If you’ve got a great idea to create positive change within your community but don’t know how to make it happen, the Aviva Community Fund is there for you. This year, the top ideas as chosen by Canadians will have a chance to share in $1,000,000 in funding. The 2013 competition starts on September 23, but those interested in

applying are encourged to start thinking now. A pre-launch website has been set up and you can visit it at: www.avivacommunityfund.org. On the site you get basic information about this year’s competition; see last year’s winners; download the Info Kit filled with insider tips on how to prepare your submission; get a head start – enter your email address and “Like” Aviva on Facebook to get all the competition updates. The Info Kit contains everything applicants need to know to plan, create and promote their ideas. You can submit your idea starting September 23. Voting begins September 30.

Yorkton Storm Hunter joins TVN By DEVIN WILGER N-R Writer The many storms in Yorkton are about to reach a bigger audience. Yorkton Storm Hunter Ryan Crouse has just joined the TVN Weather network, an invite-only site which hosts some of the most well regarded storm hunters. Crouse and his team, driver Chris Flasko, and second photographer Katie Vickers will now be broadcasting their stream to a much larger audience. Crouse describes the move as “epic.” He says that the rest of the team on TVN consists of the elite of North American storm chasing, and he is barely able to put into words the honor it is to be counted among their number. The move does come with some new features for Crouse, which he admits have a bit of a learning curve. Viewers will be able to see where Crouse is at all times when he’s broadcasting,

Correction In the July 18 edition of The News Review identified the owner of the Dominator as Greg Johnson. The owner of this vehicle is actually world famous meteorologist Reed Timmer. We apologize for any confusion this may have caused.

and he had to go from a web-based streaming service to a new system. The new system is more complicated, but it also brings Crouse to an entirely new audience. “We always sat around 20 to 65 tops, and [Sunday] when we were recording a funnel cloud by Carnduff we were at 255 viewers,” Crouse says. Crouse plans to do some streams of winter storms now that he has the larger platform. He says there will be unique challenges in winter, especially as roads quickly become impassable due to snow, but he knows that people in Texas, for example, who have never seen snow, will be interested in seeing what happens. He expects the winter feeds to be brief, because of the different dangers chasing brings in the winter months. “It will be just to get a visual representation of what is going on here, for the world to see... When you’re out in the summer, and you know you’re in a tornado warned area, you generally should have a safe route in, safe route out, with back up plans... In the winter you don’t really have that, since the back roads in Saskatchewan really aren’t drivable.” Those who wish to keep track of Crouse can visit www.yorktonstormhunter.com or www.tvnweather.com.

work world behind us. In the past, we have taken many vacations to New York, Pennsylvania and North Carolina. The planning that went into these vacations took weeks. It was exciting to watch the children as they spoke of attractions we would encounter along the way. It was important for us to try to accommodate the wishes of the entire family sometime during our vacation. Making the best of each day while on vacation is important. It is good if we can stop and enjoy the sights and sounds along the way. This makes the driving as enjoyable as the destination. With tour guides and travelling agencies we can take in attractions along the way and enjoy each day. Stopping in rest areas to let children run and play can be most helpful to overcome the endless question of “Are we there yet?” Much happiness can come from even a short vacation. Remember we need not go far and we need not stay long. Margaret Anne Yost nursed for 35 years. Returning back to school she completed classes from the Red River College in the areas of Gerontology, Bereavement, Death and Dying. For twelve years she worked in bereavement support at a funeral home. At present she is employed as an Interim Parish Worker at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Melville, Sask. She also enjoys her role as homemaker, wife, mother and grandmother.

DRIVING TOWARDS A NEW HOSPITAL – Yorkton Hyundai recently made a major contribution towards a new hospital, donating $2,000. Pictured are Ron Kaban, dealer principal of Yorkton Hyundai (left) and Ross Fisher, Executive Director of the Health Foundation. Kaban says that it’s time to show the community is ready for the new facility, and he hopes to see other businesses show their support. He says he hopes this donation keeps the momentum going.

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


Page 10A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 25, 2013

WE’RE ALWAYS ON THE MOVE 125 Theodore St., Theodore

53 Madge Way

MLS® 456630

MLS® 460302

$

150 Circlebrooke Drive 160 Johnston Cres., Canora 204 Allan Avenue, Saltcoats MLS® 461856

$

62,900

$

549,900

276,900

MLS® 462014

$

110,000

MLS® 466361

$

23 Gladstone Ave. S.

51 Elizabeth Ave.

126 Indian Point

17 Wallace Ave.

MLS® 466975

MLS® 467405

MLS® 467506

MLS® 469228

MLS® 468629

$

287,900

$

225,000

219,000

$

199,000

$

179,900

67 Clarewood Cres. $

RM of Wallace

MLS® 465837

269,000

65 Willow Cres. EXCLUSIVE

$

$

219,000

384,500

Cheryl Kustra REALTOR® 28 Armstrong St., Theodore 21 Armstrong St., Theododre 214 Poplar Ave., Canora MLS® 469251

MLS® 469282

$

$

MLS® 469379

$

306-621-4454

330 1st Ave. N.

ckustra@remax-yorkton.ca

MLS® 470184

®

$

18,000 134,900 49,900 162,900

BLUE CHIP REALTY

10 Deerfoot, Burgis Beach Drive

11 Deerfoot, Burgis Beach Drive

MLS® 462880

MLS® 462886

327 Parker Cres., Canora

$

42,000

$

42,000

MLS® 446718

$

489,000

37 Wallace Avenue

110 Circlebrooke Drive

27 Pheasant Cove

422 York Heights

MLS® 464379

MLS® 464683

MLS® 466140

MLS® 467206

$

$

279,900

$

135,000

$

519,000

115,000

Evan Johnson REALTOR®

#108-289 Fietz Street

306-620-7977

MLS® 469244

$

175,000

ejohnson@remax-yorkton.ca ®

BLUE CHIP REALTY

20 Seaton St., Springside 105 Glasgow Ave., Saltcoats 401 Pleasant Ave. 401 Drummond Ave. MLS® 446391

$

179,900

2 Pinkerton Bay

MLS® 458647

$

89 Dalewood Cres $

279,000

$

39,000

®

MLS 463143

62,000

EXCLUSIVE

$

415,000

9 Partridge Court EXCLUSIVE

®

MLS 465667

$

5 Partridge Court

MLS® 461015

52 Pheasant Cove 63 Westshore Green

®

MLS 462620

73,500

$

285,000

®

$

MLS® 461014

MLS 467095

415,000

$

109,900

$

479,000

Prices Ranging from $41,000 - $55,000 Various lot sizes available

Stacy Neufeld REALTOR® 47 Westshore Green 226 3rd Avenue 144 2nd Ave. N. MLS® 467099

$

MLS® 467261

MLS® 469236

281 2nd Ave. N. MLS® 469367

156,900 $239,000 $214,000 $49,000

306-621-3630

sneufeld@remax-yorkton.ca ®

BLUE CHIP REALTY


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 25, 2013 - Page 11A

Evan Johnson

Full Line of Plumbing, Heating, Electrical • Residential and Commercial Wiring • Renovations • Fixture and Faucet Installation and Repair • Oil, Gas and Propane Systems

R. MILLER’S Plumbing, Heating and Electrical Service Ltd. 225 - 4th Ave. N. Yorkton, Sask. S3N 1A9 Phone: (306) 783-4020 Fax: (306) 782-5354

REALTOR®

(306) 620-7977

ejohnson@remax-yorkton.ca ®

BLUE CHIP REALTY

REAL ESTATE NEWS OPEN HOUSE August 10, 1:00-5:00 Come visit these beautiful lake front lots located only 15 minutes from Yorkton

Broadway Park Realty

®

CENTURY 21 AGENTS. SMARTER. BOLDER. FASTER. © 2011 Century 21 Real Estate LLC. All rights reserved. CENTURY 21® is a registered trademark owned by Century 21 Real Estate LLC. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Each office is independently owned and operated.

Take a look at our website! www.century21yorkton.ca Ph: 306-782-2253 Fax: 306-786-6740

This k’s Wee ture Fea

5 Pheasant Cove Located in Desirable Riverside Grove Located on Anderson Lake, 15 km East on

REALTOR

cwerner@teamcore.ca

www.teamcore.ca

MLS® 469845

HOUSES (306)OPEN 621-3689 $

Highway 16. Follow the signs. (306) 782-9680

• 1338 sq. ft. of “West Coast Design” • 3 bedrooms and two 4 piece bathrooms • Many custom details that enhance this beautiful home

Deb Schmidt

429,000

deb.schmidt@century21.ca

Earn Air Miles Rewards

566 Prince Edward St., Melville

OPEN HOUSE

5-7 pm

Beautiful remodelled home located close to schools and across from a family park. This 1650 sq. ft. home has many features. Large kitchen with abundance of oak cabinets and island. There are 4 fireplaces, 3 bedrooms, main floor laundry, formal dining, finished basement and a mature landscaped yard with a pond, deck, hot tub and several perennial flower beds. Tandem garage and RV parking.

Thursday, July 25th

$

259,500

52 Pheasant Cove

MLS® 468715 Call today for a personal showing.

®

MLS 465667

Stacy Neufeld REALTOR®

Premier Realty

306-621-3680 ®

Helping you is what we do.™

45C Palliser Way Yorkton, Sask S3N 4C5 Cell 306-621-8717 Bus. 306-783-9404 Fax 306-786-6788

BLUE CHIP REALTY

Retreat With Amazing Lake Views

Long Service Award

30 Kepula Lane Miller Point on Lake of the Prairies

MLS® 468086 Walk out basement 40' deck & covered patio

$

I'VE GOT YOU SANDI COVERED WITH SHEWCHUK

621-9015

The ONE store for your perfect floor.™

THREE EASY WAYS TO SHOP

249,900 ®

ONLINE

PREMIER REALTY 45C Palliser Way, Yorkton

The Award of Excellence 2009/2010/2011/2012

Vange Vallaster 621-7272

Helping you is what we do.™

SE

FOR LEA

Blue Chip Realty 50 Darlington St. W.

Each office independently owned & operated.

269A Hamilton Road, Yorkton, SK 306-783-6666 (Office) or email sshewchuk@remax-yorkton.ca

54 Collingwood Cres.

2500 sq. ft. for lease, with large mezzanine

1282 sq. ft., two fireplaces, fully developed basement, detached large double garage. (24x22)

MLS® 465565

MLS® 462953

YOU'LL LOVE THE WAY YOUR NEW FLOOR LOOKS.

®

That's

Blue Chip Realty

269 Hamilton Road, Yorkton, SK 306 783-6666 Email: p.pugh@sasktel.net or ppugh@remax-yorkton.ca NEW

IN-STORE

Sandi Brenner sandrabrenner@royallepage.ca www.royallelepageyorkton.com

Pat Pugh Cell: 621-1119 Home: 783-7629 Fax: 786-7918

ING

LIST

IN-HOME

For a free room measure visit CarpetOne.com

CarpetOne.com Linden Square Shopping Centre, Yorkton, SK Phone: 306-782-6556 Toll Free: 1-888-782-6556

1 Dalewood Cr.

77 Crestwood Cr.

79 Agricultural Ave.

1276 sq. ft., 4 bedroom bungalow, detached single car garage

Lovely 1,352 sq. ft., 4 bedroom, 2 bath, bungalow

2 - 2 bedroom suites, double attached garage

$

269,900

MLS® 469905

$

269,900

MLS® 468419

$

169,500

MLS® 449626

273 Broadway St. W. 3 bedroom bungalow, detached single car garage.

$

69,900

MLS® 462167


Page 12A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 25, 2013

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HWY 10 EAST • YORKTON • 1-800-458-9663 PHONE: 306-782-2937 • FAX 306-783-8487

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THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 25, 2013 - Page 13A

(306) 620-2231

Supply, Install and Service of Residential, Commercial, Industrial and Agricultural Overhead Doors and Openers Serving Yorkton, Melville and the Parkland Area Customer Satisfaction is our #1 Priority!!

email: bennett@heritageodi.com

Like us on Exclusive Supplier!!

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®

Broadway Park Realty

CENTURY 21 AGENTS. SMARTER. BOLDER. FASTER. © 2011 Century 21 Real Estate LLC. All rights reserved. CENTURY 21® is a registered trademark owned by Century 21 Real Estate LLC. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Each office is independently owned and operated.

www.century21yorkton.ca or 306-782-2253 - Take a look at our website! SNOWARAMA TM

Jon Bueckert

Shelby Wilk

(306) 621-4800

(306) 621-9074

Could be you! Looking for a career?

Bridgette Carl

Deb Schmidt

Terry Korchinski

(306) 521-1925

(306) 621-3689

(306) 795-7799

Saskatchewan

Earn Air Miles Rewards IVE

IVE

LUS C21 EXC

IVE

LUS C21 EXC

LUS C21 EXC

97 Good Spirit Cres

82 Madge Way, Yorkton

53 Bradbrooke Dr.

C21EXCLUSIVE

C21EXCLUSIVE

C21EXCLUSIVE

$

329,900 bw/ 803.03 $

$

379,900 bw/ 924.74 $

$

347 Fourth Ave. N.

249,900 bw/$608.30

280,000 bw/ 681.57

78 Wellington Ave.

122 Clarewood Cres

58 Deerwood Cres.

MLS 469845

MLS 469351

MLS 469216

MLS 468413

429,000 bw/ 1044.26 $

$

155,000 bw/ 377.30 $

$

MLS 469474

$

$

5 Pheasant Cove $

#204 - 289 Fietz St.

MLS 470119

$

197,000 bw/ 479.53

MLS 468211

$

9 Poplar Bay

88 Franklin Ave., Yorkton

166 Broadway St. W., Yorkton

21 Gibson Bay, Yorkton

MLS 467707

MLS 467451

MLS 466330

MLS 466239

$

425,000 bw/ 1034.52 $

$

249,900 bw/ 608.80 $

$

129,900 bw/$299.71

$

369,900 bw/ 853.44

312 First Ave. N.- Vacant Lot, Yorkton

136 Second Ave. N., Yorkton

118 Seventh Ave. N., Yorkton

34 Parklane Dr., Yorkton

MLS 465365

MLS 464044

MLS 463708

MLS 463045

$

259,000 bw/$597.57

$

469,900 bw/$1143,82 REDUCED

1 Centennial Dr., Yorkton

222 Betts Ave., Yorkton

MLS 460151

MLS 459603

$

220,000 bw/$502.00

$

44,900

499,000 bw/$1,372.80

$

199,900 bw/$461.22

87 Cameron Way, Yorkton $

239,785 bw/$574.50

DUCED

PRICE RE

17 Franklin Ave., Yorkton

MLS 458225

519,000 bw/$1263.34

192D Manitoba Ave., Yorkton

MLS 465234

$

114 Aspen Pl., Yorkton $

289,000 bw/$703.48

REDUCED

D

53,900 bw/$124.36

$

MLS 465914

$

REDUCE

$

149,900 bw/$364.88

121 Magrath St.

259,000 bw/ 630.45

$

$

242 Maple Ave., Yorkton

MLS 452551 $

MLS 448772

164,900 bw/ 380.46 $

$

389,900 bw/$899.59

Based on bi-weekly payments, rate and payments are approximate and subject to change.*

Gaylene (GPS) Skinner

Shyla Yannoulis

(306) 621-0986

(306) 641-5991

Deanne Arnold (306) 621-8890

IN HOUSE MORTGAGE BROKER

Michelle Bailey

Edna Vanderburg

Ron Skinner

(306) 621-5032

(306) 621-9066

(306) 621-7700


Page 14A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 25, 2013

86 ONTARIO AVE.

in g N ew Li st

$210,000 Bedrooms: 4 Bathrooms: 2 Size: 1042 sq. ft. Year Built: 1973 Taxes: $1885

6 ASHWOOD C CRES. in g N ew Li st

PARK DRIVE, BURGIS BEACH

1 FIRST STREET, T TONKIN

Size: 2042 sq. ft. Year Built: 1988 Taxes: $2042 EXCLUSIVE

12 FIRST STREET

Size: 900 sq. ft. Year Built: 1965 Taxes: $545 (2012)

MLS® 461440

710 BROADWAY ST. W.

$550,000 Year Built: 1996 Bedrooms: 5 Taxes: $2,630 (2013) Bathrooms: 2 MLS® 463504

33 MYRTLE AVE.

22 ERICHSEN PLACE

$359,900 Size: 1736 sq. ft. Bedrooms: 2 Year Built: 1988 Taxes: $2,891(2013) Bathrooms: 3 MLS® 463244

RM OF WALLACE

$81,000 Acreage MLS® 468510

7 WESTSHORE GREENS

$165,900 Bedrooms: 3 Bathrooms: 2

Size: 1178 sq. ft. Year Built: 2008 Taxes: $3,480

MLS® 466187 Text: CORE31 to 33344

RM OF GOOD LAKE

$189,900 Size: 1202 sq. ft. Bedrooms: 3 Year Built: 1932 Bathrooms: 2 Taxes: $1,377 MLS® 457540 Text: CORE29 to 33344

Si Size: 1976 sq. ft. Year Built: 1978

MLS® 470126

14 RIVERSIDE DRIV DRIVE

35 MATHESON CRES. CRES

S O LD

S O LD

Bedrooms: 3 Bathrooms: 3 Size: 1502 sq. ft.

MLS® 469321

26 SWITZER BAY

$549,000 Bedrooms: 4 Bathrooms: 3

Size: 2545 sq. ft. Year Built: 1989 Taxes: $3,408

460 PARKVIEW ROAD

$289,900 Bedrooms: 4 Bathrooms: 3

MLS® 467210 Text: CORE29 to 33344

15 MCBURNEY DR.

$264,900 Size: 1747 sq. ft. Bedrooms: 5 Year Built: 1976 Bathrooms: 4 Taxes: $2,318 MLS® 455628 Text: CORE13 to 33344

Size: 1220 sq. ft. Year Built: 1967 Taxes: $2,084

MLS® 467961

117 COTTONWOOD CRES.

39 CEDARWOOD CRES.

$289,900 Bedrooms: 4 Bathrooms: 2

$182,000 Size: 1008 sq. ft. Bedrooms: 4 Year Built: 1967 Taxes: $1,493 Bathrooms: 2 MLS® 467087 Text: CORE2 to 33344

Size: 1200 sq. ft. Year Built: 1966 Taxes: $2,161 (2013)

MLS® 465645

RM OF CANA

$229,500 Bedrooms: 5 Bathrooms: 3

Year Built: 2009 Taxes: $3,478 (2013)

MLS® 459373

125 BETTS AVENUE

Size: 1264 sq. ft. Taxes: $340

$71,900 Size: 728 sq. ft. Bedrooms: 2 Year Built: 1919 Bathrooms: 1 Taxes: $1,086 MLS® 467129

MLS® 455050 Text: CORE9 to 33344

RM OF WALLACE

Bedrooms: 3 Year Built: 1978 Bathrooms: 1 Taxes: $2023 (2013) Size: 912 sq. ft. MLS® 467409

127 OLDROYD DRIVE

$420,000 Bedrooms: 4 Bathrooms: 3

Size: 1800 sq. ft. Year Built: 1940 Taxes: $2,430

MLS® 468305

#4 - 316 MORRISON DR.

$237,000 Size: 1150 sq. ft. Bedrooms: 3 Year Built: 2001 Bathrooms: 2 Taxes: $2243 (2013) MLS® 467593

28 FRANKLIN AVENUE

$137,900 Size: 640 sq. ft. Bedrooms: 3 Year Built: 1939 Bathrooms: 2 Taxes: $1,190 MLS® 453799 Text: CORE26 to 33344

20 LIVINGSTONE AVE.

68 LIVINGSTONE ST.

$289,000

$116,350

MLS® 446063

MLS® 446058

Acreage

$195,000 Size: 1425 sq. ft. Bedrooms: 3 Year Built: 1965 Bathrooms: 1 MLS® 459434

123 PATRICK STREET

$69,900 Size: 689 sq. ft. Bedrooms: 3 Year Built: 1948 Bathrooms: 1 Taxes: $818(2013) MLS®459444 Text: CORE25 to 33344

$389,000 $389 000 Bedrooms: 4 Bathrooms: 3

MLS® 470023

#303-27 ERICHSEN PL.

$165,000 Bedrooms: 2 Bathrooms: 1

in g N ew Li st

$25,000 $2 000

MLS® 469871

$350,000 Bedrooms: 2 Bathrooms: 2

$759,000 300 acres

MLS® 469307

Si Size: 1132 sq. ft. Year Built: 1976 Taxes: $2008

RM OF WALLACE

in g N ew Li st

in g N ew Li st

$125,000 Size: 981.88 sq. ft. Bedrooms: 3 Year Built: 1912 Taxes: $1115 Bathrooms: 1 MLS® 469424

in g N ew Li st

$229,900 $229 900 Bedrooms: 4 Bathrooms: 4

193 SIXTH AVE. N.

MLS® 454612, 454614 Text: CORE17 to 33344

290 MAPLE AVE.

$269,000 Bedrooms: 4 Bathrooms: 2

SPIRIT CREEK ACRES

Size: 1200 sq. ft. Year Built: 1953 Taxes: $1,627

$120,000 Bedrooms: 1 MLS® 450145

MLS® 466207 Text: CORE20 to 33344

East ShoreEast EstatesShore Estates

140 PEBBLE BEACH RD.

SALTCOATS SALTCOATS LAKE FRONT FRONT LAKE LOTSFOR FOR SALE SALE LOTS Prices ranging from $49,900 - $62,000

$269,000 Size: 1280 sq. ft. Bedrooms: 3 Year Built: 1986 Bathrooms: 2 Taxes: $1,579 (2012) MLS® 461595

HAYDEN ACREAGE

$97,600

MLS® 450784

44 JAMES AVENUE

$99,900 Size: 672 sq. ft. Bedrooms: 2 Year Built: 1948 Bathrooms: 1 Taxes: $1,255 MLS® 453847 Text: CORE28 to 33344

Gavin Konkel Specializing in Farm, Acreage and Ag 306.641.9123 Corey Werner Owner/Broker 306.621.9680 Brooke Niezgoda Residential Sales 306.621.2586

306. 782. 9680

corerealestateinc@gmail.com www.coreywerner.com All SveinCo homes are EnergyStar Certified and include an extensive 10 year warranty program.

621-2140


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 25, 2013 - Page 15A

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 arranged 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.

LET EM PLAY. A heavy storm on Sunday couldn’t stop the Yorkton Cardinals and Humboldt Dodgers from entertaining Jubilee Park with a classic Pee Wee AA provincial final. A Cardinals three run home run wasn’t enough as they fell short late.

Pee Wee AA Cards lose in classic Provincial Final By CHASE RUTTIG N-R Writer With a steady thunderstorm coming down from the sky early Sunday morning at Jubilee Park the 2013 Saskatchewan Baseball Pee Wee AA Final was bound to be a memorable game, but the young ballplayers from the Humboldt Dodgers and the host Yorkton Cardinals gave the local baseball fans and parents who braved the elements a real treat. Dealing with a sloppy infield and a soaked outfield, the players on both the Cardinals and the Dodgers didn’t let some brutal luck from mother nature prevent them from see-

ing through a winner on the weekend. After both teams rolled through the round robin they headed to the semifinal where both teams would continue their dominance in the tournament. Yorkton would quickly mercy rule Lloydminster to advance to the final, with the quick win being something that the Cardinals coaching staff felt was a key going into the final as their main pitchers would be fresh and not restricted by the pitch count. “We really felt that winning the games in a quick fashion all weekend was going to be key as we could give Kayden Taphorn the ball in the final”

says the Cardinals coaches Larry Kitchen and Mike Farquharson.

Taphorn would be put to the test early as the Dodgers went up 5-0 quickly before

Taphorn settled in to cool off Humboldt. Cont. on Page 16.

Cardinals long losing skid ends playoff hopes early By CHASE RUTTIG N-R Writer Just two weeks ago things seemed to finally be going the Yorkton Cardinals way in the month of July for the first year in a long time. The Cards were in the drivers seat for the East Division’s final WMBL playoff spot and the Weyburn Beavers were struggling. It looked like if the Cardinals could hold off

the Beavers as long as they could take the season series with Weyburn and end Bill Sobkow’s streak of missing the playoffs as manager. All of that went south following a 5-2 loss to Weyburn on July 16. The loss gave new life to the Beavers and started what has been a free fall caused by a grueling road trip that went through two of the WMBL’s strongest teams for

four games. Yorkton fell 13-5 to Melville after the Weyburn loss, allowing seven runs to the Millionaires in the bottom of the fourth inning to start off what was a road trip of horrors for the Red. In their two games against Swift Current the Cardinals would get hung for three runs in the first inning before getting shut out entirely in the second game to be handed a

sweep in the two game series. In the second game Chris Haddelland had no problem retiring the Cardinals bats as they were whisper silent in Swift Current. The 6 3’ righthander from Oregon threw nine strikeouts and walked just one batter in a gem of a complete game shutout that continued Yorkton’s misery. Cont. on Page 17


Page 16A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 25, 2013

Pee Wee AA Cardinals finish second in province as hosts Cont. from Page 15 Those five runs would be huge for the Dodgers as they had an ace on the mound in the power pitching Tyler McWilty whose fastball was proving hard for the Cardinals bats to track as he coolly sent down the Cardinals in the early innings. Still down 5-0 and with McWilty dealing the Cardinals would find their way back in the game when two Cardinals batters would get on base before getting sent home on a huge three run home run that went well over the outfield wall as someone finally connected on McWilty’s fastball and just in time as the Cardinals would now have more than enough chances to tie the game up. After the fourth inning with the gravel crew already having to come on before the inning to throw some more down in an attempt to dry the mound and home plate, the umpires suspended play and the tarps came out with the threat of a suspended game and a Humboldt win hanging on the balance of mother nature. After nearly half an hour the rain subsided enough for the field to dry up and let the Cardinals and the Dodgers take the field for the fifth inning, making sure that a true provincial champion would be crowned. Yorkton would take to bat in the top of the fifth with the Dodgers ace still on the mound and commanding the game closing in on his maximum 85 pitch count. The Cardinals failed to get a fifth inning rally going, getting caught stealing going from second to third, ending the inning with the runner in scoring position getting thrown out, putting the pressure on Taphorn to continue throwing strong pitches to get the Cardinals one last shot at bat in striking distance of extending the game. With the infield’s wet gravel creating some weird bounces all game, the Cardinals received the worst of all bounces to start the bottom of the fifth as two Dodgers baserunners advanced on errors before a ground ball hit straight through the middle would extend the Dodgers lead. Taphorn’s night would end shortly after as he reached his 85 pitches, it would be too late after that as the Dodgers would add some extra insurance before Yorkton would come to bat. A quick start would give the Cardinals some confidence as they added two runs to start the inning, chasing the Dodgers starter on pitch count and bringing in their closer. With an 11-5 lead to work with the Dodgers reliever would make short work of the rest of the Cardinals to end the game and the provincial final in what was a wild and hard fought game for both sides. Yorkton, who have had some problems with their minor baseball program’s higher age level in terms of participation came out to support the Pee Wee AA tournament all weekend something that was not lost on the coaches from both teams. “It was a huge honour to host a provincial final and show off our great facility in Yorkton,” says Farquharson. “We have a wide open facility with plenty of well maintained diamonds and we owe a ton of debt to all of those who volunteer and work at the diamond to keep our facility one of the best in the province and hopefully more youth will take advantage of a great

THRILLING FINISH. After rain pushed the Pee Wee AA Provincial Final to the morning, rain delays and some entertaining baseball led to Humboldt celebrating their first Pee Wee AA title and the Cardinals settling for second place.

opportunity to participate in Yorkton Minor Baseball. Humboldt’s coach also joined in one the praise of the Yorkton facility and thanked the staff at Jubilee Park as well as the volunteers and the City of Yorkton for hosting the Dodgers and running a well organized event considering the time changes for the medal round games due to Sunday’s rain storms. Those storms would be a talking point as both teams agreed that the wet infield gave their young players havoc in fielding the ball on Sunday. “The ball is going to be wet and players are going to be focused on the cold and trying to stay warm so in a situation like this you are bound to have errors on both sides,” explains the Dodgers coach. For Yorkton they would keep their heads high knowing that they were the second best team in the province. “If you told us at the start of the season that we would host Pee Wee AA provincials and take Humboldt to the very end in a close game we all would have took it and we are extremely proud of the way our young boys played this season and in the way they represented our city at Jubilee Park this weekend and wish them the best in the future” closed Farquharson and Kitchen. Humboldt will now move on to the Western Canadian Baseball Tournament held in Swift Current where they will represent their city for the first time. Humboldt will be coming with some experience however as some of the Dodgers players and coaches took part in the provincial title winning Muenster team last season.

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THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 25, 2013 - Page 17A

Cardinals miss playoffs for another after dismal July finish Cont. from Page 15 Things were not better in Medicine Hat when the Cardinals were dominated once again by a higher class of opponent in their road swing. The league best Mavericks beat the Cardinals 6-3 in the first game of their weekend series 6-3 after the Cardinals started the game up 3-0 before the wheels fell off for starter Shaniel Rivera in the third inning as he allowed three runs to give Medicine Hat the tie before the Mavericks slowly took over the game to continue Yorkton’s losing streak. The second game of the weekend would be less kind to Yorkton and far less close on the scoreboard as the Mavericks pelted the Cardinals for a 12-1 win, keeping spirits low after losing 3-0 to Swift Current on Sunday heading into a must win game in Weyburn against the Beavers with their season on the line after a dismal week. Yorkton was not up to task on Monday as for the third straight game between the two teams Weyburn started things off by taking the lead in their first trip up to bat, scoring two runs off of Aaron Martinez, who was entrusted with the start by Bill Sobkow with Yorkton needing a win to breathe life into their race with the Beavers for the final playoff spot in the East Division. Down 5-1 in the ninth inning Yorkton would pull out the magic for a short moment after a Dylan Gross triple started off a potential Cardinals rally by sending in Ben Grillo to

9

make the score 5-2 with a runner on third and no outs. It was not to be sadly as despite a Sergio Perez sacrifice putout to whittle the score down to two runs, Yorkton lost another must win game to the Beavers, one that all but mathematically eliminated them from the playoffs barring an epic collapse from Weyburn in the WMBL season’s final week. In order to stay alive Yorkton would need to beat the defending champion Red Sox in Regina on Tuesday night. In a rain shortened game that was called after 4.5 innings, Regina would win 2-0 off of RBI’s from Chase Benfield and Tyler Wheeler as the Cardinals chances of the postseason would come to end on a rain shortened 2-0 defeat, a bitter pill to swallow for a team that was very much in the thick of things just two weeks ago. David Toth would be handed the loss in Tuesday’s game, allowing just three hits over 4.1 innings as the game was called at Currie Field, still it was almost inevitable that the Cardinals would be eliminated as the Weyburn Beavers have been red hot at the same time the Cardinals have been ice cold, with Yorkton’s season going from an improvement from 2012 for much of the season to the status quo as Yorkton will once again be missing out on postseason excitement. At 12-30 Yorkton will finish second worst in the WMBL ahead of the Edmonton Prospects and below the Saskatoon

Elite Volleyball Camp comes to Yorkton

Yellow Jackets in what has been another disappointing season for Yorkton’s baseball fans. The Cardinals have not been treated to a winner for the better part of a half decade as Bill Sobkow has failed to guide the Cards to the playoffs as a manager for five consecutive seasons now. Yorkton will finish their season out by hosting the Yellow Jackets on July 25 before home finales against Regina and Melville July 28/29. Yorkton will now be playing for pride, officially eliminated from the playoffs and riding a eight game losing streak the Cardinals season is ending in a nightmare, they have four more chances to put a happier spin on the end of their season.

YORKTON CARDINALS dropped eight straight games to fall out of the WMBL Playoff race as Weyburn locked up the final East Division playoff spot Tuesday.

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By CHASE RUTTIG N-R Writer It was a successful first year for Elite Volley Camp last summer as Gavin Little’s rural center based camp aimed at growing the sport of volleyball saw a steady first year turnout of Grade 7-12 volleyball players looking to hone their skills heading into the high school volleyball season. That turnout has Little and his group of former collegiate and international club and National Team players headed back to Yorkton this August to continue their mission of providing a high level volleyball camp alternative to those who don’t want to travel to a major urban center. “When I was growing up I played volleyball in Fairview, Alberta where I grew up which was in Jasper and the cost of the camp was already expensive and it was a long journey just to get there,” explains Little. “So when I started Elite Volley Camp it was with the mission in mind to provide small urban centers and rural communities with professional training to show what high level volleyball looks like and how the sport can truly be an alternative to football, basketball, and hockey.” Little has an impressive list of accomplishments for a Canadian volleyball player coming from Fairview. Little’s amateur career saw him win ACAC AllConference honors as well as the GPRC Mens Volleyball MVP before moving onto the U of S where he was the University of Saskatchewan Mens Volleyball MVP before spending four seasons professionally in Finland, Switzerland, Holland and Germany before returning to Canada to help grow the game. Joining Little will be an impressive list of Canadian National Team players that will give the camp some of the most qualified coaching instruction out of any camp in Western Canada. Little’s wife, Tiffany Dodds a former CIS All-Star and Canadian University Player of the Year rounds out that list. Dodds, from Lucky Lake, Saskatchewan, played for the University of Alberta Golden Bears where she had a career filled with highlights. Dodds was named Female Rookie of the Year, two time Conference All-Star, two time All-Canada, Team MVP, Conference MVP, and University Player of the Year while winning MVP of the National Championship at the U of A before moving on to play four seasons as a pro in Asia, Central America and Europe before playing for Canada at the 2010 World Volleyball Championships. Cont. on Page 19

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Pavel Bure: A tribute to a forgotten great of the 90’s Ruttig’s rants

Pavel Bure was the first athlete I ever truly idolized as a child. Growing up there were few things that brought me joy more than watching the Pavel Bure: The Russian Rocket VHS tape until my eyes bled, it was the ultimate babysitter and my mom employed Pavel to distract me more than a few times as I watched every classic Bure play from his early years as a Canuck over and over when little Chase was still barely out of diapers. I could take you through every play. From his dazzling rookie season where he compiled 60 points in just 65 games (an amount that would become a standard from the injury plagued Pavel) and his Game 6 hat trick against the Winnipeg Jets that showed what was to come for Bure and the Canucks as led by Trevor Linden and goalie Kirk McLean, were quickly becoming one of the best teams in the NHL. I was just a newborn child when the Vancouver Canucks went through their first golden era, but thanks to that VHS tape I felt like I remember almost everything about that 1994 Cup run. Entering the 1994 Stanley Cup Playoffs as the sev-

enth seed, the Canucks went on a magical run to the seventh game of the Stanley Cup, and Bure, already becoming a star, was a feature player in the dream spring for Vancouver. In the seventh game of the opening round series against the Calgary Flames, Bure scored one of the most significant and well-known goals in Canucks history. After receiving a breakaway pass from defenceman Jeff Brown, he deked and scored on Flames goalie Mike Vernon in the second overtime to win the series. The Canucks advanced past Calgary with three consecutive overtime wins after having been down 3–1 in the series. In game two of the second round against the Dallas Stars, Bure knocked enforcer Shane Churla to the ice with an elbow to the jaw. The hit came after Bure had been cross-checked from behind by defenceman Craig Ludwig and showed the fire that the little Russian had when he would get pushed around in his early years. After defeating Dallas in five games, the Canucks eliminated the Toronto Maple Leafs in

Column Chase Ruttig the Campbell Conference Finals to meet the New York Rangers in the Stanley Cup, the second trip in the Canucks history and the first under head coach Pat Quinn as the Canucks battled the entire spring to get to the bright lights of the Finals as the unlikely seventh seed. With the series tied 1–1, Bure was ejected in Game Three after delivering a high stick to Rangers defenceman Jay Wells. Bure’s stick caught Wells beneath the eye, drawing blood and resulting in a five-minute major and a game misconduct. With Bure out of the game, the Canucks lost the contest 5–1. The loss would be a terrible start for Bure’s only Cup Final as a moment of poor discipline would cost the team. After a 4–2 loss in Game Four put the Canucks at

the brink of defeat in the series, the young Bure stepped up in a do or die Game Five in New York. Bure’s two goals lifted the Canucks to a huge momentum shifting win at Madison Square Garden with the return to Vancouver for Game Six where they would defend home ice to force a Game Seven and put the team one win away from their first Stanley Cup in franchise history. In the deciding game, the Rangers ended Vancouver’s playoff run by a 3–2 score to capture the Stanley Cup. Still the future looked bright when Bure finished with a team-high 16 goals and 31 points in 24 games, second in playoff scoring only to Conn Smythe winner Brian Leetch. Bure’s points total also remained the highest by any Rus-

sian player until Evgeni Malkin of the Pittsburgh Penguins recorded 36 in 2009, an impressive feat considering it was the winger’s third NHL season. After that magical 1994 run things in Vancouver were never quite the same. His first ACL injury sidelined him for an entire season and would be the start of an injury plagued career. With contract disputes looming and the Canucks slowly becoming a losing franchise in the late 90’s, Bure demanded a trade out of Vancouver and famously sat for the first three months of the season, a move that soured Canucks fans from a player who at the turn of the decade made Vancouver one of the most popular franchises in the league. Bure would go on to continue to score goals in his early years for the Florida Panthers, continuing to put up 50 goal seasons before knee injuries put an end to Bure’s career after a forgotten stint with the Rangers, the team that prevented Bure from winning his only chance at a championship. Bure’s short career was one of the most iconic careers of any athlete in the 1990’s. A skilled skater

and puckhandler from the Cold War era Soviet Union, Bure came out of nowhere in 1991 to become one of the most entertaining hockey players to watch of all time. Still despite an impressive body of work by way of 50 goal seasons and a highlight reel that would take weeks to get through, Bure had to wait until last year to get inducted into the Hall of Fame. Now, with time passed and Bure and the Canucks mending the fence, it was announced that the iconic #10 of Bure’s will be retired. It is 2013 and Pavel Bure is still one of my favorite athletes of all time. My first favorite player to watch, I wouldn’t have been a Canucks fan without that first VHS tape and you might not be reading this column if it wasn’t for the hundreds of hours I spent as a kid in front of the TV watching the Canucks with my dad growing up. If I had to list the three Canucks jerseys I would want to have in my closet, Bure’s #10 would rank in that list right beside Markus Naslund’s #19 and Trevor Linden’s #16. It is only fitting that Bure’s will be next to theirs at Rogers Arena.

Bagg’s comeback confirmed with CPOTW honors for Week 4 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. Former Riders legend Kent Austin’s return to Taylor Field, this time with fellow former Riders QB Henry Burris, was not so plesant as the man who was in command for two of the Riders Grey Cups (one as a player, one as head coach in 2007) as the Roughriders completely shut down the Tiger-Cats in a 37-0 clinic that kept the Riders undefeated start intact. After a week of speculation on whether he would play after injuring his foot in Toronto the week before, Darian Durant suited up as did Geroy Simon for the first time this season and the Roughriders came into their final home game of July on fire. With Durant continuing one of the best months of his career, no Riders receiver benefited more on

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THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 25, 2013 - Page 19A

Rider Report: Riders dominate Player of the Week honors Cont. from Page 18 This is the third time in his career Bagg has been named Canadian Player of the Week after picking up honors once in 2008 and once in 2009, but none will be sweeter than this one as it was nice to see a player who has spent much of his last two seasons rehabbing back on top in one of the feel good stories of the Riders season so far. Bagg would be one of three Riders to earn Player of the Week honors as Darian Durant and Rey Williams earned Offensive and Defensive Player of the Week honors respectively after being major contributors to the Riders dominance on the field. Williams was named the Defensive Player of the Week after leading a

dominating defensive performance in the Riders shutout win over Hamilton. Williams had two sacks in the win and has been one of the pleasant improvements to this year’s Riders roster, Williams has matched his career high in sacks in just the first four games. This is the third time in his career and the second consecutive week that Williams has been the Defensive Player of the Week as he was dominant in the Riders’ win against Toronto in what has been a blazing start for the veteran Williams. Durant was named Offensive Player of the Week following Sunday’s 37-point victory at Mosaic Stadium. The eight year Rider completed 20 of 32 passes for a season high 347 yards and continued his early season

perfection with zero interceptions on Sunday. Durant has been ten fold better than he was last season and with an improved line and receiver depth the sky is the limit for Durant who is now poised to become the CFL’s best quarterback with passers around the league struggling early. Overshadowed by Durant and Bagg’s heroics, Geroy Simon did make his Riders debut in the win. Simon, who may end his career as the best statistical pass catcher in league history, snagged two catches in his debut with the Green and White. Kory Sheets also continued his blazing start to 2013 with a 118 yard rushing performance on 23 carries in what was a complete beat down of the Ti-Cats.

With a Saturday rematch in Hamilton, it looks promising that the Riders will be able to head into their bye week 5-0. With high expectations heading into the season, Corey Chamblin has surpassed even the most demanding of Riders fans expectations early this season as he has guided his team through some injury concerns and wins against the two teams in last season’s Grey Cup. After a month of football, the Saskatchewan Roughriders are back to being at the top of the CFL. Still a lot can change during the course of the long CFL season and all of the goodwill that has been created with this 4-0 start will be forgotten the minute the Riders stumble, it is now their mission to keep that momentum going.

Elite Volleyball Camp looks to grow turnout in second Yorkton trip Continued from Page 17. Joining Dodds will by Tammy Mahon from Holland, Manitoba. A former University of Manitoba Bison, Mahon played nine seasons as a pro including winning a Greece championship with Panathinakos as well as the playoff MVP in addition to being a member of Canada’s Womens National Team for 10 seasons. Julie Young, a former Female Athlete of the Year and All-Canadian with the University of Calgary and Brittney Page, a former NCAA D-I player with Eastern Washington and a Canada National Team player will round out the list of 2013 coaches that will be at the camp that runs from August 6-10. Little feels that having accomplished collegiate and professional coaches is important for a variety of reasons. “Having professional experienced coaching at our camps is huge because it gives these players an opportunity that is truly Elite because we all know what it takes to get to the next level as well as the types of drills and technique adjustments that will get players of varying ranges of experiences into a much higher level of play and when volleyball is played at a high level it is an extremely fun, fast paced, and entertaining sport and that is what we are trying to show here,” says Little who also explains that the players can serve as a role model for aspiring volleyball players from small communities. “All of our coaches come from small communities and have received an education as well as the opportunity to make a living and travel the world through volleyball as well as represent our countries in some cases and that is huge because sometimes people don’t think there is much of a post high school route in volleyball as their is in other sports and we all show that volleyball is a huge international sport with post-secondary opportunities just like any other sport you can play.” Little and the Elite Volley Camp attempt to counter the misconception by showing videos and sharing stories of their own personal experiences going from high school volleyball players to the professional and national ranks. These stories and experiences aim to show athletes and high school volleyball players that post scholastic opportunities exist in volleyball just like other high school sports and that volleyball is something that can be taking further as well if given the focus. Little’s camp philosophy is based around developing the skill of each player that comes into his EVC Camp. Coaches will spend up to seven hours each day in the daily sessions teaching the players various techniques and skills, ensuring that they have time to develop proper habits that will carry over to game situations before bringing in position specific drills tooled to the role each player wants to learn before the camper’s are introduced to game play. Little feels that this brings the campers up to the highest possible level of play in the shortest period of time as the campers go through the drills for the sufficient amount of time to grow proper technique and memory of positioning. “The most important thing is reps and that is why our camp is ran over five day sessions because it would be wrong to try to just instruct a group of players over one day, especially those at the Grade 7-9 level that are still going to be relatively new to the sport and may need more attention and repetition than others and the extra gym time has proven to be effective as by the end of the week you can really see the growth in all of the players,” explains Little. “Seeing that development and helping a player fall in love with the game, or maybe even help them make a team or earn more playing time thanks to the help of my camp is such a great reward. The time focused on individual training and skill development is taken into game play by the way of controlled scrimmages and eventually a final day of game action where campers get to put the skills they honed at the camp to the test. The camp has three locations this year focused on smaller centers with camps in Little’s hometown of Fairview and one in Grimshaw also on the EVC’s 2013 calendar, that focus in smaller com-

munities that don’t already have camps is something Little takes pride in. “I don’t forsee us ever getting into cities, because we provide a unique service that some places wouldn’t otherwise have if we didn’t come there for our camp and I feel that is something that is truly special,” says Little. Cost of the Camp is $300 for the five day sessions running from August 6-10 at the Yorkton

Regional High School gym. With the timing of the camp being perfect for prospective high school players heading into tryouts at the start of the school year. You can call to register your spot at the camp open to Grade 7-12 students by calling 1-780-834-7607 or going online at www.elitevolleycamp.com for more details heading into the start of camp.

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IN MEMORIAM

Monument Special

Bulk Ore Haul Truck Drivers Procon Mining & Tunnelling Ltd. (Procon) is a successful Canadian mining contractor with sites across Canada. We specialize in above-ground infrastructure, contract mining, civil tunneling and construction. Procon is currently seeking Bulk Ore Haul Truck Drivers to work a rotational schedule for one of their projects in Northern Saskatchewan. The successful candidates must meet the following criteria:

Upright Etched in Black Granite Granite base included & taxes extra 3'0" wide x 6" thick x 2'1" high

Basic engraving included, variety of scenes Reg price $3795

SALE:

2995

$

See Our Monument Display Room at.

Kopan’s Funeral Service Hwy #9 North, Yorkton, Sask.

306-783-0099 toll free 1-866-797-5084 Authorized agent for Good-Hall Memorials Ltd. "Creating Monuments of Distinction for Over 40 Years"

Requirements: = 0-%4 " 7"-*% -"44 3*7&3 4 *$&/$& 8 *3 /%034&.&/5 = "4 580 :&"34 0' &91&3*&/$& 01&3"5*/( $0.#*/"5*0/ 53"*-&3 6/*54 03 "4 07&3

,. 0/ "35*$6-"5&% 536$,4 4&.* 53"*-&34 = 645 #& "#-& 50 1307*%& " $-&"3 %3*7&34 "#453"$5 8*5) 0 .03& 5)"/ 580 .07*/( 7*0-"5*0/4 */ 5)& 1"45 .0/5)4 "/% -No more than three (3) moving violations in the past 36 months. = !*-- #& 3&26*3&% 50 5",& " 30'&44*0/"- &7&-01.&/5 .1307&.&/5 0634& *' /05 $633&/5 8*5)*/ 5)& 1"45 580 :&"34 Responsibilities: = "6-"(& 0' */& 0$, #&58&&/ 130+&$5 4*5&4 64*/( 3*%&. "35*$6-"5&% 536$,4 = &410/4*#-& '03 5)& */41&$5*0/ 01&3"5*0/ "/% $0/530- 0' &26*1.&/5 to ensure production targets are achieved safely and efficiently while .&&5*/( "-- -&("- 3&26*3&.&/54 = 7&34&& 5)& $0/%*5*0/ 0' 5)& 7&)*$-& .0/*503 7&)*$-& 1&3'03."/$& "/% "44*45 */ 1&3'03.*/( 13&7&/5"5*7& ."*/5&/"/$& "4 3&26*3&% = #-& 50 803, */%&1&/%&/5-: &''&$5*7&-: "-0/(4*%& $3&8 .&.#&34 50 help create and maintain a strong team atmosphere to accomplish daily production targets. )*4 '6-- 5*.& 0110356/*5: $0.&4 8*5) "/ &9$&--&/5 $0.1&/4"5*0/ "/% #&/&<5 1"$,"(& )04& 8)0 "3& 26"-*<&% "3& &/$063"(&% 50 46#.*5 their resume to the Procon Human Resources Department via e-mail to jobs@procongroup.net 03 #: '"9 "5 604-291-8082.

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES 13074AT00

Garry Garvin Littlewolfe Feb. 4, 1956 - July 30, 2012 My Husband Our Dad & Papa Remember him with a smile today He was not one for tears Reflect instead on memories Of all the happy years Recall to mind the way he spoke And all the things he said His strength, his stance, the way he walked Remember these instead The good advice he'd give us His eyes that shone with laughter So much of him will never die But live on ever after As we loved you, so we miss you In our memory you are near Loved, remembered, longed for always Bringing many a silent tear His wife Audrey Ironstand, his daughter Krysty Ironstand, his son Troy Nepinak, grandchildren Holden L, Kairo L. & Craig Ironstand, Jasmin H, Destiny G & Troy Nepinak Jr.

LOST LOST ON June 24, 2013, 2 gold rings, 1 family style, other 3 stoned Amethyst. If found call 306536-2424. Reward offered.

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 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.

$1000 Distance Grant. 1-866-491-0574. www.mhvicarsschool.com

Procon Industrial is currently seeking a local F/T Ticketed

Heavy Equipment Mechanic for their shop in Saskatoon, SK.

Journeyman rate: $41.00/hr. plus benefits. The successful incumbent is expected to work some overtime. Please forward resumes to jobs@procongroup.net 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. 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. 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 - LOCAL PEOPLE NEEDED!!! Simple & Flexible Online Work. 100% Genuine Opportunity. F/T & P/T. Internet Needed. Very Easy... No experience Required. Income is Guaranteed! www.ezComputerWork.com. Help Wanted!!! Make $1000 weekly mailing brochures from home! No experience required. Start immediately! www.TheMailingHub.com. INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR SCHOOL. No simulators. In-the-seat training. Real world tasks. Weekly start dates. Job board! Funding options. Sign Up online! iheschool.com 1-866399-3853. NEED A HOME PHONE? Cable TV or High Speed Internet? We Can Help. Everyone Approved. Call Today. 1-877-852-1122 Protel Reconnect. 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.


DELIVER

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT

BUSINESS SERVICES DENNY THE Handyman. 35 plus years experience with a very picky wife. General home repairs, complete renovations, fencing, decks, painting, and a whole lot more. Call 306-621-9223.

Earn up to

100

$

FOR SALE - MISC

Experience a…

per month

or more of Extra Cash

Carriers Wanted

UÊ }> Ê ÀiðÊ7° UÊÊ > iÞÊ À°]Ê >ÀL ÕÀÊ Ûi°]Ê V Ê Ûi]Ê7> >ViÊ Ûi]Ê Àii Ê-Ì° UÊÊ ÀÜ Ê Ûi°]Ê >V >À iÊ Ûi°]Ê,i> > Ê Ûi° UÊÊ >ÀµÕ ÃÊ ÀiðÊ-°]Ê-Õ ÃiÌÊ À°Ê-°]Ê7 ÜÊ Àið UÊÊ > iLÀ iÊ À°]Ê >À Ê Ûi°]Ê À>`LÀ iÊ À°]Ê iÝ> `À>Ê Ûi°]Ê6 VÌ ÀÊ* >Vi UÊÊ > iLÀ iÊ À°]Ê iiÀÜ `Ê Àið]Ê }Ü `Ê Àið]Ê ÀÌ v i `Ê >Þ UÊÊ > iÜ `Ê Àið]Ê > iÛ iÜ]Ê > Ü `Ê Àið UÊÊ > Ü `Ê Àið]Ê ÀV iLÀ iÊ À°]Ê ÃÃv i ` UÊ i `iÀÃ Ê À Ûi]Ê Õ «Ê-Ì° UÊ ÞÀÌ iÊ Ûi°]Ê iÌÌÃÊ Ûi°]Ê£ÃÌ]ÊÓ `]Ê >V Ì UÊÊÎÀ`Ê °]Ê{Ì Ê °]ÊxÌ Ê °]ÊÈÌ Ê °]Ê- Ì Ê-Ì°]Ê 9 À Ê,`° UÊÊ Õ }Ê >Þ]Ê >V Üi Ê Àið]Ê ÀÀ Ã Ê À°]Ê

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Call

783-7355

THE NEWS REVIEW TRADES HELP WE ARE seeking Skilled Construction Labourers in the following areas: Drywallers, Interior Steel Framers, Tapers. Great attitude, hardworking individuals. Company offers great work experience, long term work and ongoing projects across Canada. Lot of growth potential. Please email your resume OR Fax: 403-6681142.

FABULOUS SUMMER VACATION IN MOOSE JAW Check out our web site for great summer deals on guest rooms and packages

FOR SALE - MISC HOT TICKETS for fans in Rural Saskatchewan only

PAUL McCARTNEY V-I-P TICKETS

August 14th in Regina Ask about our tickets in the First 5 Rows on the floor LABOUR DAY CLASSIC Riders vs. Bombers SIDELINE TICKETS September 1st in Regina PINK October 24th in Saskatoon October 26th in Winnipeg

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.

Book now at

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

LAND FOR SALE FARMLAND WANTED NO FEES OR COMMISSIONS! We completed a very successful sale of our farmland to Freshwater Holdings. There was never any pressure, nor unfair dealings during the process. The deal was handled very smoothly and efficiently. We certainly would recommend dealing with Freshwater Holdings for any land discussions, and/or sale. Regina and Bill Kossatz

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

Go online to www.dashtours.com or call Dash Tours at 1-800-265-0000 One Call & You’re There

PURCHASING: SINGLE TO LARGE BLOCKS OF LAND. LAND. PREMIUM PRICES PAID WITH QUICK QUICK PAYMENT. YMENT.

BUSINESS SERVICES

Autobody & Painting Ltd.

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

391 Ball Road

782-9600

sell in

4

Phil & Adele Kurenoff

783-7032

Ask about Sale Pricing!

AUCTIONS

Call DOUG 306-955-2266 saskfarms@shaw.ca

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.

PRODUCTS Independent Associates

RENT BACK AVAILABLE

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

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

Like us on Facebook /yorkton.newsreview

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 BUILDINGS/METAL BUILDINGS 60% OFF! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206 www.crownsteelbuildings.ca 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.

AUTO MISCELLANEOUS 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

2004 Impala LT, 2002 Ford Lariat 4x4 Super Crew Saftied, 2009 Grand Caravan, 2005 Ford Freestar, 2008 Ford Super Crew 4x4, 2005 Impala LT, 2001 Chev 1500 4x4 e/c, 2001 Toyota RAV4 4x4. And many more Consign NOW to our Harvest Auction Aug 24th

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.

*Some restrictions apply

Western Commodities

1:00 p.m. Vehicles

REAL ESTATE SERVICES

$1600

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

Saturday, July 27

HOMES, COTTAGES & More. RTMI - Ready to Move in. Call 1888-733-1411; rtmihomes.com. Red Tag Sale on now!

only

FEED & SEED

Auction

MOBILE/ MANUFACTURED

20 words, 4 weeks

Miranda is a successful model, business owner and mother of a 4 year old daughter. She is slim, attractive, outgoing, feminine and well travelled. She is active, enjoys water sports and loves romantic dinners. Many people look at me and believe I have it all, but the truth is I don’t. At 37, 5’5”, 124lbs, I have come to realize that I will only be truly happy again once I find love again. Marriage, having more children or loving his and being one big family is in my future. That would make me the happiest girl in the world. I am available, genuine, sincere, real and extremely motivated to find the man of my dreams.

www.selectintroductions.com

FARM AND PASTURE LAND AVAILABLE TO RENT

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).

AVAILABLE BACHELORETTE

Matchmakers Select 1888-916-2824 Guaranteed service Face to face matchmaking, customized memberships thorough screening process. Rural, remote, small towns, isolated communities & villages 13 years established Canada/US

SUMMARY OF SOLD PROPERTIES Central - 66 1/4’s South Central - 18 1/4’s East Central - 74 1/4’s South - 70 1/4’s South East - 22 1/4’s South West 58 1/4’s North - 6 1/4’s North West - 12 1/4’s East - 55 1/4’s

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.

2013 GREY CUP Game November 24th in Regina

Do you have unused items sitting around in the attic, the basement, and the closets that are crowding your style? In just 4 weeks, you can make money while you make room with the classifieds.

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.

Visit the Tunnels of Moose Jaw Casino Moose Jaw Historic downtown shops Western Development Museum Yvette Moore Gallery Ride the trolley

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

The Only Relationship We Want With You is to Find You the Relationship You Want With Her!

LOTS & ACREAGES FOR SALE

AT LAST! An iron filter that works. IronEater! Fully patented Canada/U.S.A. Removes iron, hardness, smell, manganese. Since 1957. Visit our 29 innovative inventions: www.bigirondrilling.com. Phone 1-800-BIG-IRON.

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the news review - Thursday, July 25, 2013 - Page 21A ADULT PERSONAL RENOS & HOME MESSAGES IMPROVEMENT

306-782-5999 www.yorktonauctioncentre.com Lic 325025

If your item has not sold after the first 4 weeks, we’ll give you another 4 weeks absolutely FREE!* Call now to take advantage of this outstanding opportunity to clear out and clean up with the classifieds.

THE NEWS REVIEW Phone (306) 783-7355


Page 22A - Thursday, July 25, 2013 - the news review AUCTIONS

AUCTIONS

Keep girls involved in sports and activities so they can reach their full potential

AUCTIONS (VWDWH RI

CLIFFORD VARGA

Yorkton, SK :HGQHVGD\ $XJXVW _ $0

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-

38th Annual Pre-Harvest

Hodgins Auction Centre Melfort, SK Thurs. August 15 9:00 AM SHARP

Combines

2010 New Holland CX8080 2005 Cat Challenger 670 (2) 1997 Massey Ferguson 8780 Case IH 1680 John Deere 7700

Combine Headers

Motograder

Skid Steer Loader

2006 Cat 450CT

Truck Tractor

2003 Peterbilt 379L

Tandem Disk

2004 John Deere 650

Heavy Harrow

Grain Trailer

2007 Degelman 7000

2008 Doepker Super B

Grain Cart

High Clearance Sprayer

2010 John Deere 9630T 2007 John Deere 9520T 2003 New Holland TG210 1993 John Deere 6300

1998 Cat IT38 John Deere 444

1993 John Deere 790E

2010 Massey Ferguson 9430 2000 Westward 3000 (2) Massey Ferguson 885 International 5000

Tractors

Wheel Loaders

Hydraulic Excavator

Swathers

2008 Case IH SPX4420

1988 John Deere 2955 Case IH 3594

1997 Cat 140H

New Holland 94C Massey Ferguson 4200 Case IH 1015 Gleaner 400

2006 Unverferth 9250

A 2013 survey by leading beauty brand, Dove, found that when girls participate in activities like swimming, music lessons, dance and soccer, the benefits can last a lifetime. A troubling issue, however, is that six in 10 girls quit activities they love because of how they feel about their looks. On the bright side, there is an opportunity to address body image issues with girls before they become a source of anxiety. The Dove survey also found that girls are open to moms and mentors helping them deal with body image

Grain, Service, & Light Trucks Seeding & Tillage Equipment Haying Equipment Numerous Grain Augers 3 Pt Hitch Equipment Livestock Equipment 10 Grain Bins Attachments Lawn & Garden Equipment

For updates and more info visit our website: hodginsauctioneers.com

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

issues so they can keep pursuing their interests. Self-esteem expert, Lisa Naylor, suggests moms and mentors look out for signs that body image is becoming an issue, such as when girls make excuses to avoid practices and games, or compare themselves to other girls. She adds that this is a key time to intervene and determine the source of the anxiety. Naylor points out that moms and mentors can use the tools at dove.ca and the social mission tab on facebook.com/dove, to spark conversations with girls around body image. She also suggests encouraging girls in their sports or other activities by: • Taking them to women’s sporting events or to hear female musicians so

a www.he

lthche

www.newscanada.com

Camping has never been so comfortable Camping is a great family getaway since it allows kids and adults to discover new activities while still enjoying many of the comforts of home. Over the past few years, for example, cooking has taken centre stage and retailers like Canadian Tire are stocking a lot of supplies to give you quality, home-cooked meals anywhere you go. It is easy now to elevate your meals from hot dogs and hamburgers to healthy alternatives by using a few simple ingredients and just the right tools. Enthusiasts tell us that multi-purpose cooking appliances and accessories are key to the camping experience, like the CADAC Safari Chef Stove. It is a multi-functional outdoor propane appliance that includes five interchangeable cooking surfaces. You can grill shish kabobs, fry pancakes on the griddle or make a stir-fry using the wok. As importantly, camping doesn’t have to be about ‘roughing it’ anymore. Instant-Tents are another development to help ensure ease-of-use when camping. Family tents offered by Coleman take less than 60 seconds to set-up or tear down. To make the tent-sleeping experience feel more like home, there are double-high air mattresses, sleeping pads and comfortable sleeping bags. Camping equipment storage has also come a long way. Many families are limited in terms of space, hindering the purchase of camping essentials like tents, coolers, and cooking appliances. Fortunately, many items are now offered in foldable or pop-up designs. From chairs, to tents, to wagons, seasonal must-haves can easily be stored during the colder months. Lastly, Canadian Tire rminds us how energizing it is to turn off the TV, tablet, video games and cell phones in exchange for the great outdoors.

ke and Stro t r a e H e ith th e. e pping w i o h d s ood Guid e h F k t li i 's a 's d it w a l, pping Health Check symbo roduct based on Can o h s y r e Go groc oose products with thaete every participating p u ch evalu When yo ns, who ia it t ie d ion’s Foundat ck.org

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they are exposed to strong female role models; • Being role models themselves by signing up to help coach a girls’ team or by joining her in a fitness or yoga class. Rosie MacLennan, gold medalist for Canada at the 2012 Summer Olympics says having a woman in her life to talk to about body image was essential in realizing her trampoline dreams. “The support my mom gave me helped ensure that trampoline was always a source of confidence,â€? says MacLennan. “I believe you can’t value enough how much these types of experiences help shape a girl’s positive outlook and potential.â€?

www.newscanada.com


Classified Results

THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 25, 2013 - Page 23A

Place your ad in

and the

For 4 Weeks. If your items do not sell, we will run your ad 4 more weeks…

FREE

TO QUALIFY: Qualifying want ads are pre-paid 4 time ads and limited to private party advertisers. (Commercial or dealer ads excluded). Price of item(s) must be included in ad. Prices in re-run ads can be lowered and sold items omitted but new articles cannot be added to the free ad. Eligible classifieds noted by * below.

CLASSIFIED HOTLINE . . . . (306) 783-7355

CLASSIFICATION INDEX 1005 1010 1020 1030 1040 1055 1075 1080 1085 1090 1095 1100 1102 1105 1115 1120 1125 1130 1135 1140 1145 1205 1210 1211 1212 1215 1216 1223 1224 1225

Anniversaries Announcements Birthdays Births Card of Thanks Coming Events Congratulations Engagements Wedding Announcements Funeral Services Memorial Donations In Memoriam Memorial Services Obituaries Introduction Services Found Lost Meeting Place Personal Messages Prayer Corner Psychics Career Opportunities Career Training Domestic Help Available Domestic Help Wanted General Employment Office/Clerical Sales/Agents Skilled Help Tutors

1228 1230 1405 1420 2005 2060 2065 2085 2105 2145 2146 2205 2223 3005 3010 3520 3535 3560 3562 3563 4025 4030 4035 4530 4545 4550 5010 5015 5020 5035

Trades Help Work Wanted Education Classes & Courses Antiques* For Sale - Misc* For Trade Garage Sales Musical Instruments* Wanted to Buy Wanted Farm Implements* Oilfield/Well Site Equipment Childcare Available Childcare Wanted Horses & Tack* Livestock* Pets* Cats* Dogs* Health Services Home Care Available Home Care Wanted Hotels/Motels Travel Vacation Rentals Business For Sale Business Opportunities Business Services Financial Services

5040 5505 5515 5520 5525 5526 5530 5535 5540 5541 6005 6010 6015 6020 6025 6030 6035 6036 6040 6041 6042 6043 6045 6055 6065 6075 6080 6090 6505 6506

Home Based Business Assessment Rolls Judicial Sales Legal/Public Notices Notices/ Nominations Notice to Creditors Tax Enforcement Tenders Registrations Mineral Rights Apartments/Condos For Sale Duplexes for Sale Farms/Real Estate Services Farms for Sale For Sale by Owner Houses for Sale Industrial/Commercial Property For Sale Lots & Acreages for Sale Land for Sale Acreages Wanted Land Wanted Mobile/Manufactured Homes for Sale Open Houses Real Estate Services Recreational Property Revenue Property for Sale Townhouses for Sale Apartments/Condos for Rent Cabins/Cottages/Country Homes

6516 6525 6530 6535 6540 6560 6920 6925 6930 6940 6945 6950 6960 6962 6965 6975 7020 8015 8020 8034 8035 8080 8120 8175 8180 8205 8220 8245 8255 8280

Rent to Own Duplexes for Rent Farms/Acreages Furnished Apartments Garages Houses For Rent Office/Retail Out Of Town Pasture For Rent Room & Board Rooms Shared Accommodation Space For Lease Storage Suites For Rent Wanted To Rent Adult Personal Messages Appliance Repair Auctioneers Building Contractors Building Supplies Cleaning Electrical Handyperson Hauling Janitorial Lawn & Garden Moving Painting/Wallpaper Plumbing

8315 8320 8346 8358 8375 9010 9020 9025 9031 9032 9035 9115 9120 9130 9135 9140 9145 9150 9155 9160 9165 9183 9185 9190 9215 9220 9225 9226 2020

Renos & Home Improvement Roofing Services for Hire Siding Snow Removal Farm Services Feed & Seed Hay/Bales For Sale* Certified Seed for Sale Pulse Crops/Grain/Feed Wanted Steel Buildings/Granaries Auto Miscellaneous* Automotive Wanted ATVs/Dirt Bikes* Motorcycles* Collectibles & Classic Cars* Domestic Cars* Sports & Imports* Sport Utilities & 4x4s* Trucks & Vans* Parts & Accessories* Utility Trailers* Boats* Boat Access/Parts* RVs/Camper Rentals RVs/Campers/Trailers* Snowmobiles* Smowmobile Parts/Accessories* Auctions

* These classifications qualify for Guarantee.

Classified Ad Rates

1 Week . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $7.00 2 Weeks . . . . . . . . . . . . $11.00

3 Weeks . . . . . . . . . . . . $14.00 4 Weeks . . . . . . . . . . . . $16.00

(Above rates - 20 words or less and includes The News Review and News Review Extra) Extra Words 12¢ per word per week Use this convenient order form to place your ad. MAIL TO: Classified Ads - The News Review 18 - 1st Avenue N., Yorkton, SK. S3N 1J4 OR phone (306) WRITE ONE WORD IN EACH SPACE

783-7355

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PRICES EFFECTIVE THE WEEK OF July 26 to Aug. 1, 2013 GROCERY DELIVERY SERVICE DIRECT LINE 783-8011 We pick, bag & deliver your groceries right to your home in Yorkton.

Actual items may vary slightly from illustrations. Some illustrations are serving suggestions only.


Page 24A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, July 25, 2013

YBID NEWS

Dream Weddings Bridal & Formal Wear For the dress of your dreams! 91 Broadway St. E. Yorkton, SK

306-782-6000 dreamweddings @sasktel.net

Crystal Shore Massage has relocated to 60 - 5th Ave. N. Yorkton

A look at what is happening in the Yorkton Business Improvement District

You have probably seen their vehicle driving about Yorkton for the past 4 months but as of Thursday July 11th Budget Blinds has officially opened its doors to residents of Yorkton and District. Owner Domenic (Dom) and Lina Rampone saw the business opportunity with the commercial and residential growth of our YBID area and decided this would be a great place to set up shop. With other family members already involved in Budget Blinds Domenic saw the Yorkton trading area as one that could support his business. Located in Yorkton at the corner of 2nd and Smith you can’t help but see their newly renovated store. Inside there are a variety of window blinds including sliding screen doors keeping the air moving and the bugs out.

786-7055

Leave a Legacy‌ Plan a gift in your Will To Enhance the Healthcare in your Community

Phone: (306) 786-1711 Toll Free: 1-877-786-1711 Website: www.golfdeerpark.com

Installation Manager Lindsay Wolkowski provides personal service to Budget Blinds customers measuring up and installing their product as quickly as possible but with a great deal of care to provide quality installations and follow-up. Office Manager Shaina Szauter is the glue that binds Budget Blinds all together co-ordinating telephone calls and appointments as well as in store assistance to walk in clients. YBID wants to welcome our latest new member Budget Blinds to our district and wish them many years of business in the Yorkton Business Improvement District.

BG Denture Clinic Creating Beautiful Smiles For Over 35 Years 46 Broadway St. E.

(Next to Cornerstone Credit Union) Contact our office: 41 Betts Ave., Yorkton, SK 800-636-3243 or 306-786-0506

• Original Auto Upholstery • Marine

• 18-Hole Golf Course • Full service driving range • Rental equipment • Electric power carts • Fully stocked pro shop with CPGA Professionals • Licensed Restaurant

A staggering number of women are wearing the incorrect bra size. Let us help you find your perfect fit. It’s quick, easy and free.

Ph: (306)

A. Goode Upholstery

306-782-1744

30 Betts Avenue, Yorkton 306-782-7982 1-866-585-7982 Hours - Tues. - Fri. 10-6, Sat. 1-4

Cell: (306) 621-2236 everlasteavesandext@accesscomm.ca

45 Betts Ave. Yorkton, SK

306.782.0417

âœŚ Eavestrough âœŚ Vinyl Siding âœŚ Window/Door Capping âœŚ PVC Windows âœŚ Soffit/Fascia 130 Livingstone St. Yorkton, SK

Yorkton, Sask.

306-783-6350 www.thecaringteam.com

Wow! Delicious! • Fried Chicken • Chicken Wings • Chicken Strips • Jumbo Chicken Sandwich • Poutine • Chicken Mushroom Soup

306-783-1080 (next to Pizza Hut)

Constituency Office: 19 -1st Avenue North Yorkton, SK S3N 1J3 Phone: 306.782.3309 Toll Free: 1.800.667.6606 Email: Garry.Breitkreuz.c1@parl.gc.ca

www.garrybreitkreuz.com

Now Serving Yorkton & Area 44-2nd Ave. N.

Free In-Home Consultation & Estimates Yorkton 306-783.1699 Melville 306-728.4575 Each Franchise Independently Owned and Operated www.budgetblinds.com


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