Yorkton News Review - November 8, 2012

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Thursday, November 8, 2012 - Volume 15, Number 38

HONORING OUR VETERANS – It’s Veteran’s Week in the City of Yorkton, a time to remember those who sacrificed so much for the freedom we as Canadians enjoy today. A special flag raising event was held Sunday in the city to kick off the week and events that are taking place. In attendance and pictured above (l-r) are: Peter Wyatt; George Arnold and Ed St. Pierre. Residents are encouraged to venture out this coming Sunday, November 11 to pay tribute to our local veterans during an annual Remembrance Day event slated to take place at the Farrell Agencies Arena. Beginning at 10:30 a.m. a special Remembrance Day Parade will take place followed by services This will be followed by refreshments at the legion where all are welcome. For more information call the legion at 783-9789.

Busy season ahead, local support needed

By DEVIN WILGER N-R Writer

Snow is on the ground, and the Salvation Army is getting ready to roll out the Christmas Kettles and raise money for people in need. Major Linda Mailman says that this year will see some changes and new initiatives to help get people excited about the effort. A new initiative this year is the Adopt a Kettle program. The idea is a business, service club or even just a family could get together and bring everyone on board to handle a kettle

for a day. She says the idea is to get people together to work the kettles, and even generate a bit of rivalry between different businesses to see who can raise the most on the kettle they adopt. Each kettle will have a sign showing who is manning for the day. Mailman says that there has already been a positive response from many groups with the new initiatives, and she notes that one church has already decided to kick off the campaign by taking over all of the kettles on the first day of the campaign, November 30.

For those who are unable to adopt a kettle for the day, Mailman says that two hour shifts are still available, and that manning a kettle has benefits beyond just raising money for a worthy cause. “Some people have called us and said ‘It’s so good, I want to go on the kettle because I meet all the people I haven’t seen since last year,’” Mailman says. The four different kettles in the city, in the Parkland Mall, SuperStore, Wal Mart or the Liquor Store. All those interested in getting involved, whether adopting a kettle

for a day or just one shift, can call Gwen at 306-744-2442, or 306-7443000 or by email at grsutherland@ sasktel.net. This year’s goal for the kettle campaign is $88,000. The funds raised from the Christmas Kettles go to the various programs the Salvation Army is involved in throughout the year, including the Food Bank. Mailman estimates that 8-10 families visit the Food Bank a day, and she says for a city this size the amount of use is high. Continued on Page 2.

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Page 2A - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - THE NEWS REVIEW

Flu shots resume

The Sunrise Health Region has officially resumed its influenza vaccine clinics. Clinics had been temporarily suspended as a result of a Health Canada review of flu vaccine made by the pharmaceutical firm Novartis following a concern in Europe. The review has been completed, and there are no concerns about the safety or effectiveness of the Novartis flu vaccine distributed in Canada. This means that anyone who has received the vaccine this year does not need another dose. The temporary ban on distribution was lifted this morning. “This is good news for many reasons,” says Dr. Mandiangu Nsungu, Medical Health Officer. “We know from this review that the batch in which the clumping was observed in Europe never entered the market, never came to Canada and that the vaccine is safe and effective. “The public can be confident in the high standards of Canadian public immunization programs which respond

to potential problems quickly and ensure that quality review mechanisms are in place.” Public flu immunization clinics resumed in Esterhazy at the Golden Jets Centre from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., at the Grayson Senior Centre from 10 a.m. – 12 p.m., and in Yorkton at the New Horizons Centre from 9 a.m. until 12 p.m. A complete listing of clinics can be found at www.sunrisehealthregion.sk.ca and a daily listing is on the toll-free information line at 1-866-800-5510. “I encourage everyone who has not already been vaccinated to attend one of the clinics which will resume tomorrow,” adds Dr. Nsungu. “When many people are immunized it protects the whole population and not just the person who is immunized, as the spread of illness is reduced.” Additional clinics will be provided in communities where clinics were temporarily suspended during the Health Canada review.

Anti-bullying goal of effort IT’S THE TIME OF YEAR when supplies run low and demand runs high. Yorkton’s annual Salvation Army Kettle Campaign is set to kick off and local support is needed to boost food supplies for families in need this holiday season and throughout the year.

Kettle campaign set to go Con’t from Page 1. One example of a program run by the Salvation Army is the Christmas assistance program, which helps families fund a quality Christmas dinner and gives toys to children in need. Mailman says this year’s Christmas campaign will work differently, going with a voucher system rather than distributing a food hamper. She explains that the change has been inspired by increases in food allergies and different dietary needs. “There are so many dietary needs. I’ve got a son who is a celiac, and I’m diabetic, and that’s just our family alone. If we put in something with flour, anyone’s who celiac’s not going to be able to eat it,” Mailman says. She notes that there will still be stipulations on it, the vouchers will be non-transferable, and will only be used for grocery products.

Also, children under 12 will receive a toy. The vouchers will be targeted towards the size of the family, and are being put together in association with the Co-op. People in need of Christmas assistance can get an application at the Food Bank, located in the Salvation Army Thrift Store on Betts Ave, and must be completed by December 1. The voucher will need to be used before Christmas, since they are there for Christmas dinner. Mailman says it can be a real boost to a family. “We had a gentleman last year who we gave one to last year who called back... He said “I want to thank you, I was able to get everything I needed to have Christmas dinner for my daughter and I.” For him, it was really special, because there was no telling what they would have had otherwise,” Mailman says.

The week of November 13-16 is Antibullying Week in the City of Yorkton. Members of St. Mary’s School Community Council attended Yorkton City Council Monday evening to talk about local efforts underway and seek city support. “St. Mary’s staff and students will be taking part in this Canada-wide initiative and we are asking everyone to participate in the event. Together, our mission is to make bullying unacceptable for everyone, everywhere,” said Dominique Holstein to council mem-

Sask. CBO’s officially recognized In order to recognize and celebrate the valuable contributions of Community Based Organizations across this province, the Government of Saskatchewan proclaimed Wednesday as Community Based Organizations Appreciation Day. “These organizations and the people who work with them are making a real difference in the lives of some of our most vulnerable citizens,” Social Services Minister June Draude says. “I

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bers. A number of activities have been planned in Yorkton throughout the week including the raising of a flag at City Hall on November 13. Also at the school, activities will be taking place daily. Tuesday will feature opening ceremonies. Anti-bullying t-shirts will be distributed and children will be educated on the difference between bullying and an incident. Learn more about what’s happening nationally at: www.bullyingawarenessweek.org.


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - Page 3A

Chamber election slated: voters needed By DEVIN WILGER N-R Writer The Yorkton Chamber of Commerce is holding an election for the 2013 board of directors. Ten candidates vie for the eight positions open on the board, which will see those elected serve a two year term. This year’s candidates are Greg Donnelly Laurie Federowich, Charlene Gibler, Ryan Hoffman, Cheryl Kustra, Joel Martinuk, Don Rae, Ron Skinner, Corey Werner and Amie Zamonsky. Juanita Polegi, Executive Director of the Yorkton Chamber of Commerce says that the candidates are all well qualified for the position. “I think we have an excellent slate, and

they’re all people involved in the community who will serve the community and the chamber very well,” Polegi says. Voting is important, Polegi says, because the Board of Directors sets the direction for the Chamber each year. Their responsibilities include attending the monthly meetings of the board, as well as serving on one of the four standing committees of the Chamber. “We’ve had a pretty active Chamber over the past few years, and one that’s keenly interested in the community, so we want to be sure that kind of board coming forward,” Polegi says. No matter what happens in the vote, there

will be some new faces on the board, as there are fewer incumbents than there are seats. Those are Ryan Hoffman, Don Rae, Corey Werner and Amie Zamonsky. Polegi is confident that everyone

elected will bring a vital voice to the board. “Everybody brings with them a unique experience and unique perspective on the community. Sharing that around the board table will just add depth to

the board,” Polegi says. The vote is online, and will see one person per each Chamber business vote for the eight names they want to see become part of the board. Polegi notes that it’s also never too late to

become a member of the Chamber of Commerce, and those who sign up now will be able to receive information and participate in programs. She says all interested should call the Chamber at 783-4368.

AGRICULTURE WEEK – This week is Agriculture Week in Yorkton, with a number of events taking place to mark the importance of the industry to this city and the province. In recognition of the week a unique brand was developed in the form of a branding iron. On Monday a board was branded and will be displayed during Yorkton’s annual Harvest Showdown event, slated for this week (Nov. 7-10). Above, June Just and Dave Farrell apply the Yorkton Exhibition Brand. Assisting are Mayor Bob Maloney, Chamber Executive Director, Juanita Polegi and Exhibition President, Grant Neill.

GOOD MOJO – Hi there, my name’s Mojo. I’m a five month old female shepherd cross. I’m a great dog, eager to meet new people and become part of a brand new family. So if you’ve got a loving, responsible home and want me to become a part of it, be sure to come on down. To learn more come visit the SPCA or call 783-4080.

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Page 4A - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - THE NEWS REVIEW

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 Janice Chalus Shannon Deveau Devin Wilger Chase Ruttig ADVERTISING: Renée Haas Buddy Boudreault PRODUCTION MANAGER: Carol Melnechenko PRODUCTION: Diane St. Marie Joanne Michael CIRCULATION: Janice Chalus

What happened to the traditions of Canada? Well it’s finally happened! Someone has decided to attack a long held childhood celebration under the guise of respect for Canada’s social diversity. It seems this year a school principal of the Saginaw Public School, an elementary school in Cambridge, Ontario, decided to cancel the school’s annual Halloween costume parade and even go so far as to ban Halloween costumes at the school. The principal gave three reasons for her heavy handed and somewhat thoughtless dictum. The school claims to teach youngsters from 22 different language and cultural backgrounds. The ban attempted to balance the needs of a diverse community while teaching social norms in society, but it suggests the school official doesn’t have fond childhood memories of Halloween. Additionally she suggested, the annual costume parade “made some kids uncomfortable” and “some costumes promote violence.” In her haste to “respect cultural diversity” the principal in question appears to ignore the idea that ALL Canadians are a part of that diversity, including those who like to celebrate Halloween. It would seem acceptable to relegate the cultural diversity of those youngsters to a second class status, if not trampled outright in the rush to political correctness. One can only wonder what this erudite soul has in mind for other Canadian celebrations such as Remembrance Day, Christmas, Valentine’s Day, and those not practiced by those from other cultures attending the school. Perhaps the “tweet” of R. Lindley who responded to the report of the ban might become foremost in embracing Canada’s cultural diversity. Lindley wrote, “We need to start embracing ALL traditions, religious or not. Instead of ‘NOT DOING’, we need to ‘DO’. It is okay to acknowledge all.” Ironically, the News and Events site of the City of Cambridge website welcomed visitors to the site by saying, “Wishing you a safe and Happy Halloween.” Kinda makes you wonder whether the teacher does actually know best in this case.

The place is here, the time is now

Floods, fires, storms, hurricanes, war, hunger, oppression... it’s times like this that we have got to be appreciative of where we live and the lives that we have. In the wake of Hurricane Sandy and the many more waves of destruction that have come before her, a person can’t help but be grateful to be living in the province and the country that we do. Sure bad things happen here and there is no place that’s perfect but in the grand scheme of things, we sure do have it good. While much of the rest of the world is in economic and social turmoil, we’re actually sitting in a pretty good place. I recently had the opportunity to hear our premier speak as he travels about the province sharing his plan for growth. Admittedly, I went to the event thinking it was going to be the same old, same old message we always hear – ‘rah rah Saskatchewan’ – but instead I actually walked away thinking we really ARE pretty fortunate to be where are. It’s easy to become complacent. It’s easy to look to the other side of the fence where the grass sometimes seems greener and opportunities appear more abundant but our premier is right, the opportunities are HERE and our time is NOW. There’s no question there are challenges to be met and there is still work to be done but while other provinces struggle

to stay afloat job numbers are increasing in Saskatchewan, natural resources are plentiful and people are moving in. “As more people come to the province of Saskatchewan and bring with them investment, bring with them energy, they help Shannon Deveau their broaden our tax base. They build this province’s capacity to invest in itself... Thats’ what growth brings... We want growth for the dividends that it pays...” correctly says Brad Wall. We have work to do when it comes to health care. We need more doctors and nurses. Our highways need help. Our infrastructure needs updating. We have to build houses and make sure they are affordable enough for every resident to have a safe, warm place to call home. We HAVE challenges but we also have opportunity where others do not and we’re on a good path. “The great opportunity is where you are and in the last few years we’ve begun to realize that I think. The great opportunity is not some difficult, distant place. The opportunity is here. It’s where we are today... We ought never to be complacent... We’re very, very lucky to live here and I think we all owe something back... that we will keep growth happening because it builds the kind of province that we want to have, not just for today, but for tomorrow.” – Brad Wall. Well said.

The way I see it... Column

Will private liquor stores bring me Belgian beer? Three privately owned liquor stores will soon be opening in the province. They will be in Regina and Saskatoon, and I find myself hoping that private liquor stores will soon pop up across the province. The reason is simple, and it comes down to one line in the release on the subject: The stores will be able to stock any product they choose. This is important, because variety is one of the areas I’ve found to be extremely lacking in the public stores in the province. I am not a heavy drinker by any means, but I have become fond of various Belgian beers lately, and would like to try more. The Saskatchewan Liquor and Gaming Authority (SLGA), by contrast, is not a fan of Belgian beer, which means that their stores are distinctly lacking in that area, and if I want some on hand at home, I’ve either got to do a special order or travel out of province. It’s annoying, and a combination of public and private liquor stores might finally alleviate the issue. In my case, and in a lot of other cases, there are small markets for specialty brews. Maybe it’s something which the SLGA has not had much success trying to capture, since they don’t tend to make much of an effort to actually attempt to satisfy a lot of these very niche markets. That’s their prerogative as a business, and they know what sells overall in their sys-

Things I do with words... Column Devin Wilger tem. But a private vendor is better suited to adapt to their specific market, and maybe try to bring in drinks which might not play in the larger SLGA system. It might be the case that outside of small pockets in the province, nobody particularly cares for the Belgian beers I prefer. I know even among my group of friends Hoegaarden gets a mix of reactions, with some loving it and others spitting its name in disgust. That’s fine, that’s why we have plenty of brands, but I find myself wishing that there would be cracks in the provincial monopoly on liquor sales, just so we could find brands and drinks which we might otherwise be unable to sample. It gives us the chance to experiment.

That is really the entire reason why competition exists in most food and beverage. I know each grocery store in this city stocks something I like which none of the others do. It might be a store brand that has pulled something off that is particularly delicious. It might be a certain brand or style of product that, for whatever reason, nobody else sells. In many cases, I don’t completely understand why one place stocks the product and others don’t, but that doesn’t matter. We have multiple stores because each offers something unique, if all the stores were the same there would be no reason to shop around. And that’s why private liquor stores are a good thing, not to replace the SLGA, but to compliment it. It will allow for the chance to experiment, and bring in products that other stores might be unwilling to stock. For the majority of people, SLGA is fine, but competition allows for new stores, new areas, and new products. It also allows people to try to enter arenas where the SLGA is unwilling to tread, selling products that may not play province-wide but will get a small but loyal regular clientele. Personally, I’m excited to see if these private sellers can shake up the liquor market in this province, and encourage the SLGA to start looking at some new product lines and different drinks.


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - Page 5A

to the editor

LETTERS PAGE

Your letter of the Week

Call for prayer stirs controversy Cost benefit?

To the Editor:

If you want to know something about the power of prayer, consider this: Devon Clunis is still two months away from formally becoming Winnipeg’s new police chief and he has already made a name for himself across Canada just by talking publicly about the subject. The comments by Clunis that made headlines came in a Christian online publication as he asked: “What would happen if we all just truly – I’m talking about all religious stripes here – started praying for the peace of this city and then actually started putting some action behind that?” It was, he said later, “an innocent comment meant for good.” But it put him squarely into a controversy over whether a public official should be openly advocating prayer. His comments were celebrated by some, pilloried by others and ridiculed by those who doubt that prayer can stop a bullet or prevent a crime in a city that often has the highest rates in Canada for murder and other violent offences. “Might as well pray, nothing else has worked,” commented one wag on an online forum. What few stopped to consider is that Clunis is advocating something that already happens every day. The work of people who pray has actually done a lot to prevent crime in the worst parts of Winnipeg and many other Canadian cities. As Clunis knows well, he only has to stroll a block or two from

his downtown office to see religious groups do important work in the fight against crime. Nearby at the Siloam Mission, a mission of the evangelical Christian Church of the Nazarene, hundreds of homeless people are provided with food, clothing and shelter daily, giving them an option other than begging or stealing. A little further away on Main Street, the newly opened Centre for Youth Excellence, run by the Christian charity Youth for Christ, provides thousands of inner city youths with access to sports and fitness facilities, even an indoor skateboard park, that keep them off the street and away from trouble. Stalwarts like the Salvation Army have been looking after the downtrodden in downtown Winnipeg for decades. The kind of work such groups do is exactly what Clunis was talking about – “prayer backed up by action”– as he explained while dealing with the fallout from his initial comments. It’s not surprising that Clunis holds his view on prayer. He is an evangelical Christian and a police chaplain for the past 14 years. Clunis says he has never proselytized to other officers and he does not consider prayer a replacement for proper policing. “’I’m not saying I’m asking police officers to sit down and pray and that’s going to be our initiative,” he said. Even with such reassurances, many people are not comfortable with a police chief using such language.

In the United States, no one blinks when politicians and public officials like police chiefs invoke God to bless America. But not so in Canada. Here we tend to pay lip service to people having strong foundations of faith in their personal lives, and then get nervous when they start talking publicly. Yet prayer plays a role in the lives of many public officials. There has been a group on Parliament Hill since the 1960s holding regular prayer meetings for MPs. It organizes the annual National Prayer Breakfast in Ottawa. At this past year’s breakfast, Father Raymond de Souza, a well-known columnist and teacher, made the case for more religion in public life, not less. “Our politics then needs religion,” he said. “Not only religion, of course, for divine revelation does not provide a legislative program. Yet if religion and religious believers are driven to the margins of our common life, including our political life, we deprive ourselves of both the intellectual and practical energies that are essential to many of the noble initiatives of our life together.” Likewise, Clunis is not depending on divine revelation for a policing strategy. But Winnipeg would be the poorer for it if his faith is pushed the margins as he tackles some of the most serious crime problems in urban Canada. Bob Cox, Troy Media Corp.

Taking time to remember our veterans

To the Editor:

This is Veterans’ Week, leading up to Remembrance Day Sunday, November 11. Apart from religious holidays, I think Remembrance Day is probably the most important day of the year. If it weren’t for the courageous men and women who were prepared to make the ultimate sacrifice in previous world wars and other international conflicts – to defend freedom, democracy, human rights and the rule of law – there wouldn’t be much else to celebrate. So it’s absolutely necessary to make the effort every year to pay tribute to their sacrifice. In Regina, Remembrance Day services are organized by a combination of local veterans organizations working together. I’m extremely grateful that they invite me to participate every year, to lay a wreath

commemorating “the unknown soldier” – i.e., all those Canadians lost in war, but whose actual resting-places are not known. The most moving moment in the ceremonies is always when – unan-

the “Veterans Company” marches past, you catch a glimpse of what real heroism actually looks like. These are the people who put everything they had “on the line” to secure our values and our way of

“Apart from religious holidays, I think Remembrance Day is probably the most important day of the year. If it weren’t for the courageous men and women... there wouldn’t be much else to celebrate.” nounced – Regina’s surviving veterans march into the stadium, and the crowd greets them with a loud, spontaneous, persistent standing ovation. Now mostly in their 80’s and 90’s, they don’t stay long on the cold arena floor. But in those brief moments as

life. And that’s one of the vital messages from Remembrance Day – never take that democratic way of life for granted. It was preserved at too great a cost to be eroded by neglect, cynicism or indifference. A healthy democracy depends entirely

on informed, engaged citizens. When any political party betrays the public’s trust or tampers with the fairness of elections or undermines our democratic institutions, the remedy is not to drop-out, complaining “they’re all the same”, but to fightback, expose the wrongdoing and demand better! And another vital Remembrance Day message is about a generous response to veterans’ needs. Whether their service stretches back to Korea and World War Two, or to more recent missions in Afghanistan and Libya, or other deployments in-between, we share a national obligation to ensure physical, medical and psychological support services of the highest calibre. It’s the least we must do, lest we forget. Ralph Goodale, MP, Wascana, SK.

Carrying on the lasting legacy our vets created To the Editor: I am a member of The War Amps Operation Legacy, which consists of young members and graduates of the Child Amputee (CHAMP) Program who are dedicated to preserving and commemorating Canada’s military heritage by teaching younger generations about our nation’s wartime history. I have had the privilege to learn

about Canada’s military heritage and also know what it is like to live without a limb – a strong bond that I share with war amputee veterans. CHAMP was started by war amputee veterans and I want to give back to those who have given me so much. It is important to remember our veterans and those who gave their lives because we need to ensure that their sacrifices do not go unrecognized. It is also impor-

tant because we want our future generations to carry on the legacy that our veterans have created. I encourage all of you to learn more about Canada’s history by means of The War Amps Military Heritage Series documentaries, which can be ordered at waramps. ca. Crystal Young, Operation Legacy Member, Regina, SK.

To the Editor: Every time any of us travel through Saskatoon’s “hood” or Regina’s “Scott-Albert” area or similar areas in other cities, we get yet another in-our-face reminder of the short sightedness of the “devolution to band operation of schools” direction taken by successive federal governments starting in the 1960s. Initially in the 1800s the Canadian government and churches partnered to run residential schools in Canada. Subsequently, the government operated day schools on reserves. Among other things, a principal objective of these schools, both the residential and day schools, was to assimilate First Nations Youths into European values and standards. To make them self-sufficient, self-directing, responsible and contributing members of a society based on European values. The fact that these schools were havens for abuse is enormously prejudicial and has distracted us from several other important facts: (a) those schools did produce tens of thousands of graduates who had the skills to be self-sufficient, self-directing, responsible and contributing members of society, (b) funds to run those schools were kept away from chiefs and band councilors, and (c) teachers working in those schools were protected from petty politics that would inhibit their ability to practice their profession without fear of reprisal and or frequent termination for simply saying and necessary “no” to their students. Our federal, provincial and municipal governments and all of us should not let our vision be so clouded in this regard as to lose sight of another related factor. It should be termed the proverbial “elephant in the living room.” Increasingly, Canadian employers are looking abroad for skilled employees. We are importing them from around the world. At the same time, hundreds of thousands of First Nations People are right here in our faces – but without the fundamental work and life skills that employers want and jobs require. From the youngest ages, most Canadian youths learn to see schooling as the route to “the good life” for themselves. On the other hand, First Nations youths and their parents and extended family members do not see schools in the same way. As a result and in spite of heroic efforts by First Nation schools staffs, their school attendance and performance is not good. They grow up to be unskilled, unemployable, dysfunctional and destined to live in poverty with virtually no stake in living by Canadian society’s standards and laws. Consequently they cost the federal government as well as provincial and municipal governments vastly disproportionate amounts in policing, incarceration and social assistance resources. I submit that while the turning over of management (termed “devolution”) of onreserve affairs by the federal government to First Nations was and may remain somewhat justifiable, management of reserve schools by First Nations falls into a different category and should not have been included. It hasn’t worked and we must admit it. Our governments must intervene and take over schools on reserves. Even if we, the Canadian tax payers, have little moral conscience and patience in this regard, our simple understanding of economics should move us in this direction. Deal with the problem now or pay astronomically more to deal with it later. Consider this. What’s the cost-benefit difference between not spending what we currently spend through policing, incarceration and social services for one First Nations person versus producing an employable, selfsufficient and able-to-contribute member of society? Dennis Hall, Saskatoon, SK.

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 - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - THE NEWS REVIEW

HayEast benefits

HayEast 2012 is celebrating its first major $20,000 corporate donation from Agrium. The money – to be split between Saskatchewan and Alberta – will help reduce the cost of transporting hay from farm locations to rail depots where it will be delivered to eastern Canadian farmers in need. HayEast 2012 is a partnership involving farm organizations across Canada. The program is a follow-up to the HayWest program that saw thousands of eastern Canadian farmers send forages to Western Canada in 2002 to help alleviate the effects of that region’s drought. Organizers say western Canadian farmers are eager to reciprocate that good will to help Ontario and Quebec farmers who face a hay shortage following record-low rainfall in some areas. “We are grateful for Agrium’s show of generosity, and we hope that other Canadian businesses will follow suit,” says Nial Kuyek, General Manager, Agricultural Producers Association of Saskatchewan (APAS) and HayEast 2012 organizer. “Farmers in Western Canada have stepped up to donate thousands of round bales of hay to our eastern neighbours in need, but we need cash donations to help us transport it across the country.” During HayWest 2002, the federal government covered the cost of rail cars, and CN and CP rail companies also made significant transportation donations. As well, nearly $110,000 was donated by the private sector in Canada’s eastern provinces. Organizers of HayEast 2012 have issued an urgent plea for Canadians and Canadian businesses to provide donations to support the transportation of donated hay from Western to Eastern Canada. “Agrium is pleased to be able to help farmers

Plate changes

Saskatchewan vehicle owners will, as of Nov. 5, have the ability to choose from a wider variety of licence plate slogans for personalized licence plates, as recent system upgrades will allow SGI to expand the maximum number of digits from six to seven. Veteran plates, Rider plates, motorcycle and snowmobile plates will continue to be a maximum of five characters due to limits on the space available to display the licence plate number. In addition, SGI will be reissuing slogans that have been inactive for five years or longer. Customers who previously registered these particular slogans will have the choice to reactivate the licence plate slogan before it is made available to other vehicle owners. There are currently more than 30,000 personalized licence plates in Saskatchewan. For 2012, SGI expects to issue around 5,200 personalized licence plates, an estimated eight per cent increase over 2011.

Foundation donation

through this valuable program,” says Mike Wilson, President & CEO, Agrium. “We are proud to be part of an initiative that brings out the best in rural Canadian values, by supporting farmers helping farmers, and we encourage like-minded Canadian agri-businesses to contribute to this initiative.” Individuals or businesses can make a donation at any Scotiabank location across Canada, or cheques can be made payable to “HayEast 2012.” Ontario farmers in need of forage must apply to the program for consideration. Program details are available at www.hayeast2012. com.

CLOSER TO THE PAD – Truck Proz has made a major contribution toward the Health Foundation’s campaign for a STARS Heli-pad initiative, which will allow the STARS helicopter to land at the Yorkton hospital. Pictured at left, Ross Fisher, executive director of the Health Foundation, receives $1,000 from Eileen and Dean Fyck of Truck Proz. Fyck says he hopes other businesses get on board with the project also.

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THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - Page 7A

Our gov’t remembers Canada’s veterans every day Our country’s lapels are blooming again – blood-red for remembrance. The crimson poppies remind us that Canada has always been greatly blessed with defenders. Generations of men and women have served our country with honour and boldness, though not without great sacrifice to themselves and their families. Our government continues to seek and find ways to honour those people and their sacrifices. Over the last year, it organized many ceremonies in memory of our soldiers who served in critical historical battles. Delegations of veterans and their families returned to the site of those events. They included the WWI Battle of Vimy Ridge, fought in 1917 and the site of the Dieppe Raid in France, which took place a quarter century later in 1942. Over the last six years, our government has implemented numerous benefits, services and programs to make sure that Canada’s remarkable veterans have the care and support they need and the recognition they deserve. Information about these is online, and I encourage veterans without access to computers to ask a friend or family member to print off more information. We recently announced that Canada would partner with other union and private- and public-sector resources through the program Helmets to Hardhats, which matches veterans with well-paying jobs and training in the building, construction and trade industries. The program will help veterans and those releasing from the Canadian Forces transition successfully to civilian life. For more information on Helmets to Hardhats, visit www.helmetstohardhats.ca. Providing support and more efficient services is another way to say “thank you” to our committed defenders. The Cutting Red Tape for Veterans initiative has implemented a hassle-free web browser, which

Parliamentary Report Op-Ed Column by Garry Breitkreuz will greatly simplify the sometimes lengthy and confusing process of obtaining veterans’ services. Check out the Benefits browser at veterans.gc.ca. We want our veterans to count on our government to provide the quality services they so justly deserve. The Veterans Independence Program (VIP) provides up-

front payments for most-commonly used services like yard maintenance and health-related travel, veterans are able to stay longer in their own homes. To learn more, type Veterans Independence Program in the search box at www.servicecanada.gc.ca. Another valuable help to our veterans is The Veterans Review and Appeal Board. For various reasons, some applicants are refused benefits to which they feel they have a right. When this happens, applicants may appeal to this board, often successfully. For more information, visit www.vrab-tacra.gc.ca. This Remembrance Day, red blazes forth again as we honour the contributions of our past troops. Like our Prime Minister, I am filled with gratitude for all our men and women in uniform – past and present. God is using, and has used, them to keep our land – and you and me – glorious and free. Lest we forget, let us often remember.

Giant colon coming

A 40 foot long, eight foot high giant pink inflatable replica of the human colon will be on-site during Harvest Showdown from November 7 until November 10 at the Gallagher Centre, Yorkton. The Giant Colon is an educational initiative of the Colorectal Cancer Association of Canada. The interactive display was created to allow the public to walk-through the supersized 3D exhibit and learn about how the colon works and how to prevent, treat and beat colorectal cancer. The Canadian Cancer Society, the Saskatchewan Cancer Agency and Sunrise Health Region have teamed up to promote the Colorectal Cancer Screening Program. Colorectal cancer is the second leading cause of death in Canada. It is also one of the most pre-

ventable cancers through regular screening and early detection. It is estimated that approximately 700 Saskatchewan residents will be diagnosed with the disease this year and 270 will die from it. “We hope this fun multimedia exhibit will be visited by most of the people attending the Harvest Showdown. The Giant Colon has been developed to raise awareness regarding colorectal cancer and other diseases of the colon and will encourage people to talk about colon health,” said Melissa Hrebenik, Director of Primary Health with Sunrise Health Region. “Education is the first step to prevention and detection of colorectal cancer.” The exhibit will be open Wednesday, November 7 to Saturday, November 10 from 12:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. daily.

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SUDOKU RULES The objective is to fill a 9×9 grid with digits so that each column, each row, and each of the nine 3×3 sub-grids that compose the grid (also called “boxes,” “blocks,” “regions,” or “sub-squares”) contains all of the digits from 1 to 9. The puzzle setter provides a partially completed grid, which typically has a unique solution. Completed puzzles are always a type of Latin square with an additional constraint on the contents of individual regions. For example, the same single digit may not appear twice in the same 9x9 playing board row or column or in any of the nine 3x3 subregions of the 9x9 playing board. This week’s puzzle is easy. See the solution on Page 10.

BIG WINNER – The Sacred Heart High School magazine campaign sold over 900 subscriptions this year, and students received rewards for their participation, from prizes to pizza parties for classes with over 50 per cent participation. The biggest prize of all went to Brady Nerbas, who won a 1999 Chrysler Cirrus supplied by Yorkton Hyundai. Pictured, Ron Kaban, dealer principal of Yorkton Hyundai, presents Nerbas with his prize.

Great Friends! kton l, Yor l a H n r Legio , 2012 sh Ba : a e C c . 0 a s 1 Pl tail Nov. Cock ce Date: 8:00 pm 0 Dan : Time 9:00 - 1:0 h Lunc 0 0 : 1 1 and Live B

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Page 8A - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - THE NEWS REVIEW

Redefining success, still making mistakes: Brett Wilson Submitted by W. Brett Wilson and Glacier Media Group I grew up in Saskatchewan, and like many people, I have a huge soft spot for my homeland. I have a tremendous amount of pride in my roots, and great respect for the people who pioneered this part of the world. In a relatively short time, those determined settlers – including my great-grandparents – helped turn the wild and rugged prairie into one of the greatest places to live on earth. Part of what makes Western Canada so unique is the special breed of people who live here. There’s just something about this place – this land – that has helped to shape a people that are solid to the core. My affection for the land is surpassed only by my affection for the people who live here, and what sets us apart is really what holds us together – a deep and enduring commitment to each other. Growing up in North Battleford, a small city just North of Saskatoon, I witnessed incredible displays of community spirit from a host of people, but most notably from my own parents. My father, Bill Wilson, is a classic prairie gentleman. If a stranger were stranded with a flat tire, he was the guy who would pull over first to lend a hand. I once was with my Dad when he backed up 1/4 mile on a very muddy road just to follow a neighbor lady driving in another direction because he was worried she might get stuck and need help. My mother was equally inspirational. As a social worker, she was always doing what

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she could to help out the community – from volunteering for causes related to her children to taking in foster kids to teaching parenting classes. For my Mom, giving back was part of her DNA. This commitment to community is a wonderful part of my legacy, and probably yours. You may be reading this in Kamloops, Kipling, or Calgary, but my guess is that we share a similar belief: that the real measure of success is not just about hard work and big rewards. It’s also about giving back and taking care of the people around us. It’s about our sense of community. As a city, Calgary has been shaped by corporate and community leaders whose collective dreams have taken it from a North West Mounted Police outpost to an international center of excellence for energy. We owe many of our greatest assets – such as world-class sports teams and facilities, dynamic arts and culture, and state-of-the-art health care and education – to the individual visions and collective efforts of our community-minded citizens. One of my favorite examples of great combined effort comes from my hometown. When I started to become more focused on personal philanthropy a decade or so ago, I realized I hadn’t yet done anything substantive to give back to my birthplace – North Battleford – so I organized large (to me) donations to the both the local United Way and the Battlefords Union Hospital. It didn’t take long to learn that my personal donation of $100,000 matched the United Way’s

entire fundraising goal for that year. I asked the hospital CEO what else was on his wish list and the request for four new anesthesiology machines caught my eye. The hospital had four operating rooms with four old units on site, but at least one unit was down for repairs at any given time. I told the hospital that I would give $300,000 toward the new machines, but they had to match my donation by raising $300,000 themselves. I didn’t realize then that the most the hospital had previously raised during one campaign was $100,000. It actually took less than three months for the city to meet – and exceed – their fundraising goal. They announced their victory on the local radio station at the end of a very touching multi-day radiothon, and called me with the results: “Brett, we have met your challenge – in fact we blew through it – and have raised $500,000!” I was so moved by the way the community had come together to support the hospital that there was little I could do but match them –dollar for dollar – and up my donation to $500,000. The $1 million total tally was an incredible boost for the city, but the bigger impact came in terms of commu-

nity engagement. To say the city and its citizens surprised themselves would be an understatement. But North Battleford is not unique. There are hundreds of similar communities with innovative organizations addressing an assortment of similar issues and causes – and providing great opportunities for citizens to work with them to make our communities better places to live and do business. To me, the business value of philanthropy is obvious. Strong communities attract new businesses, and quality employees, which in turn create an even stronger business climate. Employees want to live in communities with a strong economic and social fabric – places where they feel connected to each other and enjoy a great quality of life. Without question, communities with a strong economic base and a strong social fabric are the best places to live and work. As one of the proud co-founders of Calgary’s FirstEnergy Capital Corp., I’ve seen the enormous impact one company can have on its community. It would be nearly impossible to measure the number of lives that have been dramatically improved by FirstEnergy’s philanthropic work.In addition to donating more than $10 million to more than 500 community agencies over the past almost twenty years, FirstEnergy has raised millions for the victims of the 1997 Manitoba Flood, the Quebec ice storm in 1998, the Alberta

drought in 2002, and the Slave Lake disaster in 2011. But the best corporate philanthropy doesn’t just make a social impact – it also adds to a company’s bottom line. FirstEnergy didn’t set out to be a leader in corporate philanthropy. We did set out to be a leader in investment banking. And we used charitable giving as a marketing tool. Every time we gave a contribution to a charity, we were very open about the fact that we expected something in return. What we gained in the form of public recognition, cobranding with larger companies, or recognition within the charity’s network helped us to dramatically increase our profile, develop new partnerships, and grow our client base. That is the kind of return on investment corporate philanthropy should expect to achieve. In my world, giving and getting definitely go together, but philanthropic giving can be more rewarding than you might expect. I’m quite candid about the fact that when I first started my career 30 years ago, my goal was simple: I wanted to make money – and lots of it. I wanted success, the big house, and a few nice toys in the garage. What I soon learned was that financial success can become surprisingly hollow. Ironically, philanthropic pursuits produce a much more satisfying return. So after spending many years focused on making money, I now spend as much – if not more – of my energy

giving it away. That’s why I am constantly challenging people to think carefully about how we measure success. Earlier this year, the first World Happiness Report was released. It attempted to measure social and economic well-being around the world. Canada placed fifth. It came as a surprise to some people, but not to me, that a nation’s happiness is not necessarily tied to its economy, but has more to do with things like personal freedom and strong social networks. Just like the people who settled our communities decades ago, we are wired to connect with and care for one another. If we stop measuring success based on material wealth, and start measuring it in terms of things we really value – like our relationships with family and friends, and the quality of our communities, then we all might start to feel richer than we thought possible. To me, the real bottom line is not about how much we get, but how much we are privileged to invest in others. That’s how I have redefined success.

Business, entrepreneur and philanthropist Brett Wilson is publishing a new book in November. Entitled Redefining Success : Still Making Mistakes it will in bookstores this month. Brett Wilson authored this column in partnership with Glacier Media Group, which has extensive holdings in community media and business-to-business media across Canada.

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THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - Page 9A

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Page 10A - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - THE NEWS REVIEW

Onions: how to go about preventing the tears Probably the most frequent question I get asked is “how do I prevent crying when cutting onions?” No one enjoys this eye burning sensation followed by what seems to be an emotional breakdown. The watery eyes are caused by a chemical gas that is released from the onion as it is damaged by cutting. This chemical gas then reacts with the natural tears in our eyes and turns into a mild form of sulfuric acid which our eyes then water more to flush away the irritant. In my many years of cooking I have heard numerous ways to help prevent this reaction… some more effective than others and it is my pleasure to share these findings with you. I have heard that burning a candle near the cutting board will help because the flame will

burn off these releasing gases. However through my trial and errors all I have found is the tender glow from the candle just makes you look more romantic while you are crying. I have also heard stories that holding a spoon between your teeth, or a slice of bread hanging out of your mouth will eliminate any tears from shedding. The theory was presented to me that the metal of the spoon offers a chemical reaction with the gas to disperse it, while the bread would simply soak up the gases before reaching one’s eyes. We brought up these theories during a cooking class one evening and there was a man claiming to be a scientist in the crowd. He explained that it isn’t what you are holding between your teeth that matters, just the fact that you are bit-

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“Every Child is a gift”

Yorkton’s 15TH Annual Santa Claus Parade

Sat., Nov. 24, 2012 • The Parade Route will begin at 5:30 pm from the corner of Seventh Avenue South, (corner of Ramada Hotel). It will proceed north; turn left (west) on Broadway St., proceeding West to Laurier Ave. (corner of McDonalds, then turn left (south) on Laurier and will disburse on Independent Street. We ask that people move down Laurier to allow the entire parade to turn the corner off of Broadway. Those returning to Seventh Ave. may do so using Melville Ave. to King Street. • All Parade entries are to be in place by 5:00 pm on November 24, 2012. Parade Directors will be on site to place entries in order. • We hope to see many new faces in the Parade this year, feel free to call: Yorkton Exhibition… 783-4800… Kathy Hilworth 783-9446 Ext 230 or Penny Sandercock 782-6456 • Parade Marshalls: Grant Neil & Gerald Muzyka Parade Chairpersons: Penny Sandercock & Kathy Hilworth

Evening Parade Regulations • The Parade will have ONE official Santa Claus, therefore we ask that you NOT put one on your own float. • We ask that all entries have some type of decorations and lights. • Floats must not THROW candy. All candy must be distributed by hand by people walking along the parade route. • Children’s safety is our prime concern. • All participants will proceed in a safe manner during the route. • Parade Marshalls have the absolute authority in determining float safety and participation in the parade. Insurance is covered by the parade, but floats may carry additional insurance if they so choose. If you wish to join the Parade Committee contact the Chairpersons above. -----------------------------------------------

Please detach and mail completed form to: Yorkton Exhibition - Santa Parade, Box 908, Yorkton SK, S3N 2X1 or Fax 306-782-4919 before Nov. 16, 2012 We need to know how many floats and the approximate size of each for Parade Set Up.

Name/Organization ____________________________________ Phone _______________ Contact Name ___________________ Type of Float (Car, Truck, Horses, etc.) ___________________ ______________________________________________________

Chef Dez on Cooking by Gordon Desormeaux www.chefdez.com ing onto something… or anything! When holding something between your teeth, your breathing pattern changes and you tend to inhale/exhale through your mouth more and thus the gases have a harder time reaching your eyes. I have tried this on many occasions with a wide variety of objects hanging out of my mouth (yes, my wife still thinks I’m handsome) and it does work for the most part, but not 100 percent. There is a rumor floating around the Chef’s society that if one cuts their onion in a certain fashion that the amount of fumes being released from the onion will be

limited. However I have yet to find what technique this is and I highly doubt this theory anyway. Knowing that you will be working with an onion for dinner, one of the best bets is to toss it in the refrigerator that morning or at least an hour or two beforehand. Hot and warm air/gas rises, where cold air/gas doesn’t. This will keep fumes much lower to the cutting surface and less out of your eyes. Cutting onions near your overhead fan of your stovetop is also an option as long as it is powerful enough to suck the fumes in that direction and away from your eyes.

Using a summer fan on a stand, positioned to blow in the opposite direction of where you are standing at the cutting board is also ideal. Even better would be to have a mini sized fan that sits on the counter for these tearful chopping moments. Lastly, I want to tell you about the method that I use more often than the others: Onion Goggles. Yes, goggles specifically made to keep these harmful onion vapors away from your eyes that can be purchased from any specialty food or kitchenware stores or online. They have a foam backing on them and they sit on your face just like glasses without pressure on your eye sockets or face from other so-called solutions such as swimming goggles or ski masks. I have cut many an onion with this great invention and since they come in an array of colors too, not only will your eyes and cheeks stay dry, but you will also look stylish.

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

Dear Chef Dez: I have heard putting your onions in the fridge before cutting them helps to keep me from crying so is it okay if I always keep my onions in the fridge? Nicholas K. Surrey, BC. Dear Nicholas: It is important to know that it is not good to use the refrigerator as a permanent storage solution for your onions – it will cause premature rotting and/or sprouting of your onions because it is too humid and dark. Send your food/cooking questions to dez@ chefdez.com or P.O. Box 2674, Abbotsford, BC V2T 6R4 Chef Dez is a Food Columnist, Culinary Instructor & Cooking Show Performer. Visit him at www.chefdez.com The next “Chef Dez on Cooking” column will appear approximately November 23/12.

You can now read both of our Thursday and Saturday editions online plus link to websites of the businesses listed below.

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THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - Page 11A

What’s up at Good Spirit? Submitted by Carol Olsen We’re living in a Winter Wonderland! Thanks to Nyle James and John McDonald for building the boardwalk by the skating rink. It will be a huge bonus to the skaters... and hopefully a great winter of skating. We have a great community of volunteers! We also thank Carol Kuzyk for her donation of a folding table and electric roaster to our Community Association We will get a lot of use out of them. Our fund-raiser steak supper at Tapps last Sat. was fairly well attended and we were happy to see our neighbors and friends out for the evening. There will be a Christmas supper on Sat. Dec. 8 at the Good Spirit Acres Restaurant. There will be turkey and all the trimmings for $19.95 a plate. Please phone the clubhouse at 792-4615 for reservations as soon as possible, preferably by Dec. 1, so that they can order the supplies for the supper. We hope to see everyone there. If you would like to bring nonperishable goods and/or gifts for the food bank, please bring them to the club house, the night of the supper. The Good Spirit Golf and Country Club will be offering Stay and Ride special in the cabins again this year. Pay for two nights and get a third night free. Let’s hope that we get lots of snow for the Snowmobile Riders! The Christmas greeting board will soon be up at the Good Spirit Market. It is a great way to wish your friends at GSA a Merry Christmas with the lights and decorative homemade cards. Boards will be at the store to purchase for $10 each. This fundraiser will go towards purchasing some new picnic tables for the camp kitchen, to replace the old ones that should be “retired.” The Hamlet Board in cooperation with the Rural Municipality, landowners (Dwight/Tammy Ruf, Danny/Sasha Wasylenchuk, Ducks Unlimited) the Provincial Park and our Good Spirit Golf Resort are in the midst of cleaning up the waterways from the

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Hamlet to Horseshoe Lake. The objective was to remove any impediments from the normal water path and to create an environment that will assist the movement of water in the spring. With the dry conditions this was an ideal time to get this project done. The Hamlet Board and the community of Good Spirit Acres want to thank all of those involved for their “Spirit” of cooperation. Thanks also to our contractor, Jerry Cherewyk with Altrimira construction. The “annual” installation of snow fence along Capalano (11th fairway) has now been completed due to some tremendous

cooperation from “good neighbours.” Many thanks to Bill Cripps, Alf Dittrick, Gerry Holfeld, Sandi and Terry Konkel, Ed and Elaine Park, John McDonald, Brent Moore, Bob Martin, Michael Morton, Barry Bradshaw and Don Thompson. When you have many helping hands, the job gets done quickly. The Good Spirit Market will make up fudge orders for Christmas giving. Just give them a call and place your order. Come for coffee and pie most days, and if you are wanting lunch, please phone ahead. If you are going to try cross-country skiing, start with a small country!

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T Visa

blue chip homes Each office independently owned & operated.

Make cheque payable to: The News Review

Stacy Neufeld

Evan Johnson

621-3680 620-7977

Like us on Facebook /yorkton.newsreview


Page 12A - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - THE NEWS REVIEW

Tilley & Donna Fashions Available

ALASKA & THE YUKON

SaskTel Audio Visual Entertainment Cellular & Data Sales & Service Experts

All Coach - From Yorkton

Ruff’s Countrywide

44 Dracup Ave., Yorkton

FURNITURE & APPLIANCES 60 Myrtle Avenue, Yorkton Ph. 782-2274 or 782-2068 Fax 786-6838 www.countrywide.com

Phone (306) 782-6677

1-800-647-7751 or 783-6548 DENVER BRONCOS

HOUSTON TEXANS

CINCINNATI BENGALS

e-mail: sharpauto2000@gmail.com

Complete Auto & Truck Repair Center!!

Nov. 14 to Dec. 14

Swipe Daily & Enter to Win! 510 Broadway St. W. Yorkton

Phone 786-6777 GREEN BAY PACKERS

SEATTLE SEAHAWKS

DALLAS COWBOYS

JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS

Yorkton Bus Depot

(306) 782-2396

278 Myrtle Avenue Yorkton SK. S3N 1R4 www.sharpauto.mechanicnet.com INDIANAPOLIS COLTS ARIZONA CARDINALS

QUALITY BRAND NAME FURNITURE & APPLIANCES INCLUDING…

AUTHORIZED DEALER Mobility

June 12 - July 1 Book by Dec. 31 & receive an Early Booking Bonus

NEW ORLEANS SAINTS

SERVING YORKTON & AREA FOR OVER 60 YEARS

L & I Depot

Here’s your chance to prove it!

Think you know football?

(Lorresta & Ike Harris)

35 First Ave. N. Yorkton, SK

CONTEST RULES • The contest is open to everyone except employees of The News Review and their immediate families. • A minimum total of $25.00 cash will be given to the contestant who picks all the correct winners. In case of ties, the person who guesses closest to the Sunday night game point total of both teams wins! If still a tie, money will be split. In cases of no prize winner, prize money will carry over to the following week. If there is no winner during the 17 week promotion, the final week will be worth $425.00 and, the person with the most wins during the final week will win all the money. In case of tie, same tie-breaker rules apply. • Decision of judges is final and all entries become the property of The News Review. • All entrants must use the official blank entry form on this page. All games will be listed on this page. • You must write down the name of the advertiser in the appropriate box, not the team’s name. Team names will be found in the ads on this page. • Entries must arrive at The News Review office before 4:00 p.m. Friday, November 9, 2012.

LIMIT OF ONE ENTRY PER HOUSEHOLD PER WEEK

OFFICIAL ENTRY FORM - Name of Advertiser For November 11 & 12, 2012 1.

5.

9.

13.

2.

6.

10.

14.

3.

7.

11.

15.

4.

8.

12.

16.

NAME _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

SUNDAY NIGHT TIE BREAKER

(306) 782-2355 NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS

WASHINGTON REDSKINS

GARDON S &SECURITIES.

G

TELECOMMUNICATIONS LTD 35 Betts Ave., Yorkton, SK

SALES & SERVICE OF: • DSC Alarms & Equipment • Access Control • 24 hr. Alarm Monitoring • Surveillance Systems KELLY STOLL President

• Cameras for Home, Farm & Business • Fire Extinguishers • Mobile Radios & Equipment • Answering Service

Local 1.306.782.0211 Toll Free 1.888.782.0211

BUFFALO BILLS

SAN DIEGO CHARGERS

N.F.L. SCHEDULE FOR DAYS OF NOVEMBER 11 & 12 1. New York Giants at Cincinnati

5. Buffalo at new England

9. New York Jets at Seattle

13. KC at Pittsburgh

2. Detroit at Minnesota

6. San Diego at Tampa Bay

10. Dallas at Philadelphia

14.

3. Tennessee at Miami

7. Denver at Carolina

11. St. Louis at San Francisco

15.

4. Atlanta at New Orleans

8. Oakland at Baltimore

12. Houston at Chicago

16.

ADDRESS _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _____________________________________ POSTAL CODE _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ PHONE _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

Test your knowledge of N.F.L. Football Pick all the winners and you could win $250.00

_________ Please Print Clearly

Complete Exterior Renovations

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Don’t Just Get "R" Done! Get "R" Done Rite! 391 Ball Road Yorkton, SK

Phone: 782-9600

ATLANTA FALCONS

Fax: 782-4449

NEW YORK GIANTS

UNIQUE TRUCK MOUNTED EQUIPMENT • Patented controlled-heat cleaning • No soap, shampoo or detergent • Safe for stain-resistant carpeting • Kills or removes 90% of bacteria • Environmentally friendly

Phone

783-4131

TAMPA BAY BUCCHANEERS

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• PVC Window / Door Replacement • Vinyl Siding • Window / Door Capping • Custom Flashings

• Eavestroughing • Soffit/Fascia *Lifetime Seal Warranty*

Owners: Lynton Evans & Jeff Morley

EVERLAST 786-7055

Eaves & Exteriors Ltd. PITTSBURGH STEELERS

Paper Bag Players

Lisa Allin

P/P D/O

#5 - 1st Ave. N.

1.888.782.5955 or 782-5955 CAROLINA PANTHERS

OAKLAND RAIDERS

DELIVERING OUR BEST TO YOU! 107 Broadway St. W., Yorkton

786-7500 ST. LOUIS RAMS

Phone (306) 786-7555 Fax (306) 786-7556

"Every Christmas Story Ever Told! (and then some!) Michael Carleton, Jim FitzGerald & John K. Avarez

CLEVELAND BROWNS

Tickets on sale Nov. 6th! at:

www.paperbagplayers.com or call Marilyn@ 783-2001 MIAMI DOLPHINS

DETROIT LIONS

Yorkton Welding & Machine - (1983) Ltd. 140 York Road • Yorkton, SK S3N 2X1

NEW FOR US PRESSURE WELDING 1" OD PIPE & UPWARD CLASS M

Ph: 306-783-8773 Fax: (306) 783-8769 SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS

CHICAGO BEARS Parkland Mall Yorkton

** CHRISTMAS DINNER THEATRE **

Cancun

• 1 wk • 4+ • Direct Regina • AI • Transfers • Tax in

FAX: 782-7371 email: everlasteavesandext@accesscomm.ca www.everlasteavesandexteriors.com VISIT OUR SHOWROOM AT 130 LIVINGSTONE, YORKTON, SK

X Daily Lunch & Supper Specials X Banquet Facilities Available X Take-Out Available Now Taking Bookings for Christmas Parties

TENNESSEE TITANS

BALTIMORE RAVENS

THORSNESS APPLIANCES AND

BED STORE

14 Betts Ave.

Yorkton

786-7676 PHILADELPHIA EAGLES

MINNESOTA VIKINGS


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - Page 13A

Why Remember? Remembrance Day History Photo Gallery Local Events

A special supplement by

The News Review

Remembering Those Who Served from

Yorkton Co-op 30 Argyle St.

783-3601

180 Hamilton Road

782-2451


Page 14A - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - THE NEWS REVIEW

Wagner’s Flooring

Remember When

Lest We Forget

Financial solutions to meet your needs.

The Smart Place to Shop

ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL

Lest We Forget

78 Broadway Street E. Yorkton, Sask.

306-786-3200 www.rbc.com/online

26 - 2nd Ave. N.

782-2927

34 - 2nd Ave. N., Yorkton 782-5355 www.fuzztonemusic.com fuzztonemusic@sasktel.net

650 AIR WATTS W/BASE ELECTRIC KIT

$

99

799

**Special pricing not available in conjunction with other offers. See your local dealer for complete details. Dealer may sell for less.

WWW.BEAMCANADA.COM

46 Myrtle Avenue, Yorkton, Sask.

Phone 783-8392 We remember those who served in times of war and peace.

Safely providing quality services.™ EMW started in the Agri-business 35+ years ago. We continually endeavor to be leaders in “safety and innovation”. We would like to take this opportunity to thank our customers for their continued business and support. Please have a safe and prosperous year.

Local services planned It’s Veterans Week in the City of Yorkton and in light of that fact a number of special events have been planned. Comrade Peter Wyatt was on hand at a recent meeting of Yorkton City Council to share details. “2012 is another year where we have a chance to say thank you to those many men and women who bravely gave of themselves to give us the opportunities and freedoms we have today,” he spoke. “Remembrance Day is a very important day for all Legion Veterans and members.

We would like as many citizens of Yorkton to join us and share in our Veterans remembrances and to celebrate the freedoms they gave us.” In addition to a flag of remembrance flying at City Hall during the week, a number of events have been planned. Poppy Tag Day began October 27 with Cadets, Scouts and Cubs actively selling poppies in the community. Wreath sales began Friday, October 26 with members of the legion going to local businesses to sell wreaths. If your busi-

ness was missed and you would like a wreath, call the legion. On Sunday, November 11 starting at 10:30 a.m., a special Remembrance Day Parade and services will be held at the Farrell Agencies Arena. This event will be followed by refreshments at the legion where all are welcome and then a dinner where the legion pipe band will provide entertainment. Tickets are $15 and must be purchased by November 8. For more information call the legion at 7839789.

Lest We Forget ZAHARIA ELECTRIC LTD.

Lest We Forget

Lest We Forget

Prompt & Reliable Service 78 Lincoln Ave. Yorkton

783-7008

R E F R I G E R AT I O N LT D .

Yorkton

782-1272 Email: custom.micro@sasktel.net

782-1577 Canora

563-5527


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - Page 15A

Lest We Forget

Remember When

Remember When

Cherrydale Golf & Campground #16 Wynyard

#9 Canora

#52 Ituna

Roblin

Cherrydale Club House

"Builders of Quality Homes" 18A Broadway Street East Yorkton, SK

782-4114 Check us out on Facebook

Lest We Forget

HARVEST MEATS 501 York Road W., Yorkton

783-9446 Lest We Forget

DRS. BODE FUCHS & YAWORSKY 41 Broadway St. W. Yorkton, SK

783-3233 Remember When

“Certified” Health/Weight Management Counselors

783-5888 8-84 Broadway St. E., Yorkton, Sask.

Remember Those Who Fought For Us

Hwy. 10 E., Yorkton, Sask.

Hwy. 10 East Yorkton, SK

Melville

Whitewood

Langenburg

782-9700

at Cherrydale we let you entertain yourself

Perry 621-7965

786-6877

Lest We Forget

ALL SEASON RENTALS & SALES 37 Palliser Way, Yorkton, SK

1 800 667-1273 (306) 783-0400

The Canada Remembers Program endeavours to keep alive the achievements and sacrifices made by those who served Canada in times of war, armed conflict and peace and to promote an understanding of the significance of these efforts in Canadian life as we know it today. As most people in Canada today have never experienced war, “Remembrance” becomes a challenging concept to incorporate. How do you remember what you haven’t known? Some have been fortunate to have had relatives; grandparents, aunts, uncles, great-grand parents, who shared their stories of war and peace. Some, our newer Canadians, have sought Canada as a new home, safe from their own wartorn motherlands. We have all studied some Canadian history in schools. But the vast majority of us, especially the youth, have no first hand or even second hand knowledge of war. And thankfully so. But we can come to understand and appreciate what those who have served Canada in times of war, armed conflict and peace stand for and what they have sacrificed for their country. We live in a wonderful country, full of opportunities and freedoms we often take for granted. You can be sure that Canadian Veterans do not take our situation for granted. Young men and women sacrificed all they knew, all the comforts, love and safety of home in order to defend the rights and freedoms of others. Some returned with permanent physical and emotional scars, bound to haunt them for the rest of their lives. Others never returned. Veterans know the price paid for our freedom and they want all Canadians to share in this understanding. In fact, now, more than ever, they are passing the torch of remembrance to us, to the people of Canada, to ensure that the mem-

Lest We Forget

ory of their efforts and sacrifices will not die with them, and that an appreciation of the values they fought for will live on in all Canadians. Canadians have a reputation of being a peace loving nation, and this has been demonstrated time and time again when we have engaged in combat and peacekeeping operations for the sake of protecting humans rights, freedom and justice around the world. When you think of Canadian efforts in war and peace you come to realize that our desire to help was never motivated by greed,

Remember When

(306) 786-6636

Lest We Forget

Parkland Mall Yorkton, Sask.

240 Hamilton Road Yorkton, SK

Phone

782-9820

Lest We Forget

Lest We Forget

Remember When

Remember When

THORSNESS APPLIANCES BED STORE

782-2638

783-0321

“Redwing Safety Boots”

YORKTON Linden Square Shopping Centre

786-7676

www.leadingedgeaviation.ca

783-8107

WalMart

14 Betts Ave. Yorkton

Remember When

41 Broadway St. E., Yorkton

BG DENTURE CLINIC

50 Broadway St. W. Yorkton, SK

Claude: (306) 621-7062 Fax: (306) 783-3583 Email aeyorkton@sasktel.net

Alexander’s Men’s Wear

FLOOR & HOME

AND

YORKTON, SASK.

Lest We Forget

(306) 783-4131

782-2368

115 - 41 Broadway W. Yorkton, SK

power or threats. It was in and of itself, a desire to protect human rights, all humans’ rights. So, although many of us cannot actually “remember”, we owe it to those who have served to learn, to understand, and to appreciate the task they have undertaken. Generations of Canadian Veterans, through their courage, determination and sacrifice have helped to ensure that we live in a free and peaceful country. If we can understand this, how can we not pause and say “thank you” in remembrance of such an accomplishment?

783-5501

153 Broadway St. W. Yorkton, SK

•Electrical Controls •Electrical Construction •Installation and Service

Remember When

UPHOLSTERY & CARPET CLEANING

APPERLEY ELECTRIC ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS

Lest We Forget

CARPET ONE

Lest We Forget

LTD.

We as Canadians remember... why?

306-782-6556 1-888-782-6556

Avalon Photography & Framing

Lest We Forget

212 Broadway St. E. Yorkton, SK “Home of the Whopper Sandwich”

Remember When Drs. SHEASBY, POPICK & CAINES Optometrists 289 Bradbrooke Dr.

Yorkton, SK 46 Broadway St. E. Yorkton, SK

(306) 783-6350

Lest We Forget PARKLAND ENGINE REBUILDERS 1994 LTD. Hwy. #10 East, Box 22016 Yorkton, SK Bruce Wonchulanko Norm Dumka

(306) 782-2453 or 782-2454

Phone (306) 783-4569

Remember When • NURSERY • GARDEN CENTRE • GROCERY STORE Hwy. #9 North Yorkton, SK Phone

(306) 783-8660


Page 16A - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - THE NEWS REVIEW

Lest We Forget

EVERLAST

Eaves & Exteriors Ltd.

Owners: Lynton Evans & Jeff Morley

*Lifetime Seal Warranty*

Don’t Just Get “R” Done! Get “R” Done Rite! 391 Ball Road Yorkton, SK

Phone: 782-9600 Remember When

162 Ball Road Yorkton, SK Phone (306) 782-2463

Remember When

VT

VALUE TIRE & BATTERY 470 Broadway East. Yorkton, SK

783-1555 Lest We Forget

Heavy Duty Medium Truck & Trailer Repair Hwy #10 E. Yorkton,

782-4313

• PVC Window Door Replacement • Vinyl Siding • Windows/Door Capping • Custom Flashings • Eavestroughing • Soffit/Fascia

786-7055

FAX: 782-7371 email: everlasteavesandext@accesscomm.ca

Fax: 782-4449

VISIT OUR SHOWROOM AT 130 LIVINGSTONE, YORKTON, SK

The many ways to remember Attending Remembrance Day ceremonies on November 11 is the bestknown way that we can publicly honour the men and women who served Canada in times of war, military conflict and peace. In addition, there are many other ways that we can show throughout the year that we care about the sacrifices and achievements of these one and a half million brave Canadians who served, and continue to serve, our country at home and abroad. Remembering can take many forms: music, ceremonies, poetry, private reflection, discussion, art and shared memories from those who took part in protecting peace and freedom worldwide. In the following pages, you’ll find 50 different ways that individuals and groups can share the importance of Remembrance. More than 110,000 men and women died so that we may live in peace and freedom today. Taking an active role to remember these people, along with the Veterans who experienced the hardships of war, military conflict and peace efforts, is one way of saying “thank you.” • Wear a poppy to honour those in uniform who have served Canada and also those who have died in service to our country. • Attend Remembrance Day ceremonies or if you can’t go watch them on television. • Lay a wreath at the cenotaph. • Pause for one minute

of silence at 11:00 a.m. on November 11 to honour those who served and died in times of war, military conflict and peace. • Help plan and participate in a commemorative ceremony at school or with a community group. • Thank a Veteran or Canadian Forces member for supporting peace and freedom efforts around the world. • Organize, participate in, or attend a candlelight tribute ceremony at a cemetery to remember citizens in your community who died during military service to Canada. • Spread the word about Veterans’ Week, Remembrance Day and other commemorative events using your school’s newspaper, Web site or daily announcements. • Organize an essay or poster contest on the topic of Canada’s role in the First or Second World War, the Korean War or Peace Support missions. • Plan, organize or participate in a debate or discussion looking at how Canada’s military history influences our lives today. • Plan, organize or participate in a 1920s, 1940s, or 1950s dance or “Victory Ball.” Research the clothing, hairstyles, music, food and decorations of the time and include those themes in the event. • Bring examples of wartime art (such as paintings or posters), books and stories, poetry and music to school to show and talk about with your peers. Discuss what their purpose was during the war,

Honouring Those Who Died For Us

why they were important, and what makes them unique. • Organize a concert featuring music from the war-era. Take the concert to a nursing home and perform for the residents. • Hold a series of community readings where citizens share their favourite passages from military-related books, novels, poems, letters and diaries. Show a video or film on Canada’s role in the wars and peace missions of the 20th and 21st centuries. • Adopt a Veteran’s grave in your community. With the permission of the person’s family or the cemetery, visit and take care of the grave. You could dig weeds, plant flowers or clean the headstone. • Research the story of a family member, friend or neighbour who served Canada in wartime or peacetime. Tell that person’s story to your class. Describe how his or her life was affected by their service and talk about the challenges they faced after the war. • Invite a Veteran or a Canadian Forces member to speak to your class. You can find a list of speakers by visiting the Dominion Institute’s “Memory Project” Web site External link, Opens in a new window The Royal Canadian Legion’s Web site External link, Opens in a new window also lists Veterans who may wish to speak in your community. • Listen to Veterans and Canadian Forces members talk about their wartime and peacetime experiences

on the “Heroes Remember” feature of the Veterans Affairs Canada Web site. • Invite a Dutch immigrant to your school to speak about the special connection between the people of the Netherlands and Canadian troops during the Second World War – a connection still felt today! Your local chapter of the Dutch Canadian Association can help you find a speaker. • Contact your local or provincial War Brides Association and invite a war bride to visit your school. Ask her to describe what it was like to marry a Canadian soldier and move to a new country. Discuss what challenges war brides faced in Canada at the time. • Visit local nursing homes to spend time with those from the wartime generation. • Invite someone to speak to your class about their work with a community support or volunteer organization during the war years. These may include the Girl Guides, Boy Scouts, the Canadian Red Cross Society, the Salvation Army, St. John’s Ambulance and the Imperial Order of the Daughters of the Empire (IODE). Research their wartime activities prior to their visit. • Research how Canadians at home supported the war effort overseas. Discuss what you have learned as a class. Interview a Veteran, relative, family friend, neighbour, war bride, nursing sister, factory worker or another person who was impacted by the war. See more on Page 12.

621-0986 Bus: 306-782-2253

gpskinner@sasktel.net 180 Broadway St. West

Gaylene Skinner

REALTOR®

Lest WeForget

BMO Bank of Montreal

Lest We Forget

Love what you eat 249 Hamilton Rd. Across from Walmart

Lest We Forget

Highway #16 West Yorkton, Sask. email: potzusltd@sasktel.net

782-7423

From the staff & families of Yorkton, SK


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - Page 17A RESIDENTIAL and COMMERCIAL

Serving You In Yorkton & District Since 1959

A SOLID RETIREMENT PLAN NEEDS SOLID EXPERTISE Invest in our expertise and we will help you plan every step of your retirement.

✔ AIR CONDITIONING

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783-3028

Celebrating Over 50 Years

Penny Sandercock Investment Advisor penny.sandercock@nbc.ca

Toll Free: 1-877-782-6450 Fax: 306-782-6460

FAX: 786-6441 71 Broadway E., YORKTON

HANCOCK PLUMBING 2011 LTD.

National Bank Financial is an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of National Bank of Canada which is a public company listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange (NA: TSX). National Bank Financial is a member of the Canadian Investor Protection Fund (CIPF).

Lest We Forget

Lest We Forget

STAN'S MOBILE SERVICE

CAPITAL KIA

Truck & Trailer Repair Centre

134 Broadway St. E. Yorkton, SK

783-2772

361 York Road West Yorkton

1-877-783-2772

782-4200

www. capitalkiayorkton.com

Lest We Forget

Lest We Forget YORKTON FEED MANAGEMENT

You’re Among Friends

Hwy. #9 North Yorkton, SK

226 Broadway St. E. Yorkton, Sask.

786-4444

786-6969 1-888-782-0985

Lest We Forget

Remember When

YORK-SASK DRY CLEANERS Hwy. #10 East Yorkton, SK

14 - 1st Avenue North

783-4566 TOLL FREE: 1-866-600-4566

Yorkton, SK

782-2647

LELAND CAMPBELL LLP Barristers & Solicitors

A Full Service Law Firm RICHARD A. LELAND Q.C. THOMAS P. CAMPBELL BA, LL.B. Mediator DONNA L. TAYLOR B.SC., LL.B. CYNTHIA A. NIJSSEN BA, LL.B DOREEN K. CLARK BA, (HONS.), LL.B KYLA M. EIFFERT BA, LL.B NOLAN R. KONDRATOFF BA, LL.B MARK PERSICK (Student at Law) YORKTON OFFICE

INSTALLATION INCLUDED We Service What We Sell

36 Fourth Avenue North, Drawer 188, Yorkton, Saskatchewan S3N 2V7 Telephone: (306) 783-8541, Fax: (306) 786-7484, Email: lclaw@sasktel.net

KAMSACK OFFICE Box 399, 445 Second Street, Kamsack, Saskatchewan S0A 1S0 Telephone: (306) 542-2646, Fax: (306) 542-2510, Email: ros.cam@sasktel.net

85 Broadway St. E. YORKTON (306) 782-5545 or 1-800-667-5545 Open Saturday by Appointment


Page 18A - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - THE NEWS REVIEW

Locals travel to remember Submitted by Yorkton Regional High School teachers Steve Variyan and Perry Ostapowich

Constituency Office 19—1st Avenue North Yorkton, SK S3N 1J3 Phone: 306-782-3309 Constituency E-mail: Garry.Breitkreuz.c1@parl.gc.ca

Lest We Forget

P ARKERQ UINE

LLP

CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS “Serving Yorkton & Area” with services in

•Individual, Farm & Corporate Tax Preparation and Planning • Financial Statement Preparation • Auditing Services • Data Processing • Accounting Services

Fax 786-6414

783-8531

41 Broadway Street West, Yorkton Email: info@parkerquine.ca

With Remembrance Day right around the corner, Yorkton Regional High School teachers Perry Ostapowich and Steve Variyan are reminiscing about their travels to the WW II Battlefields of northern France. For ten days in August, 27 Canadian history teachers from across the country, including Ostapowich and Variyan, explored the Normandy countryside to get insight into this defining chapter in Canadian history. The teachers had been selected by the Juno Beach Centre Association to participate in the intensive study tour, designed to increase teacher subject knowledge, promote and revitalize remembrance, and ultimately enhance student learning. Variyan and Ostapowich gained firsthand knowledge of Canada’s participation in the First and Second World Wars. Trip highlights included visits to Canadian battlefields at Vimy Ridge, Beaumont-Hamel, Dieppe, the D-Day landing beaches including the Juno Beach sector, Falaise Gap, and other battle locations. “It was a professional development opportunity of a lifetime!” says Variyan. “To be right there, where it really happened, will only enrich my teaching of the wars. For me, it reinforced the importance of remembering these very personal sacrifices, which is an experience I want to pass on to my students.” The journey began at BeaumontHamel where, in 1916, on the first day of the Battle of the Somme, 814 Dominion of Newfoundland soldiers were wiped out in minutes in a disastrous battle with German forces. From there, the group travelled a short distance to Canada’s “Coming of Age” battlefield – Vimy Ridge. For the remainder of the tour, the group was immersed in World War II battlefields, beaches, and cemeteries of the Normandy Campaign.

“Truly understanding the magnitude of the sacrifice and the experiences our servicemen and women went through can only be accomplished by being there.” – Perry Ostapowich

A sad chapter in Canadian military history, the 1942 Battle of Dieppe was a moving testimony to the ill-fated beach assault on the French resort town. “To stand where the cliff-top German gun emplacements still watch over the pebble beach makes me shake my head at the folly of the mission,” says Variyan. “Nevertheless, Canada’s first European contribution of World War Two cannot be discounted as a lot was learned from this battle.” “For me, a highlight of the tour was visiting the Juno Beach Centre and walking the beaches where Canadians so willingly gave their lives in the cause of freedom,” says Ostapowich. D-Day was the largest amphibious invasion in the history of the world. This was to be the beginning of the end of the war. Of the five Normandy beaches attacked on D-Day, Juno was where 14,000 Canadian soldiers stormed ashore and established a critical beachhead, paving the way for thousands more to continue on to Germany. Continued on Page 7.

We Remember

Royal Canadian Legion, Yorkton General Alexander Ross Branch #77

“2012 – Remembrance Day Service”

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11

Remembrance Day Parade will be held on

Sunday, November 11th, 2012. This year’s ceremonies will be at the Farrell Agencies Arena at 10:50 a.m. Please be seated in the Farrell Agencies Arena by 10:40 a.m. The parade will form up at 10:40 hours in the Farrell Agencies Arena

TH

Banquet Legion Jubilee Hall Social at 5:30 p.m. Dinner at 6:00 p.m. Honouring Our Local Veterans Entertainment by the Legion Pipe Band Tickets $15.00 per person Tickets may be purchased at the Legion. Deadline for tickets, Nov. 9th at 12 noon. Only 200 tickets available


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - Page 19A

Auto Electric Service Ltd. Your Distributor For Yorkton & Area Serving Saskatchewan Since 1943 “The Pros That Know” 26 4th Ave.

783-6515 Yorkton Regional High School teachers Perry Ostapowich and Steve Variyan at Vimy Ridge.

Trip keeps memories alive Con’t from Page 6. “Truly understanding the magnitude of the sacrifice and the experiences our servicemen and women went through can only be accomplished by being there,” says Ostapowich. He gets emotional when he recalls one of the special personal moments of the trip. “A group of French seniors from the village of Mesnil Patrie hosted our group to a lunch in their community hall. The occasion was to honour the liberation by Canadian soldiers of their village and to thank the teachers for keeping the memories alive. The memories they shared and the gratitude they showed us as Canadians was truly humbling. ” The Yorkton Regional teachers are bringing these experiences and resources to others. They hope to create a type of memory project where students and teachers can visit an on-line resource with information, images and teaching ideas for students and teachers alike. Ostapowich notes that with most veterans of these conflicts gone, the living history is no longer with us. He went on to explain that anyone can Google images of the World Wars but how these resources can be used in an educational way to build an understanding of the sacrifices and values that came out of these conflicts is very important.

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INSTALLATIONS

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ESTABLISHED 1986

CALL US!

★ PROMPT PROFESSIONAL SERVICE ★ SERVING YORKTON & AREA SINCE 1986 ★ FULL TIME SERVICE TECHNICIANS ★ EMERGENCY SERVICE AVAILABLE 24 HRS. P.O. BOX 924 YORKTON, SK S3N 2XI

783-3600

TERRY BRUCE 24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE RES: 783-6330 CELL: 621-1397 416 Ball Rd.

COURAGE • SACRIFICE DEDICATION • HONOR On Remembrance Day… We recognize the many sacrifices made by our men and women in uniform both today and throughout our nation’s history. We honor their courage and dedication, and we thank them for their contribution to our country.

Thank you, Veterans

Painted Hand Casino Yorkton’s #1 Entertainment Hot Spot!


Page 20A - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - THE NEWS REVIEW

Lest We Forget We will Remember the Sacrifices our Veterans made in War and in Peace

BIG ENOUGH TO SERVE YOU SMALL ENOUGH TO KNOW YOU 39-7th Ave. S. Yorkton, SK

(306) 782-3842 2 Broadway St. East, Yorkton, SK

782-2275 Lest We Forget

Make No Mistake – Winter Will Be Back! Be Ready For It! See Us For Antifreeze, Diesel Fuel Additives, Batteries, etc. Lest We Forget

Lest we forget...

CITY LIMITS INN 8 Betts Ave. Yorkton

Hwy. #10 E Yorkton

782-2435

783-8511

Lest We Forget

Remember When

Cameo Pizza

57 East Broadway, Yorkton, SK

10 First Ave. N. Yorkton

783-3666

Phone 782-8282 1-888-936-7777

Lest We Forget

Lest We Forget

DR. KEN COTTENIE & DR. CODY BOWTELL

Westerhaug Bus Lines Box 397 Yorkton

(Dentists) 130 - 41 Broadway St. W. Yorkton, SK

(306) 783-7677

783-3054

SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL

St. Mary’s Parish

Ukrainian Catholic Cultural Centre Locally Owned & Operated Since 1963 info@ossyorkton.com

306-783-6995

We can accommodate small or large groups • Weddings • Socials • Meetings/Conventions Box 1669 • 240 Wellington Avenue Yorkton, Saskatchewan S3N 3L2 Phone: (306) 782-1010

Fax: (306) 782-0424

email: smcultural@sasktel.net website: smcultural.com


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - Page 21A

Take time to Remember those who gave so much!

Serving Yorkton & Area for over 50 Years 24 Hr. Service

(306) 782-2733

YORKTON HEARING SERVICES 12 - 3RD AVENUE NORTH, YORKTON ✔ Locally owned and operated. ✔ Registered Masters Degree Audiologist ✔ Renowned for outstanding customer service. ✔ Complete audiological hearing evaluations Marina Walls, ✔ Wax Removal M.S. Audiologist ✔ NO WAITING LIST

“Your Hearing Care Is Our #1 Priority”

Don’t Delay - Call Today!

306.782.1793

Open Monday - Friday, 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.

www.yorktonhearing.com

Remember When

INDUSTRIAL TRUCK & TRAILER REPAIRING

Remember When

Christ the Teacher

"Safety Inspection"

Catholic School Division Board & Staff

786-6065

783-8787

Hwy. 16 W., Yorkton, SK

www.christtheteacher.ca

Remember When

Lest We Forget

Greg Ottenbreit

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

270 Hamilton Road, Yorkton (next to Walmart)

783-9022 www.yorktondodge.com

Thank a Veteran Today!

Saluting Our Veterans

Yorkton, SK Phone

42-6th Ave. N. Yorkton, SK

782-SOUL (7685)

(306) 783-9433 www.cornerstonecu.com

Take a Moment to Remember

We Will Remember TD Canada Trust Open More Hours to Better Serve Our Customers

Jim Elliott 621-7871

63 Broadway Street East Yorkton, Sask 786-4800


Page 22A - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - THE NEWS REVIEW

Remember When

Remember When

Lest We Forget

Honoring The Veterans

The Chalet (1976) Ltd.

Hwy #10 East Yorkton, SK

786-2886 Remember When

SALES & LEASING 75 Broadway St. E., Yorkton, Sask.

Phone 782-3456

Lest We Forget

191 York Road W. Yorkton

782-2645

Linden Square Mall Yorkton

786-7700

Saluting Our Veterans

Honoring The Veterans

TERRY'S PAWN & BARGAIN

GRAIN MILLERS CANADA

782.9680

21-3rd Ave. N. Yorkton

corerealestateinc @gmail.com www.coreywerner.com

782-5626

Growing a garden of remembrance How better to say thank you than with flowers? Long a symbol of powerful emotions, flowers also play a role in reminding us of important moments in our history. Did you know, for example, that the daisy became a sign of resistance in the Netherlands during the Second World War? Or that Newfoundlanders wear forget-me-nots each July 1st in memory of those who fought and died at Beaumont-Hamel, France during the First World War’s Battle of the Somme? In 2012 and 2013, Veterans Affairs Canada is asking Canadians to make remembrance more than something you feel. Make it something you do by planting a Garden of Remembrance! What is a Garden of Remembrance, you ask? Whatever you want it to be! Virtual or real, at a local park or in your own backyard… let your imagination guide you! Get started by checking out these great ideas, templates and resources:

• Be inspired by the VAC Garden of Remembrance Idea Board. • Learn more about flower symbolism. • Check out the Garden of Remembrance Photo Gallery. • Build a garden featuring the Canada Remembers symbol. • Explore funding possibilities through the Community Engagement Partnership Fund. • Read about the Remembrance Club’s Green Thumbs for Remembrance (for children ages 5-11). • Say thank you or remind a loved one of the importance of remembrance with an e-card featuring one of our remembrance flowers. • And don’t forget to share links or post photos of your garden on the VAC Facebook page. Happy gardening! Visit: www.veterans.gc.ca/iremember.

Yorkton, SK

786-4682 Remember When ®

Blue Chip Realty

269 Hamilton Road Yorkton

783-6666 Remember When Yorkton Animal Health Centre P.C. Ltd.

& Soap Exchange

Linden Square Yorkton

Hwy. 52 W. Yorkton

782-5300

782-6620

Remember When

Lest We Forget GODFREY DEAN ART GALLERY

41 Broadway Street W. Yorkton, SK

49 Smith St. E. Yorkton, SK

783-4477

www.deangallery.ca

www.farrellagencies.com

Remember When from

Their role was to offer their lives. Ours is to remember.

Remember When

Lest We Forget

from

PARKLAND

carpet & upholstery

CLEANERS Relax We Can Do It!

4 Palliser Way Yorkton, SK

45 - 5th Ave. N. Yorkton

107 Myrtle Ave. Yorkton, SK

783-8567

783-7552

www.fountaintire.com

www.baileysfuneralhome.com

782-2940

Lest We Forget Dream Weddings Bridal & Formal Wear

Remember When

Remember When

91 Broadway Street E. Yorkton, Sask. Phone

782-6000

115 Palliser Way, Yorkton Phone

(306) 783-8080 Toll Free

1-800-565-0002

HAAS NISSAN 386 Broadway St. E. Yorkton, SK

783-9461

www.haasnissan.com

COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT, PARKS & RECREATION

Lest We Forget

Remember When

Lest We Forget

STEPHANIUK LAW OFFICE

HEARN’S WESTVIEW PHARMACY

5 - 5th Ave. N., Yorkton

265 Bradbrooke Drive Yorkton, SK

783-2424

www.yorktonlawoffice.com

783-4331 or 783-3988

Remember When

Remember When

concrete 2012 ltd.

Highway #9 and York Road Yorkton, SK

782-2264

49 Broadway St. E. Yorkton, SK Phone

783-5183

308 Broadway St. W. Yorkton, SK

Phone

783-3349


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - Page 23A

Canadians at war Canadians Take Vimy Ridge

In 1917, Canadians took part in a First World War battle that even today is a national point of pride. The scene was Vimy Ridge – a long, heavily defended hill along the Western Front in northern France near Arras. The British and French had tried unsuccessfully to capture it earlier in the war. On April 9, 1917, it was Canada’s turn. Early that morning, after months of planning and training, the first group of 20,000 Canadians attacked. Through the snow and sleet, Allied artillery laid down a “creeping barrage”—an advancing line of precise shell fire. Soldiers followed closely behind the explosions and overran the enemy before many of them could leave their underground bunkers. Most of the ridge was captured by noon that day, and the final part was taken by April 12. Canada had done it but victory came at a cost— approximately 11,000 of our men were killed or wounded. It has been said that Canada “came of age” as a country that day. For the first time the four Canadian divisions, uniting more than 100,000 Canadians from coast to coast, served side by side and achieved one of the greatest victories in our country’s history. Mud and Death at Passchendaele

In the fall of 1917, Canadian troops in Belgium fought in the Third Battle of Ypres, better known as the Battle of Passchendaele. The autumn rains came early that year to Flanders Fields. The fighting churned the flat terrain into a sea of muddy clay. Trenches filled with cold water and collapsed. Shell holes overflowed with muck. Men, equipment and horses that slipped off the duckboards (wooden walkways in trenches and on paths) were sucked into the swampy mess – often never to be seen again. The Canadians took over from the battered British forces who had been fighting there since July. On October 26, the Canadians began to advance on the enemy through often waist-deep mud. They were pounded by German artillery and machine-gun fire. It was a nightmare of dirt and death. Finally, on November 10, 1917, Passchendaele was captured. Once again the Canadians had proved their valour, by succeeding where others had not. What was the cost to capture those few kilometers of land and the ruined remnants of the town? There were almost 16,000 Canadian casualties. The Dieppe Raid

The year 1942 was a grim time during the Second World War. Germany occupied much of Western Europe and its armies were advancing in North Africa and the Soviet Union. The Soviet leader, Joseph Stalin, pushed for the opening of another front to help relieve the pressure on his battered forces. The Allies did not yet have the resources to invade Europe, but they did decide to launch a major raid on Dieppe, France. There they would try out amphibious landing techniques, gather intelligence and hopefully force the Germans to divert troops away from the Eastern Front. Almost 5,000 Canadians came ashore at Dieppe, Puys and Pourville in the early morning of August 19, 1942. The German defences were strong, however, and things quickly went wrong. John Grogan of Ontario was there…. “We knew what we were supposed to do all right. We were to get to land and get over the beach as quickly as we could and get up over the sea wall. But on landing, I guess the first thing I recall is that... the beach was lined with people all lying there... I just couldn’t understand what they were all lying there for. But they were dead... and the ones that I had waved good-bye to that morning... all of these people... all dead in such a short space of time.”

Lest We Forget

Remember When

More than 900 Canadians were killed and almost 2,000 more were captured. The hard lessons learned at Dieppe helped save many lives when the Allies came ashore on D-Day two years later. Standing Up for Freedom in Libya

Canadian Forces members have put their lives on the line in many places around the world over the years. In 2011, they found themselves facing a new challenge – helping to protect the people of Libya from the repressive regime that had ruled their country for decades. After a popular uprising in this North African country was met with violence by Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi, the United Nations (UN) authorized an arms embargo and a no-fly zone to help protect its civilians. The Canadian Forces stepped up immediately, first to help evacuate Canadians and other foreigners who were trapped by the fighting, and then as part of a North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)-led air and sea campaign to enforce the UN resolutions. Our air force patrolled the skies, refuelled NATO warplanes and bombed pro-Gadhafi forces that were threatening civilians. Our navy cruised the Mediterranean Sea off the Libyan coast, protecting the NATO fleet, boarding vessels to search for smuggled weapons and helping to stop coastal raids on the city of Misrata. It was dangerous duty – HMCS Charlottetown came under enemy fire during the mission, the first time that has happened to a Canadian warship since the Korean War. In the end, the Gadhafi regime was toppled and a new era has begun in Libya. At the mission’s peak, approximately 650 Canadian Forces members served in the theatre of operations. Fortunately, no Canadian lives were lost. National Peacekeepers’ Day Canada is unique in many ways. An example of this can be found on Sussex Drive in Ottawa. Lots of countries have war monuments but Reconciliation – Canada’s salute to peacekeepers – is the only national memorial in the world dedicated to peace support efforts. This awareness of the importance of preventing wars, not just fighting them, is also behind another original Canadian creation—National Peacekeepers’ Day. On August 9, Canadians stop to honour those who have served and made sacrifices in our country’s peace support efforts over the years. This date was selected as it was on this day in 1974 that a Canadian Forces transport plane was shot down in the Middle East, killing nine Canadian peacekeepers – our country’s largest singleday loss of life in a peace support operation. See more at: www.veterans.gc.ca.

We Honor Those Who Served

CHRISTIE’S FUNERAL HOME & CREMATORIUM 315 Ball Road Yorkton, SK

782-0555 Lest We Forget

www.parklandmall.net

782-2132 Remember When

ASPHALT SERVICES 516 Broadway St. E., Yorkton SK

121 Palliser Way, Yorkton

782-2312 Toll Free

Ph: (306) 783-3037

1-800-268-7052

Remember When

Lest We Forget

HECTOR’S AUTO BODY LTD.

86 Broadway St. & Parkland Mall Yorkton, Sask.

150 York Road East Yorkton, SK

783-2241

(306) 782-3900

Lest We Forget

Lest We Forget

L & I Depot

Yorkton Bus Depot

39 Smith St. W. Yorkton

Phone 782-6050

35 First St. N. Yorkton, SK

782-2355

Yorkton Chamber of Commerce Jct. Hwy. #9 & 16 Yorkton, SK

783-4368

Remember those troops who fought & died for our freedom. CLOSED REMEMBRANCE DAY

November 11

Parkland Mall, Yorkton

For Reservations Call 786-7555 Book Your Christmas Party Today


Page 24A - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - THE NEWS REVIEW

Lest We Forget

Lest We Forget

P.O. Box 20030, Yorkton

41 Betts Ave. N. Yorkton Phone

Phone: 783-9243 Cell: 621-3227 Email: yorktonbid@sasktel.net website: www.yorktonbid.com

786-0506

Lest We Forget

160 Myrtle Ave. Yorkton, SK

306-782-ROOF (7663)

In Remembrance of those who fought for our freedom.

Many ways to remember Con’t from Page 4.

• Ask about his or her wartime experiences and how they contributed to the war effort. Prior to the interview, prepare a question list. Record the interview and share it with the class. • Find evidence that citizens in your community participated in the war – things such as memorials, Veterans’ graves or honour rolls in churches. Visit the local cenotaph or war memorial to study its inscription. Make a map of the community and mark where war memorials/statues/monuments are located. Research what they commemorate, when they were erected, who erected them and why. • Using the Internet, research Canadian memorial sites located around the world. Show them on a map and describe their significance. Have your class design and construct its own monument. For information on Canadian memorials, visit the “Memorials” section of the Veterans Affairs Canada Web site. Research memorials located around the world that commemorate animals in war. Show the memorials on a map and describe their significance. • Make a list of animals that helped in war and peace support efforts – either overseas or in Canada. Explain what each animal did and why it was important. • Do a novel study, individually or as a group. Choose a fictional or historic book with a storyline based on Canada’s war or peacekeeping involvement. Symbols of Thanks • Write to a Canadian Forces member posted in Canada or overseas. Visit the Department of National Defence Web site External link, Opens in a new window • Participate in the “Valentines for Vets” or “Christmas Cards for Troops” projects. Send special greetings to Veterans in local nursing homes or Canadian Forces members posted overseas. • Plant tulips, a tree or an entire memorial garden in memory of local citizens who died during their military service and/or Veterans from your community who have passed on. • Write a letter to a Veteran (it could be a relative, family friend or someone from your community) thanking them for their sacrifice and celebrating their achievements. • Play the role of a war correspondent from the First or Second World War. Write headlines, news stories, local interest features, or advertisements as if you went back in time. • Compile a list of scientific and technological innovations developed in times of war. Write an essay on their impact on today’s world. • A Canadian youth remembers those killed during the Korean War at the UN Memorial Cemetery in Busan, South Korea, July 2003. VAC Photo. • Research the contribution of

Lest We Forget

23 Broadway St. E. Yorkton

783-5550

Aboriginal, African or Asian-Canadian soldiers during the First or Second World War or the Korean War. Present your findings to your classmates. Create a flag, crest or symbol commemorating the contribution of certain groups during the First or Second World War or the Korean War. These groups could include women, or Aboriginal, African or Asian-Canadians. • Prepare a graph showing various statistics on Canada’s involvement in the First or Second World War or the Korean War. Compare the numbers of those who died, were injured or taken prisoner of war to the population of your school, town, city or province. How do these statistics compare to other countries involved in the war? • Research and prepare a report on the various war service medals awarded to Canadians. Look at the reasons why specific medals are awarded, their “order of precedence,” and at the stories of people who have earned certain ones. Present your findings to your class. • Research and write an essay on a Canadian who earned the Victoria Cross and present your findings to your classmates. For information on Canadian recipients of the Victoria Cross, visit the Veterans Affairs Canada Web site. • Create a war memorabilia exhibit or a “Wall of Honour” in your school. Display photographs, newspaper articles, artifacts and pictures of community members who served in the military. Invite family members and the public to visit. To see an example of a “Wall of Honour,” visit the Canadian Forces section of the Veterans Affairs Canada Web site. • Prepare a menu, a cookbook or a meal-plan based on wartime rations. What was substituted for rationed items such as sugar? Sell the cookbook to raise funds for another school project. • Plan and organize a play that tells the stories of Veterans from your community who have served in wars and peace support missions. • Make “Izzy” dolls and send them to Canada’s service men and women to give to children who live in troubled areas of the world. • Encourage your local public library or local businesses to create a display of wartime memorabilia. Ask them to include photographs, uniforms, badges, military medals and decorations or diaries in the displays. • Volunteer at an elementary school library to read wartime stories to young children. You could also share the personal stories of local Veterans and members of the Canadian Forces. • Visit the Veterans Affairs Canada Web site regularly for news, information and ideas on how to mark Veterans’ Week and other important times of remembrance. • Last but certainly not least: never forget the contributions and sacrifices of the men and women who have served Canada in times of war, military conflict and peace – especially those who did not return.

Lest We Forget

Remember When

Thanks Grandpa Colbie, Bryce, Brendan, Riley, ✞ Jordan, Ember, Maple, Meagan

Remembrance Day You are invited to the

Army Navy & Air Force Club

November 11th Starting at 12 p.m.

to Honor Our Veterans Join Us for Fellowship, Entertainment and Lunch!

Scientific Beauty Salon

Army, Navy & Air Force Club

6 - 1st Ave. N. Yorkton, SK

43 Broadway St. East Yorkton, SK

783-4656

#4 - 76 7th Ave. S. Yorkton, SK

782-2999

783-4260


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - Page 25A

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Page 26A - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - THE NEWS REVIEW

Community Events

Canadian Federation of University Women/ Yorkton Club Christmas Meeting Tues. Nov. 27, at the Army & Navy Club @ 6:00 p.m. Former members are welcome to attend. Call Elsie @ 783-4862 if you are planning to attend, to reserve your supper plate. Ladies Champagne Brunch Sponsored by Ducks Unlimited Canada Nov. 17 @ the Gallagher Centre Doors open at 10 a.m. brunch starts at 11:15 a.m. Fabulous brunch followed by games and a silent auction. Call 782-2108 for tickets and info. or visit: www.ducks.ca. Next Steps Alzheimer Support Telehealth events designed to educate about Alzheimer disease and how to cope. A four week learning series for families and friends affected by Alzheimer’s or related dementia Tuesdays, Nov. 13, 20, 27 and Dec. 4 Call 786-0776 to register or learn more.

The Yorkton Arts Council Annual General Meeting Monday November 12, 2012 , 7:00 p.m. at the Godfrey Dean Cultural Centre. Call 783-8722 for info. Yorkton Public Library Programs • Nov. 14 – Library book club featuring “The Book Thief” – 7 p.m. • Nov. 21 – “15 Tax Secrets the Tax Man Doesn’t Want You to Know” With Duane Daku – 7 p.m. Alzheimer/Dementia Support Meeting Yorkton & District Nursing Home Nov. 14, 2 p.m. All are welcome! Call 786-0722 for info. Santa Claus Parade Nov. 24 , 5:30 p.m. Along Broadway St. Call 783-4800 if you would like to enter a float or learn more. 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!

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. Community New Horizon Friday Night Dances 78 - 1st Ave. North Yorkton • Nov. 9, music by Country Sunshine • Nov. 16, music by Old Country Lads • Nov. 23, music by Parklanders • Nov. 30, music by Ron & Sandra Rudoski (western dress optional) Dances start at 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m. Admission $7, lunch included. All are welcome! Call Peter at 782-1846. 100 Year Celebration The Saskatchewan Hospital, North Battleford, will be celebrating the first 100 years of service to the mentally ill in 2013. In honour a celebration is planned for July 12, 13 and 14, 2013, in North Battleford. If you worked at this hospital and have information you would like to be considered for inclusion in an upcoming book or know of other former employees, contact Jane Shury: SHNB 2013 Centennial Celebrations Committee Box 1388, Battleford, SK. S0M 0E0 306-446-1983 janeshury@sasktel.net.

Yorkton Public Library • Toddler Time: (Ages 6-36 months) Monday mornings 10:30 – 11:00 a.m. until Dec. 3 • Pre-School Storytime: (Ages 3-5 years) Mon. & Thurs. mornings 10:30 – 11:15 a.m. until Dec. 6 Call 783-3523 for more info. Gospel Services Sunday’s 3:30 p.m. @ Rokeby Hall Come see how the church of the New Testament age is still alive today! Ministers: Morris Grovum & Garth Cook Call (306)715-5112 or (306)715-0564 for info. 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. pARTners Gallery New Exhibit! How Now Purple Cow? A field trip to community pARTners gallery will answer that quirky question. Artist Stephanie Newsham has created a whimsical collection of pastoral portraits for your viewing pleasure. This moo-ving homage to her farm friends is colourful and captivating, guaranteed to delight the whole family! Now on display during regular hours at Yorkton Public Library in our community pARTners gallery, sponsored by Yorkton Public Library and Yorkton Arts Council.

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. Yorkton Creators 4-H Club Welcoming new members ages 6-21. Projects include cooking, sewing, woodworking and cloverbud. For more info. call Vi at 782-4721. Singers Unite! Yorkton Community Concert Choir Practices every Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the choir room at the YRHS (use parking lot entrance) Contact Laurene at 782-0460, Shanni at 783-9145. 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 pm to 8:30 pm. For more information contact 782-0673 or 782-5181.

12112CC01

Our Pride & Joy Be a part of the Special Salute to babies born in 2012 Here’s a sample of what your ad will look like.

On January 12, 2013, The News Review Extra will feature a special page devoted to the babies born in 2012. Make sure you’re one of the proud parents, grandparents, aunts, or uncles to show our readers the newest member of your family. (Please no photos larger than 5” x 7”)

Knox Jagger

March 27, 2012 Son of Ashley Carow-Michael & Warren Michael

PUBLICATION DATE: January 12, 2013 DEADLINE: Must be received by Jan. 8 - 5:00 p.m. Drop off at the office, Mail in or Email to: ads@yorktonnews.com PRICE: $21.00 (Plus GST) For further information phone 783-7355 Name: —————————————————

Address: ———————————————————————————— Postal Code ——————————— Phone ———————————— Baby’s Name: First ____________ Middle _________ Last ______________ Date of Birth ——————————

Son

/

Daughter

(Circle One)

Family Name —————————————————————————— Mother’s & Father’s Name —————————————————————

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Call - 783-7355


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - Page 27A

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.

Ladies Floor Hockey Ladies floor hockey runs every Wednesday from 8-9 p.m. at the Gloria Hayden Community Centre. Come out for a good workout and friendly competition. Sticks are available at the facility and runs from September to April. Drop-in cost is $3. Email azaharia@ yorkton.ca for more information.

Terriers Hockey Yorkton Terriers Junior A hockey club host the Flin Flon Bombers at 6:00 p.m. November 18 on what will be Teddy Bear Toss Night. The Terriers also host the Melville Millionaires November 24, the Estevan Bruins November 27, and the Battlefords North Stars November 29 in their return from home action after a three week hiatus. Come out and support your Yorkton Terriers

Harvest Hockey The Yorkton Harvest will be returning to home action November 17/18 when they host Beardy’s Blackhawks. Game time Saturday is 7:30 p.m. while Sunday’s action goes underway at 2:00 p.m. in what will be a doubleheader with the Terriers who play at 6:00 p.m. The Harvest will also host the Notre Dame Argos November 21 at 8:00 p.m. in the final game of their three game homestand. Come out and support Yorkton Harvest minor hockey.

Want your local sports event included in Sports Notes? Do you want your local sports event/story covered? Email sports@ yorktonnews.com or call 783-7355 to have your local story included in Sports Notes.

2012 GRAIN MILLERS HARVEST SHOWDOWN RODEO PRESENTED BY YORKTON NEW HOLLAND gets underway this weekend at the Farrell Agencies Arena. Friday and Saturday events will kick off at 7:30 p.m. Story on Page 29.

YRHS Sr. Boys Volleyball strong at home By CHASE RUTTIG N-R Writer With Southern Regionals on the horizon the YRHS Sr. Boys Volleyball team hosted the best 4/5A volleyball teams in the province in the final tune up before the all important provincial tournament qualifiers take place this weekend. With top talent and big games on the schedule the Raiders stepped up to the challenge going on a tear Friday night and Saturday morning, beating top ranked Moose Jaw Central in straight sets as well as Prince Albert Carlton and Weyburn in locking up the round robin crown in their pool. In the quarterfinals the Raiders drew Oxbow, who they made quick work of in a two set victory, setting up a semifinal matchup with Estevan, a team they beat in Estevan on their way to gold just two weeks prior. Estevan got revenge in the semifinal as the Raiders were shocked by an Estevan team that rode a wave of momentum after winning the second set and solid hitting from their middle and power positions to a three set victory, preventing a gold medal rematch beating Central and the YRHS with Central beating Prince Albert St. Mary’s in the semifinal.

All in all it was a strong showing for the Regional boys who are looking to qualify for the provincial finals and looked like they have a chance to contend after beating the top team in the province in the round robin. Head coach Dion Pfeifer was content with the teams strong showing, especially the bounce back win over Central who beat the Regional in Moose Jaw the previous weekend. Pfeifer pointed out the key to the Raiders win was confidence and blocking well at the net saying, “We knew we could play with this team even though they beat us pretty handily the weekend before and we kind of took it to them a little bit.” Pfeifer also keyed on his senior players on the weekend and was pleased on how they stepped up and led the Raiders to a winning weekend Heading into Regionals in Swift Current this weekend Pfeifer expects his Raiders to be ranked second or third going into the tournament with Moose Jaw Central being ranked number one and fully expects to finish the weekend in the top three and advance to the provincial tournament in North Battleford the following weekend. As for the provincial tourna-

DANIEL MANDZIUK sets a ball in quarterfinal action of the YRHS Sr. Boys Volleyball Tournament Saturday. The Regional won their group, including a victory over top ranked Moose Jaw Central, on their way to a third place finish. ment Pfeifer mentioned there is a lot of parity in the 5A level saying, “Prince Albert St. Mary’s has been the favorite in the past years and Moose Jaw beat them this weekend and there are probably seven out of the ten teams that will make provincials this year that could make a run at winning so I definitely think we have a good chance to medal at

provincials if we make it out of regionals. The Raiders will head to Swift Current this weekend for the biggest weekend of the season as they try to advance to the big show that is the provincial tournament, after beating Central and finishing third this weekend, it looks as if the Raiders are peaking at the right time for a finishing run.

Yorkton Harvest continue road trip battle By CHASE RUTTIG N-R Writer After a slow start to the season that has put wins at a premium, the Yorkton Harvest hockey team is trying to turn the corner on their three week road trip to mixed results. With the previous weekend seeing yet another Saturday/ Sunday split the Harvest matched the same result yet again, splitting wins with the Battlefords Stars in the North Battleford Civic Centre. Saturday saw the Harvest win an overtime thriller 3-2 off of two powerplay goals in regulation and a Landon Nichol winner in the extra period to give them the two points to kick off the weekend. Levi Morin tied up the game in the third period on the powerplay providing a rare goal from the blueline to send the game into overtime with six minutes left in the third period. Spencer Bomboir had a solid game

between the pipes making 37 saves and being awarded game star for the Harvest. Sunday saw the problems return for the Harvest as they were outshot 45-24 by the Harvest en route to a 6-1 loss to the Stars. An 11:00 a.m. start time on the road likely did not help the young Harvest players out, nor did the 13 penalties the Harvest took in the contest. Four powerplay goals in the third period saw Battlefords extend their lead from 2-1 and proved to be the difference maker in the early morning contest. A 5-13 night on the powerplay is likely going to beat you every time and Bombior was hung out to dry in net as he spent pretty much the entire third period facing the Stars powerplay in what was a 26-7 shot differential in the final period. The good news for the Harvest is that they have earned two wins on a road trip that had the potential to bury them

in a very deep hole in the SMAAAHL standings and now have only two road games against the Hounds and Trojans before returning for a three game homestand at the friendly confines of the FAA. Even better is that the three games are against competition that the Yorkton Harvest can easily contend with. Last place Beardy’s Blackhawks will play the Harvest Saturday/Sunday this weekend, while the ninth place Argos will head to Yorkton on Wednesday and sit just three points above the Harvest. After their dismal start the Harvest now have a four game stretch against the SMAAHL’s cellar dwellers in the two Notre Dame teams and Beardy’s, if the Harvest want to get out of the cellar themselves, they will need to mount a winning streak in this four game stretch to get back into the middle of the standings table.


Page 28A - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - THE NEWS REVIEW

Terriers finish 2-1 in weekend road action

After three games of the Yorkton Terriers three week, seven game road trip things are looking pretty good as the Terriers won two straight in Kindersley before losing in Battlefords Sunday in a three game in three days stretch that could have went a lot worse for the team. The weekend started out Friday night in Kindersley as the Terriers went to the building where they suffered on of their first defeats if the season at the hands of former goalie Warren Shymko, who posted a memorable fifty plus save performance in that meeting. Shymko had a less memorable night on Friday as the Terriers pelted him for seven goals in a 7-1 cakewalk win for the Terriers. In a game where nearly every Terrier saw the scoresheet Daylan Gatzke proved to be the standout with a two goal effort to kick off a weekend that saw him win Rookie of the Week honors. Dawson MacAuley got the start in net and was solid with twenty-four saves in the victory.

Saturday saw the Klippers change up their goalie with Tyrell King getting the nod over Shymko, but the Terriers offense still found success in what was a much tighter affair in a 6-5 shootout win. The Terriers looked like they were going to run away with another relatively easy victory as Gatzke once again led the Terriers with a four point night with two goals and two helpers. Chase Norrish had a solid game assisting both of Gatzke’s goals while Tyler Giebel scored two goals on the night in what was a high scoring affair. Kindersley benefited from two heroic goals from center Giovanni Bombini, including one with just over a minute left in the third period to tie up the game at five and send it into overtime and the shootout. Zak Majkowski eventually scored the shootout winner after six shooters and MacAuley notched the shootout win in net. Sunday’s afternoon matchup in North Battleford saw the travel and the tired legs of playing in three games in three days catch up to the Terriers as they let the game get away from them in the third period despite another three point performance from Giebel

and a four goal performance from the powerplay. Devon McMullen was solid on the blueline leading the Terriers powerplay with two assists on the Terriers third period goals, but it was just not in the cards for the Terriers who ran out of gas in the final twenty minutes of a long weekend of hockey. Conor Barrie got the start in goal for the Terriers, making it three start missed starts in a row for Kale Thomson who has been cooled off after his promising beginning to the season. The Terriers only play one game this weekend in Humboldt before playing Flin Flon, La Ronge, and Weyburn next week then heading home Sunday night to face the Bombers. Flin Flon and Humboldt sit atop of the Bauer Division standings while La Ronge and Weyburn are at the bottom of the Bauer and Sherwood Division tables respectively. A tired group of Terriers will welcome the rest this week but yet another four game week is on the horizon as the Terriers try to keep pace with the Millionaires who are still red hot at 13-3-1 and are two points up. These next two weeks can change that, something the Terriers can’t afford to forget.

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By CHASE RUTTIG N-R Writer


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - Page 29A

Riders-Stamps continue rivalry in West Division Semifinal The all too long CFL season is finally over and a long journey that started on Canada Day weekend comes to judgement day this weekend as the Riders will head to McMahon Stadium in Calgary to face off with the second place Stampeders in the West Division semifinal. If you told any fan in Saskatchewan that this is where the Riders would be at the end of the season, almost every single person would take it. Sure, there will be no home playoff advantage of Taylor Field, but after last year’s meltdown of a season a West Division semifinal in Calgary would have probably been ok in many’s books. However the Riders aren’t exactly heading into the playoffs under the happiest of circumstances, four straight losses will have the Riders attempting to defy history in winning the Grey Cup after heading into the playoffs with four straight defeats. Last weekend’s game in Vancouver can be counted as a wash as Darian Durant and Weston Dressler sat as well as the Lion’s Geroy Simon and both teams looked as if they were going through more of a controlled scrimmage than a CFL Week 19 matchup. So the Riders will head into familiar enemy territory in McMahon Stadium as the meeting between the two rivals will be the fifth time in seven years that the Riders and Stamps have faced off in the CFL postseason. The Roughriders have had the upperhand over the Stamps during those five meetings as former quarterback Henry Burris never could get over the hump in the rivalry

he infamously started by shipping out of Saskatchewan after professing his love for the city of Regina and stabbing the Rider faithful in the back just weeks later. Burris is now long gone, and the Stamps are now the sexier pick of the two teams to advance and upset the Lions on their way to a Grey Cup, but the Riders still have experience in beating the Stampeders on the road in the playoffs as Durant, Dressler, and Chris Getzlaf all know a thing or two about putting the dagger in the hearts of the Stampeders. The Stampeders 12-6 record does have them as one of the hottest teams in the CFL, and the Stampeders have bragging rights in the season series winning two out of the three matchups, but there is one key storyline heading into this game that makes this matchup unlike the rest. Stampeders quarterback Drew Tate, who was injured very early in the season and didn’t take one regular season snap against the Riders has

Ruttig’s rants Column Chase Ruttig

been announced as the Stampeders starting quarterback for Sunday’s Remembrance Day clash over Kevin Glenn, the man at the helm for pretty much all of Calgary’s twelve wins this season. The two Stampeders quarterbacks posted nearly identical stats in splitting snaps in last week’s finale against the Eskimos, but Tate is undoubtedly the Stampeders most talented quarterback and is clearly Calgary’s quarterback of the future. Whether or not Tate can play at the rate he did last year in driving Henry Burris out of town will be a deciding factor in if the Stampeders can get the

job done and avoid the Saskatchewan upset. On the other end of the quarterback matchup is Darian Durant, who sat out of Saturday’s game against the Lions to try and rest up from a season that saw him battle with injuries and inconsistent play throughout the season. Still a fan favorite throughout most of Saskatchewan, Durant has the reputation of doing things when it matters most and showed he can still lead his team over top notch competition earlier this fall in their home win over the Lions. Durant has yet to lead the Riders to a fourth quarter comeback this season, but all stats are out of

Harvest Showdown preview By CHASE RUTTIG N-R Writer The 24th annual Grain Millers Harvest Showdown returns this weekend as the November staple fills the Gallagher Centre and the Farrell Agencies Arena. With the Harvest Showdown comes the marquee event of the week as the Yorkton New Holland Rodeo kicks off the 2013 Canadian Cowboys association season at the Far-

CORRECTION The name of last week’s male Athlete of the Month on Page 16 was misprinted. The article named the student Bo Lister when it should have been Bo Loster. The News Review apologizes for any confusion the error may have caused..

rell Agencies Arena. Unlike the Painted Hand Casino Roughstock Rodeo, the ladies and novice riders get to share the center stage as well as an added variety of events that give the weekend a wide array of rodeo events. Two nights of jam packed rodeo action are set as everything from novice to ladies riding and team roping events are scheduled in addition to the CCA professional events. For the novice riders bareback, saddle bronc, and riding events are planned while barrel racing events are set to go for the ladies portion of the weekend. For the men saddle bronc, bareback, and bull riding events will all go underway for the riding portion of the main events. Steer

wrestling, tie down roping, and team roping events are also planned, giving the event more variety than the summer’s outdoor rodeo. As the first event of the 2013 CCA calender many riders and cowboys will be looking to start their climb up the CCA points standings early with an impressive showing for the Yorkton crowd in the annual kickoff to their season. Action starts at 7:30 on Friday and Saturday at the Farrell Agencies Arena for both rodeo shows with all events taking place on both days to ensure that fans don’t miss any of the action, more information for the event can be accessed at the Yorkton Exhibition or Canadian Cowboys Association websites.

Yorkton Bowl Arena Stats LEAGUE NAME MONDAY GA 1:00 CMI TUESDAY GA 9:30 TUESDAY YBC TUESDAY MIXED STS WEDNESDAY GA 1:15 HOSPITAL LEGION THURSDAY LADIES HANCOCK QUINE SATURDAY 9:30 YBC SATURDAY 11:30 YBC

MEN’S HIGH SINGLE Jerry Viczko 205 Fregus Wilson 256 Martin Phillips 273

MEN’S LADIES HIGH TRIPLE HIGH SINGLE Henry Shumay 504 Mildred Thiele 208 Fergus Wilson 649 Lisa Gibler 202 Martin Phillips 700 Verna Moroz 192 HALLOWEEN PARTY Dustin Schultz 272 Barry Gawryliuk 665 Jeannie Einarson 263 Cam Louttit 310 Cam Louttit 810 Sharon Pfeifer 207 Eli Borys 262 Ed Lischynski 616 Colleen Haider 279 Dennis Langan 248 Dennis Langan 635 Theresa Mckenzie 249 Don Haider 283 Don Haider 771 Lil Wladichuk 210 Marcia Grunerud 253 Randy Prokopchuk 277 Brian Hancock 687 Jenn Kostiuk 296 Dale Cross 342 Dale Cross 827 Jenn Kostiuk 337 Adam Becker 172 Adam Becker 398 Haley Schrader 173 Ryan Lebo 280 Ryan Lebo 703 Abbey Somogyi 157

LADIES HIGH TRIPLE Ollie Yaremko 552 Lisa Gibler 548 Verna Moroz 495

MOST PINS OVER AVERAGE Mary Ozirney +66 Fergus Wilson +98 Peter Moroz +93

Jeannie Einarson 628 Dustin Schultz +112 Paula Beck 533 Cam Louttit +84 Colleen Haider 706 Mary Ozirney +82 Jenn Kostiuk 647 Dennis Langan +72 Lil Wladichuk 544 Tim Hagon +62 Susanne Hack 592 Marcia Grunerud +97 Jenn Kostiuk 748 Randy Prokopchuk +110 Jenn Kostiuk 797 Jamie Sereda +108 Haley Schrader 489 Adam Becker +69 Abbey Somogyi 412 Carter Somogyi +69

the window now and he has the chance to erase what was yet another mediocre year by his standards with a vintage Durant playoff performance on Sunday. Stopping the run will be a big part of the Riders checklist to beating the Stampeders as running back Jon Cornish has been the best Canadian running back of this generation, becoming the player many thought Jesse Lumsden would become and setting the CFL record for rushing yards in a season by a Canadian this year. In the Riders two losses to the Stampeders this season Cornish ran all over the field and appeared to be unstoppable. A man with four 150 plus yard rushing performances in the CFL is no joke, and after being shut down in the last matchup between the Riders and Stamps and Coach Chamblin’s guarantee they would hold Cornish under 100 yards, he will be motivated and ready come Sunday. The Riders have a running back phenom of their own in Kory Sheets who has replaced Wes Cates and Hugh Charles and is appearing to be the next long time staple in the long line of explosive Riders feature backs. Sheets will need to move the chains to ease the pressure off of Durant and the receiving corps if the Riders offense is going to have success. This game is one that is hard to predict, being an unabashed Rid-

ers fan like many of the people reading this column it is nearly impossible for me to outright pick a team other than the Riders to win. Plus when you add in the fact that the Stampeders are employing an entirely new quarterback and that the Stampeders won the first two games of the series, but the Riders won the last meeting and you have yourself a situation where anything can happen. One thing is certain though, if the Riders come out like the 2011 and 2012 uninspired versions of themselves that have finished 0-4 to end the regular season Sunday might be a very long day for the province. But if the Riders play like that team that has came up against the Stampeders four times in the playoffs since 2006 and won every single time, then maybe, just maybe, we will be on the way to talking about this November being one of those magical wintery runs we have become accustomed to in Saskatchewan. Either way in a year that was supposed to be a rebuilding campaign for the Riders, they have proved that they are back on the right track in returning to playoff football after the disaster that was the 2011 season and now have a chance to erase bad memories and prove that they have the pieces to contend for Grey Cups once again. A win over the Stampeders would just be icing on the cake in a season of low expectations.

Public Pay Parking at Yorkton Regional Health Centre Effective November 20, 2012 Public pay parking will begin at the Yorkton Regional Health Centre on Tuesday, November 20. Persons parking in the Yorkton Regional Health Centre parking lot will be required to obtain a parking voucher from the automated machine located at the entrance to the parking lot. Parking fees are as follows: • Per ½ hour - $1.00 • Daily - $10.00 • Weekly - $40.00 • Monthly - $100.00 Parking vouchers are obtained at the entrance to the parking lot. The voucher is taken into the Yorkton Regional Health Centre and before leaving the building the voucher is to be paid at kiosks located at the two main entrances of the Yorkton Regional Health Centre. The kiosks will accept cash or credit card payments. Once parking is paid, time is allocated to return to the vehicle and to insert the ticket to raise the arms that will allow exiting of the parking lot. Volunteers and patients utilizing Dialysis and Oncology services will be provided complimentary parking passes for the times that they are at the Yorkton Regional Health Centre for treatment.

Upcoming Yorkton Terrier Home Games Sunday, November 18, 2012

Saturday, November 24, 2012

YORKTON TERRIERS vs FLIN FLON BOMBERS

YORKTON TERRIERS vs MELVILLE MILLIONAIRES

Game Time 6:00 p.m. at the Farrell Agencies Arena

Game Time 7:30 p.m. at the Farrell Agencies Arena


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By CHASE RUTTIG N-R Writer

Jr. Saints win districts

The Sacred Heart Saints Jr. Boys volleyball team won gold at the 2012 East Central District tournament in the most entertaining of fashions, beating the MCS Cobras in a three set thriller to take home district gold. The Saints finished second in their pool after losing to MCS, drawing the YRHS in the semifinal, the Saints won the first set before losing the second set 25-23 after coming back from a 18-9 early scoreline. Sacred jumped out to an early lead in the third and final set winning 15-11 and setting up a final with MCS. The YRHS boys settled for fourth after losing to Langenburg, and impressive showing as they only had six players for the weekend. MCS started off the gold medal match

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strong, looking as if they were going to take the first set with a 23-20 lead before coach Brian Chisholm called a timeout and the Saints responded by winning the next five points and the set 25-23. Set number two saw MCS command, winning 25-17 and set up a final set to 15 for the gold. Coach Chisholm mentioned that the Saints really came out flat in the second and third sets, which put the Saints in a 12-8 hole in the third set with the championship on the line. Sacred rallied the next four points to tie at 12 before both teams traded points to make it 13-13 with Kade Johnson at the line, Johnson was clutch and made two crucial serves to win the gold with a 15-13 come from behind win. “He made the two most important serves of the season,” says Chisholm. Coach Chisholm would like to thank the players and parents for a memorable year.

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- Best-In-Class 4X4 V8 Fuel Efficiency†¥ - Best-In-Class 5 year/160,000km Powertrain Warranty,^ 60,000km Longer than Ford F-150, RAM and Toyota ^^

X

CASH $11,500 INCREDITS

LTZ MODEL SHOWN

2012 CRUZE LS AIR & AUTO +

- Fastest Growing Nameplate in Canada*^ - Best-In-Class Highway Fuel Efficiency**

84

BASED ON A FINANCE PURCHASE PRICE OF $19,745.* OFFER INCLUDES FREIGHT & PDI, PLUS $750 FINANCE CASH X

MONTHS ‡

LTZ MODEL SHOWN

MOTORING 2012’s “MPV of the Year” Award

†~

- More Passenger Volume and More Coverage (5year/160,000km) than Mazda 5, KIA Rondo and Dodge Journey† - Best Highway Fuel Efficiency of any 7-Seater†*

WITH

BASED ON A FINANCE PURCHASE PRICE OF $16,845.* OFFER INCLUDES FREIGHT & PDI.

IN CREDITS X

LTZ MODEL SHOWN

PROUD SPONSOR OF THE CANADIAN WESTERN AGRIBITION

SCAN HERE TO FIND YOURS

N NOW AT YOUR PRAIRIE CHEVROLET DEALERS. PrairieChevrolet.com 1-800-GM-DRIVE. Chevrolet is a brand of General Motors of Canada. ‡/††/*Offers apply to the purchase of a 2012 Cruze LS Air & Auto (R7D), 2012 Orlando LS (R7A), 2012 Silverado Crew (R7D) equipped as described. Freight included ($1,495). License, insurance, registration, PPSA, administration fees and taxes not included. Dealers are free o set individual prices. Offer available to retail customers in Canada. See Dealer for details. Limited time offers which may not be combined with other offers, and are subject to change without notice. Offers apply to qualified retail customers in Prairie Chevrolet Dealer Marketing Association area only. Dealer trade may be required. GMCL, Ally Credit or TD Auto Financing Services may modify, extend or terminate this offer in hole or in part at any time without notice. Conditions and limitations apply. See Chevrolet dealer for details. W Based on GM Testing in accordance with approved Transport Canada test methods. Your actual fuel consumption may vary. ‡ 0% purchase financing offered on approved credit by Ally Credit/TD Auto Financing 84 months on new or demonstrator 2012 Chevrolet Cruze LS Air & Auto. Rates from other lenders will ary. Down payment, trade and/or security deposit may be required. Monthly payment and cost of borrowing will vary depending on amount borrowed and down payment/trade. Example: $10,000 at 0% APR, the monthly payment is $119.05 for 84 months. Cost of borrowing is $0, total obligation is $10,000. Offer is unconditionally interest-free. Freight ($1,495) included. License, insurance, registration, PPSA, applicable axes and fees not included. Dealers are free to set individual prices. Offers apply to qualified retail customers only. Limited time offer which may not be combined with certain other offers. GMCL may modify, extend or terminate offers in whole or in part at any time without notice. Conditions and limitations apply. See dealer for details. ¥¥ 2.99% purchase financing for 84 months on 2012 Chevrolet Orlando LS approved redit by TD Auto Financing Services/Ally Credit. Rates from other lenders will vary. Down payment, trade and/or security deposit may be required. Monthly payment and cost of borrowing will vary depending on amount borrowed and down payment/trade. Example: $10,000 at 2.99% for 84 months, the monthly payment is $132.09. Cost of borrowing is $1,095.35. Total obligation is $11,095.35. Down payment and/or rade may be required. Monthly payments and cost of borrowing will also vary depending on amount borrowed and down payment/trade. Biweekly payments based on a purchase price of $16,845 on 2012 Chevrolet Orlando LS with $0 down equipped as described. x $750 manufacturer to dealer delivery finance cash available on the 2012 Cruze LS Air & Auto. $4,500 manufacturer to dealer delivery credit available on he 2012 Orlando LS. $11,500 manufacturer to dealer delivery cash credits available on the 2012 Silverado Crew (tax exclusive) for retail customers only. Other cash credits available on most models. See your GM dealer for details. **Cruze LS equipped with 6-speed manual transmission. Based on Natural Resources Canada’s 2012 Fuel Consumption Ratings for the Compact Car class. Excludes hybrid and diesel models. our actual fuel consumption may vary. *^Based on retail registrations in the 12 months following launch. +The Best Buy seal is a registered trademark of Consumers Digest Communications, LLC, used under license. † Based on most recent competitive data available. †~ For more information visit www.motoringtv.com. †* 2012 Chevrolet Orlando and competitive fuel consumption ratings based on Natural Resources anada’s 2012 Fuel Consumption Guide. Your actual fuel consumption may vary. †¥2012 Chevrolet Silverado, equipped with available Vortec™ 5.3L V8 engine and 6-speed automatic transmission and competitive fuel consumption ratings based on Natural Resources Canada’s 2012 Fuel Consumption Guide and WardsAuto.com 2012 Large Pickup segment. Your actual fuel consumption may vary. Excludes hybrids and ther GM models. ^Whichever comes first. Conditions and limitations apply. See dealer for details. ^^Based on latest competitive data available. ‡‡ To qualify for GMCL’s Cash For Clunkers incentive, you must: (1) turn in a 2006 or older MY vehicle that is in running condition and has been registered and properly insured in your name for the last 3 months (2) turn in a 2006 or older MY vehicle that is in running condition nd has been registered and properly insured under a small business name for the last 3 months. GMCL will provide eligible consumers with a manufacturer to consumer incentive (tax inclusive) to be used towards the purchase/finance/lease of a new eligible 2012 or 2013 MY Chevrolet Colorado, GMC Canyon, Chevrolet Silverado, GMC Sierra, or Chevrolet Avalanche delivered between October 2, 2012 and January 2, 013. Incentive ranges from $1500 to $3,000, depending on model purchased. Incentive may not be combined with certain other offers. By participating in the Cash For Clunkers program you will not be eligible for any trade-in value for your vehicle. See your participating GM dealer for additional program conditions and details. GMCL may modify, extend or terminate program in whole or in part at any time without notice.

THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - Page 31A

SACRED HEART JR SAINTS boys volleyball players celebrate their gold medal win after two come from behind sets to beat the MCS Cobras in the gold medal match. YRHS finished fourth in the season’s final tournament.


Page 32A - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - THE NEWS REVIEW

CLASSIFIED ADS CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

BIRTHS BECQUET - Born to Sarah and Bryan Becquet of Yorkton, SK, a son, Elijah Bryan, October 31, 2012. DIAK - Born to Maddy and Terry Diak of Yorkton, SK, a daughter, Phoenix Josephine Rayne, October 27, 2012. DUFF - Born to Shannon-La and Abednego Duff of Yorkton, SK, a daughter, Aurora Esther, October 30, 2012. KESHANE - Born to Shianne Friday and Franklyn Keshane of Kamsack, SK, a son, Franklyn David Jyles, October 31, 2012.

COMING EVENTS

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT

CHECKLIST – Is this you? T You recently completed a marketing or sales program where they worked you like a dog, but you got a real buzz out of the whole thing.

T You analyze situations that don’t go as well as you expect, decide what you could have done better but don’t lose sleep over what is past.

T You are eager to put what you have learnt to use, believe people make their own luck and are prepared to work hard to achieve your goals.

T You have demonstrated the ability to make things happen when others have doubted the outcome.

T You aren’t afraid to pick up the phone and talk to strangers or initiate conversations face to face.

T You are a people person that can relate to what motivates others but can also get the job done single-handed if required.

T You’ve sometimes been accused of asking too many questions but really you are just inquisitive with a desire to better understand. T You don’t get too discouraged or frustrated when people say no.

T You have computer skills, an excellent oral and written command of English plus a business like demeanor T You believe in continuous learning and know one day you will be rich and successful without having to rely on winning the lottery.

If you checked 8 or more of these boxes and are ready to build a career in the media you could be the ideal candidate to ¿ll an exciting and rewarding role at one of Yorkton’s leading news and information providers

ADVERTISING SALES CONSULTANT

12TH ANNUAL Cookie Walk. St. Andrew's United Church, Yorkton. Sat., Nov. 17, 2012 - 12:30 p.m. $6.00 per pound. Use south hall entrance. All kinds of hommade cookies. Stock up for Christmas, lunches, parties. Everyone welcome.

Valuable experience will be gained through a combination of sales opportunities combined with a wide range of customer service and marketing responsibilities. The candidate will develop a clear understanding of the industry while contributing to the performance of a highly motivated advertising team. We offer: Employment with one of the region’s best regarded publications Base salary plus commission & bonus potential Extended health and dental plan bene¿ts Training within a supportive team atmosphere A modern working environment A wide range of practical experience within the publishing industry Send your resume and cover letter to kenchyz@yorktonnews.com to get on track with your new career

LOST

The News Review 18 First Avenue North Yorkton, SK. S3N 1J4

I LOST a large set of keys with a yoga tag on it between North Battleford & Yorkton area on August 1, 2012. If you have found these keys, please call me at 403-8639546. I really appreciate it.

We thank all applicants; only those selected for an interview will be contacted.

PSYCHICS TRUE ADVICE! TRUE Clarity! TRUE PSYCHICS! 1-877-3423032 or 1-900-528-6256 or mobile #4486 (18+) $3.19/min. www.truepsychics.ca.

We’re On Target nn

w ec t i t h c a na

co

Community Newspapers Deliver more than the news dians

el

e

a ss

r o o t s le

v

FOR SALE - MISC

Glacier Media Group is growing. Check our job board regularly for the latest openings: www.glaciermedia.ca/careers GENERAL EMPLOYMENT 2ND YEAR to Journeyman Sheetmetal workers & Electricians needed in Kindersley, Saskatchewan. Top wages, benefits, RRSP?s, room for advancement, positive work atmosphere. Contact office lukplumbing.com or 306.463.6707.

• at t h

gr

WORK WITH US & GROW A CAREER

COOK/SERVER Full Time position, min. 2 yrs. experience, wages negotiable. Call for further info. 306-620-2963. INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR SCHOOL. No simulators. In-the-seat training. Real world tasks. Weekly start dates. Job board! Funding options. Apply online! iheschool.com 1-866-3993853.

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT NEED A CHANGE? Looking for work? www.dreamscreatethefuture.ca in the Provost region, workers of all kinds are needed now! Visit our website today for more information. NEED A HOME PHONE? Cable TV or High Speed Internet? We Can Help. Everyone Approved. Call Today. 1-877-852-1122 Protel Reconnect ONE OF ALBERTA?S LARGEST community newspapers requires a reporter/photographer. Experience an asset but not a requirement. Resume, including writing samples: editor@brooksbulletin.com. Only those selected for an interview will be contacted.

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT SANDY BAY General Store seeking a full time store supervisor. Wage $17-18 p/hr. Must have supervisory skills. Willing to work shifts. Hard working, reliable, experience in food preparation. Schedule shifts. Generate reports, balance end of day, inventory, place order, health and safety procedures and safe food handling practices. Angie at 2012jobs@hotmail.ca

A non-ƉroĮt LJoƵtŚ Ɖrogram, witŚ an emƉŚasis on fƵn, aĐƟǀe, Śands-on learning! &ind oƵt more͗

www.4-H.sk.ca or (306) 933-7727


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - Page 33A CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

WANTED

Manager of Operations This full-time position operates from mid March to mid November of each year. Under the direction of the Leslie Beach Recreational Co-operative, the Manager of Operations is responsible for all aspects of the Leslie Beach administration, financial management and human resource management. Position requires post secondary education in administration or formal training in business management or related field; three years relevant experience or an equivalent combination of education and experience. Ability to work in an automated environment. Ability to work flexible hours including some evenings and weekends. The candidate must have strong communication skills, be team oriented with strong people skills, excellent organizational skills and strong leadership. Apply by: November 30, 2012 How to Apply: please email cover letter and resume to bobg@sasktel.net

FOR SALE - MISC

LLEESSLLIIEE BBEEAACCHH PAARRKK LP RREEGGIIOONNAAL

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. www.choicetel.ca. FOR SALE: Country Market-Groceries, Liquor-Outlet, baking, lotto, take-out food. Trans Canada Hwy at Shuswap Lake in Blind Bay, BC. Call 250-804-6132.

DELIVER

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT

$

12112AT01

®

A non-ƉroĮt LJoƵtŚ deǀeloƉment Ɖrogram witŚ an emƉŚasis on fƵn, aĐƟǀe, Śands-on learning! www.4-H.sk.ca

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.

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT

Culligan SERVICE TECHNICIAN

Earn up to

100

per month

or more of Extra Cash

• Bene¿t package • $18.50 to $21.00 per hour depending on experience • Performance bonus • Full time employment • Company vehicle

In All Areas

Apply to Culligan 1 - 76 - 7th Ave. S. Yorkton, SK or call Barry

Call Janice at

782-2648

783-7355

FOR SALE - MISC

THE NEWS REVIEW

sell in

4

Person required to install and service water treatment equipment QUALIFICATIONS: • Plumbing experience • Technical aptitude • Neat and personable • Valid driver’s licence CULLIGAN OFFERS:

Relief Newspaper Carriers Wanted

20 words, 4 weeks only

$1600

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT

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. www.yorktonnews.com

FOR SALE - MISC FREE 120 PAGE CATALOGUE from Halfords. Butcher supplies, leather & craft supplies and animal control products. 1-800-353-7864 or Email: gisele@halfordhide.com or visit our web store: www.halfordsmailorder.com HOT TUB (spa) covers. Best price, best quality. All shapes & colors available. Call 1-866-6526837. www.thecoverguy.com/news paper. PROVINCE-WIDE CLASSIFIEDS. Reach over 550,000 readers weekly. Call this newspaper NOW or 306-649.1405 for details.

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

*Some restrictions apply

Like us on Facebook /yorkton.newsreview

Phone (306) 783-7355


Page 34A - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - THE NEWS REVIEW FOR SALE - MISC

LEGAL/PUBLIC NOTICES

LEGAL/PUBLIC NOTICES

SAWMILLS FOR Sale located Cypress Hills. 4-71 GM diesel power, 48? head saw, green chain, cant rollers, sawdust conveyor. Also complete 54? Helle full hydraulic mill with computer setworks electric power, all decks and conveyors. Dan Reesor, Wash, Alta. 403937-2214.

LEGAL/PUBLIC NOTICES

TENDERS

TENDERS

12112MM04

WANTED BAD CREDIT? Bank Said No? Vehicles from $250/month Call 1888-619-5874 KNOW YOUR OPTIONS IN SECONDS ($10.50 hour or equivalent minimum income) $0 Down / Bad Credit / No Credit OK

HEALTH SERVICES GET 50% OFF - Join Herbal Magic this week and get 50% Off. Lose weight quickly, safely and keep it off, proven results! Call Herbal Magic today! 1-800-854-5176.

TRAVEL HAWAII ON THE MAINLAND, healthy low-cost living can be yours. Modern Arenal Maleku Condominiums, 24/7 secured Community, Costa Rica ?friendliest country on earth?! 1-780-9520709; www.CanTico.ca.

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES ELECTRICAL CONSTRUCTION & Service Business in Eston, SK. Owner is retiring. Eston is a Town of about 1200 people & has excellent school, & recreational facilities. 12 Miles from Regional Park with excellent campground, swimming pool & golf course. We have been in business 37 years here & have found it a great place to raise our family. If interested call 306.463.9455 & I will be pleased to tell you more about the business. LEARN FROM HOME. EARN FROM HOME. Medical Transcriptionists are in demand. Lots of jobs! Enrol today for less than $95 a month. 1-800-466-1535 www.canscribe.com admissions@canscribe.com WELL-PAID/LOW-STRESS CAREER in Massage Therapy. Get the best-quality RMT education without giving up your day job! Visit www.mhvicarsschool.com or call 1-866-491-0574 for free career information.

BUSINESS SERVICES

12112MM02

1999 FORD XLT Super Cab 2WD, V8, auto. O/Drive, A/T/C, pwp mirrors, box liner, good tires, excellent condition, 245,000 kms. $4,900. Ph. 306-272-3677.

HOUSES FOR SALE NEW CANADIAN built modular home for sale. #50 Westshore Greens Trailer Park. 3 bedroom, 1,520 sq. ft. Monthly payments as low as $800 per month on approved credit. Call Stan 306-4967538 for full details.

MOBILE/ MANUFACTURED

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

391 Ball Road

782-9600 CRYSTAL CLEANING Service, Monday through Friday in Yorkton. Winona Mazurat 306-620-3151 or Joey 204-648-7298.

NEW VANCOUVER Island Townhomes available in Beautiful Qualicum Beach. Ocean view. One block from the beach. Starting at $429,000. More information at. www.taylorridge.ca

APARTMENTS/ CONDOS FOR RENT

FEED & SEED 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" d Westcan Feed & Grain 1-877-250-5252

2010 FORD XLT Super Cab, A/C, p/w, p/l, p/mirrors, keyless entry, like new condition, $21,500. Phone 306-272-3677.

AUCTIONS

ACREAGE DISPERSAL AUCTION. Tractors, trailers, equipment, quality tools, welders, pipe, truck, sheds, much more! 10 a.m., Saturday, November 10, Cadogan, Alberta. 780-842-5666, Scribner Auction. Details: www.scribnernet.com.

AUCTIONS

Auction

Saturday, Nov. 10th 1:00 pm Cars Trucks Vans Suv’s Wanting to consign Call Paul @ 782-5999 Vehicles @ 1:00 pm 04 Chev 2500 4x4 Dsl, 02 Ford F150 4x4, 09 Ford Crew 4x4 Loaded, 08 Toyota Corolla 80 km, 03 Tahoe 4x4 Leather, 05 Chev 1500 e/c 4x4, 00 Chev 2500 e/c 4x4 , 04 Grand Am GT, Over 40 units expected and many more Check Website for details and pictures of items

HOUSES FOR RENT 3 BEDROOM, recently upgraded townhouse for rent. $1200.00/month + utilities and security deposit. 6 month lease. Call for info and to book a viewing. Not your average rental. 641-9129.

DENNY THE HANDYMAN - 35+ years experience with a very picky wife. General home repairs, complete kitchen, bathroom and home renovations and a whole lot more. Call 306-621-9223.

FOR RENT: Large 2 bedroom, quiet comfortable complex, great location. Fridge/stove, washer/dryer, utilities included. No smoking, no pets. Available December 1/12, $800/month. 783-9299.

VHS, 8MM, H-8, Digital 8 & Mini DV tapes converted to DVD. Records & audio tapes to CD. For details call Yorkton Video at 7839648.

HOUSE FOR RENT: 2 bedroom houses in Canora, no pets, ref. required, $650/mth. 563-2031. www.Canorahomerentals.com.

LEGAL/PUBLIC NOTICES REMOVE YOUR CRIMINAL RECORD 100,000+ have used our services since 1989. BBB A+ rating. US Waiver allows you to travel to the US, or apply for a Record Suspension (Pardon) professional & affordable. Call 1-8-NOW PARDON (1-866-972-7366) www.RemoveYourRecord.com.

GROUND FLOOR Condominium For Sale by owner, Yorkton, 1 block from Parkland Mall, 830 sq ft, 2 bedrooms, 5 appliances including in-suite washer and dryer $158,000. Call 786-2986.

TOWNHOUSES FOR SALE

AVAILABLE NOVEMBER 15, YORKTON's first brand new energy efficient 2 bedroom 2 storey condo with heated attached garage. All appliances included. $1,395 mth plus utilities. Non smoking, no pets. References required. Sec Dep $1,395. Call 403507-5094.

Autobody & Painting Ltd.

APARTMENTS / CONDOS-FOR SALE

AUCTIONS

TRUCKS & VANS

HOUSE FOR RENT CANORA, SK. 1 bedroom with office, no pets, ref. required, $450/mth. Phone 306-563-2031. www.yorktonnews.com

TOWNHOUSES FOR SALE FOR SALE. WARMAN 55 PLUS ACTIVE ADULT LIFESTYLE Large Ground Level Townhomes 306 241 0123 www.diamondplace.ca

ADULT PERSONAL MESSAGES LOCAL HOOKUPS BROWSE4FREE 1-888-628-6790 or #7878 Mobile. HOT LOCAL CHAT 1-877-290-0553 Mobile: #5015. Find Your Favourite. CALL NOW 1-866-732-0070. 1-888-5440199 18+.

STEEL BUILDINGS / GRANARIES STEEL BUILDINGS/METAL BUILDINGS 30x40, 45x90, 50x150, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call: 1-800-4572206. www.crownsteelbuildings.ca.

AUTO MISCELLANEOUS CARS FROM $49/Week, SUVs from $79/Week, Trucks from $99/Week. Get approved with bad credit, no credit or bankruptcy. $0 Down Call our Approval Hotline 1888-222-0663 - Ford, Toyota, Chevy, Honda, Dodge 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.

DOMESTIC CARS 2008 FORD Focus SES, sporty, silver, auto., 2 door, loaded, LTR, 99,000 kms, $9,200 obo. Call 7837832 or leave message.

782-5999 www.yorktonauctioncentre.com Lic 325025

Place Your Classified Ads Online at www.yorktonnews.com Visit us today for complete coverage of local news, weather & sports. Like us on Facebook /yorkton.newsreview


THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - Page 35A

YORKTON CO-OP

During a sale, participating CO-OP™ and THE MARKETPLACE™ stores make every effort to supply sufficient advertised merchandise to meet your needs. However, due to circumstances beyond our control, some items may be out of stock. Also, due to the size of some CO-OP™ and THE MARKETPLACE™ stores, a complete line of advertised items may not be carried. We apologize for any inconvenience caused by these shortages. Although we strive for complete accuracy in our advertising, errors sometimes can occur. When an error is discovered, a correction notice will be posted in CO-OP™ and THE MARKETPLACE™ stores to bring the error to your attention. We reserve the right to limit quantities. CARE+ and design, CO-OP™, HARMONIE®, BAKER'S NOON®, CO-OP and design®, are registered trade-marks of TMC Distributing Ltd., Saskatoon, Sask. S7K 3M9. CO-OP and Design™ is a trade-mark of TMC Distributing Ltd. COUNTRY MORNING® is a registered trade-mark of Federated Co-operatives Limited, Saskatoon, Sask. S7K 3M9. THE MARKETPLACE™, THE MARKETPLACE BAKERY™, THE MARKETPLACE DELI™, THE PRODUCE MARKETPLACE™, THE MARKETPLACE BISTRO™, THE CO-OP PANTRY™ are trade-marks of Federated Co-operatives Limited. Actual items may vary slightly from illustrations. Some illustrations are serving suggestions only. GST is extra where applicable.

30 Argyle St. - Yorkton - 783-3601 www.yorktoncoop.com

GROCERY DELIVERY SERVICE DIRECT LINE 783-8011 We pick, bag & deliver your groceries right to your home in Yorkton.

PRICES EFFECTIVE THE WEEK OF Nov. 9-15, 2012


Page 36A - Thursday, November 8, 2012 - THE NEWS REVIEW

YOUR HEARING CARE IS OUR NUMBER ONE PRIORITY! titive - Compe n o s e c ri P Aids Hearing t n e ll e - Exc Service

YORKTON

Open Monday to Friday 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Proud Member of

Call for an appointment today.

Yorkton Hearing

YBID

S E RV I C E S

306-782-1793 ww.yorktonhearing.com

Get Free Quotes on: • Contractors Pro • OfďŹ ce Pro • Retailer's Pro • Realty Pro *Great Prices 783-7737 email: karen@lrfuture.com

783-3601

Marina Walls M.S. Audiologist

GREAT SELECTION Scooters Lift Chairs Walkers

Bali Indonesia

13 Day/11 Night Packages from Vancouver 5 Tours included and breakfast daily!

27 - 2nd Ave. N. Yorkton, SK

85 Broadway E. Yorkton, SK

782-5545

782-2209 Toll Free 1-800-667-1481

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

ATTENTION ALL YBID MEMBERS IT’S TIME FOR THE ANNUAL YBID MEET AND GREET!

Flowers & Plants 8 Broadway St. E. York City Plaza

Where Flowers Make Perfect Scents for weddings, funerals, birthdays, anniversaries or just because Drop in or call us

783-4570 or toll free

1-877-909-4570

Fins, Feathers and Fur Pets and Supplies

All businesses from Staples to the south to the New Royal Ford to the North and west of Highway 9, all the way west down Broadway and Smith just past the Gallagher Centre, if you have a questions call us at 783-9243.

Downtown

25 Broadway St. E. Yorkton, SK

306 786-6678

JEWELLERS

We Pay Cash For Gold and Diamonds Check with us before you sell your old Gold 23 Broadway St. E. Yorkton, Sask

783-5550

gifts.of.gold@sasktel.net

GREG OTTENBREIT

MLA Yorkton Constituency

783-7275 www.gregottenbreit.ca yorkton.mla@sasktel.net

WHAT'S THE MEET AND GREET? This year is our ďŹ rst effort at holding elections for up to 11 Board of Directors as well as a brief Annual Report from our Chairman on the past year. At the same time we will enjoy meeting and greeting other YBID members and we hope our New Mayor Bob Maloney will be there for a few kind words.

THORSNESS APPLIANCES AND BED STORE

WHEN IS THE MEET AND GREET?

Bellagio Guardine

You and your staff are invited to attend on

Queen Size

$

Wednesday November 14 at the Painted Hand Casino.

74900

plus tax

14 Betts Ave. Yorkton, SK

786-7676

The business portion of the event will begin at 6:00 PM There is always great food, beverages and some prizes, so bring some business cards and drop in and MEET AND GREET!

YBID BOARD OF DIRECTORS FOR 2012

Innovation never felt so good.™

Chair - Ken Chyz - Yorkton News Review Gale Pelletier - Painted Hand Casino Marina Walls - Yorkton Hearing Services Barry Sharpe - Yorkton ANAVET Andrew Rae - Xerox Canada

9OUR FRIENDLY DOWNTOWN IDEA PRINTER POST OFl CE

Bruce Thurston - Yorkton Co-op Terry Pollock - Gifts of Gold Ken Kohlert - Fuzztone Music Corvyn Neufeld - Cornerstone Credit Union Cory Fransishyn - Property Developer

Should you have any questions or suggestions for the YBID please contact any one of the Directors Phil DeVos - Executive Director YBID - 783-9243.

Your Insurance Broker Understands

WE OFFER‌ •COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE •MOTOR VEHICLE LICENSE ISSUING Offices in ‌ •Yorkton - 783-4477 •Bredenbury - 898-2333

Marlin Travel

WHAT ARE THE BOUNDARIES?

782-7387

783-3028

P/P Plus Tax

All businesses owners, managers and staff who operate within the boundaries of the YBID are members. The YBID levy on your annual property tax form will show you that.

from 5:00 PM to 7:00 PM

71 Broadway St. E. Yorkton, SK

1379

WHO IS A YBID MEMBER:

7-1st Ave. North Yorkton, SK

Hancock Plumbing 2011 Ltd.

$

starting from

•Foam Lake - 272-3242 •Churchbridge - 896-2269

Website: www.farrellagencies.com 24 Hr. Claims Service Office Hours: 7:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. COMMITTED TO YOU AND YOUR COMMUNITY

Cameo Pizza

Pizza, Pasta, and More!! 10 First Ave. N. Yorkton

783-3666

ND !VE . 9ORKTON 0RINT 3HOP 0OST /Fl CE 0ROUD -EMBER OF 9")$

=396 $QV ZHU

Travel Alaska & The Yukon June 12, 20 Days, All Coach With a Day Cruise of Prince William Sound Call in and find out more! 159 Broadway St. E. Yorkton, Sask.

1-800-647-7751 or 783-6548

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Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.