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18-1st Avenue North, Yorkton, SK S3N 1J4 THE NEWS REVIEW Thursday, October 3, 2013 - Volume 16, Number 33 YORKTON TIRE YORKTON TIRE & AUTO CENTRE & AUTO CENTRE 131 PALLISER WAY YORKTON PHONE 782-2431 Auto Centre WE DO IT RIGHT RIGHT — THE FIRST TIME 39 Smith St. W., Yorkton, Sask. Phone 782-6050 We’re Your MUFFLER Specialists All About All About F Flowers lowers Home of the $ 18.18 Roses 6 - 146 Broadway St. E. - Yorkton 782-4222 782-4222 306-783-9461 * See dealer for details H A A S H H AAS Haas Does Not Charge Any Documentation Fees! www.haasnissan.com FINANCING MONTHS* ON OTHER SELECT 2013 MODELS CLEAROUT DRIVE 2013 0 % 84 OR FOR UP TO IN CASH DISCOUNTS $ 13,000 UP TO * By SHANNON DEVEAU N-R Writer It’s all right to breast- feed in public spaces. That’s the message Yorkton’s Baby Friendly Initiative Working Group hopes to convey to resi- dents through a new cam- paign launched in the city Tuesday. The Baby Friendly Initiative Working Group consists of health workers in Sunrise Health Region and the Yorkton Tribal Council. The purpose of the group is to undertake projects that will increase awareness about breast- feeding and its many ben- efits for babies, mothers, families and communi- ties. According to evidence based research breast- feeding can minimize chronic health conditions such as obesity, diabetes, and heart disease. In light of that fact, the local group has created life-sized cut-outs of moth- ers and their babies’ breastfeeding; these cut- outs, , officially unveiled Tuesday, will be displayed in highly visible public areas in Yorkton and towns throughout the Sunrise Health Region as well as First Nation com- munities to encourage and promote acceptance of breastfeeding. “Research has shown that one of the reasons moms will wean early is because they don’t feel comfortable breastfeeding in public,” says Carolee Zorn, Chair of the Baby Friendly Initiative. “We hope through this project we can support breastfeeding mothers to feel more comfortable and supported to breastfeed their children wherever and whenever they need to.” In Canada, and in the Sunrise Health Region, World Breastfeeding Week is celebrated the first week in October. Continued on Page 3. It’s all right, breastfeeding initiative launched Happy Birthday!!! Happy Birthday!!! Residents will soon begin to notice cutouts like the one pictured throughout the city. The Sunrise Health Region launched the initiative earlier this week designed to encourage the support of breast- feeding in public spaces. TRIBUTE TO VETERANS – 2013 marks the 68th Anniversary of the end of WWII. Legion Branch #77 is honoring all our veterans with a special recognition to those that have or will be celebrating their 90th birthday. Recently, a group of area veterans gathered at the Legion for comradeship. Pictured are, back row, l-r, Harold Wilkinson, John Miller, Sam Oystryk, Bill Bucsis, Bill Dicker, John Pankiw, George Arnold, Robert Lee, Ken Buchan, William Stubbings, Peter Wyatt. Front row, l-r, Russ Carnduff, George Sletten, Wilfred Thorsness, Nick Koshman, Fred Bodnaryk, Don Low, Hector Nelson, Joseph Musey, Al Morley.

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18-1st Avenue North, Yorkton, SK S3N 1J4

THE NEWS REVIEWThursday, October 3, 2013 - Volume 16, Number 33

YORKTON TIREYORKTON TIRE& AUTO CENTRE& AUTO CENTRE

131 PALLISER WAY YORKTONPHONE 782-2431

Auto Centre

WE DO IT RIGHTRIGHT — THE FIRST TIME

39 Smith St. W., Yorkton, Sask. Phone 782-6050

We’re YourMUFFLER

SpecialistsAll AboutAll AboutFFlowerslowers

Homeof the$18.18 Roses

6 - 146 Broadway St. E. - Yorkton

782-4222782-4222

306-783-9461* See dealer for details HAASHHAAS

Haas Does Not Charge Any Documentation Fees!www.haasnissan.com

FINANCING MONTHS*

ON OTHER SELECT 2013MODELS

4 DAYS ONLY - SEPTEMBER 19 - 23

CLEAROUTDRIVE 2013 0% 84 ORFOR

UP TO

IN CASH DISCOUNTS

$13,000UP TO

*

By SHANNON DEVEAUN-R Writer

It’s all right to breast-feed in public spaces. That’s the message Yorkton’s Baby Friendly Initiative Working Group hopes to convey to resi-dents through a new cam-paign launched in the city Tuesday.

The Baby Friendly Initiative Working Group consists of health workers in Sunrise Health Region and the Yorkton Tribal Council. The purpose of the group is to undertake projects that will increase awareness about breast-feeding and its many ben-efits for babies, mothers,

families and communi-ties. According to evidence based research breast-feeding can minimize chronic health conditions such as obesity, diabetes, and heart disease. In light of that fact, the local group has created life-sized cut-outs of moth-ers and their babies’ breastfeeding; these cut-outs, , officially unveiled Tuesday, will be displayed in highly visible public areas in Yorkton and towns throughout the Sunrise Health Region as well as First Nation com-munities to encourage and promote acceptance of breastfeeding.

“Research has shown that one of the reasons moms will wean early is because they don’t feel comfortable breastfeeding in public,” says Carolee Zorn, Chair of the Baby Friendly Initiative. “We hope through this project we can support breastfeeding mothers to feel more comfortable and supported to breastfeed their children wherever and whenever they need to.” In Canada, and in the Sunrise Health Region, World Breastfeeding Week is celebrated the first week in October.

Continued on Page 3.

It’s all right, breastfeeding initiative launched

Happy Birthday!!!Happy Birthday!!!

Residents will soon begin to notice cutouts like the one pictured throughout the city. The Sunrise Health Region launched the initiative earlier this week designed to encourage the support of breast-feeding in public spaces.

TRIBUTE TO VETERANS – 2013 marks the 68th Anniversary of the end of WWII. Legion Branch #77 is honoring all our veterans with a special recognition to those that have or will be celebrating their 90th birthday. Recently, a group of area veterans gathered at the Legion for comradeship. Pictured are, back row, l-r, Harold Wilkinson, John Miller, Sam Oystryk, Bill Bucsis, Bill Dicker, John Pankiw, George Arnold, Robert Lee, Ken Buchan, William Stubbings, Peter Wyatt. Front row, l-r, Russ Carnduff, George Sletten, Wilfred Thorsness, Nick Koshman, Fred Bodnaryk, Don Low, Hector Nelson, Joseph Musey, Al Morley.

By DEVIN WILGERN-R Writer

The majority of 3D printers on the market today are big, compli-cated and expensive. Yorkton inventor Rylan Grayston’s Peachy Printer is the opposite of that, a 3D printer for $100, and the promise of the device has caught on, raising over $500,000 of investment through crowdfunding site Kickstarter. The difference between the Peachy Printer and other 3D printers is the way it works. Instead of com-plicated mechanical methods, a light-sensi-tive resin – in plastic, silicone and rubber right now – which will become the printed object floats on the sur-face of some salt water. In another tank is more water, which drips into the bottom tank, allow-ing the resin to rise and give the objects a 3D shape. The other com-ponent of the printer uses mirrors and a laser beam to focus light on the desired part of the resin. The printer gets information from a sound file, read from an audio jack. Grayston explains that this does not actually save very much money in con-struction, but does make a big difference to the usability. “Because I’ve chosen to stay with audio, and because every smart-phone has an audio output and a micro-phone input, you will be able to use a smart-

phone to use the print-er. That means that [it can be used by] people who can’t afford com-puters but can afford cell phones – and this is I believe a situation in third-world countries, there is a lot of cell phones and they are doing really innovative things with them down there.” The goal from the outset was to make 3D printing ubiquitous, and Grayston says that the challenge was find-ing ways to strip the cost out of a system, and use methods that are free or use as little money as possible. “You have to put your brain into specific situ-ations that force your thinking out of the box that you grew up in. For example, if you were in the 3D printing business, you would grow up in a box that says these things are expensive and this is how you do it. This is why these things are expensive, and that’s a fact... I like to ask myself questions that spur the impossible, how can I do something absolutely for free? The hole in the bucket is an example of that, the hole that the dripping happens through doesn’t cost anything, so that is the solution.” The project is entirely open source, allowing people to modify the software and hardware as they see fit when the project is complete. Grayston says that he believes that if a cre-ator does not allow peo-ple into the source, they

greatly limit the power of their inventions and the progress they can make, and he believes that going open is the key to maximizing the potential of the device. “The printer has so many things that it can do that if you decided that you wouldn’t share it and wouldn’t share the code and wouldn’t let people add to it, you would limit it a lot.” Grayston has been working on the project

for a year so far, and has been thinking about it for a year and a half. He admits that it has taken over his life, but that inventing things has always been the way he wants to work, and he’s glad that he has an idea that has allowed him to become devoted com-pletely to its develop-ment and has found

success already, allow-ing him to devote all of his time to its develop-ment. With the amount of money raised being so much more than was initially asked for, Grayston admits that the pressure is on, and the team will have to deliver on the promise on the device now that they have received such a large international following. When some-one makes an invest-ment to fund a Kickstarter project, they assume some risk, as it is possible that a project might not see results. Grayston says his reputation is on the line, and with his team they know they have to spend the next year perfecting the device. “It’s completely incor-rect to look at this as Rylan Grayston and his Peachy Printer team got rich, it isn’t. We actually just got our-selves in a huge amount of debt. We owe the world something that’s worth ten times the

money that we got forwhat we’re going todeliver by today’s stan-dards. But we’re chang-ing the standards, andwe’ve shown how we’regoing to do that. Whatwe’re doing is taking ahuge debt to the world,and a risk, and you’veset aside a plan thatyou can do it with thefunds that you’ve got,”Grayston says. “At the same time, Ifeel relieved as it goeslarger. As it grows, thebetter the numbers get,the better I can dele-gate tasks to the rightpeople. My worst fearwould be selling 200 ofthem and sitting in ashop by myself for sixmonths making themby hand, whereas if Isell thousands andthousands of them, Ican hire people who areexperts at doing piecesof the project, and haveeverything done reallyefficiently.” For more updates onthe Peachy Printerproject or to back it,visit peachyprinter.com.

Yorkton inventor promises cheap 3D printing

YORKTON INVENTOR Rylan Grayston shows part of the prototype Peachy Printer, which promises to be the cheapest 3D printer on the market. The inventor has already raised over $500,000 to finish developing the product.

“But we’re changing the standards, and we’ve shown how we’re going to do that. What we’re doing is taking a huge debt to the world, and a risk, and you’ve set aside a plan that you can do it with the funds that you’ve got.”

–Rylan Grayston

Visit us at: www.yorktonnews.com

Page 2A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, October 3, 2013

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This year’s theme is “Breastfeeding Support: Close to Mothers,” high-lighting support as a key factor for mothers breast-feeding. In celebrating World Breastfeeding Week, the Baby Friendly Initiative Working Group is also issuing a “Quintessence Breast-feeding Chal-lenge.” Every year, on the first Saturday of October at 11:00 a.m., mothers and children at sites across Canada and around the world com-pete to set the record for the most children breast-feeding at one time. In Yorkton, the chal-lenge is taking place October 5 at City Centre Park on Broadway Avenue. Registration starts at 10:30 a.m. The winners of the competition include: • the site with the most children breastfeed-ing at one time;

• the country with the most children breastfeed-ing at registered sites; • and in North America, the region (province or territory or state) with the most chil-dren participating as a percentage of the birth rate. For more information visit the website www.babyfriendly.ca or call 306-786-0625.

Breastfeeding support

By DEVIN WILGERN-R Writer

It’s described as a Biblical tour with a personal touch, as the Rock and Marlin Travel have partnered for a nine-day tour of Israel. The trip, hosted by Rick and Kathleen Gibson, promises to be a once in a lifetime experience for the people attending. Rick Gibson says that his role in the trip will be to give the Christian context to the different sites that they will visit, while local guides will provide the historical perspective and the Hebrew perspective. “These sites that we will be seeing, most of them are well known sites. We’ve heard about them, we know what the sites are, but to actually be able to go and see the sites and walk the areas will be a really wonderful experience.” The trip will mean something dif-ferent to everyone who takes it, and Gibson says he’s looking forward to it for a number of different reasons. “Partly because of all my years of ministry as pastor, I’ve got some

curiosity about seeing the Holy Land and the sights, to see some of the archaeological digs. Also, for the last 15-20 years, I’ve had an interest in Jewish customs and traditions, and how their customs and traditions

have parallels in our Christian faith. My curiosity is to go and see first hand... An educational, spiritual pil-grimage is what I’m looking for,” Gibson says. Israel is a country with a long his-

tory, with constant archaeological digs and many of the sites are thou-sands of years old. “To have so much history in that country, historical, biblical and polit-ical, it is truly an amazing place to go,” Gibson says. The hope is to see this trip become a regular occurrence, and Gibson says that it while the trip has a Christian context, it’s something that would be valuable to anyone, given the rich history in the region, and they welcome people of any faith to come along and experience the trip. He also emphasizes that in spite trouble in some regions the Middle East, Israel itself is a safe place and the guides will know if there are any problems in the region. While some people might be concerned by what they hear, Gibson says that there is no reason to worry about safety on the trip. The tour will cost $3,295 with $690 in tax. Those interested are encouraged to contact Marlin Travel as soon as possible. The trip will depart on March 2, 2014.

Pilgrimage to Israel planned and you are invited

Rick and Kathleen Gibson

October is Ag. Month Check out our website at: www.yorktonnews.com October as Agriculture Month in Saskatchewan. The month will focus on opportunities for youth in agriculture. “Our province has been a leader in feeding the world and will continue to do so as the global de-mand for food increases,” says Agriculture Minister Lyle Stewart. “Naturally, there is a high demand for skilled individuals ready to take on this challenge. Whether your interests lie in business, research, farming or ranching, working in agriculture comes with the promise of a bright future and the opportu-nity to help feed the world.” Agriculture is a major contributor to the Saskatch-ewan economy, employing more than 50,000 people and accounting for 7.5 per cent of the provincial GDP. Saskatchewan is also the top agriculture ex-porting province, with more than $11 billion in ag-riculture exports in 2012. This includes 53 per cent of the world’s lentils, 38 per cent of the world’s peas and 21 per cent of the world’s canola oil. To show-case the diverse career options in agriculture, the ministry has created an opportunity catalogue to distribute to guidance counsellors and industry lead-ers. The catalogue features examples of careers in agriculture, highlighting the people behind the jobs and the unique paths they took to fi nd their home in agriculture. Learn more at: www.agriculture.gov.sk.ca.

THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, October 3, 2013 - Page 3A

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The News Review ispublished every Thursday at

18 - 1st Avenue North,Yorkton, Saskatchewan S3N 1J4.

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THE NEWS REVIEW

Feeling lucky today?

When in Rome, do as the Romans do, when in Canada, do as Canadians do – or NOT. There isn’t an anti-racial bone in my body but this has nothing to do with that and I have to say, it really bothers me. When the average Joe boards a plane in Canada, it’s gotten to the point where we are practically strip searched, well that may be exaggerating a tad but the process is pretty thorough. The last time I flew I had my purse rummaged through, I went through the scanner, was frisked down and even had to take my hair clip out so they could see I wasn’t hiding anything in it. When we have our passport photos taken they have to be “picture perfect.” No shine, no smiling, just a clear and full facial view. And that’s fine I guess if it’s all in the line of security and ensuring we get from point A to point B safely. But why aren’t the same rules applicable to everyone who departs on a flight within Canada? This is not to stir the anger pot or to be anti-Muslim, but currently in Canada, fully veiled Muslim women can breeze through security with-out removing their veils (niqabs). We aren’t talk-ing just head covers either. These fully cover the

face leaving just the eyes to see. When we get on a plane we take off our shoes, belts, jewellery, give up hand lotions, tweezers and whatever else might look like a potential threat and they get to saunter on through? Something is wrong with that picture. “We don’t have concerns

with that,” said one spokesperson for the Canadian Air Transport Security Agency. “WE have con-cerns with the fact if the person has any metal under their clothing.” Naturally, but I can bet you if you or I walked up to security with a mask on our faces we would promptly be asked to take it off or told to get lost. Transport Canada insists that the airline must be able to verify the identity of all passengers before they board a plane but in all honesty, can you really without a shadow of doubt know that the person behind the veil is who they say they are? I say not. If people want to wear their niqab in public, fine, that is their personal choice, but as far as I’m con-cerned, when we are boarding an aircraft, the same rules should apply to ALL who are boarding the aircraft.

ColumnShannon Deveau

The way I see it...

The recent release of Grand Theft Auto V made a billion dollars in three days. Assuming that the copies sold for an average of $60 a piece, which ignores spe-cial editions, about 16.7 million copies of the game found their way into the hands and homes of consum-ers. Other violent titles have also seen billion dollar sales days, like the Call of Duty series, and chances are that even if you don’t own some violent games, you know someone who does. It could be a friend, it could be a coworker, it could be the person who is typing these very words. So can we stop painting out games to be the source of all the wrongs in the world already? It’s still a recurring theme. A recent profile of the man behind the Washington Navy Yard shooting painted a portrait of an individual who had legitimate and severe mental illness. It also had a line about how he really liked Call of Duty. The problem with that line is that Call of Duty is an incredibly popular title, and the vast majority of people who love it don’t shoot any real people. As the games make increasingly giant amounts of money, and find their ways into more and more homes, it has become clear that it’s not quite appropriate to make them a scapegoat anymore. The majority of players only shoot virtual people. Then again, it’s to be expected that a new medium

is going to trigger a kind of panic about their lasting effects. Movies had the Hayes Code, comic books the Comics Code Authority, all put together to ensure that they did not corrupt the youth and lead them down a path of moral decay. All of those measures were eventually challenged and dropped, as it was realized that adults can handle watching a movie in which a member of the clergy is ridiculed, or read a comic where law enforcement dies as a result of a criminal’s activities, both things restricted under those mediums’ specific censorship codes. We moved on from those panics, and now we are faced with a fresh one.

It’s brought up continually because it’s a medium some people don’t understand, and it often involves actions that would be morally repugnant in the real world. However, even if I would personally like to see more non-violent titles – variety is the spice of life, after all – it’s clear that the violence in these virtual worlds tends to be restricted to those virtual worlds. If they were not, the past week would have been a spree of death and destruction stemming from all of those poor souls blasting through Grand Theft Auto, rather than a week that was relatively sane and quiet. I can understand the fear of a new medium, new entertainment, and new experiences. It’s something different, and on the surface it can look quite scary, and depict violent acts in a manner that was not pos-sible before. But, let’s be honest, murder rates are on a downward trend after peaking in the ‘70s, violent crime is also on a downward slope. As a whole, even as entertainment has reached its violent peak, we have seen a general decline in the amount of actual, real world violence. While such violence is still shock-ing and unacceptable, it’s clear that at this point we need to realize that there’s a much different cause behind it. Instead of using violent entertainment as a scapegoat, let’s find the real cause.

Column

Things I do with words...

Let us stop blaming entertainment for violence

ED I TOR I A L

I N S I GHT S

You wanna fl y? Then take it off

GENERAL MANAGER: Ken Chyz OFFICE MANAGER: Diane St. Marie EDITOR: Shannon Deveau WRITERS: Devin Wilger Chase Ruttig ADVERTISING: Renée Haas Buddy BoudreaultPRODUCTION MANAGER: Carol Melnechenko PRODUCTION: Diane St. Marie Joanne Michael CIRCULATION: (306) 783-7355

It’s unfortunate, but it will happen, per-haps sooner rather than later and it could have been prevented. The inability or per-haps inaction by parents, the authorities and the community in general only hastens its inevitability. Parents complain that they have no control after their children go out the door. The authorities have far more pressing and important matters to attend to. The community provides a poor role model as, daily, children see adults breaking the same laws without a second thought. The result, someone’s child lying in the street, bent and bloodied beside the mangled wreckage of his or her bicycle. If the young-ster is lucky, he or she will only suffer an injury. If not... The other day a young person went flying through a local intersection on his bicycle, an intersection that has seen its share of motor vehicle accidents. He wore no bicycle helmet. He did not stop at the stop sign. Nor did he appear to check the traffic particu-larly carefully, unless he was capable of some extra sensory perception that wasn’t readily apparent. The whole time, as his bicycle crossed from one side of the road to the other after travelling down the middle of the street, he rode with no hands on his handle bars. Perhaps the main reason for his inattention and inability to have his hands on the bicycle handlebars was that he was busy using both hands to engage in texting on his cell phone. Hopefully he and others like him made it home safely. His safe arriv-al, however, probably reinforced his sense of invincibility and perhaps his contempt for those who might actually be concerned for his safety. The fact is, bicycles are considered vehi-cles and, as such, are required to follow the laws and rules of the road as any other vehi-cle, motorized or not. The laws were enacted to protect drivers, cyclists and even pedes-trians so that all could use streets safely. Some might argue that drivers aren’t required to wear helmets. True, but they are required to buckle up which might be a tad ludicrous on a bicycle. No matter how skilled they might be, cyclists are required to keep their hands on their handle bars while rid-ing just as drivers should have their hands on the steering wheel while driving. Coming to a full stop at a stop sign regardless of traf-fic is a legal requirement rather than an optional suggestion. Finally, texting or talk-ing on any hand held device while driving or cycling is dangerous and therefore against current laws. It might be reasonable to assume that the same cyclists who flaunt safe practices and road regulations will become the same driv-ers who consciously or subconsciously ignore vehicular laws. It’s inevitable. Someone won’t be lucky. The price may be very high. Hopefully the victim won’t be your child...

Devin Wilger

THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, October 3, 2013 - Page 5A

To the Editor:

With the passage of The Sas-katchewan Employment Act last spring, the Saskatchewan govern-ment raised a lot of questions to be answered with regard to accompa-nying regulations that will be draft-ed this fall. The amendments made last May are just a beginning, and leave many questions unanswered, and many impacts unknown or unclear. On September 27, at the meeting of the Minister’s Advisory Commit-tee on Labour Relations and Work-place Safety, the Government will once again be asked to slow down and to make certain that new Sas-katchewan Employment Act doesn’t remove, restrict or otherwise impair the rights of working peo-ple. With a booming economy and challenges in attracting labour, Saskatchewan needs to be sure this new law achieves the objectives set out for it. Frankly, I don’t think it does. As it stands, there is a long way to go to ensure that The Sas-katchewan EmploymentAct – also known as Bill 85 – will actually serve our people well by re-placing nearly 70 years of balanced labour legislation and repealing or amending 33 separate laws. It is in everyone’s interest to en-sure the Saskatchewan Employ-ment Act does not signify the end of our stable, harmonious labour rela-tions and the beginning of workplace strife that will prove detrimental to productivity and investment. The Saskatchewan Employment Act must maintain workers’ un-fettered right to join a union and access balanced and effective col-lective bargaining. The Act should

provide for safe, dignifi ed work in a stable, productive labour relations environment. Saskatchewan’s workplaces should be moving forward with a view to benefi tting the whole of so-ciety and not just empowering em-ployers at the expense of employ-ees. Nationally recognized and re-spected labour relations scholar and lawyer, Professor David Doo-rey of York University, observes in his review of the legislation, “Bill 85 in its fi nal version remains a one-sided package of reforms. The Bill’s Labour Relations provisions in particular are designed to impose new obligations, new restrictions, new costs, and new challenges on unions.” If this is not the intent of the Sas-katchewan Employment Act, I ask again that the Government consult fully and openly with all stakehold-ers, to ensure the Act is further amended and/or the impending Regulations address the following issues: • Obstacles to workers’ ability to organize and secure collective bar-gaining rights should be removed. • Concerns that Saskatchewan families may no longer be able to spend weekends together and em-ployees may be denied lunch breaks if the employer decides its neces-sary should be explicitly dealt with. These seemingly small changes refl ect a legislative thrust that ex-pands employer control over work-ing conditions. The Regulations must address the lack of checks and balances over how employers exer-cise this discretion. • The regulations must detail what happens to supervisory em-ployees severed from their current

union as a result of this legislation and identify what protections are provided for the affected employ-ees. As it stands, the Saskatchewan Employment Act provides no pro-tections for supervisory employees who are removed from their current bargaining units by the legislation. While employment standards respecting overtime pay and the defi nition of the work week have been rewritten, they are fraught with complexity and a lack of clar-ity. The regulations must ensure that the impact in the workplace is not a further watering down of em-ployees’ rights to reasonable hours of work and payment for overtime work. This should also include the pro-tection of a three-hour-minimum shift or call-in pay. If modernization is the goal of this reform, let’s make sure that is what the Saskatchewan Employment Act actually accom-plishes. As it stands, I have grave reservations. Why the rush? There is nothing to lose by taking the time to do this right and every-thing to gain by ensuring the pro-tections are there for our working families. Let’s make history by tak-ing the Saskatchewan Employment Act back to the drawing board to ensure balance, fairness, and clar-ity in labour standards and labour relations laws.

Hugh Wagner, General Secretary of Grain and

General Services Union (ILWU Canada) and a

Member of the Minister’s Advisory Committee on Labour

Relations and Workplace Safety.

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.

Letters welcomed

Your letter Weekof theLETTERS PAGE

to the editor

To the Editor:

I just can’t believe what I heard on the news! Some immigrants have legally challenged that they have to pledge allegiance to the Queen in order to become Cana-dian Citizens! Who the heck do they think that they are? Did somebody force them to come to this country? Are they refugees? Whatever made them come to this country, they came to a democratic country with a lot of freedoms, including the free-dom to leave if they are not happy here.

Myself I am a Norwegian immi-grant and have lived in Canada for over 40 years, enjoying every moment of it! I chose the freedom to become a Canadian Citizen and pledged allegiance to the Queen, as that is what we Canadians do! Nobody forced me to become a citizen, as I’m sure nobody is forc-ing the people who lost their chal-lenge in court! I can only hope that they were ordered to pay the entire legal cost, including the cost of operating the court room and the judge’s salary, as I would prefer that my tax money be bet-ter utilized elsewhere. I harbour no ill feelings or preju-dices towards any ethnic group in our great country, but I do have a strong dislike for the people that need to challenge Canadian laws or culture. We are a bilingual country with two offi cial languag-es: English and French. Learn one or the other or even better learn both of them! -We celebrate Can-ada Day, not any other country’s national holiday! We do recog-nize that Canada was built on im-migrants from around the world by staging annual multicultural events in most major cities across Canada. Canada is my adopted country, and I am forever pleased that Canada adopted me!

Kaare Askildt Hazel Dell, SK.

When in Canada...

The Sask. Employment Act

To the Editor:

This week the United States and more than 90 other countries signed the UN Arms Trade Treaty aimed at curbing the transfer of conventional weapons that could promote acts of genocide, crimes against humanity, or war crimes. But Stephen Harper’s govern-

ment did not sign, overly anxious the treaty might somehow impinge on recreational users in Canada en-gaged in sport shooting and hunt-ing. This is the same Stephen Harper who last week dismissed Iranian as-sertions that their country was not seeking nuclear weapons and who declared ‘We should carefully moni-

tor deeds far more than words’. Stephen Harper seems to be very good at principled words when it comes to lecturing others, but less great at setting a good example when even the slightest interests of his political base is affected.

Larry Kazdan,Vancouver, B.C.

A case of “do as I say, not as I do?”

To the Editor:

The long-awaited Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change report is making headlines. The re-port is designed to inform the global community about the current state of climate science – the sci-entifi c debate, consensus and data. We will learn of the latest projections of tem-perature increase, sea level rise and extremes in weather. The report is seven years in the mak-ing and is currently the ultimate in climate sci-ence – not Al Gore, not Rush Limbaugh, but ac-tual scientists who study climate. So, expect three things to happen: Media sensa-tionalism, arguments for government intervention-ism and, the continuing stigmergic revolution. Media sensational-ism has already started. This is nothing new. The media always presents, hypes and glorifi es two sides of the environmen-tal issue of our time. My advice when it comes to the media and climate

change? Turn off the ra-dio, turn off the televi-sion, put down the book Bill McKibben or Sean Hannity wrote and please instead devote time to the science. Mainstream me-dia is not for news, it is for entertainment – sadly. Then come the calls for government intervention-ism. Whenever climate change is in the limelight, liberals tend to champion the need for our great government institutions to once again save human civilization. Conserva-tives and other skeptics advocate that these same government institutions should save big business from the liberals. Both arguments are absurd. Modern liberal visions of empowering the state to combat climate change are short-sighted to say the least. Empowering bureaucracy to combat something as urgent as climate change will only exacerbate our en-vironmental problems. Bureaucracy is slow, un-democratic and ripe with special interests. Any hope of changing power structures so they act

with benevolence will fall fl at. In the face of complex problems facing our en-tire biosphere we should act in ways that make our institutions unnecessary – to work around hierar-chy and build a new so-ciety free of institutional supremacy. Which brings me to my other point: On the other side of the very same bu-reaucracy we have modern conservatives advocating that “junk science” should not foster policy and any attempts to do so are just outright attacks on good ole American capital-ism. In reality, what we often fi nd is government supporting big industry. For just one example, liberal champion and US President Barack Obama is stomping around the country advocating natu-ral gas as a clean burning “bridge fuel” – the answer to the climate problem. The administration has ignored methane emis-sions (by touting that they are less than projected as if that means there are no emissions), groundwater contamination and other environmental impacts of

hydraulic fracturing. In the face of our en-vironmental crisis, how-ever, we are witness to emerging orders. The greatest of biologi-cal phenomenons – Spon-taneous Order – is already at work solving the prob-lems we face today. We see this in emerging ideas of food production in the form of local permaculture farms and the urban food movement. We see it in the emerging philosophy of Adaptive Collaborative Management in regards to the utilization of natu-ral resources. We see so-cial movements dedicated to preserving cultural and natural heritage. There is work being done that is changing our institutions to give communities dem-ocratic energy in the form of micro-generation and solidarity economies. Climate change presents a great challenge to civi-lization. Where there is labor to be done, we will do it. Expect us.

Grant Mincy, Media Coordinator Center

for a Stateless Society.

Climate change, institutions, orders

“Canada is my adopted country, and I am forever

pleased that Canada adopted me!”

By DEVIN WILGERN-R Writer

The City of Yorkton is moving forward with Our City, Our Future, the official community plan, zoning bylaw and sign bylaw. Part of that movement involves con-sultations with the com-munity, and the city recently hosted a public open house to get input. Gord Shaw, Director of Planning and Engineering, says that the recent open house was successful, with 20

people coming through to ask questions about the zoning and sign bylaw and provide input into the city’s direction. The concerns raised involved landscaping of commercial properties, access to properties and concerns about signs and their placement. He says that people want Yorkton to be brought in line with larger jurisdictions as well as having made in Yorkton policies. The comments and observations from the evening will be consid-

ered when looking at the bylaws and official community plan, and Shaw says they will be included where the city can put them into the laws. While this is likely to be the final open house on the plan, Shaw says that the city is still open to input until the begin-ning of November. They hope to go back to coun-cil on the matter before the end of the year, so there is approval for the community plan, the zoning bylaw, and the sign bylaw by 2014.

By DEVIN WILGERN-R Writer

The Parkland College was at the Yorkton Co-op with the Parkland Regional Library to celebrate the impor-tance of essential skills recently. Natasha Katchuk with the Parkland College says that the purpose of the day was to highlight the impor-tance of essential skills in the workplace and at home. Those essential skills are reading, document use, numeracy, writing, oral communication, working with others, thinking, computer use and continuous learn-ing. Katchuk says that highlighting the importance of essential skills is key to a constantly changing job envi-ronment. The day was hosted by the Co-op because of a part-nership between the Parkland College and the Co-op have been partners in a mentorship program, which focuses on advancing employees within the company, something spurred by a changing job market. “What employers are telling us is that it’s harder to keep employees in the workplace. There is competition now so employees are moving on.” The opportunity this presents, she explains, is that employees can now advance within a company, as a mentor teaches them how to work in different parts of the workplace. By improving essential skills, employ-ees have more opportunities within a company, and the company itself runs smoother due to the staff that is better equipped to handle different responsibilities. The day itself featured a free barbecue as well as dif-ferent activities to bring essential skills into focus. “We are just highlighting essential skills for work and life.”

Culture Days celebrated in the city

Essential Skills Day event held

By DEVIN WILGERN-R Writer

Annual Culture Days celebrations saw a wide variety of activities take place in the city, including film screenings by the Yorkton Film Festival, live painting, and tasty food from the Festival of Cultures. The day also featured the opening of Nest – Nest Egg – Empty Nest by Monique Martin at the Godfrey Dean Art Gallery. The Saskatoon-based artist, who will be an artist in resi-dence at Disneyland Paris, created a show about nests and what they mean. The inspiration for the work was the economic crisis, Martin explains, with the nests being red to symbol-ize so many people living in debt. There are prints which have bank statements as the eggs within the nest. She was inspired to use the nest as a theme because of different events happening in her life, with the nest being a common term used to tie them together. Starting with the nest egg, Martin says that he also had an empty nest of her own, as her children moved away and she felt conflicting emotions, enjoying their absence but feeling as though she should be sadder about her kids moving on. These ideas all found their way into the work, and Martin says it fits together. Martin also places a priority on making work with waste material. There is a selection of nests made from clay scraps from Martin’s art classes, as well as larger nests con-

structed out of discarded pianos, window blinds, bedsprings and news-paper bundle straps. Martin did not pay for any of the materials used, taking things people would other-wise have found their way into the landfill. “Birds find their things, so I was mimicking being a bird and under-standing the complexity of a bird flying to find a twig, and flying it back to their nest. It’s a long, hard task that we take for granted,” Martin says. It’s also about not putting more things into the world, Martin explains. She says that she some-times feels uncomfortable sitting behind a new canvas with new paints, putting more art into the world, but by using discarded mate-rials she’s reassembling things that are already there. The use of recycled materials also lead to Martin’s residency at Disney in Paris, and she says that the com-pany was interested in raising awareness about how much waste was in their own company, and her art is part of that program. She notes that one of her upcoming proj-ects will be a large nest constructed using coat hangers which Disney gets when their costumes go out to be dry cleaned. “You get a lot of materials that have to go to the garbage. It’s an awareness for the staff, it’s an aware-ness for the people visiting, and it’s an awareness for the whole city.” Nest – Nest Egg – Empty Nest runs until December 12 at the Godfrey Dean.

CULTURE DAYS featured a wide variety of activities showcasing culture in the City ofYorkton, with live painting by Jeann Spilak (above), screenings by the Yorkton Film Festival and live music. Pictured below, Monique Martin with some of the work from her show Nest – Nest Egg – Empty Nest, on now at the Godfrey Dean Art Gallery.

Community plan unfolds

The News Review is online!

Visit us at:

yorktonnews.com

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By SHANNON DEVEAUN-R Writer

Yorkton is experienc-ing a definite growth spurt and with that comes new opportunities and developments. On the slate of changes is a new dining option that prom-ises to be unlike any other in the city. “Love” East Indian Cuisine is set to officially open its doors on October 18 bringing a new taste sensation to Yorkton along with a dining expe-rience the owners hope residents will embrace and enjoy. Partnered with his brother, Inder Sharma says the pair already own and operate two success-ful restaurants in the Esterhazy area and they are looking forward to getting a Yorkton loca-tion off the ground. “My brother’s story is phenomenal, like a typi-cal immigrant. He’s very ambitious. He came here as a cook...” And he still cooks and enjoys bring-ing a piece of his home to others. In Esterhazy the pair owns George’s Pizza as well as a family ori-ented Steakhouse. They started on a smaller scale but then seeing a need in the community they began to expand. Now, in addition to keeping their current locations, they have their sights set on Yorkton. More than just a place to grab a bite, Sharma says Love will be the complete dining experi-ence. The brothers have been working day and night renovating and put-ting the finishing touches on decor to get just the right feel. Walls are

adorned with antique hand carved pieces shipped from India, many of which were previously homed in Indian palaces. A waterfall will greet customers upon entering Love and in addition to public dining, there is a formal, private dining room option with person-alized service from the chef himself. “He will make anything you want,” says Sharma. The whole process of coming to Yorkton began in October of 2012. Sharma says it’s been a devine path since then with everything falling into place as if it were all

“meant to be.” Originally, the broth-ers were bidding on the old Tracy James location but when that deal fell through, the York House entered the picture and almost seamlessly every-thing came together. “My brother believes in God unconditionally. I’ve never seen beliefs as strong in my life... he does not plan anything, it will happen if it’s meant to happen.... I believe in God also but I also know it’s about dollars and cents, you have to be practical.” That meant surveying a large number of Yorkton

residents to see if they would welcome an East Indian restaurant to the city. Sharma says he believes the time is now and that people will love and even crave the new taste option. Food will be authenti-cally cooked in a tandoori clay oven and despite what some may think, it will be mild enough for all to enjoy – unless of course a little more heat is requested. The menu will start out on a smaller scale, with only the tastiest of dishes says Sharma and then it will expand as customer

demand does. All of the food will be prepared fresh and healthy he adds. “We are only using the highest quality ingre-dients... we won’t com-promise on quality... “This is a place where families can come, people can have their meetings here (Love is equipped with a full service board-room), kids can have their birthday parties, hus-bands and wives can come have a romantic dinner in one corner... we will have table cloths and it’s a warm environment. You won’t have to go to Regina to have that expe-

rience,” he adds. “We are so excitedabout this. It’s a chal-lenge, we are scared. It’sa big investment and alot of faith but I thinkwe’re going to do verywell... The support so farhas been tremendous andwe hope people will justcome to try us.” Love is set to openOctober 18 at 11 a.m. forlunch. A dinner menu isslated from 5 p.m. until9:30 p.m. Learn more atwww.loveyorkton.com orby visiting the Facebookpage: www.facebook.com/LOVEYORKTON.

From India with LOVE, new restaurant to open

ANTIQUE, DELICATELY HAND CARVED pieces, some of which came from far offIndian palaces and were shipped to Saskatchewan, will adorn the walls in Yorkton’s new-est restaurant – Love, Fine East Indian Cuisine.

BROTHERS, INDER (LEFT) AND BK SHARMA, are excited to be a part of the Yorkton community as they get set to open their new restaurant in the city.

SHOW AND SHINE – Big Brothers and Big Sisters of Yorkton and Area recently received a major contribution from Walmart. The annual BBBS Show and Shine, hosted by Walmart, raised $2,000, with the store contributing a matching grant, making a total of $4,000 going to BBBS. Pictured above are DJ Hewitt, Store Manager, Russell Haugerud, Assistant Manager, Abhinav Bhargav with BBBS and Irma Van De Bon-Nicol, Executive Director BBBS.

By SHANNON DEVEAUN-R Writer

Another exciting production has been planned and you could be a part of it. Rehearsals are currently underway for Yorkton’s Paper Bag Players’ annual Christmas dinner theatre! This year’s production takes place on Friday, November 22; Saturday, November 23; Saturday, December 7; and Saturday, December 14 at the Ukrainian Orthodox Auditorium. The play, Cocktails at Pam’s, is a delightful comedy set in the year 1965. Pam and her husband Julius are hosting another cocktail party where Pam is determined that everything be perfect. When her guests begin to take charge of

her party and Pam begins to lose control, hilarity ensues! There are still a couple of roles avail-able, so if you are an actor who enjoys the stage, the applause, and the fun; call Teresa Weber at 306-621-6437. New to the dinner theatre this year is the addition of a cabaret. Following the play, The JayWalkers will be performing. So, be sure to remember your dancing shoes! Tickets will be available soon and can be purchased by visiting www.paperbag-players.com.

It’s your chance to act– Paper Bag Player production planned

THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, October 3, 2013 - Page 7A

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Page 8A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, October 3, 2013

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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• Classifi eds• Sports• Opinions• Entertainment

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By ALEX MORGOTCH

While many are content to sail through life with-out exerting themselves to any great extent, there are a rare few who relish a challenge. They push their personal limits, pushing themselves to almost superhuman lev-els. One former Yorkton area resident, Garry Springgay, recently passed through Yorkton on his way home to Phoenix, Arizona after completing a gruelling motorcycle trip which tested him physically in his quest for a personal goal. Growing up in the area, Springgay developed an interest in motorcycles along with his buddies Rick Dawson and Rick Bradshaw, both owners of local motorcycle dealer-ships in the city. All three became competitive riders in widely differing types of two wheeled competi-tion. Dawson, of Harley Davidson of Yorkton, claimed several national drag racing titles. Bradshaw, of Schrader’s Honda, Yamaha, Suzuki became one of the top motocross racers in the province. Springgay chose to compete in long dis-tance endurance motorcy-cle riding. “It’s a com-pletely different format. You’re really only compet-ing with yourself,” he points out. Springgay joined the Iron Butt Association in 2001. The worldwide asso-ciation is dedicated to the sport of safe endurance motorcycling. Members train for longer distances with shorter rides and work their way up to lon-ger distances as their skill and endurances improves. Springgay began slowly with shorter training rides starting with three “Saddlesore 1000” rides which required riders to complete a 1000 mile (1600 km) distance in 24 hours. His next level took him through a Bunburner Gold ride which saw him riding 1500 miles (2400 km) in 24 hours. “That’s one of the most difficult rides there are from a time perspective because you have to average 62 and a half miles (100 km) an hour to make that ride work. It means you just have to keep the wheels turning’ Springgay explains. Following the Bunburner ride, Springgay decided to up the challenge by com-pleting the Border to Border Insanity ride which required a rider to travel from inside of Mexico to inside of Canada (or vice versa) in 24 hours or less. “I completed that ride in 23 hours and a few minutes on a stock Harley Davidson Road King with a five gallon (22.75l) gas tank, no cruise control, no radio, no nothing so it was a difficult ride,” he recalls. His next challenge was the 50 CC ride which required a competitor to ride coast to coast in under 50 hours. Springgay rode non stop from San Diego to Jacksonville, Florida in about 37 hours. He was constantly stretch-ing his nonstop riding limit from 20 hours in the saddle to 24 hours, to 37 hours on the 50 CC ride. “Over a period of years

you can find that limit and sometimes extend that limit by making your motorcycle more comfort-able, by improving your nutrition, by doing a bunch of different things that allow you to stay safe at the 30 or 32 hour mark on the bike,” he remarks. Springgay had a specif-ic goal in mind for his lat-est challenge. He wanted to prove to himself that he had what it took to enter the Ironbutt Rally. The rally, which started in the 1980’s, takes place every two years. It involves an 11 day, 11,000 miles (17,600 km) ride. Riders plan their own routes to places which are assigned bonus points based on the level of difficulty in reach-ing those particular desti-nations in the allotted time. The rider with the most points at the end of the rally wins. “It’s become sort of the world’s premier motorcycle challenge, Springgay claims. The competition has taken riders all over North America, from Prudhome Bay, Alaska to Key West, Florida and from Canadian Maritimes to San Diego, California. “You can potentially go anywhere, Pikes Peak to Death Valley in the same rally, so it’s a very tough, very serious motorcycle rally,” he adds. Competitors must apply for entry. Each year out of some 800 to 1000 appli-cants, 100 are chosen for the competition, Spring-gay notes. The competi-tors are notified whether they have been selected about six months prior to the rally, he says. To achieve his objective, Springgay decided to com-plete two trips in one ses-sion. He wanted to ride the 48 Plus and the Ten Tenths in a single ride. The 48 Plus required him to ride through all 48 con-tinental U.S. States and Alaska, while the Ten Tenths ride required a ride of 10,000 miles (16,000 km). Both had to be completed in 10 days or less. He began preparing for the current rides about six months ago. Once he decided to complete the rides this spring, Springgay began to plan his route, to minimize the number of miles he need-ed to ride to touch all 49 states. He opted to start in Laughlin, Nevada. A 30 minute ride took him to Needles, California and another 30 minutes took him through Kingman, Arizona. “So within the first hour and a half, I had three states,” he states. After crossing Arizona, Stringgay rode across New Mexico, Texas and into Oklahoma on his first day. On his first night on the road, Stringgay almost suffered a setback which could have ended his ride. Riding east on Interstate 40, just east of Clinton, Oklahoma, he encoun-tered a truck which lost a part of its load of granite statues. The stone statues struck and damaged some cars in front of him. “I managed to avoid most of the carnage except for one of these statues that took a funny bounce and thank-fully missed my front wheel or I wouldn’t be here,” he suggests. He didn’t escape unharmed, however. The stone

slammed into the left hand side of his bike, working its way back to bend his shift lever back against the kickstand, broke off his foot peg with his foot still on it while trying its best to tear off his left foot and did some damage to the left hand side of the bike. Springgay managed to keep his wits about him to bring his bike under con-trol and ride over to a gas station to examine the extent of the damage. Seeing no vital fluids leaking, he determined the the damage was main-ly cosmetic. A pair of vice grips straightened the shift lever to allow him to change gears. The foot-peg, while bent back and broken, was serviceable. At this point most rid-ers might have seriously considered quitting. Springgay continued on to Henrietta, Oklahoma where he decided to check into a motel for the night. After about four hours of sleep he completed anoth-er inspection of his motor-cycle. Continued on Page 9.

Adventure of a lifetime: putting on the motorcycle miles

FORMER YORKTON AREA RESIDENT, Garry Springgay, recently passed through Yorkton on his way home to Phoenix, Arizona after completing a gruelling motorcycle trip which tested him physically in his quest for a personal goal.

THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, October 3, 2013 - Page 9A

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“I determined that it was safe to ride. There were no vital components that were damaged, no fluids leaking or anything like that,” he remembers. His left foot while sore, appeared to be unbroken, protected as it was by a heavy motorcycle riding boot. Springgay even slept with the boot on that night, fearing that his foot might swell up if he removed it. Continuing his ride, he worked his way south and east through Arkansas, and Kentucky, touched on Florida and began work-ing his way north through Georgia and the Carolinas. Springgay continued up the east coast into the Atlantic states. “The sec-ond night I spent some-where in Arkansas. The third night I actually rode straight through, riding 32 hours straight so I could miss all of the rush hour traffic on the east coast near Boston,” he explains. He rode through Connecticut, New Hampshire, Mass-achusetts and Maine in the wee hours of the morn-ing, saving himself a lot of time. The only glitch on his ride up the eastern sea-board was getting lost in the Bronx in New York city that night. “It was overcast, drizzling. Between the combination of the tall buildings and the overcast conditions my GPSs just kind of lost their way and couldn’t lock on a satellite signal. They kept sending me in circles. Never having been to New York City before, let alone the Bronx, I got off the George Washington Bridge somewhere, made a wrong turn and probably ended up in a place I shouldn’t have been,” Springgay recounts. “It was a little hairy. There was no high drama or anything and I never had any problems or any-thing. But it was not some-where I really relish being at 2:30 in the morning. I’ve seen too many Charles

Bronson movies,” he quips. Around Rome, New York Springgay rode through a torrential downpour with thunder and lightning which was so close he could smell the ozone. He decided to get off the high-way and stop early that day. He quit riding about 4 p.m. but having ridden for 32 hours he felt he’d earned a break. He found a motel in Rome and treat-ed himself to the only sit down hot meal of his entire trip at a Denny’s, he says. “I had some pot roast and mashed potatoes which was the only real sit down meal I had in 10 days,” he asserts. From New York Springgay rode west across the top of the U.S. until he reached North Dakota. From North Dakota he turned straight south rid-ing through South Dakota, touching on Kansas and Nebraska. Turning west, he picked up Colorado and Wyoming where he encountered signs stating that all roads south of Cheyenne were closed because of the flooding. “It was just surreal to see that,” he suggests. After Colorado, Springgay rode through Utah, Idaho, and Montana. While riding through Missoula, Montana about 7 p.m. on his way to Spokane a valve stem snapped on his rear tire. “I went from a perfectly han-dling bike to mush in about 50 feet,” he relates. With the assistance of Rick Dawson and AMA Towing, he managed to get the bike to safety to a motel. Springgay managed to get the wheel off that night and had it ready to go to a tire shop in the morning. The local Firestone Tire shop was a little reluctant to repair a motorcycle tire and had to be persuaded. As it was just a valve stem they accommodated him and he was on his way the next morning, having lost only about 12 hours. “I lost about 12 hours for the ride that I really couldn’t afford but I was still on the ride

and I wasn’t going to give up, so I left Missoula,” he continues. After Missoula, Springgay rode through Spokane to Umatilla, Oregon turning north up Interstate 5 to British Columbia. It rained all the way through Oregon to Hope, B.C. After checking the weather forecast a drenched Springgay chose to continue rather than quit. He was sorely tempt-ed however as there is no more dispiriting experi-ence than riding through pouring rain for hours on end. He rode to Prince George where he managed to get two and a half hours sleep in a local motel. The next day Springgay rode to Smithers and Hyder, Alaska. He obtained his receipt which officially ended his 48 Plus ride. With one challenge com-pleted, he still needed about 900 miles (1440 km) to complete his Ten Tenths challenge. He turned and headed south returning to Smithers where he got a motel for the night where he enjoyed about 4 and a half hours sleep. On resuming his trip, he rode from Smithers straight through to Yorkton, a dis-tance of about 1226 miles (1961 km) in about 18 hours. Springgay completed his Ten Tenths ride at Dafoe on his way to Yorkton. He arrived in Yorkton about 2 a.m. Tuesday, September 17 after completing a jour-ney which took him over 10,000 miles (16,000 km) riding through 49 states and three provinces in just under 10 days. Looking back, Springgay says it was a good trip. He rode through about 3000 miles (4800 km) of rain, 1500 miles (2400 km) of it was serious rain with thunder and lightning and rain accompanied by very low temperatures in north-ern B.C. and Alaska. Packing the right protec-tive gear made things bearable. He estimates he burned between $1200 and $1300 of fuel. “I com-pletely wore out a set of

new tires in 10 days.” Springgay, who has seven motorcycles in his garage, says he wanted the right bike for the job. His chosen motorcycle, a 2005 Honda ST1300, is equipped specifically for endurance riding. He’s mounted two GPS units with Sirius XM Traffic Information. It has Nexrad weather radar which has weather maps available on a screen in front of the rider to help him prepare for or navigate around major storms. “I’ve got all kinds of data readout on the bike so that I know what’s going on at all times.” The bike is modi-fied to be comfortable. Springgay built his own electronic cruise control. He’s added a hydration system which provides cold water to help him stay hydrated while rid-ing. Springgay bought the bike In addition to planning the route, preparing the bike and building physical stamina, riding gear and accessories are important, Springgay points out. He prefers L.D. (Long Distance) Comfort under-wear made of a high tech material that wicks mois-ture away. It’s designed with no seams so there are no pressure points to both-er a rider over a long peri-od of time. A seamless gym pant is also worn under an

outer ballistic nylon riding pant. A Tour Master water resistant jacket is worn. A Shoei Neotech modular helmet equipped with communications gear in it allows the rider to flip up the chin bar to eat, drink and talk to customs offi-cers, Springgay notes. A helmet liner protects the head as well. “It keeps my helmet from turning into this big bacteria fest over 10 days,” he says. Three pairs of gloves, a hot weather glove, a middle weight pair and a cold weather glove protect the hands. A pair of heavy boots which he feels saved his left foot complete the riding gear. “I carry just enough clothing to get me through the trip. This was a 10 day trip. Everything I carry into the motel room goes into basically one small gym bag,” he sug-gests. It might seem that Springgay would be con-tent to take some time off after his punishing experi-ence. Not so. He’s looking forward to the Big Tex Rally in Texas in a couple of weeks followed by the Ironbutt Memorial ride to honor fallen riders. Following three more ral-lies, Springgay plans to put the bike away for the year about the beginning of November. He plans to ride another 25,0000 to 30,000 miles (40,000 to

48000 km) next year. Entries for the 2015 Ironbutt Rally open the end of October. Partici-pants are chosen by the first of December. Spring-gay plans to apply as soon as entries open. If he’s selected to compete, he will have a year and a half to prepare for the rally. How is Springgay able to ride as much as he does? Well, it helps that he owns his own audio engineering company, Cogent Audio Labs which does audio consulting and design work for audio manufac-turers around the world. “It helps to be your own boss,” he remarks. Springgay says he enjoyed the experience and considers doing it again. He thinks he might start in Hyder, Alaska, get the toughest part of the ride over with and finish closer to home in Arizona. The toughest part of the ride was through the Rockies. “You have to real-ly want to go to Hyder,” he chuckles. In addition to maintain-ing old, local friendships, Springgay, who has dual Canadian and American citizenship, is addicted to the television show Corner Gas. He saw some reruns of the show in Chicago and thought it was bril-liant. In addition to the Corner Gas clothing he also owns all the DVDs.

Motorcycle adventure

Page 10A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, October 3, 2013

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$254,900165 Caldwell Drive

MLS® 475128$320,000

205 Betts Ave.MLS® 473405

$253,000

Evan JohnsonREALTOR®

[email protected]

®

BLUE CHIP REALTY

27 Pheasant CoveMLS® 466140

$519,000#108-289 Fietz Street

MLS® 469244$175,000

5 Partridge CourtEXCLUSIVE

$415,000

9 Partridge CourtEXCLUSIVE

$479,000

110 Circlebrooke DriveMLS® 464683

$275,000

58 Whitesand DriveMLS® 476849

$449,900

FEATURE FEATURE PROPERTYPROPERTY

25 Collingwood Cres.MLS® 475256

$239,900

1 Anderson DriveMLS® 474051

$369,000

New Listing 27 King St. W.MLS® 477383

$189,000

New Listing

®

BLUE CHIP REALTY

Stacy NeufeldREALTOR®

[email protected]

22 Switzer BayMLS® 473066

$380,000

401 Drummond Ave.MLS® 461015

$62,000

89 Dalewood CresMLS® 463143

$279,00052 Pheasant Cove

MLS® 465667$415,000

63 Westshore GreenMLS® 467095

$109,900

9 Partridge CourtEXCLUSIVE

$479,000401 Pleasant Ave.

MLS® 461014$39,000

418 Darlington St. E.MLS® 471708

$439,900

18 Eugene Dr.,Sandy Beach

MLS® 468569

$24,90023 3rd Ave., Otthon

MLS® 476776$116,000

RM of WallaceMLS® 476529

$459,9005 Partridge Court

EXCLUSIVE$415,000

217 Gordon Ave.MLS® 474600

$299,000

47 Westshore GreenMLS® 467099

$156,900226 3rd Avenue

MLS® 467261$226,000

144 2nd Ave. N.MLS® 469236

$189,000281 2nd Ave. N.

MLS® 469367$49,000

SOLD

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

New Listing New Listing

Reduced

Reduced

THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, October 3, 2013 - Page 11A

If your business is directly associated with the Real Estate Market,

you will want to consider advertising in the

REAL ESTATE NEWSThis special section runs every second

Thursday in

THE NEWS REVIEWIf you would like to place a display ad in

Real Estate News or if you have any questions

Call Ken at

783-7355

REAL ESTATE NEWS

R. MILLER’SPlumbing, Heating and Electrical Service Ltd.

225 - 4th Ave. N. Yorkton, Sask. S3N 1A9Phone: (306) 783-4020 Fax: (306) 782-5354

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

Evan JohnsonREALTOR®

(306) [email protected]

®

BLUE CHIP REALTY

Helping you is what we do.™

PREMIER REALTY45C Palliser Way, YorktonVange Vallaster

621-7272

The Award of Excellence

2009/2010/2011/2012

LongServiceAward

54 Collingwood Cres.1282 sq. ft., two fi replaces,

fully developed basement, 24’x22’ garage.MLS® 462953

$289,900

20 Alexandra Ave.1268 sq. ft. , 3 bedrooms,detached garage (24’x18’)

MLS® 474741$225,000

The ONE store for your perfect fl oor.™

For a free room measure visit CarpetOne.com

We'll come to you!Request a free, no obligation measurement for your next fl ooring project!

CarpetOne.comLinden Square Shopping Centre, Yorkton, SK

Phone: 306-782-6556Toll Free: 1-888-782-6556

205 Betts Ave.MLS® 473405

Amazing value,2010 build with huge detached garage.

$253,000

Blue Chip Realty®

Each office independently owned & operated.269A Hamilton Road, Yorkton, SK

306-783-6666 (Office) oremail [email protected]

SANDISHEWCHUK 621-9015

I'VE GOT YOU COVERED WITH

Feature PropertyFeature Property

® Blue Chip Realty

269 Hamilton Road, Yorkton, SK306 783-6666

Email: [email protected] [email protected]

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

79 Agricultural Ave.2 - 2 bedroomsuites, double

attached garage

$169,500MLS® 449626

77 Crestwood Cr.Lovely 1,352 sq. ft.,

4 bedroom,2 bath, bungalow

$269,900MLS® 468419

1 Dalewood Cr.1276 sq. ft., 4 bedroom

bungalow, detached single car garage

$249,900MLS® 469905

9 - 5th Ave. N.828 sq. ft.

offi ce/retail space

$10.50 sq. ft.Triple Net

MLS® 467420

FOR LEASE

OPEN HOUSES

New Listing All Proceeds going to support

Licensee: Society for the Involvement of Good Neighbors * Lo ery License# RR13-0065 * Only 3000 Tickets Printed * Only available for purchase/sale within Saskatchewan

Retail Value $6825

Thank you to everyone who bought tickets for the beautiful

SveinCo Developments playhouse.

The winner of the playhouse is

Logan Britton.

Watch for the total amount raised

in the next paper.

Home For Youunder

$150,000

162 Crescent Lake Road, Saltcoats

$324,900

NOGST!

At HomeFor You

“BEAUTY, ELEGANCE, CHARACTER”

Direct 306-621-0986

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

Sandi [email protected]

www.yorktonrealty.caPremier RealtyHelping you is what we do.™

312 Taylor Ave., Springside, SKMLS® 467846

Affordable$69,900

Located just 15 minutes northwest of Yorktonin town of Springside.

• 860 sq. ft. • 2 bedrooms• Spacious living room • 3 pce bath (hand held shower)

• Large eat-in kitchen • Front nook and back porchOVERSIZED LOT HAS GARDEN, FRUIT TREES,

MATURE GRASS, TREES AND SHRUBS

Page 12A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, October 3, 2013

STORE HOURS: Mon - Fri: 8:00am - 5:30pm Sat: 8:00am - 5:00pm • Closed Sundays & holidays for family time

Prices in effect until Oct. 12, 2013 or while quantities last! • Visit us on the net: www.windsorplywood.com

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DOOR SHOP SERVICESWe've got everything you'll need to install your new

door . . . Lock sets, shims, door stops etc. At

Windsor, we offer complete door shop services,

including prehanging, drilling and mortising for

hinges and knobs and installing glass.

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CRAFTSMANEXTERIORPREHUNG

FIBERGLASSPREHUNGDOORThese doors won’t dent, split, rot or crack like real oak doors will over time. Complete with 6 Lite clear glass and includes finger-joint jamb, 2” brickmould, hinges, mix fixed sill, white sweep and double drilled.White in colour.• Prehung• Smooth• 2” x 6” Jamb

PREHUNG • 6 PANEL

STEEL DOORYour choice of left or right hand swing. Comes completely assembled including brickmould, primed white and ready to finish. Pre-hung in 4 1/2” jamb. 2’8” x 6’8”.

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Windsor PlywoodThe you need to know!

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Armadillo From Rhino DeckComposite has never looked better. Armadillo’s “hardshell” is permanently fused to its composite core. The unique composi-tion of the outer layer provides better control over pigmentation, resulting in a denser, richer color, more variation and a more real-istic look.IT’S FULLY ARMORED:Armadillo’s super hard exterior shrug off scuffs, stains & boasts superior resistance to fading.OUT OF SIGHT:Armadillo’s grooved planks enable the use of the Rhino Deck hidden fastener system. It provides a clean, uninterrupted look and quick installation.• 20 year manufacturer’s warranty including 2 year defective parts replacement warranty• 5/4” x 6” - 12’, 16’ & 20’• 3 colors

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RUFF’S HOME FURNISHINGS60 Myrtle Ave., Yorkton, SK • (306) 782-2274Store hours: Mon - Fri 9 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. • Sat 9:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.

$699

7 PCE SUITEwith rectangular extension table and 6 side chairs made from select veneers and hardwood solids in a rich cottage design

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5 PCE SLEEK CONTEMPORARY SUITEIn a dark expresso color

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5 PCE CASUAL DINING

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THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, October 3, 2013 - Page 13A

Clopay Doors: A beautiful combination of Quality and Elegance

Supply, Install and Service of Residential, Commercial, Industrial Supply, Install and Service of Residential, Commercial, Industrial and Agricultural Overhead Doors and Openers Serving Yorkton, and Agricultural Overhead Doors and Openers Serving Yorkton,

Melville and the Parkland AreaMelville and the Parkland Area

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306-783-1699306-783-1699email: [email protected]

SERVING POSTAL CODES: S0A, S3N, S0EPhone for a Free In Home Consultation and a

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Page 14A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, October 3, 2013

Visit Us For A Day,Stay For A Lifetime

East Shore EstatesEast Shore Estates

SALTCOATSSALTCOATS LAKE FRONT LAKE FRONT LOTS LOTS FOR SALEFOR SALE

East Shore Estates

621-2140

All SveinCo homes are EnergyStar Certifi ed and include an extensive

10 year warranty program.

SOLD

SOLD

SOLD by MLS

2-3 p.m.

SOLD

SOLD

SOLD SOLD

SOLD

SOLD

SOLD

SOLD

New Listing

New Listing

New Listing

New Listing

New Listing

306. 782. [email protected]

www.coreywerner.com

Gavin Konkel -Specializing in Farm,

Acreage and Ag306.641.9123

Corey Werner -Owner/Broker

306.621.9680

Brooke Niezgoda -Residential Sales306.621.2586

SOLD

SOLD

SALTCOATSLAKE FRONT

LOTS FOR SALEPrices ranging from $49,900 - $62,000

SOLD

New Listing

New Listing

SOLD

SOLD

$189,900Bedrooms: 3Bathrooms: 2

Size: 1202 sq. ft.Year Built: 1932

Taxes: $1,377

33 MYRTLE AVE.

MLS® 457540Text: CORE28 to 33344

SOLD

Visit Us For A Day,Stay For A Lifetime

New Listing

$115,000Bedrooms: 3Bathrooms: 1

Size: 981.88 sq. ft.Year Built: 1912

Taxes: $1115

193 SIXTH AVE. N.

MLS® 469424Text: CORE1 to 33344

New Listing

New Listing

New Listing

New Listing

$175,000Bedrooms: 4Bathrooms: 2

Size: 1008 sq. ft.Year Built: 1967

Taxes: $1,493

117 COTTONWOOD CRES.

MLS® 467087Text: CORE2 to 33344

125 BETTS AVENUE

MLS® 467129

$71,900Bedrooms: 2Bathrooms: 1

Size: 728 sq. ft.Year Built: 1919

Taxes: $1,086

RM OF WALLACE

Acreage$20,000

MLS® 454612, 454614Text: CORE17 to 33344

SOLD

$99,900Bedrooms: 2Bathrooms: 1

Size: 672 sq. ft.Year Built: 1948

Taxes: $1,255

44 JAMES AVENUE

MLS® 453847Text: CORE8

to 33344

SOLD

SOLD

New Listing

$215,000Bedrooms: 4Bathrooms: 4

Size: 1132 sq. ft.Year Built: 1976

Taxes: $2008

6 ASHWOOD CRES.

MLS® 469871Text: CORE21 to 33344

30 WILLIS AVE.

$139,900Bedrooms: 3Bathrooms: 2

Size:1,632 sq. ft.Year Built: 1976

Taxes: $901 (2011)

MLS® 476236

28 BULL CRESCENT

$309,000Bedrooms: 4Bathrooms: 3

Size: 1368 sq. ft.Year Built: 1986

MLS® 472950

RM OF WALLACE-KONKEL

$269,000Bedrooms: 2Bathrooms: 1

Size: 1131 sq. ft.Year Built: 1950

MLS® 472447Text: CORE12 to 33344

25 LINCOLN AVE.

$229,000Bedrooms: 4Bathrooms: 2

Size: 1040 sq. ft.Year Built: 1962

Taxes: $1579MLS® 472531

Text: CORE25 to 33344

$50,000Size: 616 sq. ft.

Year Built: 1930Taxes: $1093

261 MAPLE AVE.

MLS® 471417

$287,500Bedrooms: 4Bathrooms: 2

Size: 1080 sq. ft.Year Built: 1972

Taxes: $1960 (2013)

268 CIRCLEBROOKE DR.

MLS® 476931Text: CORE32 to 33344

$225,000Bedrooms: 4Bathrooms: 2

Size: 1178 sq. ft.Year Built: 1960

Taxes: $2085

322 EIGHTH AVE. W., MELVILLE

MLS® 477276Text: CORE30 to 33344

$179,000Bedrooms: 4Bathrooms: 1

Size: 1056 sq. ft.Year Built: 1959

Taxes: $897

120 DRUMMOND AVE.

MLS® 476867Text: CORE20 to 33344

$169,900Bedrooms: 2Bathrooms: 1

Size: 1228 sq. ft.Year Built: 1956

Taxes: $2682

107 FIRST AVE. N.

MLS® 476872Text: CORE34 to 33344

$159,900Bedrooms: 6Bathrooms: 2

Size: 1334 sq. ft.Year Built: 1967

Taxes: $1424

311 THIRD ST. BREDENBURY

MLS® 477123Text: CORE27 to 33344

$10,800Lots & Land

Taxes: $414

139 THIRD AVE. E.

MLS® 471563

RM OF WALLACE

$759,000

MLS® 470126

$389,000Bedrooms: 4Bathrooms: 3

Size: 1976 sq. ft.Year Built: 1978

TONKIN ACRES

MLS® 469321

81 LOGAN CRESCENT EAST

$199,900Bedrooms: 3Bathrooms: 2

Size: 972 sq. ft. Year Built: 1954

Taxes: $1743MLS® 474044

Text: CORE6 to 33344

3-5 pm

22 ERICHSEN PLACE

MLS® 463244Text: CORE33 to 33344

$349,900Bedrooms: 2Bathrooms: 3

Size: 1736 sq. ft. Year Built: 1988

Taxes: $2,891(2013)

246 VICTORIA AVE.

$149,000Bedrooms: 2Bathrooms: 1

Size: 720 sq. ft.Year Built: 1960

Taxes: $1255

MLS® 472412Text: CORE29 to 33344

$100,880Bedrooms: 1

MLS® 450145Text: CORE4 to 33344

SPIRIT CREEK ACRES

$210,000Bedrooms: 4Bathrooms: 2

Size: 1042 sq. ft.Year Built: 1973

Taxes: $1885MLS® 469307

Text: CORE5 to 33344

86 ONTARIO AVE.

241 FOURTH AVE. N.

$219,900Bedrooms: 3Bathrooms: 1

Size: 1218 sq. ft.Year Built: 1962

Taxes: $1730MLS® 472371

Text: CORE7 to 33344

28 FRANKLIN AVE.

$137,900Bedrooms: 3Bathrooms: 2

Size: 640 sq. ft.Year Built: 1939

Taxes: $1190 (2012)MLS® 475384

Text: CORE26 to 33344

225 CIRCLEBROOKE DR.

$279,900Bedrooms: 4Bathrooms: 2

Size:1,144 sq. ft.Year Built: 1971

Taxes: $2074 (2013)MLS® 475280

Text: CORE to 33344

$25,000

PARK DRIVE, BURGIS BEACH

MLS® 470023Text: CORE19 to 33344

New Listing

MOND AVE. 107 F

New Listing New Listing

268 CIRCLE

New Listing

SOLD

177 LAURIER AVE.

Bedrooms: 3Bathrooms: 1Size: 910 sq. ft.

Year Built: 1949Taxes: $1471

MLS® 472775

177 LAURIER AV

SOLDSOLD

$226,000Bedrooms: 3Bathrooms: 2

Size: 1280 sq. ft.Year Built: 1986

Taxes: $1,579 (2012)

140 PEBBLE BEACH RD.

MLS® 461595

$264,900 Bedrooms: 5Bathrooms: 4

Size: 1747 sq. ft.Year Built: 1976

Taxes: $2,318

15 MCBURNEY DR.

MLS® 455628Text: CORE13 to 33344

$245,000Bedrooms: 3Bathrooms: 3

Size: 988 sq. ft.Year Built: 1967

Taxes: $1869

34 CANWOOD CRES.

MLS® 477517Text: CORE11 to 33344

$245 000 Size: 988 sq ft

New ListingNew Listing

$108,000Bedrooms: 3Bathrooms: 1

Size: 1136 sq. ft.Year Built: 1966

Taxes: $1300 (2013)

224 PARK AVE. CHURCHBRIDGE

MLS® 477864

$108 000 Size:

New ListingNew Listing

$159 900 Size: 1334 sq ft

S .

New ListingNew Listing

$287 500 Size: 1080 sq ft

New ListingNew Listing

$225 000 Size: 1178 sq ft

,

New ListingNew Listing

$179 000 Size: 1056 sq ft

New ListingNew Listing

$169 900 Size: 1228 sq ft

New ListingNew Listing

$97,600 MLS® 450784

HAYDEN ACREAGE

East Shore Development 2 Anderson Trail MLS 471933 .................... $55,000 3 Anderson Trail MLS 471934 .................... $55,000 4 Anderson Trail MLS 471935 .................... $55,000 5 Anderson Trail MLS 471936 .................... $52,000 6 Anderson Trail MLS 471937 .................... $52,000 7 Anderson Trail MLS 471938 .................... $52,000 8 Anderson Trail MLS 471940 .................... $45,900 9 Anderson Trail MLS 471941 .................... $45,90010 Anderson Trail MLS 471942 ................... $45,90011 Anderson Trail MLS 471943 ................... $55,00012 Anderson Trail MLS 471944 ................... $55,000

13 Anderson Trail MLS 471945 ................... $55,00014 Anderson Trail MLS 471946 ................... $53,00015 Anderson Trail MLS 471947 ................... $53,00016 Anderson Trail MLS 471949 ................... $53,00017 Anderson Trail MLS 471950 ................... $59,50018 Anderson Trail MLS 471951 ................... $59,50019 Anderson Trail MLS 471952 ................... $59,50020 Anderson Trail MLS 471954 ................... $62,00021 Anderson Trail MLS 471956 ................... $62,00022 Anderson Trail MLS 471957 ................... $62,00023 Anderson Trail MLS 471958 ................... $62,000

PICTURED ABOVE (L-R) ARE: John Denysek, Regional Director, Saskatchewan Abilities Council, Deana Jesmer, Community Relations Coordinator, Saskatchewan Abilities Council, Gerry Ann Fraser, Franchisee, Boston Pizza, Jim Treliving, Chairman, Boston Pizza International).

Boston Pizza gives back It’s all about giving back and Boston Pizza is on board with doing that. Jim Treliving of CBC’s Dragons’ Den and Chairman of Boston Pizza International recently made himself available to present a $42,846.47 cheque on behalf of the Saskatchewan Boston Pizza Franchisees and the Boston Pizza Foundation to the Saskatchewan Abilities Council for the dollars raised from Saskatchewan’s first annual Boston Pizza Day for Camp Easter Seal. “I’m thrilled to be able to recognize the incredible efforts of our guests and franchisees in Saskatchewan to raise money for a very worthy cause,” says Treliving. “Thanks to their gen-erosity and all of the hard work of our stores and staff, we’re giving a lot of kids facing challenges the opportunity to experience summer camp.”

All Saskatchewan Boston Pizza Restaurants, BP’s Lounges and the Saskatchewan Abilities Council came together to raise funds and aware-ness for Camp Easter Seal at the 1st annual Boston Pizza Day for Camp Easter Seal, in June. Our guests came in for lunch, dinner and drinks with family and friends at all Boston Pizza restaurants in Saskatchewan. The Franchisees donated 10 per cent of total net sales that day to Camp Easter Seal through the Boston Pizza Foundation . Saskatchewan is a leader in philan-thropic giving across Canada and once again, Boston Pizza guests have shown their generosity by supporting a well deserved Saskatchewan Charity.

Continued on Page 16.

THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, October 3, 2013 - Page 15A

PRICES EFFECTIVE THE WEEK OFOctober 4 to 17, 2013

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

YORKTON

GROCERY DELIVERY SERVICEDIRECT LINE 783-8011

We pick, bag & deliver your groceries right to your home in Yorkton.

Find us onFacebook

During a sale, participating CO-OP® and the MARKETPLACE™ stores make every effort to supply suffi cient advertised merchandise to meet your need. 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®, 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. MARKET TOWN® is a registered trade-mark of TMC Distributing Ltd. THE MARKETPLACE™, THE MARKETPLACE BAKERY™, THE MARKETPLACE DELI™, THE MARKETPLACE BISTRO™, THE PRODUCE MARKETPLACE™, THE CO-OP PANTRY™ are trade-marks of Federated Co-operatives Limited. Actual items may vary slightly from illustrations. Some illustrations are serving suggestions ony. GST is extra where applicable.

void

PRE-OWNEDCLEARANCE

$24999

$26241

$44999

$47900$24900

$33999

$23999 $26999

270 HAMILTON ROAD, YORKTON (Next to Walmart)

Local 783-9022 Toll Free 1-877-726-0823;

www.yorktondodge.com*See dealer for details

up to41 hw mpg

0%

2013

Dodge DartFINANCINGAVAILABLE

*

Page 16A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, October 3, 2013

13095DD00

ROYAL CANADIAN LEGIONBRANCH NO. 77

PRESENTS

380 BROADWAY ST. WEST, YORKTON, SK

For Details Call Legion Office 783-9789Visit our website www.yorktonlegion.ca

BEEF ON A BUNWITH VARIETY ...............................

$8

Book Your Christmas Party Now!

Something Different Every Friday 5 P.M. - 7 P.M.

Hall Rental Available with catering or without

50/50 & MEAT DRAWS EVERY FRI & SAT

“Affordable Middle Income Housing.”

The Canadian Federation of University Women, Yorkton, invites the public to attend a

discussion on “Affordable Middle Income Housing.”

A panel comprised of a home builder, a

contractor, a financial advisor, city planner

and a realtor will discuss issues pertinent

to this topic. This discussion is open to the public, free of charge, at the Parkland College, on Tuesday, October 15,

2013 @ 7:00 P.M., in Room 101.

Open Cinema – with Elwyn VermetteYorkton Public Library

Tuesday, October 15 – 7 p.m.The Real Sherlock

HolmesNo charge

Everyone welcomeA joint project of the

Yorkton Film Festivaland the Yorkton Public

Library.

Alzheimer/Dementia Support MeetingOct. 9, 2 p.m. @ the Yorkton & District

Nursing Home Conference Room

All are welcome! Call 306-786-0722 for

info.

Jeffery Straker A “Stars for

Saskatchewan” concert presented by the Yorkton

Arts Council Oct. 24 at 8 p.m.in the Anne Portnuff Theatre

Singer-songwriter-pianist Jeffery Straker has

released several studio albums, recorded for CBC Radio’s Canada

Live, reached the top ten on Much More Music, and left critics raving! Tickets at the Yorkton

Arts Council office, Welcome Home Floral and Gift Shop, or door.

The Yorkton and District Horticultural

Society Meeting Oct. 17, 7 p.m. in the

Sunshine Room, SIGN on North Street. This is

“member involvement” night, where everyone shares gardening tips

and advice.Everyone is welcome: you

don’t have to be a member to come to the

meeting and hear some great garden-

ing advice! Members, please remember to bring

your garden photosfor the photo album.

Bible TalksSunday’s @ 4 p.m. @

Baileys Funeral ChapelUntil Nov. 10

All are welcome!Call 306-270-6477.

The Yorkton Branch of the Saskatchewan

Genealogy Society Meeting

October 8 at 7 p.m. at the Western Development

Museum. There will be a

presentation on how to use Legacy 7 for your genealogy research.

Everyone is welcome!

New Horizons Senior Center Bingo

78 First Ave. North Yorkton, Sk.

Bingo will be played Sunday, Oct. 20 and continue every third

Sunday of each month. Bingo starts at 2:00 p.m.

Eight games will be played at 25 cents a

game. Extra cards will be available

Everyone is welcome. Lunch included

Admission $3/person.

Parkland Right to Life Meetings

Meets every third Wednesday of the month

@ St. Gerard’s Hall basement @ 7 p.m. For info. call 306-783-6240.

Pierson Carnival of Crafts

Edward Sports CenterPierson, Manitoba,

Oct. 5, 11:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Over 80 crafters, 15 are new... leatherwork,

fudge, woodworking, ceramics, home decor

(too much to mention!)– $3 admission, includes

entry for over 70 door prizes!

Royal Canadian Legion General

MeetingOct. 23, 7:30 p.m.New members and

volunteers needed! You do not have to be a

veteran to get involved!All are welcome!

Life ChainSponsored by the

Parkland Right to Life group. Oct. 6, 2-3 p.m.Corner of Gladstone &

Broadway. All are welcome! For details call

306-783-6240.

Community ChoirCome join the fun!

Yorkton Community Concert Choir. Please

call Laurene at 306-782-0460 or Anna at 306-744-

2729 for info.

Yorkton PublicLibrary Programs

• Fall session Pre-school Storytime

Ages 3 - 5 yearsMonday or Thursdays

10:30 – 11:15 amOct.7 – Nov. 28

• Mother Goose on the Loose, A mother and

child program for ages 0 - 3. Monday or

Thursdays 10:30 – 11 a.m.Oct. 7 – Nov. 28

Con’t from Page 15.

“On behalf of all of the franchisee’s in the province, we would like to thank all of our staff for the efforts they put into the day and mostly, we would like to thank our guests for the support they gave us and Camp Easter Seal. We are thrilled to be able to contribute in a little way towards the success of Camp Easter Seal,” says, Saskatchewan Boston Pizza Franchisee, Jim Werschler. Boston Pizza guests helped raise additional funds and spirits for these very special campers! A large number of MPs, MLAs, Municipal Leaders, Chamber and Tourism Executive Members along with Saskatchewan Abilities Council Board Members, Volunteers and Staff across the Province rolled up their sleeves to help serve guests at all Saskatchewan Boston Pizza locations to build aware-ness. Guests purchased a specially designed Camp Card when they vis-ited a Boston Pizza restaurant and wrote a camp card message to some-one special. The camp cards were posted throughout the restaurants and literally filled the walls with support for Saskatchewan kids with disabilities to attend summer camp. “On behalf of the 700 individuals that attended Camp Easter Seal this past summer, we are overwhelmed by the generosity of the Boston Pizza infrastructure that has partnered with us to enhance the lives of chil-dren with disabilities. The enthusi-

asm and commitment of the franchiseowners is admirable as they rallied insupport of the first annual BostonPizza Day for Camp Easter Seal,”comments John Denysek, RegionalDirector, Saskatchewan AbilitiesCouncil. All funds raised through BostonPizza’s 10 per cent of net sales dona-tion and Camp Cards were donatedto Camp Easter Seal through theBoston Pizza Foundation, which rais-es funds for a variety of local, regionaland national charities across Canada,including the Heart & StrokeFoundation of Canada, Kids HelpPhone and Juvenile Diabetes ResearchFoundation. “On behalf of the Boston PizzaFoundation and myself I would like toextend my sincere congratulations toall the Saskatchewan Boston PizzaFranchisees and their restaurantstaff for an outstanding fundraisingeffort for Camp Easter Seal, makingthe presentation of this cheque possi-ble. The Boston Pizza Foundation hasraised and donated over $ 16 millionto date, since it’s inception in 1990 tocharities across Canada making a dif-ference in the communities we live,work and play in. It is through thecontinuous and generous philanthrop-ic work of our Boston Pizza franchi-sees and their teams that we continueto be able to support the incrediblework of charities like Camp EasterSeal in making a difference for thosein need right across Canada,” addsCheryl Treliving, Executive Director,Boston Pizza Foundation.

Boston Pizza gives back

SPRITE, is a spayed female Samoyed cross about four to five years old and is up to date with her vaccinations. She is a very happy and talkative girl who loves attention. If you’re that responsible, loving home please call 306-783-4080 for more information or drop by the Shelter at 79 - 7th Ave. S in Yorkton.

Community Events

THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, October 3, 2013 - Page 17A

NEWS REVIEW SPORTS

Sportnotes

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. Appoint-ments are also available. Contact Amber Zaharia for more information by phone at 828-2401 or by email [email protected].

Sunrise Cycling Club

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

YRHS Football The Yorkton Regional High School Raiders foot-ball program is back for another hard hitting sea-son in the Moose Jaw High School Football League. After a one loss season took the Raiders to the MJHSFL final in 2012 where they fell short to Moose Jaw Peacock the Raiders will be host-ing the Weyburn Eagles in their annual Friday Night Lights game with their undefeated season on the line. Come out to Century Field Friday night to see some of the best high school football players in the province as the 3-0 Raiders look to continue their quest for a provincial title. See the Dance Innovations dance team and the Raider Gridders Cheerleaders at halftime. Rock climbing and entertainment will be on hand. Gametime is 7:00 but come early.

Have something for Sport Notes? Have an interesting local sports story, Email [email protected] to give us your tips for The News Review Sports.

TERRIERS ROOKIE JORDAN ROSS celebrates a late game winning goal with #91 Tayler Thompson on Saturday night as the Terriers staved off a hungry Estevan Bruins team with a 3-2 win. The Terriers are 2-2 after two weeks of the season

By CHASE RUTTIGN-R Writer

Over the fi rst two weeks of the SJHL sea-son the Yorkton Terriers have found out one of the biggest changes in going from being one of the top teams in the league to being the defending league champions, each night is a big game for the opposition. With the Weyburn Red Wings coming out and giving the Terriers headaches on the opening weekend of the season splitting games with the Terriers in a home and home series, the Battlefords North Stars did one better in beating Yorkton in their home barn. In mid-week action the North Stars came out with a gritty effort against the Terriers, showing that they wanted to prove themselves against the defending champs with a physical fi rst period that ended scoreless. Kailum Gervais and Ben Greenway started off the second period with the best fi ght of the 2013/14 SJHL season so far to attempt to give their respective teams a jump in a deadlock game. In the end it would be the North Stars who got the jump scoring three unanswered goals in the second period en route to a 4-0 win over the Terriers to move Yorkton’s early

season record to 1-2. With their Viterra Division rivals in the Estevan Bruins coming into town Satur-day night the Terriers needed to step up and make a statement with a new squad early in the season. They did just that with a blend of newcomers and 20 year old tal-ent stepping up to defend home ice against the Bruins. Just over fi ve minutes into the fi rst peri-od rookie Zack Zadorozniak of Foam Lake put home a goahead goal to put the Terri-ers on top. Early in the second period vet-eran stepped up as Brady Norrish clanged home a slap shot from the point to beat Matt Gibney and put the Terriers up 2-0. Not to be outdone the Bruins came roar-ing back to tie the game thanks to goals from Nolan Nicholas and Darcy DeRoose to put the pressure back on the Terriers. With returning forwards Dylan Johnson and Josh Ellis missing on Saturday due to minor injuries the Terriers got their scor-ing punch from an emerging forward pros-pect as Jordan Ross fi nished a rebound on a Gibney shot to give Yorkton a 3-2 win. Most importantly to assistant coach Casey O’Brien it was another improvement all around for the Terriers. “It wasn’t important that we came back with a win on home ice after losing to

Battlefords on Wednesday in the sense of the standings, but more so to show that we are on the right course with starting the season and working towards our end goal and I think we did that tonight,” says O’Brien. O’Brien also tipped his hat to the North Stars for their impressive performance on Wednesday. “Battlefords really showed that they can be a contender in the North so far this sea-son and I think you saw why on Wednes-day and it was our fi rst time seeing them but we get a look at them again soon which will be a good chance at measuring where we are at development wise when we play them next.” O’Brien was also pleased with the pro-duction out of young wingers in Zador-ozniak and Ross with some key veterans out of the lineup. “Having Ellis and John-son out of the lineup was a good chance to see who can come in amongst the young-sters and produce so it was great to see two of our new wingers answer the call with goals,” mentions O’Brien who noted that the Terriers returned a lot of their players on the blueline this season, leav-ing them a bit thinner at forward.

Cont. on Page 19.

Terriers bounce back at home

By CHASE RUTTIGN-R Writer

The Yorkton Raiders sea-son ended at Gutheridge Field last year, losing in the MJHSFL Championship to Moose Jaw Peacock after beating them at home in the regular season. Returning to Moose Jaw for the fi rst time since the heartbreaking loss, the Raiders knew that The Raiders did just that as they rolled past the Cen-tral Cyclones 41-9, defeating a team that beat them last year at Century Field on the last play of their annualFriday Night Lights game. The Raiders got revenge during the league semifi -

nals, on Saturday they got it a second time to settle the score. Rookie Alex Popoff, one of the Raiders emerging of-fensive weapons, is already aware that if the Orange are going to achieve their goal of a provincial title, Gutheridge Field will have to be home turf as much as Century Field. “This season to go to pro-vincials we have to play here, we have to win, and we want to make this fi eld ours just as much as anyone else,” said Yorkton slotback Alex Popoff, who fi nished with fi ve catches for 106 yards on offence and an in-terception on defence.

Con’t on Page 18.

YRHS Sr. Raiders blow out Central in first road game

ALEX POPOFF takes it to the house in an early season game. Popoff was once again stellar on the road against Central, earn-ing 106 receiving yards on five catches.

Page 18A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, October 3, 2013

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

YORKTON TERRIERS vsHUMBOLDT BRONCOS

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

Friday, October 11, 2013

YORKTON TERRIERS vsMELVILLE MILLIONAIRES

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

Upcoming Yorkton Terrier Home Games

By CHASE RUTTIGN-R Writer Yorkton’s Atom Grid-der football team fought to maintain their no-loss record in the fi-nal two games of the regular season in two hard-fought games, but slipped to 4-2 as they headed into one of four Bowl Games on Sunday, September 29 at Regi-na’s Liebel Field.

The Gridders met up with The Regina Cana-dians at Liebel Field on Saturday, September 14 with 10 players missing from the roster. The game started with the first series riddled with 5 offside calls lasting 10 minutes. The Gridders found it difficult to gain tempo, but the defense had a very consistent and strong game. Even-tually, the Canadians

scored a touchdown and a single-point conver-sion with only seconds left in the first half.The second half saw the Gridders get their run-ning game going. Cart-er Pawliw had a great run followed by Josh Haczkewicz who railed down the sideline for a 50-yard touchdown run, Yorkton however fell short on the convert and lost 7-6 to end their un-

defeated season.Saturday, September 21, the Gridders hosted the undefeated Regi-na Thunderbirds who were ranked 2nd int the 18 team field of Atom Teams in the Regina Minor Football League. The Gridders, who had dropped to 4-1, were in a 4-way tie for 4th place in the league. The first half of the game was a defensive battle. Thunderbirds got on the scoreboard first and tallied a 2-point conver-sion. Right before half time, the Gridders ran their double-reverse for 100 yards with ball car-rier Josh Haczkewicz, but unfortunately the play was called back on a holding call. 8-0 at half for the Thunder-birds.The Gridders opened up the second half with a great drive all the way down to the Thunderbird 10-yard line, but then the offense stalled and couldn’t score. Then the Thunderbirds started to ground and pound the ball 100 yards to score another touchdown. The Birds missed on the con-version. The Gridders offense experienced a two and out leaving the Thunderbirds to score again. 20-0. Yorkton would add a TD to make

it 26-6. The Atom Grid-ders finished regular season play with a 4-2 record and in 7th place out of the 18 teams in the RM, earning them a spot to play for the Kanuka Thuringer Bowl Game at Liebel Field on September 29 against the Regina Badgers.Gridders had a great start firing off with Josh Haczkewicz on a double reverse run into the endzone, but unfor-tunately the touchdown was called back on a holding penalty. That didn’t slow down the Gridder offense as Josh Herman carried the ball 25 yards for a Gridder touchdown. The Grid-ders fumbled on their 2-point conversion at-tempt. 6-0 Gridders. Second half, the Grid-ders offense did more damage to themselves than the Badgers de-fense with ball-security issues committing four fumbles in the second half. The Gridder de-fense was put in a bind as they had to try and stop the Badgers from the Gridder 20-yard line. Three plays lat-er, the Badgers scored again and converted to take a 14-6 final.Defensive Coach Ryan Effa was so pleased to have been able to work

all of the kids that came out this year. “We had 48 players on our roster this year. That’s a lot of kids to manage. It is amazing because in our relatively short season, we see all of our players, boys and girls, grow so much. It’s a great pro-gram to be a part of.”While the season didn’t end quite how he would have liked to see, Head Coach Jason Boyda says that it was a pleasure to coach these young Grid-ders. “The season was so enjoyable because of the support we had from the parents and com-munity. We are very thankful to the YRHS Senior Gridder players who came out to give back to the football pro-gram by taking time out of their busy lives to coach future players.” Coach Boyda went on to put this successful season into perspective. “It is our goal each year to make it to one of the Bowl Games in the RMF. That’s no small feat. We are one community with one team in a league of 18 teams. Recently, RMF was considered to be one of the top minor football programs in the country. Our Atoms are doing all right – obvi-ously, we will reach for better.”

By CHASE RUTTIGN-R Writer It was an unexpected flurry of points for Saskatoon Blades pros-pect Turner Ottenbreit as he started his second SMAAAHL season with the Yorkton Harvest over the weekend against the Swift Current Legionnaires at the Farrell Agencies Arena, but it was one that showed just how much the young blue-liner has developed from the end of the 2012/13 Harvest sea-son. Ottenbreit came up with six points over two games, including two goals in big wins over Swift Current to start the Yorkton Harvest

season at 2-0 following a preseason loss to the Tisdale Trojans the weekend before. Head coach Dan Cross was surprised with the production of his blue-line, but notes that the backend is the strong point of the 2013/14 Harvest roster. “Ottenbreit might not be a powerplay weapon like Ethan Bear was for us (last season), but he has worked on his game a lot over the summer and played well at Blades camp and it showed this weekend that if we get things going from the blueline, building up play and chipping in with goals, we can get these types of weekends. Yorkton swept Swift

Current rather easily, a feat that Cross says defines the top end playoff teams in the league from those fight-ing to make it at the end of the season. “With so many week-end back to backs even-tually you see a lot of splits, one team wins on Saturday and the other takes the game on Sunday, but if you can come out and sweep a team on a consistent basis you can really put together a good record at the end of the sea-son,” says Cross who hopes to get the Harvest into the Mac’s Midget Tournament with an improved start in 2013/14.

Blades prospect Ottenbreit lifts Harvest to 2-0 start

YORKTON HARVEST players celebrate a sweep of Swift Current at the FAA to startoff their 2013/14 in style. Turner Ottenbreit had six points in two games.

YORKTON ATOM GRIDDERS finished the 2013 RMF season 4-2, up with the Top Ten teams in one of the best minor football leagues in the country.

Atom Gridders just fall short of undefeated in successful year

Raiders bring undefeated football season into Friday Night Lights Cont. from Page 17.

One week after rush-ing for 297 yards as team, the Cyclones could manage just one-yard on the ground with Zach Hagerman pick-ing up just ten yards on five carries and quar-terback Parker Chow finishing with minus-9 yards on ten carries. Yorkton has won the battles along the line of scrimmage all season and against a school that is traditionally one of the top two schools in

Moose Jaw each season the Raiders did some advanced scouting in the film room to ensure that they would be pre-pared for the Cyclones before heading on the bus to Moose Jaw. “We scouted their offence and knew some of their plays, so we knew what was coming at us,” says Popoff. The Raiders also got two more impressive offensive performances out of star running back and quarterback pair Zak Kais and David

Balysky in the convinc-ing win. Kais finished with 13 carries for 93 yards and four touchdowns in the win. while the quarter-back Balysky was the Raiders’ top rusher with 11 carries for 133 yards. Balysky also threw for 157 yards on 9-of-16 passing, earning less yardage in the air than in the Raiders two open-ing games with the Cyclones D doing a decent job of stopping the majority of the Raiders passing play

with the exception of Popoff who hauled in well over half of Balysky’s 157 yards. Next for the Raiders is a game against the Weyburn Eagles that will be on Friday Night Lights as the third annual FNL game will be hosted at Century Field at 7:00 p.m. For the Raiders and Eagles they will be renewing a storied rivalry that dates back to their days in the Regina RIFL league before the two teams

moved to Moose Jaw last season. Weyburn is coming off of a down year, but in their RIFL days it was the Eagles that had the Raiders number on many occasions in the late 00’s. Now the tables are turned and the Raiders seem like league and title favor-ites. Both teams will be bringing it with the excitement of playing football under the lights. Last year the Raiders undefeated sea-son was dashed by the

Cyclones in the FNL game which the Raiders are 1-1 in since starting the tradition. With a race with Peacock for first place and home-field playoff advantage brewing the Raiders will have to avoid look-ing past an always pre-pared Eagles team if they dream match up of an undefeated Peacock-Raiders regular season tilt is to become a real-ity. Either way you will not want to miss out on the action at Century Field this Friday.

Earlier this week I tuned into the AL Wild Card Tiebreaker (The play-in game before the play-in game) between the Texas Rangers and the Tam-pa Bay Rays and was preparing to get my MLB Baseball preview ready (ALDS/NLDS predictions at the bottom of the column) before I noticed that Nelson Cruz Jr. of the Rangers was playing and in manager Ron Washington’s lineup. Cruz just happened to be suspended for Major League Baseball games 112-162 for a Performance Enhancing Drug violation. He was returning for the play in game because it was Game 163 of the regular season and if the Rangers won he would be eligible for the playoffs, a long with a hand-ful of other players suspended this season lucky enough to have their suspension time end just as the deadline for playoff rosters hit. Normally this would be the cause for a great up-roar of Hot Sports Takes from the usual suspects. Three hours of discussion on Pardon the Interrup-tion and Around the Horn. Except there was no real outrage, and there shouldn’t have been any. In the year 2013 PED’s and performance enhanc-ing supplements are as part of sports as the bench press and wind sprints. Millions of people each day go to the pharmacy and drop hundreds of dollars on the next magic tub of powder to go to the peak of their athletic or aesthetic ability. Creatine to increase muscle mass quickly, protein powders to sustain it, pre workout to get you “amped” and lift more weights to get built quicker. We as a culture are infatuated with the poten-tial of our human bodies more than ever since the Cold War. Some of it is superfi cial, but the culture

starts in high school athletics where the letter-man jacket has been replaced by the gym bag full of supplements as the way you could most likely spot the next Varsity star of your hometown. Per-formance enhancing, but not with HGH and ste-roids. Yet performance enhancing nonetheless. So why are we still so obsessed with wagging the fi nger at athletes who get caught using ste-roids and HGH to increase their body mass for performance or to rehab an injury? When the shelf life of our favorite athletes goes from the early 30’s to their early 40’s as we saw with Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens and Andy Pet-tite? When we see generation defi ning moments like Ben Johnson’s 1988 100 meter gold medal, Lance Armstrong’s Tour de France titles, Barry Bonds 73 home runs, over a race where the majority of the talent pool was performance enhancing or was caught performance enhancing are we sup-

posed to pretend those things never happened? Are we supposed to sit and lie to ourselves that it didn’t take all of the things we love about sports to achieve those great feats? Ben Johnson tore himself apart in the gym for those 100 meter times to be achieved as well as perfecting his starts, Lance Armstrong overcame cancer to become the best cyclist in the world and made people care about a sport where people rode bikes in the mountains for long hours early in the morning in the United States. Barry Bonds was one of the best outfi elders of all time before steroids and took them to catch up to the rest of the league to tap into his potential as the greatest hitter in baseball history, extending years onto a Hall of Fame career that gave us something to cheer and to talk about. Nowadays a PED violation is as newsworthy as a DUI arrest or a player injury and the use of per-formance enhancers to heal injuries and achieve a dream that thousands of athletes each year sac-rifi ce to try to attain is a reality of the modern sports landscape. You can try to fi ght it, but the PED era is never going away. I am going to stop worrying about who is using what and keep focus-ing on the moments that remind us all why we love sports, not who is taking which magic pill to get better. MLB Predictions: National League Pirates over Cardinals Dodgers over Atlanta American League Tigers over A’s Red Sox over Rays/Indians

ColumnChase Ruttig

Ruttig’s rants

How I learned to stop worrying and embrace PED’s

Ross developing into standout rookie for the Terriers Cont. from Page 19.

Twenty year old for-ward Tayler Thompson had an injury scare dur-ing the win, crawling off the ice after blocking a shot on the penalty kill. Thompson return and performed capably, lead-ing by example according to O’Brien. “When you see that a 20 year old who has had WHL experience like Thompson coming out and showing the young-sters that there are guys in their last year of Ju-nior hockey that are go-ing to lay it out there ev-ery night it really sets the tone for the guys coming into defending the title this season.” One of those players who knows that role in

mixing in with a loaded roster is Ross, who scored the game winner in addi-tion to a crucial power play goal on Opening Night at the FAA. A for-mer Tisdale Trojan in the SMAAAHL, Ross says that after adjusting to not being one of the big-gest forwards on the ice at 6 2’ making the jump to Junior hockey, prov-ing that he can continue to get timely goals is top priority. “I know that I have to get my conditioning up as well as my strength to transition to the Junior level, but I also want to contribute right now to a team that won the title last season so to get two goals at home in three games is a thrill,” says Ross.

Several Terriers spent the week in Warman as part of the SJHL Show-case including head coach Trent Cassan. O’Brien said the time will be used on skill development and to nurse some minor in-juries before playing the Weyburn Red Wings on the road for the second time in 2013/14. York-ton lost the first game 3-0. Going back to Wey-burn expect the Terri-ers to come out with the thoughts of reminding their Viterra Division ri-vals who won the South Conference last season in another test for the new look Terriers. Yorkton’s next home game will be Tuesday in a highly anticipated Can-alta Cup rematch with the Humboldt Broncos.

DAYLAN GATZKE dropped the gloves during the third period of the Terriers win over the Estevan Bruins. Yorkton will host Humboldt Tuesday night at the FAA.

Rider Report: Despite strong start the wheels are coming off for Durant By CHASE RUTTIG

N-R Writer

Darian Durant came out to start the 2013 CFL with guns blazing, silence all those in Rider Nation who doubted him during challenging 2011 and 2012 seasons with the best football of his career. Getting Geroy Simon in the offseason and seeing Kory Sheets improve into the league’s top rusher, the George Cortez offense ran through DD like clock-work. Durant controlled the turnover battle, pro-tected the football, and with Sheets and a good offensive line the Riders always found a way to bury teams in the second half. Since the months have changed from summer to fall in Saskatchewan things have been much different however.

Since Labour Day Weekend the Riders are 0-4, missing Kory Sheets and the con-fidence in execution that was a trademark of their start that had the prov-ince thinking Grey Cup this summer. Now the Riders are looking like they will be facing the possibility of two road games before to reach the Celebration in Rider Nation as the likely last

Grey Cup at Taylor Field will likely go through Calgary in the West Fi-nal and with the Riders falling further down the wayside it will be go-ing through B.C. Place for the West Semifinal should things stay as dismal as they have been over the past month. With Durant getting support from a large segment of Rider Nation when the struggles first

came, all patience is be-ing thrown out of the window after another debacle of a first half where Durant and the Riders offense wasted away a football game despite a quality defen-sive effort. Until Weston Dressler’s fourth quarter touchdown the Riders offense came from two punt singles from Ricky Schmitt and a safety conceded by Al’s punter

Sean Whyte. The Riders were down 4-3 at half-time and in the end lost to 5-8 Montreal 17-12 in a de facto must win game with time running out to right the ship. Durant threw for three interceptions in the loss, going 24/46 for 335 yards, but only find-ing the end zone once. For the Riders whose hopes essentially rest on the arm of Durant with

Sheets out of the lineup, the interception numbers are a concern. Saskatchewan totalled just 18 rushing yards on Sunday, if they are going to win on Friday night in a loud B.C. Place Durant will need to be better. A veteran of the league, ex-cuses are out of the win-dow. Durant will have to put the team on his back if the Grey Cup dream is to become a reality.

THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, October 3, 2013 - Page 19A

265 Bradbrooke Dr.Yorkton, Sask. S3N 3L3

(across from the hospital)

306-783-4331306-783-3988

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HEARN’S WESTVIEW PHARMACY

NEW HOURSThese new hours are effective Oct. 1/13

Monday to Friday 7 a.m. till 11 p.m.Saturday 8 a.m. till 11 p.m.

Sunday 9 a.m. till 9 p.m.

YORKTON16 Broadway St. E.

5F-275 Broadway St. E.

Discover the Freedom of the sky

and learn to fly!- Introductory Flight Lesson

- Airplane Rides- Inquire about Private Pilot Ground School

evening classes starting mid Oct.- Considering a career? Inquire about the

SIAST Aviation Diploma program.

Join Us . . .Saturday, October 5Sunday, October 6

Yorkton Airport9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

Coffee and Donuts will be servedPancake Breakfast Sunday

For more Info. (306) 783-0321

20th Annual

OPEN HOUSE

Page 20A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, October 3, 2013

Whatever you need done, you’ll find the solutions right here!

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71 Broadway East306-783-3028

By CHASE RUTTIGN-R Writer A full contingent of racers showed up in Yorkton last Saturday for the final round of the Saskatchewan Championship Motocross series. Clear skies and a top notch track that was carefully constructed for the large Saskatchewan Championship finale greeted the more than 270 entries that came from the three prairie-provinces. The hundreds of people who came through the gates were not disappointed as they were treated to outstanding racing with many locals having break-out performances to close out the provincial motocross sea-son for 2013. In the kids classes new Yorkton racers Josh and Noah Duerksen came out on top with Josh grabbing three 1st place trophies and his younger brother Noah pulling in a 1st, 2nd and 3rd overall in an impressive weekend for the Deurksen clan. Another nota-ble performer was the former Yorkton racer Jarrett Biro who left with a 1st and 2nd place finish to return to his former hometown with some season ending hardware for his tro-phy case. First time racer Joshua Kulcsar of Yorkton fin-ished 6th in the 50cc 4 to 6 year old class as he starts out in motocross racing for the first time.The Beginner GP class full-size bikes category was stacked with returning and new entries from the Yorkton area. Bryce Newton owned the class on a

borrowed bike from another rider but notable rides came from the less experience racers such as Carson Reese and Craig Spokowski who showed promise in their first go at competitive GP motocross rac-ing. Yorkton riders Nathan Gordon, Andrew Dingle and Colton Reese all suffered from a crash or two which put them back further than they wanted on the day. Junior MX-2 was one of the more anticipated classes of the day and once again Yorkton riders took the spotlight. 15 year old Haylen Langelier of Yorkton has been battling at

the top of this class the last half of the season and he didn’t disappoint with a win in moto 1 followed closely by fel-low Yorkton rider Kennedy Lutz in 2nd place for a double podium finish for the home-town crew. The 2nd moto saw 13 year old Kennedy put all of her USA racing experience to use and come out of the turn one in 1st place after a second place finish in the first moto of the Junior MX event. After Langelier suffered a bike prob-lem on the 2nd lap while chas-ing her she pulled away from the other 30 competitors for a decisive victory on total points

in the moto, her first against the guys on a big bike. Junior MX-1 saw area racers Brett Newton and Chad Greziuk claim 1st and 3rd respective-ly. Yorkton saw the Intermediate MX-2 debut of former Yorkton racer Kyle Biro who is one of the hottest young racers in Western Canada. After dominating the Junior class provincially as well as at the Western Canadian Nationals the Biro family requested that Kyle be allowed to race with the semi-pro level riders in the Intermediate class for the last

event of the Saskatchewan motocross season. The thir-teen year old then demonstrat-ed why he is one of the hottest up and coming young riders in the country by taking com-manding wins in both MX-2 race motos to show the poise in competing with even older rid-ers that makes him a hot com-modity in Canada’s motocross circuit. Biro also held his own with the Pro riders by finish-ing 4th in the Pro-Am GP, a great start to a promising rid-ing career for Biro who is bare-ly a teenager and is already amongst the best riders in the province. Yorkton racer Zach Hudy returned from school in Vancouver to pull off a 4th in the Intermediate MX-2 in his only race this season after being one of the top intermedi-ate riders in 2012. Haylen Langelier had an impressive race with a first overall in the Youth 13 to 25 class. Kennedy had another podium with a third overall finish to top off her awesome day (she also took an easy 1st in the Ladies class) and Brett Newton challenged her to come home with a fourth overall place for Youth The Yorkton Motorcycle Club invites all new riders to join for 2014. The club cur-rently operates Millstone Raceway as an off-road and motocross riding area. The site is open for use by all club members. Information, mem-berships or day passes are available by contacting any club executive or at Schrader Honda Yamaha located across the highway from the track.

Annual Yorkton motocross event sees locals shine

YORKTON MOTOCROSS riders defended their home track in the final round of the Saskatchewan Championship Motocross series, with several local riders taking home first place and top three finishes on Saturday at Millstone Raceway.

LADY SAINTS SOCCER kept their strong form on the pitch in Prince Albert, finishing third after beating Saskatoon Holy Cross 4-nil.

By CHASE RUTTIGN-R Writer After their highest ever finish in the Moose Jaw tournament last weekend the Sacred Heart Girls Soccer team finished 3rd at the Prince Albert Carlton tournament over the weekend, continuing their strong run of form in preparation for 2A Gir ls Soccer Provincials. In their first match of the tournament the Saints came out strong against the Weyburn Eagles, pulling out a 6-2 result thanks to a hat trick from Rita Fetsch and a brace from Kristen Jonassen. Justine Zarowny potted the other Saints goal in the win. Sacred’s hopes of a tournament win would be tested in the semifi-nals as they drew the strong Prince Albert Carlton side, giving them a tough challenge against the 3A tourna-

ment hosts. Two goals from their talisman in Fetsch wouldn’t be enough for the Saints as Carlton moved on despite a very impres-sive effort from the Lady Saints who con-tinue to give the 3A schools from Prince Albert a run for their money each weekend playing both St. Mary’s and Carlton close this season. In the bronze medal match things would be easier on the Saints as they took on the Holy Cross girls from Saskatoon. With a chance to end their weekend on a high note for a second straight weekend the Saints did not waste the opportu-nity. A Fetsch hat trick for the second game on the weekend was added by a Morgan Shymanski goal and the Saints took a 4-nil win to secure a podium finish in Prince Albert. Amy Prybylski was solid in goal in the final match,

registering a clean sheet for the shutout. Coach Jeanne Fetsch felt that her Saints played well all three games _ coming so close to defeating Prince Albert Carlton and

advancing to the Final . The Saints were also happy in defeating the top team in Saskatoon convincingly. Great defence by Morgan Shymanski and Darrian Desjarlais led the way.

Great set ups by mid fielder Kristen Jonassen who had 2 goals and 4 assist, con-trolling the middle of the pitch. Rita Fetsch once again led the offense with 8 goals in

the three games and Justine Zarowny had a strong tournament in the midfield and scored her third goal of the season to round out the notable Saints perform-ers.

Lady Saints soccer leave Prince Albert with bronze medal

the news review - Thursday, October 3, 2013 - Page 21A

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Local, timely,relevant!

Brought to you by the

SaskatchewanWeekly

NewspapersAssociation

and thisnewspaper.

We acknowledge thefinancial support ofthe Government of

Canada through theCanada Periodical

Fund of theDepartment of

Canadian Heritage.

COMMUNITYNEWS THATMATTERS

COMING EVENTS

ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES SHOW & SALE. October 28 to No- vember 3 (inclusive) at Market Mall, Preston & Louise, Saska- toon, during mall hours.

GROW MARIJUANA Commer- cially. Canadian Commercial Pro- duction Licensing Convention Oc- tober 26th & 27th. Toronto Airport, Marriot Hotel. www.green- lineacademy.com. Tickets 1-855- 860-8611 or 250-870-1882.

PIERSON CARNIVAL of Crafts... 35th Annual, Pierson, MB. Satur- day, October 5th/13. 11:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. DST. Over 8 exhibitors and 70 door prizes.

IN MEMORIAM

BABCHISHIN: In Loving Memory of

Anne, Joseph and ElenorWe cannot lose the ones we loveFor even when they're goneWe feel their gentle presenceIn the hush of every dawn.We see them in the sunlightThat makes the day so bright.In the flowers of the spring timeAnd in the stars at night.For they will always stayIn all that's bright and beautiful.Loving are the memories you left behind.Lovingly remembered by son & brother Larry

HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATORS

for late model CATequip: motor scrapers(cushion ride), dozers,

excavators, rock trucks, graders (trim operators).

Camp job. Competitivewages plus R & B.

Valid drivers license req’d.Send resume and workreferences to: Bryden

Construction andTransport Co. Inc.

Box 100, Arborfield, Sk.S0E 0A0; email:

[email protected]: 306-769-8844

IN MEMORIAM

In Memory ofErnie W. Perry

Feb 5/69 - Oct 2/08A Good Man

Gone but not forgotten.Loved and remembered always.

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

IN MEMORIAM

PSYCHICS

TRUE PSYCHICS For Answers CALL NOW 24/7 Toll FREE 1- 877-342-3032 Mobile: #4486 www.truepsychics.ca.

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

RENAISSANCETRANSPORT INBRANDON, MB

requires experiencedClass 1 Drivers to haul

liquid fertilizer andasphalt oil within MB,SK, AB, ND, and MT.

**Excellent earning potential****Consistent home time**

**Excellent benefit package** Basic requirements are:

-Class 1 license with air--Acceptable driver’s abstract-

-Passport or FAST card-

Call Tyler @204.571.0187

or email resume totheuchert@

renaissancetrans.ca

Required person toCOOK AND CLEANfor 10-15 man roadconstruction camp.Accommodations

provided. Successfulapplicant will be

required to travel withthe construction crew.

Must have valid driver’slicense; safe food

handling ticket; andexperience in a similar

environment. Send resume and two

work references to:Bryden Construction,Box 100, Arborfield,

Sk. S0E 0A0.Fax: 306-769-8844.

Email: brydenconstruct

@xplornet.ca

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT

ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT. Temporary position. Processing payments, accounts payable, check and answer emails from cli- ents, Word and Excel. Send re- sume to [email protected] or call 323-657-5938.

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT

AUTOMATED TANK Manufactur- ing Inc. is looking for experienced welders. Competitive wages, prof- it sharing bonus plus manufactur- ing bonus incentive. Full insu- rance package 100% paid by company. Good working environ- ment. Keep your feet on the ground in a safe welding environ- ment through in hole manufactur- ing process. No scaffolding or ele- vated work platform. Call Cindy for an appointment or send resume to: [email protected]. 780-846- 2231 (Office); 780-846-2241 (Fax).

DRIVERS WANTED AZ, DZ, 5, 3 or 1 with airbrakes: Guaranteed 40 hour work week + overtime, paid travel, lodging, meal allow- ance, 4 weeks vacation/excellent benefits package. Must be able to have extended stays away from home, up to 6 months. Experience Needed: Valid AZ, DZ, 5, 3, or 1 with airbrakes, commercial driving experience. Apply online at www.sperryrail.com under ca- reers. Click here to apply, key- word: Driver. DO NOT FILL IN CITY OR STATE. EOE.

CLASSIFIED ADS

See Our Monument Display Room at.Kopan’s Funeral Service

Hwy #9 North, Yorkton, Sask.306-783-0099 toll free 1-866-797-5084

Authorized agent for Good-Hall Memorials Ltd."Creating Monuments of Distinction for Over 40 Years"

Upright Etched in Black GraniteGranite base included & taxes extra

3'0" wide x 6" thick x 2'1" highBasic engraving included, variety of scenes

Reg price $3795

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WW1336

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CEL (www.cel-electrical.com) is a Saskatoon based Electrical & Instru-mentation Contractor with offi ces in Saskatchewan, Alberta and Manitoba.

We are currently accepting applications for: Electrical Apprentices and Journeypersons

to work at a project in the Yorkton SK area and other projects across Western Canada.

The ideal candidate will have an industrial or commercial electrical background and posses good organizational, communication

and problem solving skills.Apprentice opportunities may be available for applicants with no

experience that have other construction experience or farming background.CEL offers a team work environment, competitive wages, company RRSP,

health plan and an active safety program. Please email resumes to: [email protected]

or fax to (306) 477-8833All applications will be kept confi dential

18-1st Avenue NorthYorkton, Saskatchewan S3N 1J4

fax: (306) 782-9138Only applicants we wish to interview will be contacted.

Required ImmediatelyFULL TIME ADVERTISING

SALESPERSONIf you are a creative, self-motivated, well-groomed individual with a professional attitude who enjoys working with the public, we can offer you an exciting opportunity in the newspaper advertising field.The successful applicant must possess a valid drivers license and a reliable late model vehicle.This is a full-time position that offers a competitive salary plus an attractive commission plan. We also offer a complete benefits package including medical and dental.Preference will be given to those with experience, however, the suitable candidate will be trained.All applications will be kept in strictest confidence.

Send your resume and cover letter to:[email protected]

Page 22A - Thursday, October 3, 2013 - THE NEWS REVIEW

CANADIAN MANUFACTURED

backed by 10 yearwarranty

-multi family, singlesection, motel style

homes-Qualify for

C.M.H.C.Financing

FOR MORE INFOCALL

1.800.249.3969www.medallion-homes.caHwy 2 South Prince Albert

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT

HELP WANTED - LOCAL PEO-PLE NEEDED!!! Simple & Flexible Online Work. 100% Genuine Op-portunity. F/T & P/T. Internet Needed. Very Easy... No experi-ence Required. Income is Guaran-teed! www.ezComputerWork.com.

Help Wanted!!! Make $1000 weekly mailing brochures from home! No experience required. Start immediately! www.TheMai-lingHub.com.

HELP WANTED (male/female) to load mail truck 1 to 1-1/2 hours mornings, starting time 5:30 a.m., $20/hr. May have full days if busy - 12 hour days at $12/hr. Call Rob at 306-641-6269.

INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR SCHOOL. No simu-lators. In-the-seat training. Real world tasks. Weekly start dates. Job board! Funding options. Sign Up online! iheschool.com 1-866-399-3853.

JOURNEYMAN AUTOMOTIVE Service Technician(s) in Hanna Al-berta. Hanna Chrysler Ltd. offers competitive wages from $30/hour, negotiable depending on experi-ence. Bright, modern shop. Full-time permanent with benefits. Friendly town just 2 hours from major urban centres. More info at: hannachrylser.ca. Fax 403-854-2845; Email: [email protected].

Do you have items in your garage, attic, basement? Sell them quickly with a classified ad. Call 783-7355.

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT

TOWN OF LANIGAN EMPLOY-MENT OPPORTUNITY - The Town of Lanigan invites applica-tions for the position of Director of Recreation & Community Develop-ment. The ideal candidate should possess the following: Certifi-cate/Diploma from a recognized Recreation Program or equivalent; Work experience in a field of Eco-nomic Development & Tourism would be an asset; Capable of op-erating equipment and performing minor maintenance and repairs would be an asset. Current salary range is $32,000 to $40,000 annu-ally plus a comprehensive benefits package. For a list of duties, con-tact the Town of Lanigan at (306) 365-2809 or email [email protected]. Resumes com-plete with 3 references should be sent to: Town of Lanigan, Box 280 Lanigan SK S0K 2M0 or faxed to: (306) 365-2960. Applica-tion deadline is Thursday, October 10th, 2013.

TRAVEL CONSULTANTS Want-ed! Flight Centre is hiring in Sas-katoon, and is on the lookout for travel consultants to join their team.No travel experience is nec-essary. You will need to share their passion for travel and have a proven aptitude for sales. To ap-ply, visit www.apply-first.ca/jobF149621.

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

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

TRADES HELP

BUSY SERVICE company in Prince George, BC, is currently seeking a Journeyman Plumber with gas licence to work in a fast paced, service company. Experi-ence in service & installation of heating & cooling systems, gas & wood fireplaces and all aspects of plumbing are an asset. Good com-munication, troubleshooting skills, valid drivers licence. The company offers a very competitive wage and excellent benefit package. Ap-plicants should send resume to [email protected].

FOR SALE - MISC

HOT TICKETSfor fans in Rural

Saskatchewan Only

WINNIPEG JETS1 night U-Drive Packages

are available for ALL HOME GAMESPackages include:

Hotel, Tickets & Dinner

See the SOLD OUTGREY CUP Game

Tour packages includes4 Nights Hotel

Accommodations andGrey Cup Tickets

Nov. 21st - 25th in Regina

Go online towww.dashtours.com or call Dash Tours at

1-800-265-0000 One Call & You’re There

4 DRAWER filing cabinet, 36x46. 3 piece bedroom set, shelved headboard, in perfect condition. New 3 piece bedroom set, brass headboard. 2 wing chairs, like new, deep dusty rose color, paid $1000 per chair, want best offer. Call for details 306-795-2476.

ADVERTISEMENTS AND state-ments contained herein are the sole responsibility of the persons or entities that post the advertise-ment, and the Saskatchewan Weekly Newspaper Association and membership do not make any warranty as to the accuracy, com-pleteness, truthfulness or reliability of such advertisements. For great-er information on advertising con-ditions, please consult the Asso-ciation's Blanket Advertising Conditions on our website at www.swna.com.

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

Butcher Supplies, Leather & Craft Supplies and Animal Con-trol Products. Get your Halfords 136 page FREE CATALOG. 1-800-353-7864 or Email: [email protected]. Visit our Web Store: www.halfordsmailor-der.com.

HOT TUB (spa) covers. Best price, best quality. All shapes & colors available. Call 1-866-652-6837. www.thecover-guy.com/newspaper.

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

GARAGE SALES

77 CENTENNIAL Dr., Thurs., Oct. 3rd - 3 p.m. - 7 p.m. Fri., Oct. 4th - 9 a.m. - 7 p.m. House - mirrors, pictures, lots of Christmas decora-tions, new Christmas trees - too numerous to mention.

BIG FAMILY GARAGE SALE! Everything must go! Washer & dryer, kids clothes, kids toys, furni-ture, misc. stuff. 59 Clarewood Cres., Yorkton. Thursday, Oct. 3 - All Day. Fri., Oct. 4 - AM only. Sat., Oct. 5 - All Day.

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

CHILDCARE AVAILABLE

JESSICA'S DAY Home currently has full and part time spaces available. Lots of crafts, stories, and outside play. Snacks and lunch provided. Call 306-782-0120 for more information.

TRAVEL

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

BUSINESS SERVICES

391 Ball Road

782-9600

Autobody & Painting Ltd.Don’t Just Get “R” Done!Get “R” Done Rite!

HOUSES FOR SALE

864 SQ. FT. two bedroom in Ca-nora, 16x22 insulated detached garage, 2 sheds. New: paint, floor-ing, furnace, tankless heater, shin-gles, eavestroughs, windows, doors, much more. Immediate possession available. $95,0000. Call 306-563-5787.

LAKESIDE HOUSE, attached gar-age, deck, 36x24 shed. Lake of the Prairies. Oak, granite, beauti-fully landscaped, over 300 trees, jet dock. Call 204-937-4775.

LOTS & ACREAGES FOR SALE

ACREAGE FOR SALE. 2 miles west of Yorkton on Hwy 52. Two bedroom house on 1.8 acres. Call or text 306-521-1351.

SUN HILLS RESORT at Lake of the Prairies, SK has 12 prime lots in Phase 1 to offer. Priced $56,000 - $69,000. We are located 40 min. east of Yorkton near the Togo bridge. More info www.sunhillsre-sort.com. Call 306-597-4660.

REAL ESTATE SERVICES

ONLY A FEW UNITS LEFT! 55 PLUS ADULT COMMUNITY Ground Level Ranchers. www.dia-mondplace.ca 306 241 0123 War-man, SK.

REAL ESTATE AUCTION. Three new 1104 sq. ft. houses; three oth-er properties. Melville, Saskatche-wan. Sunday, October 27, noon. Visit ukrainetzauction.com for de-tails.

APARTMENTS/CONDOS FOR RENT

RETIREMENT APARTMENTS, ALL INCLUSIVE. Meals, transpor-tation, activities daily. Short Leas-es. Monthly Specials! Call 877-210-4130.

FURNISHED APARTMENTS

FURNISHED APARTMENT for rent. Must have references. 306-563-5281.

HOUSES FOR RENT

HOMES FOR rent in Canora. Clean, comfortable and affordable. NO PETS. References required. Prices starting at $650/mth. Not in-cluding utilities. 306-563-2031. www.canorahomerentals.com.

STORAGE

STORE YOUR motorcycle Nov. 1 - April 30, N/E Yorkton, private garage. $116. Call 306-890-0571.

MOBILE/MANUFACTURED

SUITES FOR RENT

AVAILABLE NOV. 1st. Two bed-room suite. #1 - 154 Betts Ave., Yorkton. Fridge, stove and utilities included. $950 monthly, or best of-fer. Preference given to single oc-cupancy, will consider two. Ph. 782-0768 or 621-1227.

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. 1-888-544-0199 18+.

FEED & SEED

FEED & SEED

Buying/SellingFEED GRAINS

heated / damagedCANOLA/FLAXTop price paid

FOB FARMWestern

Commodities877-695-6461

Visit our website @www.westerncommodities.ca

HEATED CANOLAWANTED!!

- GREEN CANOLA- SPRING THRASHED- DAMAGED CANOLA

FEED OATSWANTED!!

- BARLEY, OATS, WHT- LIGHT OR TOUGH

- SPRING THRASHEDHEATED FLAX

WANTED!!HEATED PEAS

HEATED LENTILS"ON FARM PICKUP"

Westcan Feed & Grain

1-877-250-5252

STEEL BUILDINGS / GRANARIES

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

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

AUTO MISCELLANEOUS

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

WRECKING AUTO-TRUCKS... Parts to fit over 500 trucks. Lots of Dodge... GMC... Ford... imports... We ship anywhere. Lots of dodge, diesel, 4x4 stuff... (Lloydminster) Reply 780-875-0270..... North-East Recyclers truck up to 3 tons.

SNOWMOBILES

THE ULTIMATE OFF-ROAD SNOW VEHICLE, 1990 Tracker with Mattracks, 4 cyl., automatic, power steering, economical, nice and warm. Call 204-937-4775.

WORK WITH US & GROW A CAREER

Glacier Media Group is growing. Check our job board regularly for the latest openings:www.glaciermedia.ca/careers

DELIV

ER

Call

783-7355

THE NEWS REVIEW

Earn up to

$100 per month or more of Extra Cash

Carriers Wanted

ATTENTION: The Saturday edition of the

News Review Extra will not be delivered in the city of Yorkton as of

Saturday, Oct. 5. However it will be available to be picked up at various boxes located throughout

the city. The Thursday edi-tion will continue to be de-livered as usual. See next Thursday’s paper for a full description of where to pick

up your paper.

The News Review apologizes for any

inconvenience.

THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, October 3, 2013 - Page 23A

Lisa Allin #5 - 1st Ave. N.1.888.782.5955 or 782-5955

Test your knowledge of N.F.L. FootballTest your knowledge of N.F.L. FootballPick all the winners and you could win Pick all the winners and you could win

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OFFICIAL ENTRY FORM - Name of AdvertiserFor October 6 & 7

SUNDAY NIGHT TIE BREAKER

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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, October 4, 2013.

LIMIT OF ONE ENTRY PER HOUSEHOLD PER WEEK

N.F.L. SCHEDULE FOR DAYS OF OCTOBER 6 & 7

1. New Orleansat Chicago

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8. Seattleat Indianapolis

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11. San Diegoat Oakland

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13. New York Jetsat Atlanta

14.

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HAAS386 Broadway St. E., Yorkton

306-783-9461www.haas.nissan.ca

140 York Road • Yorkton, SK S3N 2X1

TRAILER PARTSELECTRIC BRAKE

ASSEMBLIES, BEARING KITS & MORE

Tickets $40 per personNov. 22, 23, Dec 7, 14

Ukrainian Orthodox Hall, YorktonFor more info call Pam

@ 306-621-2685Tickets available online

www.paperbagplayers.com

by Stewart Lemoine

produced by special

arrangement with

Playwrights Guild of Canada

$1045

Page 24A - THE NEWS REVIEW - Thursday, October 3, 2013

YBID NEWSYBID NEWSA look at what is happening in the

Yorkton Business Improvement District

Victoria

ProudMember of

YBID783-3601

JEWELLERSWe Pay CashWe Pay CashFor Gold andFor Gold and

DiamondsDiamondsCheck with us before you sell your old Gold

23 Broadway St. E.Yorkton, Sask

[email protected]

GREATSELECTION

ScootersScootersLift Chairs

WalkersWalkers

85 Broadway E.Yorkton, SK

306-782-5545

Your Insurance Broker Understands

WE OFFER…•COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE•MOTOR VEHICLE LICENSE ISSUING

Offices in … •Yorkton - 783-4477 •Foam Lake - 272-3242 •Bredenbury - 898-2333 •Churchbridge - 896-2269

Website: www.farrellagencies.com24 Hr. Claims Service Office Hours: 7:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.

COMMITTED TO YOU AND YOUR COMMUNITY

YORKTON

Open Monday to Friday8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.Call for an appointment today.

306-782-1793ww.yorktonhearing.com

27 - 2nd Ave. N.Yorkton, SK

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

Get Free Quotes on: • Contractors Pro • Offi ce Pro • Retailer's Pro • Realty Pro

*Great Prices306-783-7737

email: [email protected]

YOUR HEARING CARE IS OURNUMBER ONE PRIORITY!

Yorkton HearingS E RV I C E S

Marina WallsM.S. Audiologist

- Competitive

Prices on

Hearing Aids

- Excellent

Service

71 Broadway St. E.

Yorkton, SK

306-783-3028

Innovation never felt so good.™

Hancock Plumbing 2011 Ltd.

GREG OTTENBREIT

MLA Yorkton Constituency

306-783-7275www.gregottenbreit.ca

[email protected]

Cameo Cameo PizzaPizza

Pizza, Pasta,

and More!!10 First Ave. N.

Yorkton

306-783-3666

Flowers & Plants8 Broadway St. E.

York City Plaza

Where Flowers MakePerfect Scents

for weddings, funerals, birthdays, anniversaries

or just becauseDrop in or call us

783-4570or toll free

1-877-909-4570

THORSNESSTHORSNESSAPPLIANCESAPPLIANCES

AND BED STOREAND BED STORE

14 Betts Ave. Yorkton, SK

306-786-7676

Mattress Set with Gel Memory

FoamQueen Size

$$5995990000plus tax

Saddles & SteelMusic Productions

• Weddings • Music for All Occassions • Big Screen Video Dances • LCD Projector Rentals • Audio/Visual/Light Rentals

& Services • Game Show Mania • Karaoke Machines & Supplies

See us for a great selection of instruments & more!

182 Broadway St. W.783-4397

www.saddlesandsteel.com

YorktonBus Depot

L & I Depot (Lorresta & Ike Harris)

35 First Ave. N.Yorkton, SK

(306) 782-2355

Corporate Training- Safety Training, Professional Development, and more- Customized options and on-site delivery

Contact Ed Hourd for an on-site consultationCall 306-641-9171 or email: [email protected]

Transat Holiday Winter Sun Holiday Packages

Book by Oct 31 and receive Price Guarantee and Free Upgrade toOption Plus on Distinction and

Luxury Collection Resort BookingsMarlin Travel (Downtown)

25 Broadway St. E.Yorkton

306 786-66781-877-667-8892

orMarlin Travel (Inside Walmart)

240 Hamilton Rd.306 782-0503

1-866-782-0503**certain restrictions apply**

YORKTON BUSINESS IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT

2013 ANNUAL MEETING

WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 9, 2013MEETING BEGINS AT 7:00 PM

RAMADA INN HERITAGE ROOM

• ELECTION OF THE 2014 BOARD OF DIRECTORS

• NOMINATE OR RUN AS A BOARD MEMBER

FOR MORE DETAILS CALL PHIL DE VOS AT

621-3227

NOW IS THE TIME TO TAKE AN ACTIVE ROLE IN YOUR YORKTON

BUSINESS IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT

“OUR ANNUAL MEET & GREET WILL BE HELD NOVEMBER 20”