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Yorkton News Review - Archive

Horseshoe Club closes

Horseshoe Club closes

The Yorkton Horseshoe Club is closing. Declining membership numbers has lead the club to the difficult decision to disband.
Toy collector brings old toys back to life

Toy collector brings old toys back to life

Toys are for the young, and the young at heart. The Yorkton Farm Toy and Collectible Show is about bringing toy fans together to find new treasures and share old ones.
Grandkids inspire Serendipity Doll Fashions

Grandkids inspire Serendipity Doll Fashions

Retirement means different things to different people. Some might take the time to go fishing, others might travel.
Editorial Cartoon

Editorial Cartoon

Be a Norway, Saskatchewan

Why does Saskatchewan have the biggest legislative building in the country? Because Sir Walter Scott, the province’s first premier, was a man of vision.

Things I do with words... Time to defend the bus service

I will begin by admitting very few people choose to ride an STC bus. Nor does anyone pretend that it’s a profitable venture for the province, especially since it’s heavily subsidized.
Yorkton Photography Guild

Yorkton Photography Guild

The Yorkton Photography Guild Photos of the Week provided by Chantelle Rivers and Cindy Baillie. Interested in learning more about the guild? Visit the Facebook page.

Proceed cautiously with new laws

To the Editor: As they draft new laws on assisted suicide or euthanasia, our governments must proceed cautiously and adopt laws that are as restrictive as possible, to protect the most vulnerable. This is not just a religious issue.

Trudeau didn’t cut and run in the fight against ISIS

Not that it’s anyone’s business, but I voted Liberal in the last election. The Liberal candidate in our riding, Nathaniel Erskine-Smith, made it easy. Serious, impressive young guy, great C.V.
Sissinghurst, the White Garden and more…

Sissinghurst, the White Garden and more…

When writer Vita Sackville-West first fell in love with Sissinghurst (in Kent County, southeast of London, England) in1930, then a ruin used to incarcerate French prisoners of war in the mid-1700s then later as a workhouse in the 1800s, her son Nigel
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