Red Deer Advocate, October 17, 2016

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Legion marks 90th year BY JONATHAN GUIGNARD ADVOCATE STAFF Games, live music and fresh-cooked food highlighted the festivities at the Red Deer Legion, Branch #35 on Saturday. The Red Deer Legion celebrated its 35th year at its Bremner Avenue location along with the 90th anniversary of the Legion in Canada. Red Deer MP Earl Dreeshen was on hand for the event and presented Bev Hanes, Red Deer Legion president, a certificate congratulating the legion on its milestone. “The legion has meant a lot to people in Central Alberta. They have been such a major part of the community and it’s great they have chosen to celebrate their 35 years here. It was a great honour to be here,” said Dreeshen. Hanes has been an official member of the legion since 2000 and president since 2014. See LEGION on Page A2

Photo by JEFF STOKOE/Advocate staff

David Lustgarten, chair of the Crime Prevention Centre in Red Deer, accepts donations from a passing motorist along Taylor Drive, north of 32nd Street, during a Charity Checkstop Saturday.

Giving season gets head start BY JONATHAN GUIGNARD ADVOCATE STAFF Red Deerians showed their generosity this weekend by helping kids keep warm this winter. Central Alberta Crime Prevention Centre and Red Deer RCMP teamed

up for their third annual Charity Check Stop on Saturday. They collected over 115 coats and about 150 additional winter clothing items, part of the Coats for Kids program. Jessica Bernard, program development, Central Alberta Crime Prevention Centre, said it’s great seeing cars line up to support the cause.

“People’s trunks seem to be always loaded. We’re absolutely overwhelmed with the support. Whether it’s clearing out the change in your console or donating items, every little bit counts. It’s wonderful to see,” said Bernard. See CHARITY on Page A2

Taking re-enactments very seriously ANNUAL SHOWDOWN PITS CALGARY’S 65TH MOUNT ROYAL RIFLES AGAINST RED DEER’S FIRESTICK LIVING HISTORY SOCIETY BY PAUL COWLEY ADVOCATE STAFF

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John Hoyt, left, and Franz Hilsenbeck attend Fort Normandeau Days. RED DEER WEATHER

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Lyle Keewatin Richards was peacefully enjoying Red Deer’s Fort Normandeau Days celebrations when he was asked for a match. The wife of the colonel of a group of historical reenactors explained it was to fire a cannon at an unarmed group of rebellious Métis as a mini recreation of the 1885 Rebellion. “I said, ‘I’ll give you a match, but you’ve got to give me a gun.’ ” So they handed Keewatin Richards a six-shooter and told him to fire away from the nearby bushes. “And they fired back with a frickin’ nine-pound cannon,” he recalls with a laugh. After that uneven matchup 30 years ago, Keewatin Richards was determined to come better prepared the next year. Since then, Living History Society members have used a va-

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riety of replica long guns, pistols and eventually their own cannon to defend their lands in what has become a popular annual showdown between Calgary’s 65th Mount Royal Rifles and Red Deer’s Firestick Living History Society. For about a decade, the small group of history buffs has branched out to crafting replicas of a variety of pistols, from 18th century style flintlock pistols to U.S. Civil War-era percussion pistols. Keewatin Richards has had guns all of his life, starting with a pellet gun when he was about five. He was introduced to building weapons by Ron “Doc” Cameron in the late 1980s, when they both worked at the then-CGTX rail company in Red Deer. They started making knives and “one thing led to another,” says Keewatin Richards.

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