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New business opening in the industrial park

lights

LED Luminesence is opening in the former Drum Wireless location out along highway 575 across from Encana

They will be selling LED lights, servicing the agriculture, industrial, commercial, and automotive industries as well as residential.

Owner is Sean Gruner and he is hoping to open next Friday, April 1. Congrats on the new business, it is great to see new businesses opening in Drumheller.


Speaker Series continues with Calgary geologist

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    The March 24 session of the 2016 Royal Tyrrell Museum’s Speaker Series is a presentation by Jon Noad, a petroleum geologist from Calgary, entitled “Whoops! Fossil Faux Pas!”
    While humans have been misidentifying fossils for thousands of years, right back to the primitive Britons with their Devil’s toenails (Gryphea bivalves), fairie hearts (heart urchins), and petrified serpents (ammonites), there are certain horrendous mistakes that the palaeontological community will never forget. Some are quite intentional, where fake fossils have been created to deceive innocent collectors and scientists; in other cases, a particular fossil has been completely misinterpreted as representing a different type of animal or even turned out not to be a fossil at all. Sometimes the animal has been reconstructed with parts of the body upside down, back to front or, in extreme cases, with the wrong head. Finally, there are times when an innocent fossil has been used to promote particular agendas or ideologies.
    This talk counts down the top twelve fossil failures over two-hundred years and includes everything from Piltdown Man to plesiosaur heads, chimeric dinosaurs to Charnia. Prepare to be astonished by the audacity, gullibility, and simple carelessness of the people that have made those fossil misidentifications.
    The Royal Tyrrell Museum’s Speaker Series talks are free and open to the public. The series is held every Thursday until April 28, 2016 at 11:00 a.m. in the Museum auditorium. Past presentations are also available on the Museum’s YouTube channel: youtube.com/user/RoyalTyrrellMuseum. For more information, visit tyrrellmuseum.com.

Granddaughter of Dr. TR Ross brings his stories to life

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    When former resident Helen Webster opened a box of notes and correspondence of her father’s, former Drumheller Doctor TR Ross, she never knew it would be a treasure chest.
    Webster, sister of local lawyer Bob Ross, will be coming through the valley on Tuesday, April 5, for an appearance and reading of her book “Medical Man,” stories of her father, a real prairie doctor.
    “I enjoyed the process, the research, and almost more than anything, enjoyed meeting all of the people, grandchildren of  people who my grandfather looked after, and they all had stories to share,” Webster tells The Mail.
      TR Ross practiced in Drumheller from 1919 to 1950. While Webster left the valley when she was 12, she has fond memories of her grandfather.
    “I don’t know if it is mystique of mythology. Some of the stories I heard about him have reached almost a mythical status, and then I would get down to what really happened,” she said. “I knew my grandfather. He loved to get the family together and tell stories about his early life. I spent a lot of time with him and my grandmother up until we left Alberta.”
    She loved those stories and they were part of the inspiration to write the book. The other part was her box of treasures.
    “I was fortunate enough to have received from my mother a cardboard box that contained fragments of journals, case studies and notes that he has made. I looked through them and I thought this is really a treasure. When you combine those with so many of the oral histories that I heard, I thought if I don’t do something with this, it would be lost.”
    She was also able to track down a family member who also had correspondence from Webster’s grandmother.
    “Through these letters, journals and case studies, I thought I could write a book,” she said.
  Medical Man reflects a life very different from a modern doctor. TR Ross was a physician and surgeon. He worked in Bow Island, Lethbridge and Coleman before coming to Drumheller. Webster explains it was no coincidence that he came to the valley.
    “The reason he came to Drumheller is because that was when the original Drumheller Municipal hospital was built,” said Webster. “He had become extremely proficient as a “bone doctor” dealing with mining injuries. When the hospital was to be situated in Drumheller, the centre of a mining area, for him it was the obvious choice to move on to a new hospital where his skills and reputation as a doctor to the miners would be valued.”
    Webster recounts that often when she does readings, when she talks to people they lament not writing down stories from their parents or grandparents when they had a chance.
     “These are very important stories to tell,” she said. “I was just really lucky to have that cardboard box, that treasure box that got me started.”

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