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Delia mourns loss of community icon

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The Delia community is mourning for an icon of the small village and the legacy he created.
Onruf Luke, the proprietor of Luke’s in Delia, passed away on October 26 at the age of 89. He immigrated to Canada from China in 1951 to join his father. They came to Paradise Valley and then Barrhead before they settled in Delia in 1957 and opened the Delia Coffee Bar. The family and the cafe quickly became a mainstay in the community.
Bob Sargent has been a patron since attending school, and it has continued into adulthood.
“I’m 66, and I remember going there in elementary school, so probably when I was 10,” he said. “When I was a young kid in elementary when you got a hamburger, it was in between two slices of bread.”
“Luke was Delia,” he said, noting that where ever he would go and mention Delia, others would mention the cafe.
“I’m a farmer so I would go there for my morning coffee,” said Sargent. He adds it was their ritual to go to Luke’s when they finished planting, and then again when they would finish harvest.
He said Luke's nephew, Kar, for the last few years has been running the kitchen, but even as Luke has health issues, he would come in the afternoon.
As many times as Sargent would go to Luke’s, there was a coffee klatch of regulars.
“If you went in the morning and sat in one of their chairs, you were in trouble,” he laughs. “Ralph Whitman used to say if they didn't have anything new by 9 o'clock they would start up a story.”
In 1970, Luke and his father, Charlie, travelled back to China and came home with his bride Mai Yim Leung. They had three sons and a daughter.
The original cafe was where the Community Centre now sits, and they took over the former Legion building for the restaurant. Luke also successfully opened the Delia General Store in 1981 and ran it until 2002.
Mayor Dave Sisley recognizes how important Luke’s was to the community.
“They come from all over to go there,” said Sisley. They have the best liver and onions anywhere.”
“We are all wondering what is going to happen, but that will be up to the family. It would be a huge loss if they shut it down.”
Dave Marshall’s memories go back to high school. He remembers Mungo Jerry’s “In the Summertime,” blaring from the juke box.
“He’s a legacy for that town and that community, and a staple for the farmers. He is going to be missed,” said Marshall.
“The school kids are going to miss him too, even at present. We would all go there at lunch hour and play pinball, and if you had too many free games of pinball, you were late for class.”
Marshall also remembers burgers coming on regular bread, and that is still the most popular way to order it today.
“Myself, I have it on the bread.”
He remembers at the original location, you would look back into the kitchen, and Charlie would be cooking up a storm with flames coming out of the stove up to two feet high.
“You didn’t want to mess with him or he would take the cleaver to you!” laughs Marshall. “A credit to his family, not only did they work hard, they were there and put in the long hours.”
He also said Luke would be there for his patrons. If the banks were closed and you needed to cash a paycheck, he would dig deep into his pocket.
While he lives in Drumheller now, Marshall says he gets there about once a month, and along with his burger, he orders a Pepsi.
“I can remember in the 1960s and 1970s, the big kids in Grade 12 or just graduated, like Jim Anderson or Kenny Friedley would order a bottle of Pepsi. It seemed to be the popular drink then. But I asked Kar about six months ago, what they sell more of, Pepsi or Coke? He said Delia has always been a Pepsi town, I sell 3-1 Pepsi over Coke.”
“He’s one of a kind, he is going to be missed. It’s too bad but all things change in small towns.”


Television's History Wrangler back with second book featuring Drumheller character

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The History Wrangler Rob Lennard is spreading the rural history of Alberta and Canada through the lens of characters originating in Drumheller.
In 2013, Lennard was through the valley with his book The Amazing Alberta Time Travel Adventures of Wild Roping Roxy and Family Day Ray. The fictional twins were from Drumheller and attend DVSS, and the book referenced The Drumheller Mail. This was the book’s second iteration and was a Calgary Stampede best seller at its centennial.
Since then Lennard has been busy, and after starting a small Youtube channel with the Alberta History Show in 2020. It was cut short because he was contacted by The Cowboy Channel, which approached him to do a national television show.
“After two shows (the Alberta History Show) a broadcaster approached us to do an actual TV show for a network,” said Lennard.
The History Wrangler is now working on its third season for the Cowboy Channel, and Lennard hosts, produces, and writes the show and is planning to film segments for its third season.
“For season three I want to get Drumheller involved, with a dinosaur segment,” he said.
If he isn’t busy enough he has completed a sequel to The Amazing Alberta Time Travel Adventures of Wild Roping Roxy and Family Day Ray. This time it is the Amazing Time Travel Adventures of the Canadian Fearless Four. This book follows Drumheller hero Ranger Roxy as she time travels back to the Battle of Vimy Ridge in World War I. They then time travel to 1944, where the hero joins the 1st Canadian Parachute Battalion during the D-Day landing.
The book also has a section detailing the biographies and history of the real men and women who served, and who Lennard based the characters of the book on.
Lennard is also a singer-songwriter and is set to embark on a five-country tour with his program Cowboys and Ranchers off to the Great War and the Battalions.
“We are performing in war museums in five countries with my band the Rocky Mountain Gang Band,” said Lennard.
He plans to return to the valley to talk with students as well as shoot segments for the upcoming History Wrangler season.

Kneehill County council pre-authorizes $3.2 million project for 2023 budget

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Kneehill County council is getting a jump on its 2023 budgeting process and, during the Tuesday October 25 regular council meeting, preauthorized spending up to $3.2 million to complete design and construction of an asphalt pavement overlay next year.
Nearly 10 kilometres of Range Road 25-1, west of the Town of Three Hills between Highway 27 and Highway 583, will have an asphalt pavement overlay and will be funded through the Municipal Sustainability Infrastructure (MSI) Capital grant.
“We have been made aware of a fairly large amount of Alberta Transportation jobs coming up that we’re going to try and get in front of, and hopefully secure some of these contractors for our jobs with this paving project,” explained Kneehill County Director of Infrastructure Mike Ziehr.
The road has an estimated traffic count of between 160 and 180 vehicles per day and is considered an arterial road.
Mr. Ziehr noted the end result of the overlay installation would be to have the road become a no-ban surface to accommodate agriculture and other industry traffic to travel freely between the two highways.
He added the $3.2 million budget is the projected “top end” for the project, and there will hopefully be a “fairly healthy buffer” to avoid additional funding requests at a later date.
Council unanimously pre-authorized the expenditure of up to $3.2 million for the design and construction of the asphalt pavement overlay in the 2023 budget.


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