News | DrumhellerMail - Page #1106
10062024Sun
Last updateThu, 03 Oct 2024 12pm

“That’s the lady I am going to marry!”

IMG 7860

    It was the spring on 1976 and Ron Wegleitner was doing what any 17-year-old car nut in  Saskatoon would be doing. He was washing his car, getting ready to do some street racing.
    He got talked out of racing that night. Instead, he was set up on a blind date. Ron and his friends rolled up to Rete’s house that night. She was in Saskatoon studying hairdressing.
 “Just as I pulled up to the house, they informed me they had someone they wanted me to meet,” Ron tells the Mail. “I turned  around and she walked out of the house, and I looked at her, I said ‘that’s the lady I’m gonna marry.’”
     Rete wasn’t too sure of the young man with wild long hair. They went out that night, but Ron sat in the back seat.
    “I chased her for about three months and then I got a date,” he said.
    Rete left Saskatoon during that summer for work, and when she got back they began to date around October.
    Family was always important, and they were best friends with his parents. The had a family band and spent many nights playing. When they would get the chance they would all go dancing. The band still gets together for family and special events.
    They were married in 1977 and in 1980 had their first child. Not long after that, they had the opportunity to come to Drumheller.
    “Some friends of ours wanted to buy a garage where the Quick Lube is now, Riverview Park Texaco. He asked if I would think about moving down there to run the shop, that was 1982,” he said.
    The long term plan was to be in the valley for a couple of years, and then head to BC to work in a mine or lumber mill, and then the Northwest Territories. After that, he would return to Saskatchewan. However, they stayed in the valley.
    They operated the garage on Highway 9, and then had the shop at a location on Bridge Street. In 1990 they moved into R&R Automotive in downtown Drumheller where he operated until 2008. Currently, Ron works for Atco and Rete is at Drumheller Associated Physicians.
   Along the way, they raised their two boys, and as an active member of the Rotary Club, had five Rotary exchange daughters who have remained close. Ron says he counts family by the heart and not by blood.
   Almost 42 years later they say the secret is patience, lots of love and laughter.
   “You have to have fun together,” said Rete.
    “I told my son and daughter-in-law, and I have told lots of young couples, ‘you spend more time picking out a phone than a mate,’” laughs Ron. “For me, she was the one I wanted to marry in 1976, and she is the one I would marry today if I had to do it again.”


64 years, nine innings at a time

IMG 7801

    More than six decades ago Barb Ouellette had no idea how much hockey and baseball she would watch over the coming years, but with 64 years of marriage under their belts, seven children, and nine grandchildren, Roger, 89,  and Barb, 86, Ouellette wouldn’t change a thing.
    Barb was working at the Toronto Dominion Bank in Oyen and Roger was a young man working for Canadian Utilities.
    When Roger is asked what he thinks caught her eye all those years ago, he chuckles said it was his new 1954 Plymouth. Barb however laughs and says a year after they were married they had to sell it and get a used car.
    Another version of their story had to do with a tardy Canadian Utilities worker trying to cash his pay cheque.
    “That bank was only open until noon on Saturdays and he came running in at five to 12 and I had to let him in and out because the door was locked,” said Barb. “Don’t ask me how much his cheque was because I wasn’t the teller!”
    As for dating, Barb says “We went to ball games and hockey games, the same thing we do now,” she laughs. Roger, of course, was an avid baseball and hockey player. As the children and grandchildren sprouted up they were involved in sports with them.
The life of a lineman didn’t keep them in one spot for too long. They were married in Oyen and had their first daughter. Their second daughter was born in Three Hills. After that, they moved to Consort where they stayed for 15 years and had five more children. Barb’s best Valentine gift was her seventh child, Glenn who was born on February 14, 1965.
    “Very fertile county there,” said Barb.
    After that, they were in Drumheller for five years, and then up to Vermillion. They moved to Three Hills where Roger retired. After a short stint in Stettler, they moved back to Drumheller in 1996.
     Even after retirement, he was busy on the field.  In fact, they would winter in Arizona and for 15 years he played senior ball. Even after they no longer went south, he continued to play with a team from Linden.
    It was a rigorous schedule with tournaments almost every weekend. Barb would accompany him on the trips.
   “I liked watching baseball. I never played because I was scared of the ball,” she said.
  They also did some travelling together. They went to Alaska, Mexico, and a cross Canada trip after Roger retired. One memorable trip was a snowmobiling trip to Yellowstone that Roger won.
    The secret to 64 years of marriage? According to Barb, is they simply got along. They weren’t the jealous types.
    “We didn’t smother each other, he went with his friends, and I went with mine, and then we would go together. We are compatible… we had a happy medium.”
    “The secret is separating work life from personal life.”   

Firefighters celebrate 100 year history

fire dep

This coming October the Drumheller Fire Department is going to be celebrating its 100 years of operation in the valley.
On October 1, 1919, Mr. William Guterson was appointed fire chief, signaling the first time Drumheller had an organized fire department. Current Firefighter Keith Hodgson says prior to the formation of the brigade there had been attempts to organize and there was an unofficial brigade.
“Prior to 1919, they did have some equipment, but they didn’t have an organized group of people. Whenever there was a fire, they let off a siren, and depending on the number of rings, it told people what part of the town it was in, and anyone who was able-bodied was supposed to attend and try to help with the fire.
According to the book, The Hills of Home, there were 14 original members. By 1921 the department had two hand drawn reels, four playpipes, two hydrant hose gates, 1250 feet of cotton hose and two ladders. Hodgson says local lore dictates that Chief Guterson brought the ladders.
“He was a painter I believe and because he had ladders someone suggested he be fire chief,” Hodgson tells the Mail.
One reel was kept at the Sutherland Block on 3rd Avenue. The other was stored in a garage on the corner of Railway Avenue and 1st Street West. Shortly after forming the brigade it was recommended that a hall should be built with accommodation for the men and space to dry hoses. A building was prepared.
In 1922, a new town hall was built, that included a police station, cells, town offices, a courtroom and the magistrate’s office as well as space for the brigade and its apparatus. Also in 1922, they acquired a combination chemical and hose carrier mounted on a Ford chassis. In 1928 a Pontiac hose truck was purchased.
Like many prairie towns, there were notable fires over the years including Regent Theatre and the White House Hotel. Tragedy struck in 1937 when Harry Lefebre perished fighting a fire at the Vickers Hardware Store. Lefebre was the brother-in-law of Chief Guterson. In 1951 Adolph Guterson, son of William perished battling the Napier Theatre fire. He was 23.
Through the years the department grew and adopted new technology. Today it is still a volunteer service and has fire halls in central Drumheller as well as in Rosedale and East Coulee.
The main centennial celebration will be on October 17. There will be a banquet inviting the community and former firefighters. There will also be displays and history at the event, and stories shared.
“Luigi Vescarelli has come back to help us plan the event, so we are working on as much of it as we can,” said Hodgson.
Leading up to the celebrations, the department will be honoured by having the theme of the Canada Day Parade. Hodgson says they are looking at a possible event such as an Open House on that day.
Hodgson has set up the Drumheller Fire Department 100th Anniversary Facebook page that will have more details of the celebration as it approaches. Hodgson says he plans on sharing tidbits of the Drumheller Fire Department history on this page.
Hodgson adds they are interested in items or memorabilia from the history of the fire department to display during the celebration.
“We want to capture some of this history from the people are still around,” he said.
He has also set up the email drumfire100@kch.ca for those interested in learning more or who wish to get involved.


Subcategories

The Drumheller Mail encourages commenting on our stories but due to our harassment policy we must remove any comments that are offensive, or don’t meet the guidelines of our commenting policy.