Notices

All of The Review's Notices have been placed online since April of 2009. This includes birth and death notices.

The cost for a notice is $8.00 for the first 20 words and .35 for each additional word. If there is a picture the cost is $45.00 for the first 20 words and .35 for each additional word.

Please note that you can search for a name or keyword at any time by typing information in the search window at the top right of our home page at any time.
If you are searching for information here and cannot find it, please send us an email at: classifieds@thereview.ca and we will do our best to help you locate what you need.
Our ONLINE ARCHIVES available online for a modest fee for your genealogical research. Start exploring your roots!
If you would like access to our digital edition, please note that we have reduced our prices and it now costs just $20.99 (GST included) for a one-year digital subscription, with new page-turning technology, better search functions, faster PDF access and complete access to each calendar year, beginning January 1, 2010.

Please email your suggestions to Review publisher Louise Sproule at: lsproule@thereview.ca

For your convenience, please find links to some of our local funeral homes below:

Berthiaume Funeral Home: www.salonfuneraireberthiaume.com
Hillcrest Funeral Home: www.hillcrestfuneralhome.ca

 

As per your request we have posted a few memoriam verses as examples:

In Memoriam verses:

Sweet memories will linger forever;
Time cannot change them, it’s true;
Years that may come cannot sever,
My loving remembrance of you.


In our hearts your memory lingers,
Sweetly tender, fond and true,
There is not a day, dear mother (father),
That we do not think of you.

We mention your name,
And speak of you often,
God bless you mother (father),
You are not forgotten.

O happy hours we once enjoyed,
How sweet their memory still,
But death has left a loneliness,
The world can never fill.

Wherever I go, whatever I do,
Memories keep me near to you.

Time takes away the edge of grief,
But memory turns back every leaf.