The Icelandic Canadian - 01.08.2006, Qupperneq 35

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.08.2006, Qupperneq 35
Vol. 60 #2 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 77 ages that were sent since they didn’t know what they were. When her sister made it for them they were really pleased with this newly discovered food. My grandmother has several fond memories of her childhood. Saturday mornings she would go to the local the- ater for the Saturday Morning Fun Show. You’d go in the morning to watch a serial of some sort, then before the main show, there would be a contest for the kids up on stage. It was a lot of fun and the whole thing only cost a quarter. If you wanted to buy candy for the show you only had to pay a nickel and you could get a large bag of penny candies. Water was delivered in a barrel and you had to be very careful about wasting it. On Sunday evenings the whole family would bathe. They’d start with my grandmother, since she was the youngest, and end with her father. In the winter they brought snow in from outside and heated it on the wood fire. When every- body was done washing the water would go outside and be dumped in the garden. My grandmother had many different jobs while she lived in Flin Flon. During her last year in school she worked at a confectionary called Freedmons. She’d serve milkshakes, sundaes, French fries, steaks, and burgers. When she finished school she worked at a store in Bakers Narrows, which was a campground. This was where she met my grandfather, Phillip Einarson. She also worked at Sears and as a receptionist for a clinic before she got pregnant. She had four children in total. Later she taught herself to decorate wedding cakes and found work as a cake decorator and as a guard for the RCMP. In 1969 Prince Charles was on tour and came to Flin Flon. The men and women of the Royal Canadian Legion did a parade march for him before he came to review the troops. Since her father was part of the Dutch army stationed in Guelph he had different markings on his uniform. When Prince Charles saw these he came over to ask him about them. In 1986 my grandfather was trans- ferred to Nelson BC where he worked as a district manager for Sears. They still live there now, although they still go back to Flin Flon to visit old friends. All in all, my grandmother says that Flin Flon hasn’t really changed in the last few years and it isn’t really much different than before. The city is, of course, much larger than it was when she was growing up, and there are a lot more people living there now. I ended up learning a lot of things that I didn’t know previously. I learned about my family as well as what was happening the same time that my grandmother was growing up. When I was young I went with my parents to visit some family up in Flin Flon. But the only thing I really remem- bered about it was how rocky everything was and the Flin Flon Stack (apparently one of the tallest free standing structures in western Canada). I had no idea the kinds of things that had happened in Flin Flon's past, nor did I really care. But talk- ing to my grandmother has given me a 3^voyiA)ya£d^xyri (2arte Gunter 495 STRADBROOK AVENUE • INQUIRE: (204) 452-4044 24-Hour Supervision An Intermediate Care Facility Herman Thorvaldson, President We offer a Brand-new Facility Government Approved Facility Personal Furnishings Welcome

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