Vol.30 No.3

$3.00

Them Days was sadden to learn that Doris Saunders passed away. Many people called Doris Saunders Dob. Nigel Markham was working in Happy- Valley- Goose – Bay. Doris Saunders was known by a few  as “Little Spot” in Cartwright. Doris Saunders called herself a “squawky kid from Cartwright’. On January 13, 1904 there was a baby eskimo born in the United States. Barry Mercer’s dad Frank Mercer was 20 year’s old when he stepped foot off the boat in Hopedale in September of 1934. Jessica Gavin went to Halifax for National Historic fair in 2006. Boat Diana bring passengers and fishermen  along the coast until early fall. Doris Saunders used to go Bessie Flynn in motor boat when she was a girl. William Saulter and his crew went to the country caribou hunting for a week or so on. In late April we received strange animal being sighted about 25 km out of Nain.

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Description

Them Days Vol. 30 No. 3 – 2006

These Days at THEM DAYS – Lorne Hollett
Administrator’s Note – Judy Pardy
Dr. Doris Jean Saunders Eulogy – Gillian Saunders
Thoughts of Doris – Patty Way
Remembering Doris – Nigel Markham
Dobbie Jean – Judy MvGrath
“Dr. Dot”, an appreciation – Wally McLean
Inuit Entertainers in the U.S. Part 3 – Jim Zwick
He Served in Three Police Forces – Barry Mercer
If My Walls Could Talk – Jessica Gavin
Jack Buckle – Ellen McDonald & Peggy Hancock
Bessie Flynn – Doris Saunders
Interview with William Saulter – Stephen Roberts
An Unexpected Visitor – Lorne Hollett

Front cover: Dr. Doris J. Saunders wearing a traditional Labrador silipak, c. 1998. Courtesy Gillian Saunders.

Back cover: Doris Saunders on Dumplin Island. Photo Nigel Markham.

Additional information

Weight .12 kg
Dimensions 23 × 15.5 × .5 cm
Magazine Type

Digital, Physical