"Those Were The Days" Article Jan. 23/70 Those Were The Days;Swift Current Sun - Those Were The Days Clipping (1970-01-23);Swift Current Sun - Those Were The Days Clipping (1970-01-23);Swift Current Sun Clipping (1970-01-23)

"Those Were The Days" Article Jan. 23/70 Those Were The Days;Swift Current Sun - Those Were The Days Clipping (1970-01-23);Swift Current Sun - Those Were The Days Clipping (1970-01-23);Swift Current Sun Clipping (1970-01-23)

Artifact



2003.53.71
January 23 1970, January 23 1970
A clipping of a weekly series from "The Sun" newspaper called "Those Were The Days". The series was written by Jim Greenblat as he reminisces on the past of Swift Current. This article is from 23 January 1970. It talks about the start of Elmwood golf course mentioning that the first clubhouse opened on 21 April 1927, and the new course opened on May 24. The article also discusses a meeting in 1921 that inspired said golf course, the building of Citizen's rink in 1920, the "Native Sons Day" hosted by the Kiwanis club in November 1924, a note on cold temperatures in December 1949 through January 1950, an attempt at a CNR extension, promises to resurface the No. 4 highway South, a note on SFTS 39 and other local events during WWII, Lloyd Bingham, and "Deefy" Bannerman. This information is supposed to have been quoted from a scrapbook made by Jack Lundholm. There is also another article on the page concerning the first Red Cross Blood Donor Clinic and its success.

A clipping of a weekly series from "The Sun" newspaper called "Those Were The Days". The series was written by Jim Greenblat as he reminisces on the past of Swift Current. This article is from 23 January 1970. It talks about the start of Elmwood golf course mentioning that the first clubhouse opened on 21 April 1927, and the new course opened on May 24. The article also discusses a meeting in 1921 that inspired said golf course, the building of Citizen's rink in 1920, the "Native Sons Day" hosted by the Kiwanis club in November 1924, a note on cold temperatures in December 1949 through January 1950, an attempt at a CNR extension, promises to resurface the No. 4 highway South, a note on SFTS 39 and other local events during WWII, Lloyd Bingham, and "Deefy" Bannerman. This information is supposed to have been quoted from a scrapbook made by Jack Lundholm. There is also another article on the page concerning the first Red Cross Blood Donor Clinic and its success.
Paper, Paper


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