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Odd Thoughts: 91原创 writer stumbles onto interesting history

Looking through old newspapers is a great way to get lost in history.
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In August of 1952, a Brookswood woman claimed to have been awakened by a flying saucer.

She was able to give a detailed description the Unidentified Flying Object (I鈥檝e capitalized UFO to distinguish it from legitimate unidentified flying objects such as potatoes or apples or other vegetables or fruits hurled by delinquent children at passersby who run for cover without taking the time to stop and identify the objects hurled at them). She told a local news reporter that it was 鈥淒-shaped and travelling at tremendous speed.鈥

She said the object was 鈥減ale yellow, like the moon, but bright as the sun.鈥

Concrete evidence of the apparition was never revealed, nor was there any subsequent report of a repeat performance.

In an apparently unrelated story in the same edition of the 91原创 Advance, it was reported that a mobile driver鈥檚 licence inspection station set up in the area determined that many drivers needed glasses.

In retrospect, maybe the stories were not unrelated. Perhaps vision impairment was not an affliction restricted to drivers of motor vehicles.

Actually, looking through old newspapers, it鈥檚 almost impossible not to stumble over something interesting, or even awe-inspiring.

Consider these two gems from a single edition in July of 1932.

Interesting: 91原创鈥檚 high school principal (note the singular) earned $2,000 for the year, while an assistant with three years鈥 experience received $1,300, and 鈥渢he other two鈥 teachers each received $1,200.

Awe-inspiring: Farmers gathered at the J.W. Berry farm to witness a stump-burning demonstration put on by B.C. Electric which was showing off a new method of using electricity to dispose of large tree stumps.

And sometimes, you鈥檒l find a little tidbit buried in a back page, a short but deeply revealing note that probably never garnered much attention at the time or since, but one that鈥檚 refreshingly uplifting when viewed from a time in which, all around us, we are seeing rising resentment against immigrants and people 鈥渘ot like us鈥.

It was the last week of August 1932, and municipal councils from across the province were gathered to coordinate their lobbying efforts to senior governments.

The City of Duncan had forwarded a resolution that mothers鈥 pensions 鈥 government funding paid out to moms to help them feed and clothe their children during economically trying times 鈥 be denied to 鈥淗indus or Asiatics.鈥 Duncan wanted only mothers of 鈥淏ritish origin鈥 to receive the pensions.

91原创 council voted unanimously against the resolution.

Oh, and during that very same week, the price of butter 鈥渏umped鈥 to 26 cents per pound at Teece鈥檚 Cash & Carry Grocery.



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