TABLE OF CONTENTSPublications Mail Agreement No. 0040012044 Registration No. 09027 Return undeliverable items to: The Newfoundland Herald, P.O. Box 2015, St. John’s, NL, A1C 5R7 15 23 6 LOVE OF FISHERY QUOTE OF THE WEEK BIRTHDAY BASH Mother and daughter fishing duo Lillian and Christine “There is no better Day reflect for their love of the fishery in this reveal- sunrise to be seen A recap of the night Juno winners July Talk rang in Canada’s Big Birthday Bash on George Street in St. on this island and John’s with style. 25 ing and emotional feature. 29 I am very thank- ful to the sea for giving me a decent livelihood and thank God daily for keeping us safe on the water.” — Jessie Ann Marsh WINDOW IN TIME GROS MORNE FEST 30 How a surprise package in the mail sent NTV’s Jodi The Gros Morne Theatre Festival, in its 23rd year, Cooke spiraling back into her childhood, and the brings the best in Newfoundland storytelling to one reflections that came along with it. of our most picturesque locations. INSIDE THIS WEEK 2 FROM THE ARCHIVES 29 LOCAL ARTS & MORE 40 SCENES OF NL WADE TARLING Celebrating our past Gros Morne Theatre Fest Reader photo submissions Talented multi-instrumentalist, Wade Tarling lets the 3 WAIT TILL I TELLS YA 30 MUSIC SPOTLIGHT 42 HOROSCOPES music do the talking with his newest collection of The tradition continues... Wade Tarling Life according to the stars tunes, Strength. 4 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR 32 THIS WEEK WITH JIM 43 TV WEEK COVER PHOTO BY Publish or perish Ask Alice Your weekly TV guide COLIN PITTMAN PHOTOGRAPHY 6 PEOPLE 33 PURRFECT PETS 45 MUST SEE TV NOW AVAILABLE Local and Hollywood celebs Reader submissions A rundown of top TV picks! ONLINE! 12 INSPIRATIONAL 34 CRIME FLASHBACK 72 GET PUZZLED! Tribute to a fisherman Gallery of rogues Train your brain 15 COVER STORY 36 FINE OL’ SCOFF 75 COMICS Love of fishery Baked cod The Herald’s funny pages 18 FISHERY FEATURE 37 BABY OF THE YEAR 78 KIDS’ CORNER Fisherwomen of Garnish Reader submissions Activities, art work, DIY’s 25 BLAST FROM THE PAST 38 SOAP TALK 80 LAST LAUGH A window back in time Daytime’s hottest topics Tickle your funnybone 28 WHAT’S ON THE GO? 39 MOVIE MINUTE Provincial listings In theatres and on demand THIS WEEK’S HERALD CONTESTS 33 PURRFECT PETS 69 SNAPPY CASH PUZZLE 71 HERALD HIJINKS WWW.NFLDHERALD.COM 37 BABY OF THE YEAR 69 NTV LUCKY NUMBER 74 SUPER CASH PUZZLE 40 SCENES OF NL 70 LUCKY NUMBER BINGO 79 WIN A BOOK DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com JULY 15 - 21, 2018/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 1
From the Archives Volume 72 No. 28 70 YEARS AGO this week ... THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD. In recognition of over 70 years of The Published by the SUNDAY HERALD LTD., Newfoundland Herald, we delight in giving 460 Logy Bay Road, St. John’s, Newfoundland. readers a glimpse into our colourful past. Tel.: (709) 726-7060, Fax: (709) 726-6971. A number of prominent citizens, including His Mail: P.O. Box 2015, St. John’s, NL, A1C 5R7. Worship the Mayor, received poison pen let- ters, according to The Sunday Herald. The E-mail: [email protected]. letters, of a religious and political nature, were so vile Entire contents copyright 2017 that it was considered a new low in the present political © The Newfoundland Herald. All rights reserved. campaign being waged. It was seen as obvious that the person, or persons behind the letters were attempting SUBSCRIPTION RATES: In Newfoundland and to make the coming referendum a religious vote, and Labrador – 26 issues for $43.94 + HST, 52 issues to stir up as much religious propaganda as possible. All (1 year) for $82.68 + HST. Call 1-800-901-4901. the letters contained a tirade of abuse because of the political inclinations of the citizens. PUBLISHING CREED “If you abuse POWER you lose it, But if you do not use POWER you also lose it.” 1948 Publisher: The Sunday Herald Ltd. G.W. Stirling JULY 11 - JULY 17 Founder: G. Scott Stirling Cover Editor: Pam Pardy-Ghent Managing Editor: Dillon Collins Staff Writer: Shannon Cleary A PRICE ON MARRIAGE? BARTERING BABIES Art Director: Graphic Artists: Laurene Slaney, Erin McCarthy A 33 year old widow residing in St. An unidentified Halifax man, believed Contributing Photographers: Sara Rostotski, John’s, who has two children, shared with to be a former resident of St. John’s, was Paul Daly, Bud Gaulton, Aamie Gillam this publication that she will marry any suspected by the Department of Child Guy S. Davis, sober man between the ages of 35 and 45, Welfare of Nova Scotia of being involved Contributing Writers: who has at least $3,000 in the bank and a on a small scale of illegal trafficking in Danette Dooley, Jim Furlong, Krystyn Decker, steady job. This was similar to a recent of- babies in the province of Nova Scotia and Wendy Rose, Sarah Jane Sheppard, Pete Soucy fer by a U.S. woman, Miss Nellie Wolan, United States. Danny Bulanadi, who had no less than 20 men write and of- Contributing Artist: Brad Crocker fer to fill her requirements. The selling of orphan children to pro- spective adopters became a lucrative rack- Sales/Circulation Manager: Miss Wolan, unlike the Newfoundland et in Canada, netting sellers as much as Gary Oliver: 570-5246 woman, asked for $10,000. $1,000 per child. Sales Representatives: Kara Puddicombe: 570-5248 Megan Murphy: 570-5297 Circulation Coordinator: Roberta Noseworthy Ron Sparkes Chief Financial Officer: Brenda Hussey Credit Manager: Operations: Adele Burton, Linda Grenning, Laura Waterman Mike Greenland Promotion: PUBLICATIONS MAIL AGREEMENT NO. 0040012044 REGISTRATION NO. 09027 RETURN UNDELIVERABLE ITEMS TO: THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD P.O. BOX 2015, ST. JOHN’S, NL, A1C 5R7 Starting at just Print & Bonus Digital* Subscription DISTRIBUTORS: St. John’s, Mount Pearl, 570-5246; $14.38 3-month subscription (13 issues) $27.21 HST included Bayden Bown, Burin Peninsula, 279-0269; 6-month subscription (26 issues) $50.53 HST included Wade Morgan, Trinity-Conception, 786-2539; 12-month subscription (52 issues) $95.08 HST included Diane Arnold, Clarenville/Bonavista, Experience The Digital* Only Subscription 677-2702; Newfoundland Herald’s Allan Miles, Grand Falls/Windsor, 535-0290; 3-month subscription (13 issues) $14.38 HST included John Morgan, Placentia, 227-2622; digital editions. 6-month subscription (26 issues) $27.60 HST included Jennie Nurse, Stephenville, 649-3475; 12-month subscription (52 issues) $53.48 HST included Ron Downey, Corner Brook/Deer Lake/ Pas- Anywhere, Anytime! *Digital versions Include: Desktop & Mobile Editions adena, 632-5918; Call1-800-901-4901 Tina Foley, Gander, 256-3853 Order Online (nfldherald.com) or Mail: (Order Form on Page 72) ISDN 0824-3581 We acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada. Nous reconnaissons l’appui financir du gouvernement du Canada. 2 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018
WAIT TILL I TELLS YA EDITORIAL BY: PAM PARDY-GHENT 3 45 6 78 9 10 2 16 15 14 13 12 11 1 COLIN PITTMAN PHOTOGRAPHY THE TRADITION CONTINUES ... 1. JESSIE ANN MARSH 5. ALICE GRANDY 9. LILY DAY 13. CONNIE LEGGE 2. SANTANA MAY 6. HENRIETTA MAY 10. CHRISTIE DAY 14. DARLENE STACEY 3. MELISSA GRANDY 7. SADIE GRANDY 11. GAIL WALSH 15. CHERYL DAY 4. MARGARET GRANDY 8. TRINA GRANDY 12. LEE CLUETT 16. DARLENE GRANDY W hen you have outport roots generations of males in his family did special edition of The Herald., explain- like I do, you grow up lov- before him. I spoke with his mother just ing why they felt the need this way; ing the fishery. You also a week ago after yet another too-close- have a natural respect for for-comfort trip at sea. ‘BECAUSE IT’S TIME’ those who earn their living from the sea. In my case, however, it was mostly “I always said the water will take “Because it’s time. For too long, peo- the men of the community who donned (him) from me. Never got him this time ple thought women in the fishery are just the oilskins and rubbers and headed though,” she shared quietly. there getting stamps. And yes, there’s out in dory. It’s not that women didn’t people who promote themselves as a do their fair share, mind you. Bandan- But it’s not just our sons at risk when harvester yet they haven’t stepped foot naed – heads could be seen bobbing up they hear the sea calling. The fishery in boat. But us? We work hard at the and down in the hot sun throughout the has fired up the belly of many wom- fishery and we support each other. We season, worn ‘sensible’ heels balancing en throughout generations of our own. haul our arses out of bed at 4 a.m. and along the flakes as the women Garnish’s Melissa Grandy is one woman then haul our guts out at sea. And then, salted and turned fish. proud to earn her living at sea. Grandy we come home and we take care of kids, started going out on in boat weekends tend to elderly parents, we clean, cook, FIRE IN THE BELLY with her father when he need an extra volunteer, and we contribute,” she says. set of hands beginning when she was Even today, most think Is it worth it? Yes, she says emphati- the fishery is a male-dom- around 15. “I had no idea what I was cally. “We get to stay in the communities inated endeavour. One of doing, but he put me to work, and we love and we get to raise our children my son’s close outport I did whatever he said to do, and I where we grew up, and hopefully the tra- buddies entered the dition continues with our children; sons fishery when learned. Quick,” she said.” or daughters.” he finished Grandy helped gather the wom- school, the en of Garnish together for this same as “Hopefully the tradition continues with our children; sons or daughters.” — Melissa Grandy Pam Pardy Ghent, The Herald’s Managing Editor, can be reached by emailing [email protected] DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com JULY 15 - 21/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 3
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR FISHER FOLK MAJOR LORNE HISCOCK PHOTO COLIN PITTMAN PHOTOGRAPHY NL SCALLOP FIASCO DARLENE GRANDY Dear Editor, couldn’t help us because they represent Darlene feels today’s technolo- Our federal government is forcing the the workers at Clearwater’s Grand Bank gy and machinery makes it much easier plant, so fishermen were hung out to dry. for women to be able to fish. 3Ps scallop fleet to destroy the only bit of fishing ground we have available to us on Why weren’t our scallop fishermen “As years ago, even in our hus- the St. Pierre bank. compensated for the loss of our fishing band’s time, they had to pull their grounds like the fisherman in the Strait lobster pots by hand where today The bank is divided into three scallop of Belle Isle who were compensated by with the hydraulic equipment it beds (northern, middle and southern), Nalcor for the loss of some of their scal- makes the job much easier for the but local fishermen from the south coast lop grounds to a hydro line? women to help.” have only had access to the northern bed since 2006. The Newfoundland scallop fleet has ‘CARPOTS’ been tied on for weeks because it’s no Back then, they built an invisible fence longer viable to fish in the northern bed. Docking facilities have also im- around the rest of the grounds where we proved. “Years ago some people always had the right to fish. We’re barred There’s a particular area in the north- would stay at their cabin on the shore from the middle and southern scallop ern bed called the Icelandic core zone during the lobster season and each beds, and only the offshore fleet from that fishermen like me have been waiting day they would keep their catch in Nova Scotia are allowed to fish there. to open for weeks. But even when the area ‘carpots’ or holding crates to sell on a does open DFO will only issue six fishing weekly basis when the collector boat It’s criminal for Newfoundland fish- permits every 10 days, which means not would come and buy the lobsters erman to be banned from fishing scal- all fishermen will get a stab at it. from the fishermen. Today, people lops in our own waters, while at the same leave from their home port daily time we can fish any other species in the DFO is pitting fishermen against fish- and sell the lobsters to buyers that same area. ermen, and it’s not right. are waiting on the wharf, that will then truck everyone’s catch to their Earlier this year, the federal govern- It’s terrible to think our own govern- plants.” ment gave away some of Clearwater’s ment is stopping us from fishing our surf clam quota to a group including own grounds when we as fisherman Lobster pots are different as well. aboriginal groups from Atlantic Canada know there is resource enough here for “Years ago the pots were wooden and Quebec, and I agree it was terrible. all the local scallop boats to be success- which could not withstand some ful. Instead, right now there are two off- high winds and during a storm they However, what government did with shore draggers from Nova Scotia fishing would get a lot of damage, and at the Clearwater and the clams is the same our prosperous grounds by themselves end of each season there was lots of as what government did in taking away while we are tied on with no where to go. repairing to be done, but today the our scallop grounds and giving them to wire pots can withstand much more Clearwater. — Fisherman Paul Snook, which makes less repairs each sea- Fortune, NL son. I’ve been fishing with my hus- How is that right? The FFAW-Unifor band Clifford for 20 years.” SEE MORE ON PAGES 12-24 4 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018
SUBMITTED PHOTOS NATASHA PARSONS I missed many firsts: you gotta do what you gotta do Natasha Parsons understand what rience. You do your work and shut your had to go to work and leave her young it means to work hard. Besides mouth when you needs to,” she says. twins. “When I had my children, they working in the lobster fishery, at 40, the were four months old and I had to go mother of twin 17 year-old boys, owns That lesson served her well when she crabbin’. I was out on the boat seven to and runs a store in her home town of eight days at a time and I’d be home just Garnish. to shower and I’d be gone again.” “I’m like someone on speed, but I takes nothing,” she said laughing be- HEARTBREAKING tween serving customers. While she loves chatting with folks in her store, Her mother took care of the boys for what she really loves is being at sea. “I months. “Mom saw the first roll over. enjoy it to the fullest. Every day out in I cried my heart out in boat that day. I that boat is an adventure and I can’t wait missed many firsts. Not too many would to see what that adventure is going to do that, but when you pick this life, you bring me,” she shares. gotta do what you gotta do.” LIFE LESSONS The first time Parsons went out in boat she was 14. One of her best lessons she says she learned when she was 16 out fishing with her dad and Uncle Mike. “He made sure I did the work. I had to prove myself. I loved him, but I also wanted to gut ‘m and gaffed ‘m. But he did me a favour – made me push harder and I realized you had to swallow what people say and use it as a learning expe- Disclaimer: Opinions and letters published in The Newfoundland Herald are JULY 15 - 21/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 5 not necessarily the views of the Editor, or Publisher. The Newfoundland Herald reserves the right to edit or omit copy, in accordance with our policies. Letters to the Editor must be attributed with a name, address and contact phone number – names and town of origin will be printed, or may be withheld at the editor’s dis- cretion. Herald Contest Rules: Contest is open to all NL residents. Employees and immediate family members of Stirling Communications International are ineligi- ble to play or win. If the winner is unable to receive the prize, or are unreachable within a set amount of time, another entry will be chosen from the collected sub- missions. Submissions accepted in person at The Newfoundland Herald, 460 Logy Bay Road, St. John’s or online (if applicable) at nfldherald.com on the contest page. Only the winner(s) of the contest will be notified. The Newfoundland Herald reserves the right to publish the name and photograph of the winner. Prize must be accepted as awarded, with no substitutions. DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com
PEOPLE! LOCAL & INTERNATIONAL CELEBRITY NEWS PAGE8 JULK TALK ROCKS CANADA DAY T he biggest party on Canada The festivities kicked off with the Then came the headliners, who Day took place in St. John’s, finalists for the Rock The Block com- with no shortage of enthusiasm without question. petition showing their stuff (see page or energy, treated the packed crowd seven for more), with supporting acts to a massive set that included fan fa- Juno winning rockers Property and Soap Opera warming vourites Picturing Love, The Garden the audience up as the evening heated and Summer Dress. Next stop for music July Talk headlined the annual Cana- up. fans, George Street Festival! DC da Day Big Birthday Bash on George Street, and it was one for the ages. 6 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018
PEOPLE! INSTAGRAM: @OURLADYPEACE DOUG HAWCO FACEBOOK PHOTO WHO WILL ROCK THE BLOCK? DOUG HAWCO T he 2018 George Rock The Block Competition — NEW ALBUM — Street Festival will see fans decide who will is set to kick off earn the opening slot with an Halifax based Newfoundlander online voting poll that runs Doug Hawco is set to release his in style on July until July 20th. The bands third full length album Follow on Au- include Brother Down, gust 1st, with a re- 26th, headlined by Ca- Disposition, The Hellfire lease show at the Carleton in Halifax nadian rock legends Our Club, Mantra, Red City and Trend. on August 2nd. Visit georgestreetlive.ca for more. DC The 11 track effort Lady Peace. But one lucky consists of nine originals plus two local act will get to grace the covers. For more information visit www. stage ahead of the rock icons. The 2018 doughawco.ca DC GAMEA YEAR. A GAME. AN ISLAND. JULY 15 - 21, 2018/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 7 JOAN SULLIVAN W W W B R E A K W AT E R B O O K S C O M DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com
PEOPLE! LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR JUDY M. FOOTE PHOTOS ECHL.COM PHOTO ON THE MAT AT GOVERNMENT HOUSE ZACH O’BRIEN I f you are feeling like strik- lunchtime yoga session of the summer. ing a pose, going down- Another free class, this time in tai chi, JOINING THE MARLIES ward dog, or if you sim- will be added for Tuesdays. PG ply need to get the kinks Newfoundland native Zach out, why not head over to Government O’Brien is joining the Calder House for some free yoga on the lawn? Cup Champion Toronto Marlies. Each Wednesday this summer at 12:15 O’Brien signs with the Marlies, after grounds of Government House in St. recording 35 points in the 2017-18 John’s is open for anyone who wants to season with the Bakersfield Condors join in. About 150 people joined this province’s Lieutenant-Governor, her and Wichita Thunder. He honour, Judy Foote for the first free previously captured the Calder Cup, the AHL’s equivalent to the Stanley Cup, in 2014-15 with Man- chester. DC 8 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018
PLACE | BAFFIN ISLAND PEOPLE! INSTAGRAM: @ DOUG.PLUMB DOUG PLUMB NEW EDGE COACH SUBMITTED PHOTOS The St. John’s Edge Interim NEWFOUNDLAND EXPLORER General Manager Carl English announced that Doug Plumb has been N ewfoundlander Aldrin and Elon Musk. Over named the club’s new head coach. Ste- Dr. Latonia the past 15 years Dr. Har- Hartery has tery has sailed through the ven Marcus will con- tinue his role as As- been be- Northwest Passage nine sociate Head stowed an amazing hon- times, circumnavigated Coach while Stu our, being named a Fellow Newfoundland 12 times, Julius will take on of the New York City Ex- as well as taken part in other the role of assistant. PLACE | GRISE FJORD Doug Partridge will join plorers Club, joining the likes voyages throughout the Cana- the team as a consultant to the of Neil De Grasse Tyson, Buzz dian Arctic and Greenland. DC coaching staff. DC DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com JULY 15 - 21, 2018/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 9
PEOPLE! KING LEBRON JOHN TAVARES JAMES VAN RIEMSDYK PAUL STASTNY NHL FREE AGENT FRENZY HEADS TO LAKERS T he Toronto to Montreal on a one year The King is heading to LA. Maple Leafs deal, Paul Stastny left Months after taking the Cleav- have landed Winnipeg for a three year land Cavaliers to the NBA finals, the deal with the Vegas Golden their man. The Knights, Jack Johnson opted four time MVP has for a five year deal with the signed a four biggest signing by a mile at Pittsburgh Penguins, James year, $154 mil- van Riemsdyk left Toronto to lion contract the 2018 NHL Free Agent return to the Philadelphia Flyers, with the Los Vancouver added a pair of forwards in period came when Toronto Jay Beagle and Antonie Roussel and Angeles Lakers. This Calgary landed winger James Neal. DC will be James’ third team following landed coveted superstar cen- Cleveland and a four year stint with the Miami Heat. DC tre John Tavares, who took, by all accounts, a discount of $77 million for seven years to come home to Toronto. Elsewhere, Tomas Plekanec returned 10 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018
PEOPLE!FILE PHOTOS TRENTMcCLELLAN MATTWRIGHT FILE PHOTO NEWFOUNDLANDERS JOIN JFL KELLIE LODER A pair of noted Newfound- Minutes in recent years, have been — ISLAND TOUR — land comedians are announced as perform- joining the biggest ers for the 2018 Just For Juno nominee Kellie Loder has Laughs Festival in Montre- kicked off her Newfoundland comedy festival in al. Wright joins the comedy tour this past week with intimate gala hosted by Ken Jeong on dates in Norris Point and Clarenville. the country. Touring in support of her latest album July 26, while McClellan per- Benefit Of The Doubt, Loder will make Homegrown comedians Matt forms alongside Will Forte on stops in St. John’s, Grand Falls-Wind- July 25th. DC sor, and Woody Point throughout Wright and Trent McClellan, July and August. For more informa- tion and tour dates visit kellieloder. both of whom have been lending com. DC their talents to This Hour Has 22 DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com JULY 15 - 21, 2018/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 11
INSPIRATIONAL PEOPLE SUBMITTED PHOTOS COLIN PITTMAN PHOTO HONOURING FAMILY TRADITIONS The sea can be kind to those who earn a living off it, but it can also be cruel. Sisters Connie Legge and Lori Snook lost their dad in 2006. The Herald reflects BY PAM PARDY GHENT C onnie Legge lost her dad, prise and a year later on April 20, 2006 every year in his memory.” Wallace Grandy, to the sea in she lost her dad. As it was the start of the lobster sea- 2006. The Herald spoke with Legge’s sister, Lori Snook, “He lost his life as his boat capsized son, the fishing had to continue. “I still while him and his crew were deposit- don’t know to this day how I had the two years after the tragic death. (Page ing their lobsters in the carpots which strength to do this, but I was in deni- was anchored just a short distance from al/shock and it was years later before I 13) At the time, Legge – who came from shore. I place an annual flower reef there could accept what had happened. Dad was and still is my strength and guard- a long line of proud fishermen – had “Dad was and still is my ian angel that drives me,” she says. strength and guardian shared that she was determined to carry angel that drives me.” FISHER FAMILY on the family tradition. That still holds — Connie Legge Tragedy hasn’t driven the Grandy women from the fishery. “I have five true today. female cousins and a couple of female friends who own their own enterprise ‘MY DAD’S FOOTSTEPS’ today,” she says proudly. “Someone had to carry the family Legge says she loves the challenges genes in their blood and of course it was and the unknowns that she faces every- me who wanted to follow in my dad’s day as she heads out on the water. footsteps,” she shared. “I strongly praise any female fisher Legge started fishing in 1992 while in that faces the challenges we endeavour her last year of high school, going lump and Mother Nature every spring as we fishing with her parents so she could af- go on the water. It’s a tough livelihood ford a car. Five years later, she wanted but wouldn’t change a thing.” more of the sea – and the money. “How could a girl not love the money she was making with no degrees?” In 2005 she bought her own enter- 12 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018
BY PAM PARDY GHENT (FIRST PUBLISHED, JAN. 20, 2008) SUBMITTED PHOTOS TRIBUTE TO A FISHERMAN L ori Snook, 36, of Grand feel as if my grief has been eased a little grandfather and husband. “He was this Bank misses her father and by sharing it with others, and by reading short, blocky, jolly fella,” she explains. she wanted a way to remem- about the loss and healing of others,” she says. A ROGUE WAVE ber him. Like many before Snook shares the story of the life and He was also a hard worker and so her, she thought about creating a special death of her father, Wallace Grandy, 55, he was out on the first day of the 2006 of Garnish. “My father was a fourth gen- lobster season. The date was April 20th. Facebook site in his honour. “I felt there eration fisherman,” she begins. He was a jovial man, a kind and loving father, “Dad was out on the water with two was more to it that I needed to do, some- others when a rogue wave came out of “Dad was out on the nowhere, hit his boat and it capsized,” thing a little different,” she says. water ... when a rogue she says. Everyone went into the water. wave came out of no- While other fishermen managed to save A PLACE TO REMEMBER where, hit his boat and it the other two individuals in the water, capsized.” — Lori Snook her father had gone under the boat. She recognized that so many have also Snook says they believe he was knocked lost loved ones they wish to remember. unconscious and drowned. He was dead That’s why she created the Facebook when he was hauled out of the water. site, In Memory of those that have went on to Heaven. “As I was missing my “It was very hard on the family,” Snook father I spoke with others who also had says quietly as she recalls that day. Her loved ones that had passed and one thing mother had been preparing lunch and that everyone had in common was that had glanced up and saw her husband out they never wanted that loved one to be on the water checking his pots. She kept forgotten — ever,” she says. busy, figuring he would be in shortly and ready to have a bite to eat, Snook shares. Snook’s Facebook site is a place to “When she glanced up again she saw the remember. On it, members post pictures boats circling around and then the word of those that have died. They also share came…” she trails off. poems, prayers and offer each other advice and support. Snook says she has Snook says being a fishing family, all been moved by the response of those the kids took a turn fishing with their who have posted. “Words can be so powerful — the messages that people have posted are so moving and already I DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com JULY 15 - 21/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 13
LORI SNOOK’S FAMILY “As the boats set out that season I said to myself that dad is still sailing, just from another harbour.” — Lori Snook father, but the middle child, Connie Legge, later became a full-time fisher- Facebook site she created. “I didn’t realize Snook says she still thinks about her person. That meant they were all aware before how much death touches every last father every day. “That first year as the of the dangers. Yet, there had not been one of us, it leaves no one untouched,” she boats set out that season I said to myself a tragedy in Garnish waters for so long. says. Membership is growing, and there that dad is still sailing, just from another are people “from all over,” leaving messag- harbour,” she says. “You are fearful, but you always fig- es of loss, of love, and of hope. ured those you love would come home Snook feels her father still keeps an when the day’s work is done,” she says. WATCHING OVER THEM eye on their family, and on the local fish- ermen as they head out to sea. “It’s nice to be able to put a picture up of someone you loved so much, to intro- “The lobster season when dad died duce that person in some way to others was the best lobster season in a long time who never met them, but who know for this area,” she says. “I believe dad was what you are going through,” she says. watching over them, making sure they were all doing okay.” COMMUNITY SUPPORT Snook says the community rallied around her family. In fact, the family were shocked, yet honoured, that so many fishermen stayed off the sea on the day her father was buried. “The beginning of lobster season is when you make your money, so staying away for a day was a big sacrifice for them,” she says. Going to her father’s funeral cost them money, she says. Legge gave the eulogy at her father’s funeral. “My sister learned to fish with my father and she spoke of the way he made it fun, how even when she made mistakes (like losing a fish or two overboard) he always joked, teasing that ‘there goes another dollar off your cheque,’” Snook says with a chuckle. Her father, she says, didn’t say anything unless there was a grin on his face. Snook is moved when she speaks of the 14 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018
COLIN PITTMAN PHOTOGRAPHY BY PAM PARDY-GHENT COVER STORY FOR THE LOVE OF THE FISHERY Mother and daughter fishing duo Lillian and Christine Day reflect on their time in the fishery L illian Day of Garnish will be While she’s never shied away from the 65 in September and while work, she also admits enjoying a secret she says she’s doing so with pleasure while she and her husband fished more secluded waters from their “mixed emotions,” she will 35’ longliner, MV Christie Gail. be hanging up her nets and retiring once ‘‘One thing I like about fishing on the shoreline was the tranquility and the this season is over. peacefulness of nature there and listen- ing to the sea,” she says. “I’m getting out after 32 years in the SOME CLOSE CALLS fishery. I’ll miss it, I won’t lie. I’ll miss But the sea wasn’t always kind. “I also the first week the most, putting out the hated the sea at times when it came to hauling up the boat on the slipway. We (lobster) pots. The first week of hauling had an ATV and a block and tackle on the sea bank to haul up the boat when is really exciting. If you don’t go the first we came in from fishing. My job was to hold the boat on by the slipway til Ger- week, you’re missing out on a lot,” the “One thing I like about ald would run up and tie on the boat to fishing on the shoreline haul it in. Several times while waiting for seasoned fisher begins. was the tranquility and the peacefulness of na- LIFETIME ON THE OCEAN ture there and listening to the sea.” — Lillian Day She’s spent nearly a lifetime on the ocean, part of it spent fishing from what she calls ‘the shoreline’, a remote area called Round Nap near Point Ros- ie about 25 kilometres from Garnish. DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com JULY 15 - 21/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 15
COLIN PITTMAN PHOTOGRAPHY But I never thought of giving up.” Lillian’s daughter Christine Day sits “Sometimes I’m nervous but I’m out there too and it’s what we know. I have no fear going out in boat, so I near her mom. guess I have to like that she’s out there too.” — Lillian Day “She’s not givin’ up because she wants Gerald to get everything ready to haul kept at it, she says. to. Her health and dad’s health is start- the boat out of the water, the sea would ing to deteriorate just because of age. I take me off my feet, and into the frigid SATCHED RIGHT THROUGH said, get out while you still got some go waters below. Not nice in rough seas. in ya, or keep at it until you’re wore out,” There were close calls, but not anytime “You just keep going. You are busy. If she says. did I lose the boat off the slipway,” she it’s raining, you zipper up to the chin. says proudly. The worst is, when you come in, you’re ‘A DYING BREED’ satched right down through the middle. When the seas turned rough, you just That’s the worst. Not the cold – the wet. At 40, Christine has been fishing most of her life, but started full time in 1996. She lived away for a while, in Cal- gary, but returned home after a year. “I hated the lifestyle away and missed my roots,” she says. Many Newfoundland- ers can relate. Christine and her husband Jerry Peach purchased their own fishing license in 2007 and she’s been skipper ever since. “I love my job. Love my life. The fishery is one of a kind and honestly, with all the rules and regulations there are now, it makes it near to impossible for a young person to start a career which somewhat makes us a dying breed,” she says. Reflecting on having a daughter in the fishery, Lillian sighs. Does it make her happy? “ “That is questionable. We always took the kids out in boat when they were small, banding lobsters or whatever, and we hoped they wouldn’t go into the fish- ery. My son, he’s older, he went doing hair. My daughter went on to pursue a career in Calgary and then came back fishing. Sometimes I’m nervous but I’m out there too and it’s what we know. I have no fear going out in boat, so I guess I have to like that she’s out there too.” ‘DOING THE WORK’ When asked why they felt it was im- portant to showcase their way of life in The Herald, the women are clear. “It’s important to know the women are not just collecting a check. When we gets paid it’s because we worked the same or as hard as any man. We don’t sit on the shore while someone else goes fishin’ and we take the credit. The only credit we get is what we worked for,” says Christine with passion. Her mother agrees; “We are not just 16 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018
COLIN PITTMAN PHOTOGRAPHY “I’m proud of what we do, but you got people who make you feel like you have to hang your head down like you’re ashamed. The women who posed for The Herald, and lots more like us, we all work hard and I’m proud to say it.” — Christine Day there on E.I., we are doing the work.” are the women who won’t give up on ‘‘I got mixed emotions retiring. I don’t It’s also about being proud of what you their roots. They are in it, so to speak, know. My daughter’s fishin’ so I’ll go out for the long haul. with her, but it’s hard to give up.” do as well, they both share, even when others seem to look down on those in “We live in rural Newfoundland yet Christine smiles. “She can go, but she the fishery. “I’m proud of what we do, we are able to make a comfortable living won’t work like she used to. I’ll have her but you got people who make you feel staying home here and we enjoys it. That banding lobsters or something.” like you have to hang your head down says it all,” says Christine. like you’re ashamed. The women who Lillian laughs. The roles have reversed posed for The Herald, and lots more like Lillian is quiet, lost in thought. What’s and that’s what passing the torch is all us, we all work hard and I’m proud to say on her mind? we ask. about. it. I think that’s an important message to get out there,” says Christine. COMMUNITY SUPPORT GARNISH, NL. /ELAINE STRONG PHOTO It’s also important to show how these “We live in rural Newfoundland yet we are able to make women have each other’s backs, she adds. a comfortable living staying home here and we enjoys it. “It’s nice to know that if you’re out there, That says it all.” — Christine Day someone is looking out for you. We are all after the same fish, but we all want to come home safe. If the wind picks up and you’re in trouble, you want someone to be there for you like you’d be there for them. You won’t be able to haul your- self in over. It’s important to help each other. If you’re done early, give someone else a hand. It’s how we do things around here.” And they all have the same goal. They DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com JULY 15 - 21/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 17
FISHERY FEATURE generation, explaining she has a son who works in Alberta, and that’s just dandy, SUBMITTED PHOTO thank you very much. ALL IN THE FAMILY “Not if I can help it he won’t go in the Mother/daughter duo Trina and Sadie Grandy say they are fishery,” she says. As for her? Even when truly blessed to earn a living at sea BY PAM PARDY GHENT her parents eventually retire, she is stay- ing put. “It’s all I know. Being a child of T rina Grandy is the baby in the weather we are all still in good spir- fisherpeople, there were no babysitters her family and the one who its,” says Trina. back then. You had to go in the boat joined the merry fishing with your parents and sit up front and RAISED ON THE FISHERY stay there until the nets were hauled.” crew led by her parents, Sa- Trina, however, doesn’t quite feel the She remembers living at the fishing die and Lloyd Grandy. Sadie, now 71, same about passing her love of cabin from April to July. You stayed put fishing down to the next until the fishing was done, she says. thinks having her daughter around is ‘WE ARE FISHERWOMEN’ simply amazing. “I thinks it wonderful Trina says it was important to get the because she turns after me. I love it. word out about what she does for a few reasons. Right from the heart. Haven’t entered “People look at me and say; you are in me mind to retire. My husband’s been the lobster fishery? No! Actually, yes, I fish. People say, you look too pretty. fishing for over 60 years and I’ve been Well, you might be cleaned up and look fine when you are outside, but inside fishing for over 35.” that boat you are working. There’s no pretending. We are fisherwomen. And Trina laughs. “We’re the only boat Garnish has a high rate of fishingwom- en and they should be honoured.” that has two ladies as crew. We laughs, Mom Sadie is also proud of what she we have so much fun. No matter does for a living. “I got up at 4 o’clock this morning and now I’m just in through “I am truly blessed COLIN PITTMAN PHOTOGRAPHY the door 12 hours later. Fishing’s been to be able to say good to us. No matter how bad it was, that I still have my you still made a living.” parents fishing by my side.” And she loves fishing dearly. “If I wasn’t fishing I’d just be doing house- — Trina Grandy work. Get me out there,” Sadie laughs. Her daughter smiles. “We’ve seen alot of spray in our face. When it’s flat calm and the sun is in your face it’s beau- tiful, but you pay for it on windy days.” When Sadie started out, the pots were made of wood and times were hard. “Before the lob- ster season began, we would comb the beach for ‘tum- blers’ as they called it to put in the pots for weight, repair- ing and taking pots 18 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018
FISHER FOLK SUBMITTED PHOTO COLIN PITTMAN PHOTOGRAPHY “Inside that boat you are working. There’s no pretending. ALICE GRANDY We are fisherwomen. And Garnish has a high rate of fishingwomen and they should be honoured.”— Trina Grandy Alice started fishing in 1989 but gave it up in 2014 for her health. out of storage, haul herring nets trying I enjoy it. I will give up fishing when my “I fished for 25 years, 12 years of to get bait on hand for the upcoming body tells me that I can’t go, other than this I fished on the shore and that was no piece of cake. I could tell you season. Preparation had to be done to that I’m staying fishing. Fishing may not stories that would make your hair stand on end. My reason for fishing the slipway where we land our boat be for everyone but as for me I’ve always was I married a fisherman and I fig- ured if I went in the boat with him on the shoreline. After the winer, large had the nerve for fishing and as long as I we could make a good living, and we did. I miss being out there like heck. boulders and other large rocks would continue to have my health and strength, It’s hard work, but when it’s for your- self it makes a big difference.” wash in the dockway I will continue still in area where it all needed “I am proud to carry the fishing industry.” COLIN PITTMAN PHOTOGRAPHY to be removed to put the slipway down again.” on a legacy that has ‘TRULY BLESSED’ HENRIETTA MAY ‘I LOVE FISHING’ been in my father’s Trina smiles at her Henrietta May says she never thought fishing would be her life’s work. Life has become a lot family for many gen- mom. She feels the same way. “Never in my life did I ever think I would be a fisherwoman. But here easier, she shares. The erations. Fishing will “I am truly blessed to I am and I loves it and enjoys it very pots are made of wire be able to say that I still much. We all got good points and and requires less work live on in the Grandy have my parents fishing funny moments about fishing. I was always told if you can find a job you to maintain and their family.” — Trina Grandy by my side. They are the loves you will never work a day in boat is larger. But the two eldest people still your life.” way it makes her feel is fishing in Garnish. They what is key, she says. have showed me throughout my fishing “I can absolutely say I love fishing. It’s career that hard work pays off and you the best time I feel when I’m out on the really have to enjoy what you do.” water. I can’t wait to get back at it in the The three spend their time laughing spring time. To watch the sunrise in the and enjoying each other while out in morning really does your heart good.” boat, but there’s always something more Given a choice, she’d still pick fishing, somber at play as well; the feeling of says Sadie. keeping a legacy alive. “If someone gave me a choice of a “I am proud to carry on a legacy that prepaid vacation to Florida or go fish- has been in my father’s family for many ing, hands down fishing all the way. I’d generations. Fishing will live on in the rather be on the water, that’s how much Grandy family.” DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com JULY 15 - 21/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 19
FISHERY FEATURE SUBMITTED PHOTO SUBMITTED PHOTO THE NEXT GENERATION through the morning and surviving the weather.” As a mom, Melissa Grandy knows the fishery works for her family. Will the tradition continue? BY PAM PARDY GHENT Why does she do it? It’s in her blood, she says. M elissa Grandy runs her own in comfort, we are out in hail, sleet and fishing enterprise with her snow and wind and our arses are freezing “My dad fished his whole life. I bought husband Darren – and often and we are out there punching through his enterprise. Dad misses it with every their two kids – at her side. the waves through the bay trying to get ounce of his being; he wants to be in The fishery, she says, has been good to the boat now but he can’t because of his them as a family. “It’s the only industry back. It kills me to see that. No matter where you can haul your guts out work- how bad it gets I says; I’ll fish it as long ing for two months of the year and then I can, fish it till I can’t fish no more, for be a full-time mother for the rest of the dad.” year,” she begins with gratitude. I LEARNED THE ROPES HEADING OUT TO SEA COLIN PITTMAN PHOTOGRAPHY When asked why she wanted The Her- Grandy, who has two young children; “No matter how bad it ald to feature the women who fish from Logan, 13, and Chloe, nine, says the gets I says; I’ll fish it as Garnish, her answer was quick. sacrifices she makes heading out to sea long I can, fish it till I at four a.m (warming her hands on the can’t fish no more, for “There’s people who promote them- hauler’s motor when the cold gets too dad.” — Melissa Grandy selves as a harvesters yet they haven’t much to stand) when the goin’s good are stepped foot in boat. Us women, we sup- well worth it. port each other. I planned on being an LPN, and I ended up cutting up lump, “Besides loving the work, the biggest slicing open fish trying to take out all the benefit is being home with your kids eggs. I learned the ropes.” when you’re done. You’re still out (in the shed) at your gear, but you can raise your But being able to promote what they children. How lucky are we?” do for a living is about so much more, she says. But it’s not all sunshine and roses, she admits. “Days others are sat in an office “Women are not looked at the same, even today. Too many women were looked at as not really in the fishery. Peo- ple say it to me all the time; oh, you are actually in the boat? No by! I’m home doing friggin’ arts and crafts. It used to be women were there to get her stamps or working in the plant. My husband has a trade, yet he’s been away eight weeks in the last three years. The fishery keeps our family alive. It’s our only source of income. We work hard, and it’s been good to us,” she says. Grandy says being involved in the fish- ery is also about keeping it around for the next generation. 20 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018
FISHER FOLK SUBMITTED PHOTOS COLIN PITTMAN PHOTOGRAPHY “I hope one of them takes it over. I think my daughter DARLENE STACEY will, because she shows more interest. She’s like her mother. Ready to take on anything.” — Melissa Grandy Like many of the women who fish in Garnish, Darlene Stacey comes “We can fish every day of the year, thing. When it’s shitty we just look at from a long line of fishermen on both but if every license went out and fished each other; move your fingers! Keep ‘em sides of her family. because they could, there wouldn’t be a moving! Only went twice to warm them damn fish left in the ocean. As long as on the hauler motor on the exhaust this “My father is from the resettled we continue to protect it like we are do- year. My hood never comes down. If my fishing community of Point Rosie ing now; keeping extra pots off the wa- hood comes down, it’s splitting rocks.” where he fished with my grandfa- ter, returning v-notches and the spawn- ther. In 1984 my grandfather retired ies (to the water), we’re always going to Besides the weather, the only other and my mom went fishing with my have a little fishery here. When you see downside is the uncertainty. dad.” anyone doing otherwise, we become a little hostile. We don’t want to lose this “It’s the only industry out there where As a teenager, Stacey would occa- industry. We got one of the best (lobster you don’t know what you’re getting paid sionally go out as well to haul nets or fisheries) on the island and it’s not worth until a week later,” she says with a what- jig for cod during summer vacation. risking.” can-you-do laugh. “I left Newfoundland in 1989 ‘IT’S UNNERVING’ Still, the good news is she’s always to go to college in PEI. I worked in earned a living. And she hopes one of her various places across Canada for the Still, Grandy says sometimes staying two kids will eventually carry the torch. next 11 years. My mom bought her in the fishery is hard. own fishing enterprise in 1998. In “I hope one of them takes it over. I 2000 my husband Steve and I moved “Days you’re glad you are in it and think my daughter will, because she back home from Ontario to go fish- other days you can’t stand it because shows more interest. She’s like her ing with them. I fished with my dad you see so many losing everything they mother. Ready to take on anything.” and Steve fished with my mom.” got because they are not able to fish. Or worse. My uncle drowned, Uncle Wal- ‘I LOVE FISHING’ lace Grandy, and a lot of days there’s too much wind. It’s unnerving. We don’t While her parents have since re- have the biggest boats out there.” tired, Stacey and her husband con- tinue to fish. The lobsters will still be in the pots to- morrow, she says, and if she doesn’t feel “I love fishing, despite the often good, they don’t go out. cold and rough weather conditions. Since my first boat ride to Point Ros- That doesn’t happen often. “We don’t ie as a young child I have always been miss much. We go out in almost any- just as comfortable on the water as on dry land. I am proud to be one of the many women who carry on the fish- ing tradition here in Garnish.” DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com JULY 15 - 21/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 21
FISHERY FEATURE JENNA WALTERS PHOTO MAIDS OF THE SEA GAIL WALSH - ‘THIS IS MY LIFE AND I LOVE IT’ The Herald chats with fisherwomen of Garnish, NL BY PAM PARDY GHENT Gail Walsh has been fishing for 29 Walsh and her husband operate two When fishing is over you don’t have a lot years. Now 48, she reflects on step- enterprises and she says she’s proud of to do until April the following year and ping in the boat at the age of 19. the work she puts into their business a lot of people dislike you for that. So “I started with my dad and my two sometimes you feel ... something. I get brothers. But my mom, she never want- “When you speak to people and they a funny feeling over it sometimes. I get ed none of her children in boat. She ask you what you do, it can be hard. to stay home with my kids when fishing worked in the fish plant and dearly loved is over, yes, but there’s a cost that comes working in the plant. She was there until COLIN PITTMAN PHOTOGRAPHY with that.” she retired. But as for us in the boat? No, she didn’t want us at it.” “... women like me go ‘THIS IS MY LIFE’ out in boat. We get FINDING HER CALLING out of bed and go out There’s a big monthly bank payment through that gut through for one, plus if anything breaks; from But Walsh soon learned fishing was all weather. And there a hauler to a motor, that comes out of her thing. “I had an office job for a while should be pride taken in their pocket. “A lot of people lie in their but it wasn’t for me. Put me outdoors that.” — Gail Walsh beds while women like me go out in boat. and not pinned down and I enjoy it. But We get out of bed and go out through my mother never wanted anything to do that gut through all weather. And there with the boat and she’s still the worrier. should be pride taken in that. Not every- She was more comfortable when dad body can handle what’s out there when it was in the boat with us all. Now dad, he comes to the work and the wind.” turned 75, and he still goes fishing with my brother.” It’s not a job for the faint of heart, she says. Walsh is mom to two. Will they fol- low in her footsteps? Walsh’s answer has “It’s a physical, stressful job. I love it at us chuckling. “My 18 year old just grad- the best of times, but when it’s rough and uated and if she comes in the boat, I’m nasty you hate it then. Everyone would getting out of it. She has a mouth you be like it; happy in the good and not as could slap right off. No worries. She’s 18 happy in the bad.” Would she change and she knows it all, she does.” anything and go back to an office job? “Never. This is my life and I love it.” 22 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018
FISHER FOLK JESSIE ANN MARSH PHOTO JESSIE ANN MARSH Proud to say she’s a female lobster fisher person in Garnish COLIN PITTMAN PHOTOGRAPHY by the blue waters of Fortune Bay. MARGARET GRANDY I began my working career as an oughly enjoyed it and I never got sea sick, office clerk in Marystown which I which was my biggest fear. In 2015 I sold Margaret is now retired after done for many years. I later took the the shop and started lobster fishing with spending 25 years in boat. plunge and purchased the local conve- my husband. I am very comfortable out nience store in Garnish just up the road in boat and glad I decided to give it a try. “I started out as a fish plant worker from the wharf. This is where I got my I am hoping once I get my required sea in 1976. I stayed there until I had my first glimpse of all these women coming time and credits we can acquire a second three kids then I went weight master in from lobster fishing each day. enterprise. on the wharf for four years before I got brave enough to go fishing with JESSIE ANN MARSH PHOTO Many days it’s windy, raining and just my husband, Marven.” miserable, other days it could be snow. One lady came to the shop one day You never know what to expect, but the The two had a 19 ft. flat that they to buy oil gear to wear out in boat. She nice days always make up for the bad hauled lump nets in for two years be- bought two or three sizes too large for ones. There is no better sunrise to be fore getting a lobster licence in 1988. her and I couldn’t understand why. I seen on this island and I am very thank- later came to find out that she was preg- ful to the sea for giving me a decent live- “We advanced to a 21 ft. fibreglass nant and wanted her oil gear to fit her for lihood and thank God daily for keeping boat Seahawk. She could pound the the full lobster season. us safe on the water. you-know-what out of you everyday.” Soon, another licence followed and they started taking their children fishing with them as well. “Now they fish for themselves. I left the fishing in 2009 after a long, hard battle with health issues, but love to wake up each day and look off to see where my kids are to each day.” THE WOMEN FISHERS COLIN PITTMAN PHOTOGRAPHY COLIN PITTMAN PHOTOGRAPHY I always admired the women fish- “I am very thankful to CHERYL DAY ers that went out in boat in all types the sea for giving me of weather to do their job, but then to a decent livelihood and Cheryl started fishing in 2004 realize that many of these women are thank God daily for with her husband and father-in-law. She out there while pregnant was just mind keeping us safe on the took to fishing like a fish takes to water. blowing to me at the time. water.” — Jessie Ann Marsh “I went to Marine in 2008 to work I was not born into a fishing family towards becoming level 2 and became like many of the women fishers, but my an enterprise owner in 2011.” spouse has been a fisher person his en- tire working life. He purchased his lob- ster enterprise in 2011 and I finally got the opportunity to go out and see what it was all about. To my surprise I thor- DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com JULY 15 - 21/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 23
FISHER FOLK COLIN PITTMAN PHOTOGRAPHY BEE ORIGINALS PHOTOGRAPHY SUBMITTED PHOTO COLIN PITTMAN PHOTOGRAPHY LEE CLUETT SANTANA MAY Lee started fishing in 2007, af- Proud mom and fisher ter working retail for 19 years. Santana May, 32, is proud mom of “I started fishing with my husband two daughters, Hailey and Kylie. Derek and my Father-in-law Harvey “I lobster fish with my husband Cluett, and then Harvey retired. I Dwight. I wasn’t a boat person growing enjoy fishing and the lifestyle that I up and now I have been fishing since 2003 have now and I would not trade it.” and we started lobster fishing in 2009. It was a hard start for me as I get sick some GOOD & BAD DAYS days. The first few years I got sick a lot of But not everyday is good she days but now it’s more the weather/wind because I get nervous and then I’ll get shares. “There’s lots of bad days too; sick. But every year it gets better and I get more use to the wind.” bad weather, trouble with gear. But we take the good with the bad.” In 2017 Cluett completed Fishing Masters 4 course which gave her a better knowl- edge in running a enterprise. Cluett has a niece she is close to, Chloe Grandy. “As for SUBMITTED PHOTO Chloe, it’s like anything; you have to do what you like as a career. Just long she is happy and enjoyed it it would fine with me if she got into the fishery.” As for women in the fishing industry, Cluett believes they work just as hard as anyone. “I would encourage any woman thinking about a career in the fishing industry to do it. It’s hard work but it’s not all bad and a little hard work never hurt anyone. I always said, I have worked with a lot of people over the years and I believe there are cer- tain jobs for certain people. Not ev- eryone is cut out for fishing.” 24 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018
SUBMITTED PHOTOS BLAST FROM THE PAST! A WINDOW BACK IN TIME How a surprise package in the mail sent NTV’s Jodi Cooke spiraling back into her childhood, and the reflections that came along with it BY NTV’S JODI COOKE I t’s been said before that things in life come full circle. The question is whether or not we recognize that when it happens. And so when something came back to me this week, that I didn’t know I was looking for, it gave me more than a warm feeling of nostalgia. It gave me an insight into myself that I also didn’t know I was in search of. A realization that I’ve come full circle and a consid- eration of those who made me into the person I am. Let me explain. LOVE FOR THE OUTDOORS Something came back to me, that I didn’t know I was looking for ... A realization that I’ve come full circle and a I’ve often thought about where my consideration of those who made me into the person I am. love for the outdoors comes from. I’ve always believed it came as learned be- on our small family sailboat. When I fore it was hip. He would recycle garbage haviour from my mom and dad, my look back, that was camping – perhaps bags and we poked fun at him. He was big brother and my husband. My folks even more now, than camping has be- onto something. taught me to ski and sail. My big brother come – still she says she’s not a camper. really nurtured my passion for skiing. I My dad could fashion any piece of junk Me? Well I wasn’t sure if I had a skill remember when he first got his driver’s into something useful. The sailor in him of my own. I wanted to bring something license. We “borrowed” the family car made him a true environmentalist be- to the table that made me feel like I con- to go skiing and he often dragged me tributed to our family. I was the baby along behind him at ski club meets and races. My mom wasn’t much of a camp- er, but she could make a mean breakfast DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com JULY 15 - 21/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 25
and didn’t bring anything to anyone SUBMITTED PHOTOS that they didn’t already know. At least, I thought that until I got something in the My favourite places to pass time were in the woods, and mail this week from my childhood. Only in my best friend’s play-house her father built, tucked then did I realize that I brought the gift in the trees behind their house. It had a working wood of making a house a home, even from the stove, bunk beds and all of our toys. tender age of seven or eight. It had a working wood stove, bunk beds I was eager to learn. She taught me TINY CABIN ON TRINITY BAY and all of our toys. Amanda and I would lots about the woods. She taught me camp there many nights all by ourselves. things to eat out there, like tree gum, As my husband and I build a tiny cab- Our parents trusted us to make a fire. and things to avoid like bogs (learned in on Trinity Bay, I’ve learned quite a bit We packed snacks. We played games. the hard way). about the construction process. I love it. We went on all sorts of adventures. But I mostly love it for the moment I get She was my neighbour and had a better DECORATING WITH JODI to start decorating. The fresh whitewash knack for the “wilderness” than I did. on the pine walls inside are barely dry I think as a kid I didn’t feel like I had before he catches me hanging pictures, She taught me things to much to give Amanda ... except curtains. the floor isn’t even down before I’m roll- eat out there, like tree ing out the area rug and the windows gum, and things to avoid One day my mom got a new sewing are barely framed before I’m hanging like bogs (learned the machine. I was eager to spruce up our curtains. I’m quick to make this house hard way). little play house in the woods so I knew a home. We had an argument about the just what I’d do. I’d sew up some panels curtains. and get decorating. “Why keep putting these things up, I made a few curtains and tossed them when I only have to take them down,” in a Sobeys bag for the grand delivery. my husband would say. “Because I need I only had to ride my bike about seven temporary aesthetics that please the or eight houses up the road. My glorious eye,” I’d explain. My husband finally arrival with proud curtains swinging off gave in, and even started working around my handle bars in sequence with pink the panels that collected dust and dirt in streamers was a sight to behold! a construction site. I wondered if I was obsessing a bit too much with the whole As I rounded the driveway off the thing, but again – something came full main road my handlebars steering right, circle to me – and now I understand. the Sobeys bag swung into the spokes of my bike with a mighty whirl. Amanda’s I grew up in Lower Coverdale, New mother Brenda just happened to be sit- Brunswick. My favourite places to pass ting on the front porch and watched me time were in the woods, and in my best as I flew bottom over front, a handle bar friend’s play-house her father built, end over end. The glorious curtains were tucked in the trees behind their house. jammed up in the brakes – twisted and gnarled. The Sobeys bag, shredded and 26 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018
in the woods long after my family moved up to the big city in Ontario, and I al- ways longed to be back there. This week, I checked my mailbox and found a package from Lower Coverdale. Brenda Wilmot heard through Aman- da, we had built a cabin in Newfound- land. She figured it was only fitting those curtains come home. SUBMITTED PHOTOS It’s the simplest things that bring me the greatest joy – and I find that in the woods. But when it’s time to come inside, I know my space will always be a cozy one, especially with the curtains wide open, letting the sun shine in. melted in a plastic skid marked streak. I collected my curtains. I’m sure she had a FULL CIRCLE was bloodied and bruised with rocks in Popsicle for me too. my hands and knees and it wasn’t long Inside that package, tattered and before the tears and wailing trailed be- After I dusted myself off and got a worn, I pulled out two neatly folded hind once the perimeter was surveyed good cry, we went down to the cabin and panels. They were white – bleached by and the shock of it all settled in. hung those damned curtains. the sun. A small grommet hung on by a thread where the tie backs once connect- THOSE DAMNED CURTAINS I think Amanda probably always ed. I remembered them as blue. Maybe thought the curtains were a bit “city”, but even an oxford stripe. Now, bleached Brenda didn’t miss a beat. She scooped even if she did, she sure as heck didn’t by years of exposure, the curtains were me up and sat me on the front deck. She let on and like a good friend does, she finally retired and embarked on a long cleaned the stones out of my knees and grinned and bared it for years to come. journey across the gulf, to my mailbox in They hung in that tiny play house cabin St. John’s Newfoundland. It was natural. It made sense to me. Here I am, 30 years later, still decorat- ing the cabin. My childhood friend and her family knew that – after all these years. The little girl inside, riding her bike down the road, is still there. I’m still here. I’ve never let go of that. It’s the sim- plest things that bring me the greatest joy – and I find that in the woods. But when it’s time to come inside, I know my space will always be a cozy one, especial- ly with the curtains wide open, letting the sun shine in. I am forever grateful to the Wilmot family of Lower Coverdale, New Bruns- wick. Mac, Brenda, Amanda, Candy and Kim gave me life skills I am truly grateful for. They’ll always have a place to stay, in our little cabin in the woods. DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com JULY 15 - 21/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 27
WHAT’S ON THE GO? DATES: SUMMER 2018 COMPILED BY: DILLON COLLINS HOT TICKETS ISLAND ROUNDUP JIM CUDDY July 21 Strawberry Fest, Deer Lake TIM BAKER July 25 Garrick Theatre, Bonavista GEORGE STREET FESTIVAL July 26-Aug. 1 St. John’s AUG. 3-5 THE ONCE TOM COCHRANE PHOTO JIM CUDDY BRYAN ADAMS FOLK RULES July 27-28 Mile One, St. John’s NL FOLK FEST Aug.3-5 Bannerman, St. John’s AT BANNERMAN! MUSSELBED SOIREE Aug.11 Lewisporte T he 42nd annual Newfoundland and Labrador Folk THE GATHERING Festival takes place this August at Bannerman Park. Artists include a wide range of styles and age demo- Aug.23-25 Burlington graphics. From young upstarts like Brandon Bowen and Cassie Farrell to established artists like Chris Andrews and the interna- ICEBERG ALLEY tionally renowned Andy Irvine, there’s something for everyone at the Folk Festival. Special attractions include the legendary PERFORMANCE TENT Buddy Wasisname and The Other Fellers, The Once, Fortunate Sep.12-22 Quidi Vidi Ones and Fred Penner. Visit nlfolk.com for more! BRYAN ADAMS GOT A GIG? Promote your next show in The Herald. Email: [email protected] 28 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018
SUBMITTED PHOTOS LOCAL ARTS & MORE NEWFOUNDLAND VINYL OUTSIDE MULLINGER ED & ED GROS MORNE THEATRE FEST 2018 The Gros Morne Theatre Festival, in its 23rd year, brings the best in Newfoundland storytell- ing to one of our most picturesque locations. BY DILLON COLLINS F or the 23rd year, Theatre play – the entire community has been a Newfoundland and Labra- part of the process. It truly resonates with dor presents the Gros Morne the arts and community working hand in hand.” Theatre Festival, a four With seven plays, set in two venues, month long celebration of stories, songs 165 performances and over 35 artists, working from June 2 to September 22, and culture nestled in one of the island’s the Gros Morne Theatre Festival is a professional 16-week summer repertory most pristine locations. S.S. ETHIE season along with a visiting artist series. COMMUNITY EFFORT “While we’re doing this STACKED LINEUP year’s season, we’re Featuring exciting new additions and talking about next The lineup includes the comedy Ed returning favourites (with a modern season.” — Gaylene Buckle & Ed, which is set in Cow Head and twist), the festival lineup is the combina- deals with the demise of the cod fishery tion of the combined efforts of dozens of director Jeff Pitcher, is an exploration of in 1992, the romantic comedy Outside actors, directors, designers, stage man- the lives of 17 men who fought in World Mullinger, which brings a taste of rural gers and volunteers, to name a few. War I from the Great Northern Penin- Ireland to Newfoundland, the famous sula. dinner theater S.S. Ethie, musical Neddy “It’s an amazing effort,” shares Gay- Norris Night, the popular Newfound- lene Buckle, General Manger of Theatre “17 Men truly is a product of commu- land Vinyl and the Berni Stapleton cre- of Newfoundland and Labrador. “While nity inspiring our art,” Pitcher said in ation Our Frances, which chronicles the we’re doing this year’s season, we’re a release. “The play will truly be a cele- life of VAD Nurse Frances Cluett. talking about next season. We’re always bration of community and professional in planning for the year ahead. It takes theatre coming together to tell the story For complete lineup and to purchase tick- an awful lot of people to make the festival of life in the community,” Pitcher said. ets, visit www.theatrenewfoundland.com or happen. “From church service to war memorial to phone 1-877-243-2899. New this year is a docu-drama that is truly a community effort for the town of Cow Head. 17 Men, helmed by artistic DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com JULY 15 - 21, 2018/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 29
MUSIC SPOTLIGHT BY DILLON COLLINS SUBMITTED PHOTOS “You learn the stuff you play and you develop a vocabulary as an instru- mentalist...” — Wade Tarling TARLING’S STRENGTH ship contract, who is from Paradise,” he says. “We did another three or four con- Multi-instrumentalist, Wade Tarling lets the music do the tracts together as a jazz trio. I went to talking with his newest collection of tunes, Strength Vancouver for a little bit and hung out for a little while, and then I decided to S ome things in life come nat- from Capilano University. From there, a come here. I immersed myself in the urally. Many are athletically change of scenery beckoned. scene here and then it sort of took off. gifted – natural prospects to Over a couple of years I started to meet “After my graduation recital I just sort people and musicians and grab onto the a sport of choice. Some are of put the sax in the case and jumped scene a bit.” aboard a cruise ship and was hired as a creatively inclined – a pen or paintbrush pianist,” Tarling shared. “I took off and NEWFOUNDLAND’S SCENE did that for the next four or five years.” can become a playground of possibilities. Today Tarling is an established pres- LOVE AND MUSIC ence in Newfoundland and Labrador’s For Wade Tarling – born of Burnaby, music climate, lending his talents to From the west coast of Canada to local groups Hip Waders, The Bishops B.C. and embraced by his newfound cruising across the globe, Tarling’s con- and Dana Parsons Project, though he nection to Newfoundland and Labrador, does admit becoming acclimatized to home in Newfoundland and Labrador – as if by serendipity, came to him through the scene took some getting used to. love and music. music came as if by instinct. “It took a little bit as an outsider to get “I met my wife on my very first cruise into the scene at first. I actually started Tarling began playing piano at age working at a music store here and that’s what did it for me, to meet the musicians seven, branching out with saxophone in that way and jump into a couple of bands early on. That connected me. It’s such a primary school. Naturally, a career in rich history and music scene here. It’s pretty special.” music came calling, as Tarling received Having honed his craft learning un- his Bachelor of Music and jazz Diploma der such industry greats as John Medes- ki, Billy Martin, Chris Wood and John Scofield, Tarling’s debut instrumental EP is rich in polish and passion. “I’ve had the idea for a number of years and just never had the time to take on that kind of project,” Tarling says of 30 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018
his collection of piano tracks, Strength. “It’s an album about hope, determination, tenacity... I “Some of the songs were written for a hope (the songs) bring that out in people.” — Wade Tarling long time. Over the past year I took it upon myself to strive toward it. It’s an al- it. Just do it and let it happen,” he says. Things you might never have thought of bum about hope, determination, tenaci- “You learn the stuff you play and you de- that are at your grasp and maybe aren’t ty. There’s a couple of songs I hope really velop a vocabulary as an instrumental- as hard as you thought.” bring that out in people, especially that ist, but you always want to expand that first song Strength ... Being instrumental vocabulary. That’s the way I look at it. Strength is available digitally on multiple music, there are no words, so you have to platforms now. For more visit wadetarling.com tell your story through the music. People can take on their own meaning with the songs. It could mean something entirely different to different people. HOPE & TENACITY “These songs, they can tell that story of hope and I don’t want to sound too cheesy, but hope for a better place, a bet- ter life and having the tenacity to break through to the other side and overcome struggle,” he adds. “A lot of that came through my fingers on the piano. You look on the news and it all affects you. I’m feeling this, like I’m wanting to do better, add something positive into the world.” Versed in per- formance, arrangements and lending his skills as a teacher, Tarling is well in- clined to pass along some of his acquired knowledge to prospective musicians across the province and beyond. “ Learn as much as you can, but just do DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com JULY 15 - 21, 2018/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 31
THIS WEEK WITH NTV’S JIM FURLONG ASK ALICE W ell known writer, histori- There is no definitive proof his attraction to young females. an and journalist Will Self that Charles Dodgson was The father of the Liddell girls once wrote, “It’s a problem, a pedophile, but there are was the Dean of Christ Church isn’t it, when somebody certainly clues that ‘give and Dodgson was a close friend of writes a great book but they’re not a great us pause.’ the family until something happened. person.” and Alice Liddell. We also know Dodg- DEAD AT A YOUNG AGE This week we tell the story, or part of it, son had a disturbing habit of photograph- of the very odd Charles Dodgson. He was ing other young girls, often nude. No In 1863 there was a definite and never a mathematics lecturer at Oxford but was such picture of Alice Liddell has surfaced, explained break in the relationship be- also a giant of literature best known to but one of her sister Lorina has. tween Charles Dodgson and the Liddell the world by his pen name; Lewis Carroll. family. At the time Alice was 11 years It is a full frontal nude shot of the young old. Adding to the mystery is the fact that ODD CHARACTERS Lorina. In fact Charles Dodgson was Charles Dodgson died at the relatively close with all of the Liddell girls. It has young age of 65. He is, of course, the author of Alice in led to speculation over many years about Wonderland, that remarkable story that He kept a diary, but it seems whole has enchanted children and adults alike sections of the diary have been removed for generations. As you know it is the or edited either by Dodgson himself or journey of a young girl, Alice, into a very his family. Dodgson had no less than 10 strange world filled with odd characters. brothers and sisters, but all refused to discuss Charles with the rest of the world The issue at hand is that the Alice of Al- after his death. ice in Wonderland was a real person. She was Alice Liddell, the young daughter of There is no definitive proof that Charles a minister, and there is a troubling body Dodgson was a pedophile, but there are of evidence that suggests she may have certainly clues that ‘give us pause.’ been a victim of ‘Lewis Carroll.’ There has been for a century dark speculation Alice in Wonderland remains one of on the relationship between Dodgson the great works of the 19th century, but (Carroll) and Alice. the photographic record left behind by Charles Dodgson makes us wonder if be- What we do know with certainty is hind the marvellous tales of Alice in Won- that Charles Dodgson, besides being a derland there is any innocence at all. writer, was an avid photographer. Among his pictures are odd ones of Alice, her sis- Scholars continue to work on the com- ters, and other young girls. Dodgson had plex character that was to us Lewis Car- Alice pose as a ‘beggar child;’ there is a roll and to peel away like the skin of an picture as well of a kiss between Dodgson onion some of the layers that may tell us who he was. NTV’s Jim Furlong can be reached by emailing: [email protected] Quality Congratulations to our June Used cash puzzle winners: 1-877-777-2211 www.a1automotive.net $50: Linda Bulger, St. John’s $30: Dale Dale, St. John’s 395 East White Hills Road $20: Heidi Dunphy, St. John’s If you require puzzle answers, email [email protected] 32 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018
ENTER TODAY: [email protected] PURRFECT PETS “Quick, take You’re gonna the picture, I be so proud. I ate my need to blink.” poop so you don’t KITTY OF THE WEEK have to clean it up. PUPPY OF THE WEEK BELLA JESSIE Owner: Kesley Dean Owners: Elizabeth Burry HONOURABLE MENTIONS BUTTER • Owner: Amanda Cole MALIBU • Owner: Angela Sheppard MOLLY • Owner: Holly Parrell ENTER TO WIN A PRIZE PACKAGE RULES AND REGULATIONS: Two pets qualify each week. One prize is awarded monthly (winner is Enter The Herald’s Purrfect Pets Contest for your chosen from all weekly qualifiers). Employees and chance to win a monthly prize, courtesy of Critters N immediate family members of The Newfoundland Herald and its affiliated companies are not eligible Things, 11 Commonwealth Ave., Mount Pearl! to enter. CRITTERSNTHINGS.com • 709.368.8660 ENTER TO WIN: Send your pet photos, pet’s name, your name and location to: Purrfect Pets, c/o The Newfoundland Herald, P.O. Box 2015, St. John’s, NL A1C 5R7 or upload images at: www.nfldherald.com/Contests/Purrfect-Pets DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com JULY 15 - 21, 2018/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 33
CRIME FLASHBACK BY MAX HAINES DONALDHUME GALLERY OF ROGUES DONALD HUME T hose among us who are London with a bevy of elderly ladies. Before we leave Merrie England we inclined to hasten the de- He managed to annihilate several un- would be remiss not to mention Don- parture of a friend, neigh- suspecting acquaintances, but got his ald Hume. It didn’t pay to disagree with comeuppance when he enticed Mrs. Du- Donald. One rather shady character bour or lover sometimes rand-Deacon, one of his fellow roomers named Stanley Setty wasn’t aware of this at the hotel, to his workshop in the near- fact and ended up very dead in Donald’s prefer to completely obliterate any trace by town of Crawley. London apartment. What was Donald to do? He hardly had to think about the of their victim. Let’s start in England Haigh had no trouble dissolving the perplexing problem before methodically unfortunate Mrs. Durand-Deacon, but dissecting his victim and arranging the where we so often do, work our way to couldn’t shake off her buddy, dear Mrs. assorted parts in neat manageable par- Lane, who made embarrassing inqui- cels. Then Donald, who happened to be Africa, and end up on our native soil. ries of Haigh. It was the persistent Mrs. a pilot, flew over the English Channel, Lane who insisted that Haigh report her dropping his cargo over the side as he flew JOHN G. HAIGH friend missing to the police. Within a through the air in his flying machine. few days Haigh had told all. JOHN GEORGE HAIGH When a portion of Setty popped to Incidentally, while Haigh was dashing the surface and was duly traced to Don- Who can forget that classic body about the countryside, killing for gain ald, he was charged with murder. Clever obliterator, John George Haigh, who de- and dissolving to avoid detection, he Donald confessed to wrapping, but not veloped a profitable habit out of dunking had a girlfriend. Barbara Stevens always to killing. He was found innocent of his victims in sulphuric acid, until there maintained that Haigh had behaved like murder, but guilty of being an accessory was nothing left save sundry portions. a perfect gentleman to her, although on after the fact. occasion when he showed up late for Haigh was a rather handsome dev- dinner, he would be suffering from wa- Donald Hume served eight years in il who lived unobtrusively at a hotel in tery sore eyes. Dartmoor Prison before being released. He caused a sensation by confessing to We now know that he stirred victims’ Setty’s murder. Not one to stay out of remains in his ever ready vat of acid. trouble for long, he shot and killed a taxi Hard work, and very trying on the eyes. driver in Switzerland. When last heard Oh yes, I almost forgot. Haigh ended his from, Mr. Hume was resting comfort- illustrious career at the end of a rope on ably at the Hospital for the Criminally August 19, 1949. Insane at Broadmoor, England. JAMES CAMB On to Africa. When the liner Durban Castle shipped out of Cape Town, South Africa, bound for Southampton, En- gland, no one knew that the charming young girl in Cabin 126 would never vibe seen or heard from again. The rea- son Gay Gibson disappeared was simple enough. James Camb, a steward aboard 34 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018 *Crime Flashback Images are used for reenactment purposes only and might not be historically accurate.
JAMESCAMB ARTHURKENDALL the ship, killed her and pushed her body John George Haigh, Donald Hume, James Camb and out through a porthole. No body, no Arthur Kendall, all men who tried to obliterate bodies conviction. No way! one way or another. Camb claimed that he was enticed to shack and disappeared forever. At the tations of innocence, Arthur Kendall Cabin 126 by the attractive Miss Gibson. time there was no evidence of foul play, was tried, found guilty and sentenced to While there, the obliging Camb further but nine years later, when three of the hang on June 23, 1962. Seven days be- claimed that he was in the process of children were young adults, they ap- fore his execution date his sentence was having intercourse with Miss Gibson commuted to life. when she suddenly went limp. Panick- proached authorities with ing, he pushed the dead girl through a the unbelievable story Haigh, Hume, Camb and Kendall, porthole, figuring it would appear that they had witnessed all men who tried to obliterate bodies as if Miss Gibson had fallen their father stab their one way or another. In the case of Camb overboard. and Kendall, no trace of a body has ever mother. been uncovered, which leads us to the It was a great story, Arthur has always main- distressing thought of the possibility of but just didn’t stand up tained that no crime took place, an apparent murder victim showing up to close scrutiny. A night and that his wife walked out on him alive and well. Has it ever happened? watchman in the first class pantry stated and never returned. Despite his protes- that a bell had rung for service in Miss Gibson’s room. When he responded, he knocked on the cabin door. It opened a few inches, and the night watchman rec- ognized Camb, who said, “It is all right,” before closing the door. Who rang for service? It certainly wasn’t Camb. It may have been the desperate action of Gay Gibson as she struggled for her life. As circumstantial evidence mounted, Camb admitted to being in Miss Gib- son’s cabin. He was found guilty and sentenced to death, but later had his sen- tence commuted to life imprisonment. ARTHUR KENDALL A little closer to home, we have the strange case of Helen Kendall. In 1952, Arthur Kendall, his wife Helen, and their five children, ranging in age from one to 12 years, left their farm in south- ern Ontario to run a sawmill in Ontar- io’s Bruce Peninsula. One night, so Arthur claimed, Helen walked out of their tiny 12 by 12-foot DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com JULY 15 - 21/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 35
FINE OL’ SCOFF PAM PARDY GHENT [email protected] GET BAKED! COD, THAT IS! W hile the recreational cod tug, is a grand way to spend a day. The kitchen when it comes to eating healthy fishery is reduced in best part, besides the excitement of jig- and getting creative. length this year, it’s still ging a cod, is getting a chance to cook and eat it afterwards. While I agree with many a fellow something many will cel- Newfoundlander and Labradorian that There’s many ways to enjoy cod. there’s nothing better than pan fried cod ebrate participating in. Getting out on From pan fried to stuffed to adding it with scrunchins, why not mix it up a lit- to a yummy chowder, cod is king in the tle this year and get baked! Enjoy! the water with family and friends and 7x11-inch baking dish. Melt in the pre- BAKED COD lowering a line, and then feeling that heated oven, 1 to 3 minutes. Remove dish from oven. 4 Tbsp butter Preheat oven to 400°F (200°C). 1/2 sleeve buttery round crackers (like Place 2 Tbsp butter in a micro- Coat both sides of cod in melted but- wave-safe bowl; melt in microwave on ter in the baking dish. Ritz®), crushed high, about 30 seconds. Stir buttery 1 lb thick-cut cod round crackers into melted butter. Bake cod in the preheated oven for 10 1/2 lemon, juiced Place remaining 2 Tbsp butter in a 1/4 cup dry white wine 1 Tbsp chopped fresh parsley 1 Tbsp chopped green onion 1 lemon, cut into wedges minutes. Remove from oven; top with lemon juice, wine, and cracker mixture. Place back in oven and bake until fish is opaque and flakes easily with a fork, about 10 more minutes. Garnish baked cod with parsley and green onion. Serve with lemon wedges. 36 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018
ENTER ONLINE AT NFLDHERALD.COM BABY OF THE YEAR CONTEST BABY BOY OF THE WEEK BABY GIRL OF THE WEEK ETHAN PENNEY CATHERINE HANN Parent: Lesley and Alex Penney, Grand Falls-Windsor Parents: Crystal and Travis Hann, Marystown CONTEST RULES AND REGULATIONS: HONOURABLE MENTIONS Enter by mail to Baby of the Year, c/o The affiliated companies are not eligible to LILLIAN OWENS RYLAN SKINNER Newfoundland Herald, P.O. Box 2015, St. enter. John’s, NL A1C 5R7; or online at nfldher- • You may enter as often as you wish, Bay Roberts Grand Falls-Windsor ald.com. Please include baby’s name, par- though once your child is chosen as our ents’ names, date of birth, hometown and weekly winner, they aren’t eligible to win contact information. Two babies will qual- again. ify every week. Our Baby of the Year will • Photos must be at least 200 dpi, be clear be chosen from all weekly qualifiers. The and unobstructed (the less accessories the overall winner will appear on the cover of better). No photos will be returned. Con- the first issue of The Newfoundland Herald test ends Oct. 31, 2018. in 2019. • If family members other than parents • Babies must be under the age of two by send entry, you must include a permis- sion slip from parents or guardians. Dec. 31, 2018 (born in 2017 or 2018). • At the end of the contest, vote for your • Babies must reside in NL. favourite qualifier by logging onto the • Employees and immediate family mem- website nfldherald.com. bers of The Newfoundland Herald and its DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com JULY 15 - 21, 2018/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 37
SOAP TALK BY DANA BLOCK BILLY celebrated his birthday trapped in an elevator with PHYLLIS, on NTV’s Young & The Restless. YOUNG & THE RESTLESS DAYS OF OUR LIVES SHARON made a plea. BRADY was on the hot seat. The custody battle for little Chris- Eve brought a surprise witness to tian continued as Sharon made an Tate’s custody hearing. Brady’s impassioned plea to the social worker. past came back to haunt him at the hear- Meanwhile, Victor and Nikki’s inter- ing. JJ visited Lani as she mourned the view didn’t go as smoothly, especially loss of her baby. Ciara was concerned as when Nick stopped by to sabotage it by Ben became increasingly unglued with- mentioning Victor’s failing health. out his medication. Abby was disheartened when she Hope received some unsettling news learned that Arturo was unable to spend about Ben. Eve was forced into a corner the 4th of July with her due to work. Bil- during Tate’s custody hearing. Chloe ly celebrated his birthday trapped in an and Eric had a deep discussion about elevator with Phyllis. Nicole. Ciara tried to reason with a par- Hilary faced some challenges when anoid Ben while he was hallucinating. the guest for her holiday show canceled, Tripp pulled back from his kiss with leaving her to fill airtime with interviews Claire, who admitted she was starting to on the roof deck. Abby decided to bring have feelings for him. Hope questioned the celebration to Arturo. Jack contin- Clyde about Ben. Brady was on the hot ued his quest to prove that Phillip Chan- seat while being implicated in Deimos’s cellor was his biological father. murder. 38 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018
BOX OFFICE BEST! THEATRICAL RELEASE: JUL.13 MOVIE MINUTE PG-13 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom WEEKEND ESTIMATES: $60,912,195 PG R MONSTER VACATION! Sicario 2 Hotel Transylvania 3 takes the fun from the castle to the Incredibles 2 $19,007,566 cruise in this fun-for-the-family comedy BY DILLON COLLINS $46,417,761 W hen have you had PG this much fun at a monster movie? It’s smooth sailing for Drac’s Pack as The Hotel Tran- the monsters indulge in all of the ship- sylvania franchise has been board fun the cruise has to offer, from thrilling family audiences monster volleyball to exotic excursions, since 2012. A pair of big box and catching up on their moon tans. But office successes at the theatres, the dream vacation turns into a night- a slew of video games and a mare when Mavis realizes Drac has fall- television series, the Adam en for the mysterious captain of the ship, Sandler led franchise has Ericka, who hides a dangerous secret proved a cash cow for Sony that could destroy all of monsterkind. Pictures Animation. They go for the three-peat this summer! Rotten Tomatoes Bio: In Sony Pic- tures Animation’s Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation, join our favorite mon- ster family as they embark on a vaca- tion on a luxury monster cruise ship so Drac can take a summer vacation from providing everyone else’s vacation at the hotel. DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com JULY 15 - 21, 2018/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 39
SCENES OF NL Three Rock Cove, NL — Amanda Cornect Frenchman Cove, NL — Rose Noel Quidi Vidi, NL — Larry Daley Petite Forte, NL — Danielle Walsh St. Joseph’s, NL — Wendy Leonard 40 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018 * The Herald reserves the right to crop, colour correct or republish submitted images.
Petty Harbour, NL — Rose Hood Black Duck Cove, NL — Zander Isaacs Botwood, NL — Kendall Dempster WIN A PHOTO DREAM PACKAGE KING’S POINT, NL — KAITLIN BUDGELL Enter The Herald’s Scenes of NL Photo Contest for your chance LAST WEEK’S PHOTO CONTEST QUALIFIER! to win a spectacular $500 Sara Rostotski Prize Package! www.ROSTOTSKI.com • 709.579.9247 ENTER TO WIN: Send your photos, NL locations and your name to: [email protected] OR Mail: Scenes c/o The Newfoundland Herald, P.O. Box 2015, St. John’s NL, A1C 5R7 OR upload images at: www.nfldherald.com/Contests/Scenes DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com JULY 15 - 21/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 41
YOUR HOROSCOPE THIS WEEK’S CELEBRITY BIRTHDAYS! ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 19) Your per- CAMILLA PARKER BOWLES VIN DIESEL KRISTEN BELL sistence pays off as the information you JULY 17, 1947 JULY 18, 1967 JULY 18, 1980 demanded starts to come through. The pace is slow at first, but it begins to speed BORN Your intuition helps you communicate easily with people up as the week draws to a close. and understand their needs. TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20) An unwel- THIS WEEK? come bit of news jolts the Bovine, who’d prefer that things proceed smoothly. But LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Set some CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Real- it’s at most a momentary setback. A Leo strict guidelines for yourself so your izing that someone else is taking credit brings more welcome tidings. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You need to heavier-than-usual work schedule doesn’t for what you did is bound to get anyone’s pay close attention to the details before making a commitment. Don’t accept overwhelm the time you need to spend goat, but especially yours. Be patient. anything that seems questionable, unless you get an answer that can be backed up. relaxing with loved ones. The truth soon comes out. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Congratula- tions on getting that project up and run- SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You might AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Forget ning. But as exciting as it is, don’t let it feel a little uncomfortable being among about opposites attracting. What you carry you away. Make sure you set aside time to spend with family and friends. people you hardly know. But remember need is to find someone who thinks like LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be sure you are part of the discussion involving your that today’s strangers can become tomor- you and will support your ideas, even if suggestions. Your presence ensures that you can defend your work, if necessary. It row’s valuable contacts. others say they’re too radical. also helps gain your colleagues’ support. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A misunder- SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Re- PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20) Workplace standing needs to be dealt with, or it can ward yourself for all that you’ve accom- problems can affect your financial plans. grow and cause more problems later on. Be the bigger person and take the first plished despite some annoying situations Be prudent and avoid running up bills or step to clear the air. that got in your way. Enjoy a well-earned making commitments until things begin getaway with someone special. to ease up by the 27th. Build a Better Office EQUIPMENT NETWORKS INTERIORS www.pinnacleoffice.ca 709-747-7468 42 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018
TV WEEK DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com 2018JULY 15 - 21 48 Sunday 51 Monday 54 Tuesday 57 Wednesday 60 Thursday 63 Friday 66 Saturday NEWFOUNDLAND’S AWARD-WINNING TELEVISION LISTINGS JULY 15 - 21, 2018/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 43
‘FREE TV’ SCHEDULE JULY 15 - 21, 2018 Reality Children Sports News Local Movies TIME: SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY NTV.ca 06:00 AM NTV Entertainment News Issues & Answers NTV News: First Edition 06:30 AM NTV Eyewitness News NTV Early Morning News NTV News: 1st Edition NTV Early 07:00 AM NTV.ca Morning News 07:30 AM Jesse Stirling’s… 08:00 AM Issues & Answers Yukon Gold 08:30 AM Places to Go 09:00 AM Klondike Marc and Mandy 09:30 AM Trappers Ice Pilots NWT 10:00 AM Heart Matters 10:30 AM NTV.ca The Morning Show NTV.ca 11:00 AM Church of the Rock 100 Huntley Street NTV.ca 11:30 AM Jesse Stirling’s… NTV.ca A Closer Look NOON Issues & Answers NTV Newsday NTV Eyewitness News 12:30 AM Week in Review The Young and the Restless NTV Entertainment News Days of Our Lives Dimestore Fishermen 01:00 PM W-5 The Rachael Ray Show 01:30 PM Entertainment Tonight Canada NTV Saturday Movie: 02:00 PM The Simpsons The Bourne 02:30 PM The Simpsons Legacy 03:00 PM Genius Junior 03:30 PM 04:00 PM Arts Delight Judge Judy 04:30 PM NL Sportsman Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? 05:00 PM Jeopardy Wheel of Fortune 05:30 PM Wheel of Fortune NTV News: First Edition On the Mark NTV Week in Review 06:00 PM NTV Sunday NTV Evening Newshour NTV Eyewitness News 06:30 PM Evening Newshour Global National 07:00 PM 07:30 PM Entertainment Tonight 08:00 PM Jeopardy 08:30 PM Border Security Border Security 09:00 PM Border Security 09:30 PM Superstore TKO: Total The Wall NTV Saturday 10:00 PM Big Brother Man With A Plan Knockout Movie: 10:30 PM Slumdog 11:00 PM Salvation Big Brother Millionaire 11:30 PM Entertainment CTV National News NTV 12:00 AM Tonight Entertainment 12:30 AM Weekend NTV Latenight News 01:00 AM News 01:30 AM The Late Show With Stephen Colbert Saturday Night Live ATLANTIC/LABRADOR - .5hr. earlier H EASTERN - 1.5hr. earlier H CENTRAL - 2.5hr. earlier H MOUNTAIN - 3.5hr. earlier H PACIFIC - 4.5hr. earlier 44 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/JULY 15 - 21, 2018
MUST SEE TV: CANADA’S SUPER STATION MON/8:30P.M. ELEMENTARY MON/10:30P.M. SALVATION THU/8:30P.M. RANSOM Holmes engages an old foe to Grace embarks on a dangerous Maxine leads in her first negotia- protect his father. mission. tion to save hostages at a retreat. Holmes engages an old foe to protect Pentagon official Grace Barrows em- When Eric and other guests at an an- his father after he learns Morland is in barks on a dangerous mission, and Liam nual retreat are taken hostage by a mili- danger of being killed. Also, Holmes Cole and Darius Tanz’ relationship is tia group, Maxine leads the team in her and Watson search for a murderer. tested. first negotiation. SPORTS HIGHLIGHTS SUNDAY 5:00 p.m. 12:15 p.m. [3] [CBC] Calgary Stampede [23] [TSN] [54] [FOX] FIFA Soccer Showdown Sunday. – Calgary, Alta. Live World Cup. Final. Luzhniki Stadium – 5:30 p.m. Moscow, Russia. Live 2:00 p.m. [30] [RSE] MLB Baseball L.A. Angels at L.A. Dodgers. Dodger Stadium – Los [NBC-D] [11] [NBC-B] EPGA Golf Angeles, Calif. Live Scottish Open. Final Round. Gullane Golf Club – East Lothian, Scotland. Live MONDAY [30] [RSE] Blue Jays Central Live 9:30 p.m. 2:30 p.m. [30] [RSE] MLB Baseball Home Run [30] [RSE] MLB Baseball Toronto at Derby. Nationals Park – Washington, D.C. TUE/9:00PM MLB ALL-STAR GAME Boston. Fenway Park – Boston, Mass. Live [31] [SN360] WWE Monday [31] [SN360] Misplays of the Night Raw Live MLB All Star Game. National League vs. American Month League. Nationals Park, Washington, D.C. Live on RSE. 3:30 p.m. TUESDAY 9:00 p.m. [3] [CBC] Equestrian Reach for the FRIDAY 2:30 p.m. Sun Classic Derby. Championship Show [30] [RSE] MLB Baseball Nat. League 2:00 p.m. Jumping. Spruce Meadows – Calgary, vs. Am. League. All-Star Game. Nationals [30] [RSE] MLB Baseball Baltimore at Alta. Live Park – Washington, D.C. Live [3] [CBC] WR Rugby San Francisco Toronto. Rogers Centre – Toronto, Ont. Live [54] [FOX] MLS Soccer Seattle at 9:30 p.m. Sevens. Women’s Round of 16. AT&T Park 4:30 p.m. Atlanta. Mercedes-Benz Stadium – – San Francisco, Calif. Live Atlanta, Ga. Live [31] [SN360] WWE Smackdown! 8:30 p.m. [NBC-D] [11] [NBC-B] WR Rugby 4:30 p.m. Live Sevens World Cup. AT&T Park – San 11:30 p.m. [30] [RSE] MLB Baseball Baltimore Francisco, Calif. Live [7] [ABC] ITF Tennis Wimbledon. Final. at Toronto. Rogers Centre – Toronto, Ont. 5:30 p.m. [37] [DISC] Deadliest Catch: 9:00 p.m. Roughest and Toughest [23] [TSN] CFL Football Winnipeg at [23] [TSN] CFL Football B.C. at Toronto. BMO Field – Toronto, Ont. Live All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club WEDNESDAY Ottawa. TD Place Stadium – Ottawa, Ont. 7:30 p.m. – Wimbledon, England. 8:30 p.m. 9:30 p.m. [10] [A] Sidelines [30] [RSE] MLB Baseball Boston at [NBC-D] [11] [NBC-B] PGA Golf [23] [TSN] ESPY Red Carpet [3] [CBC] WR Rugby San Francisco Detroit. Comerica Park – Detroit, Mich. Special Live Bowl. Women’s Quarter-finals. AT&T Park Live American Century Championship. Final 11:00 p.m. 11:00 p.m. 9:30 p.m. Round. Edgewood Tahoe – Lake Tahoe, [31] [SN360] MLB’s Best Nev. Live [2] [PBS] Cycling Lexus Velodrome – [3] [CBC] WR Rugby San Francisco Detroit, Mich. Live Sevens. Quarter-final and Women’s Final. CTV National New[[2CsI2HF]] [CBS] [26] [GLOBAL] [115] THURSDAY AT&T Park – San Francisco, Calif. Live PGA Golf John Deere Classic. 2:30 p.m. SATURDAY 10:30 p.m. Final Round. TPC Deere Run – Silvis, Ill. 12:00 p.m. Live [30] [RSE] Darts World Championship. [23] [TSN] CFL Football Montreal at [23] [TSN] ITF Tennis Wimbledon. 9:00 p.m. [23] [TSN] Golf The Open Championship. Calgary. McMahon Stadium – Calgary Men’s and Women’s. All England Lawn Round 3. Tennis and Croquet Club – Wimbledon, [23] [TSN] CFL Football Saskatchewan England. at Hamilton. Tim Hortons Field – Hamilton, Ont. Live DIGITAL VERSION AVAILABLE ONLINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com JULY 15 - 21, 2018/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 45
MOVIE HIGHLIGHTS THE BEST MOVIES ON TELEVISION SUN/1:30PM SUNDAY 8:00 p.m. 12:15 p.m. RATATOUILLE 7:30 a.m. [47] [COM] Wedding Crashers +++ [50] [TCM] What Price Hollywood? A rat who can cook makes an unusual [50] [TCM] Knute Rockne: All (2005) Owen Wilson. (2h30) +++ (1932) Constance Bennett. (1h45) alliance with a young kitchen worker American +++ (1940) Pat O’Brien. 8:30 p.m. 12:55 p.m. 9:15 a.m. at a famous restaurant, on YTV. [44] [SPC] Captain America: The [53] [AMC] The Shining ++++ [50] [TCM] B.F.’s Daughter +++ Winter Soldier ++++ (2014) Chris (1980) Jack Nicholson. (3h30) TUE/9:00PM (1948) Barbara Stanwyck. (2h15) Evans. (3h) 4:25 p.m. SALT 10:30 a.m. 9:30 p.m. [53] [AMC] Pulp Fiction +++ (1994) A CIA agent goes on the run after [46] [FAM] Air Buddies +++ (2006) [50] [TCM] The More the Merrier John Travolta. (3h5) a defector accuses her of being a Michael Clarke Duncan. (1h45) ++++ (1943) Jean Arthur. (2h) 5:45 p.m. 11:00 a.m. 11:30 p.m. Russian spy, on AMC. [50] [TCM] Of Human Bondage [34] [SHOW] Alice Through the [44] [SPC] Captain America: The +++ (1964) Kim Novak. (2h) NSTVA/T12U:3R0DP.MA. Y NTV/1:30 P.M. Looking Glass +++ (2016) Mia Winter Soldier ++++ (2014) Chris 7:45 p.m. Wasikowska. (2h30) Evans. (3h) 11:30 a.m. [50] [TCM] They Drive by Night MONDAY +++ (1940) Humphrey Bogart. (1h45) [50] [TCM] Roadblock +++ (1951) 7:30 a.m. 8:30 p.m. Charles McGraw. (1h30) 12:30 p.m. [50] [TCM] Gambling Lady +++ [46] [FAM] Men in Black +++ (1934) Barbara Stanwyck. (1h15) (1997) Will Smith. (2h) [47] [COM] Wedding Crashers +++ 8:45 a.m. 9:00 p.m. (2005) Owen Wilson. (2h45) 1:00 p.m. [50] [TCM] Woman in Red +++ [53] [AMC] Salt (2010) Angelina Jolie. (1984) Gene Wilder. (1h15) 9:30 p.m. [50] [TCM] Casablanca ++++ 11:10 a.m. (1942) Humphrey Bogart. (1h45) [50] [TCM] The Music Man ++++ 1:15 p.m. [53] [AMC] The River Wild +++ (1962) Robert Preston. (2h45) (1994) Meryl Streep. (2h30) 12:15 a.m. [44] [SPC] Parker +++ (2013) Jason 1:40 p.m. Statham. (2h30) [50] [TCM] Meet Me in St. Louis 1:30 p.m. [53] [AMC] M*A*S*H ++++ (1970) ++++ (1944) Judy Garland. (2h15) Donald Sutherland. (2h50) [24] [YTV] Ratatouille +++ (2007) 1:45 p.m. WEDNESDAY Voices of Brad Garrett. (2h15) 6:45 a.m. 2:00 p.m. [50] [TCM] Clash by Night +++ (1952) Barbara Stanwyck. (2h) [50] [TCM] All the King’s Men +++ [36] [SLICE] This Is Where I Leave 4:30 p.m. (1949) Broderick Crawford. (2h) You ++++ (2014) Jason Bateman. 10:15 a.m. 2:45 p.m. [53] [AMC] The Shining ++++ (1980) Jack Nicholson. (3h30) [50] [TCM] Lovely to Look At +++ [40] [E!] Sin City +++ (2005) 6:15 p.m. (1952) Kathryn Grayson. (2h) Mickey Rourke. (2h45) 12:45 p.m. [50] [TCM] Singin’ in the Rain [50] [TCM] Lady of Burlesque +++ ++++ (1952) Gene Kelly. (2h) (1943) Barbara Stanwyck. (1h45) [50] [TCM] Ship Ahoy +++ (1942) 3:15 p.m. 8:00 p.m. Eleanor Powell. (1h45) 1:35 p.m. [47] [COM] You Again +++ (2010) [53] [AMC] The Goonies +++ Kristen Bell. (2h15) (1985) Sean Astin. (2h30) [53] [AMC] A League of Their Own 3:30 p.m. [50] [TCM] The Mad Miss Manton +++ (1992) Geena Davis. (3h) +++ (1938) Barbara Stanwyck. (1h30) 2:30 p.m. [55] [CHCH] Santa Fe Trail +++ 9:30 p.m. (1940) Errol Flynn. (2h) [50] [TCM] The Yellow Cab Man 4:45 p.m. [50] [TCM] The Man Who Came to +++ (1950) Red Skelton. (1h30) Dinner ++++ (1942) Monty Woodley. 5:45 p.m. [50] [TCM] The Apartment ++++ 11:45 p.m. (1960) Jack Lemmon. (2h15) [50] [TCM] A Southern Yankee 7:00 p.m. [50] [TCM] Anatomy of a Murder +++ (1948) Red Skelton. (1h45) ++++ (1959) James Stewart. (3h) 7:25 p.m. [36] [SLICE] This Is Where I Leave 1:30 a.m. You ++++ (2014) Jason Bateman. [53] [AMC] Summer Rental +++ (2h30) [21] [VIS] The Seven Year Itch +++ (1985) John Candy. (2h5) [50] [TCM] The Way We Were (1955) Marilyn Monroe. (2h) 7:30 p.m. +++ (1973) Barbra Streisand. (2h30) 7:30 p.m. TUESDAY [50] [TCM] Three Little Words +++ 8:15 a.m. (1950) Fred Astaire. (2h) [24] [YTV] Shrek the Third +++ 9:30 p.m. (2007) Mike Myers. (2h15) [50] [TCM] Cass Timberlane +++ (1947) Spencer Tracy. (2h15) [18] [W] Someone Like You +++ (2001) Ashley Judd. (2h) THE BOURNE LEGACY “QUOTE”NOTABLE MOVIE “What I’m going to do is wait for the next person to show up to kill you. Maybe they can help me.” WWW.NTV.CA — THE BOURNE LEGACY 46 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/July 15 - 21, 2018
THE BEST MOVIES MOVIE HIGHLIGHTS ON TELEVISION [53] [AMC] Willy Wonka and the 1:30 a.m. 11:40 a.m. WED/10:30PM Chocolate Factory +++ (1971) FAST FIVE Gene Wilder. (2h30) [21] [VIS] A Patch of Blue +++ [53] [AMC] Smokey and the Bandit [50] [TCM] Gone With the Wind (1965) Sidney Poitier. (2h) +++ (1977) Burt Reynolds. (2h15) Dominic Toretto and his crew of street ++++ (1939) Vivien Leigh. (4h) 2:30 a.m. 1:30 p.m. racers plan a massive heist to buy 10:30 p.m. their freedom while in the sights of [44] [SPC] Captain America: The [5] [NTV] The Bourne Legacy +++ a powerful Brazilian drug lord and a [24] [YTV] The Good Witch +++ Winter Soldier ++++ (2014) Chris (2012) Jeremy Renner. (3h) dangerous federal agent, on SHOW. (2008) Catherine Bell. (2h) Evans. (3h) 1:55 p.m. [34] [SHOW] Fast Five +++ (2011) 3:00 a.m. THURS/9:30PM Vin Diesel. (3h) [53] [AMC] Caddyshack +++ CAPTAIN AMERICA: [44] [SPC] Men in Black +++ [50] [TCM] The Candidate +++ (1980) Chevy Chase. (2h5) THE WINTER SOLDIER (1997) Will Smith. (2h) (1972) Robert Redford. (2h) 3:00 p.m. 12:00 a.m. 3:30 a.m. As Steve Rogers struggles to embrace [50] [TCM] North by Northwest his role in the modern world, he teams [53] [AMC] Willy Wonka and the [34] [SHOW] A Million Ways to ++++ (1959) Cary Grant. (2h30) up with Black Widow, to battle a new Chocolate Factory +++ (1971) Die in the West +++ (2014) Seth 3:30 p.m. threat from history: an assassin known Gene Wilder. (2h30) MacFarlane. (2h30) 12:30 a.m. 5:00 a.m. [115] [CIHF] The Bourne Legacy as the Winter Soldier, on SPC. +++ (2012) Jeremy Renner. (3h) [28] [PRMT] Walking Tall +++ [50] [TCM] Nevada Smith +++ 5:30 p.m. NTV/9:00 P.M. SATURDAY (2004) Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson. (1966) Steve McQueen. (2h30) SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE [50] [TCM] Fail Safe ++++ (1964) THURSDAY FRIDAY Henry Fonda. (2h) WWW.NTV.CA 10:30 a.m. 10:30 a.m. 6:30 p.m. [46] [FAM] Anastasia +++ (1997) [46] [FAM] Fantastic Mr. Fox +++ [53] [AMC] Lethal Weapon +++ Voices of Meg Ryan. (1h50) (2009) Voices of George Clooney. (1h50) (1987) Mel Gibson. (2h30) 10:35 a.m. 1:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m. [53] [AMC] Jerry Maguire +++ [50] [TCM] The Body Snatcher [24] [YTV] Big Hero 6 ++++ (2014) (1996) Tom Cruise. (3h) ++++ (1945) Boris Karloff. (1h30) Voices of Ryan Potter. (2h) 11:30 a.m. 3:55 p.m. [34] [SHOW] Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol (2011) Tom Cruise. [50] [TCM] Sex and the Single Girl [53] [AMC] The Karate Kid +++ [40] [E!] Clueless +++ (1995) Alicia +++ (1964) Tony Curtis. (2h) (1984) Ralph Macchio. (3h) Silverstone. (2h) 1:30 p.m. 4:00 p.m. 9:00 p.m. [50] [TCM] The Yellow Rolls-Royce [50] [TCM] Doctor X +++ (1932) [5] [NTV] Slumdog Millionaire +++ +++ (1965) Rex Harrison. (2h15) Lionel Atwill. (1h30) (2008) Dev Patel. (2h30) 3:45 p.m. 5:30 p.m. [53] [AMC] Lethal Weapon 2 +++ (1989) Mel Gibson. (2h30) [50] [TCM] Assault on a Queen [50] [TCM] The Return of Doctor X 9:30 p.m. +++ (1966) Frank Sinatra. (2h) +++ (1939) Humphrey Bogart. (1h15) 4:20 p.m. 8:00 p.m. [44] [SPC] Speed +++ (1994) Keanu Reeves. (2h25) [53] [AMC] Summer Rental +++ [50] [TCM] Green Light ++++ 10:30 p.m. (1985) John Candy. (2h5) (1937) Errol Flynn. (1h30) 5:45 p.m. 9:30 p.m. [34] [SHOW] Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation +++ (2015) Tom [50] [TCM] Not With My Wife, You [10] [A] X-Men: First Class +++ Cruise. (3h) Don’t! +++ (1966) Tony Curtis. (2h) (2011) James McAvoy. (3h) [36] [SLICE] No Strings Attached 8:30 p.m. [24] [YTV] The Spiderwick +++ (2011) Natalie Portman. (2h) Chronicles +++ (2008) Freddie 11:30 p.m. [53] [AMC] The Karate Kid +++ Highmore. (2h) (1984) Ralph Macchio. (3h5) [50] [TCM] West Side Story ++++ [53] [AMC] Lethal Weapon 3 +++ 9:30 p.m. (1961) Natalie Wood. (2h45) (1992) Mel Gibson. (2h35) 12:00 a.m. [40] [E!] Clueless +++ (1995) Alicia [44] [SPC] Captain America: The Silverstone. (2h) Winter Soldier ++++ (2014) Chris [53] [AMC] Caddyshack +++ 11:55 p.m. Evans. (3h) (1980) Chevy Chase. [50] [TCM] Bullitt +++ (1968) Steve [44] [SPC] John Wick ++++ (2014) McQueen. (2h) SATURDAY Keanu Reeves. (2h5) 10:30 p.m. 9:30 a.m. 12:30 a.m. [34] [SHOW] A Million Ways to Die [50] [TCM] The Bandit Trail +++ [306] [ENC1] Fargo +++ (1996) in the West (2014) Seth MacFarlane. (1941) Tim Holt. (1h30) Frances McDormand. (1h40) 11:30 p.m. 10:30 a.m. 1:30 a.m. [50] [TCM] The Sand Pebbles [28] [PRMT] Beverly Hills Cop +++ [24] [YTV] Big Hero 6 ++++ (2014) ++++ (1966) Steve McQueen. (3h30) (1984) Eddie Murphy. (2h30) Voices of Ryan Potter. (2h) “A few hours ago, you were giving chai for the phone NOTABLE MOVIE walahs. And now you’re richer than they will ever be. “QUOTE”What a player!” — SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE DIGITAl VERSION AVAIlABlE ONlINE: www.NFLDHERALD.com July 15 - 21, 2018/THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD 47
G72JSNulIURlyPIAN1N5YDARADONYOMM R Rogers SD Shaw Direct Vu Satellite % Bell Aliant Digital MOVIES SEIVOM MLUACSOT LSEE TV SWENREALITSYTROPS CHILDNREERNDLIHC SPORYTTSILAER NEWSVT EESLTOSCUAML 07/15 R SD Vu 6 AM 6:30 7 AM 7:30 8 AM 8:30 9 AM 9:30 10 AM 10:30 11 AM 11:30 12 PM 12:30 1 PM 1:30 6:00 AM - 1:30 PM Entert- NTV NTV.ca: Remar- Issues Places Klondike Trappers Heart NTV.ca: Church Remar- Issues NTV W5 NTV (5) 310 199 12 ainment Eyewitne Reflec- kable and to Go Matters Reflec- of the kable and Week in News ss News tions People Answers tions Rock People Answers Review CBC (3) 299 200 3 CatHat D.Tiger SuperW! Arthur Chirp CorrieSt CorrieSt CorrieSt CorrieSt CorrieSt CorrieSt mark.p LandSea News HelloBye Goods PBS (2) 364 284 8 Baking Painting Paint Interfaith Rogers Sesame D.Tiger Arthur O. Squad MiWeek Journal Motor. AutoLine Contrary W.Week Record _ CMT (6) 583 575 22 Black Black Black \"The Color of Rain\" ('14) \"Dear Viola\" ('14) Brittany Gray. (CC) BestChow BestChow Genius Genius Middle ABC (7) 361 281 11 Chronicle NewsCenter Five NewsCenter Five GMA/Sunday NewsCenter Five This Week NewsCenter Five Record Matter CityLine CTV2 (10) 340 202 5 Paid Degrassi CornerG CornerG Worst Driver Paid Paid Paid Written Kitchen Op. Smile Church Hot In Hot In JadeFev. NBC-B (11) 280 9 House Money Today Boston Weekend Boston Weekend Sunday Today Boston Weekend Today Meet the Press NewE. Paid NBC-D 58 Consumer Consumer Ins. Ed. Local 4 News Morning J.Osteen Local 4 News Sunday Today Flash Meet the Press Consumer TBA TREE (16) 546 553 20 CatHat Scarlett Duggee Splash'N Octonaut Chomp R Rivets Top Wing Machines Shimmer Barbie Nella th Various Pony BenAnd Top Wing OLN (17) 457 411 102 Paid Mantracker Liquid.. Liquid.. Survivorman Liquid.. Paid Dirt Trax Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Liquid.. W (18) 567 602 274 Movie LoveList Paid \"Three Bedrooms, One Corpse: ... \"The Julius House: An Aurora Te... LoveList \"Date Night\" ('10,Com) Tina Fey. (CC) CBCN (20) 390 502 13 N.Things News News CBC John Live news coverage featuring reports from CBC bureaus across Canada and the world. Weekly CBC News _ VISION (21) 394 650 64 Super. Beyond Super. Yoga Believe Touch Ministries Super. Youssef Creflo Faytene Copelnd Facts Islam Hour of Power CBS (22) 362 282 7 Murdoch WBZ This Morning WBZ This Morning WBZ This Morning WBZ This Morning CBS Sunday Morning Face the Nation NE Liv. Paid _ TSN (23) 400 400 100 SportsC SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre SportsCentre Pre-game Soccer FIFA World Cup Live _ YTV (24) 542 551 21 Nicky Sponge Regal A. Cloudy Cloudy Sponge Sponge Sponge Loud H. Loud H. Loud H. Danger Mysticon Mysticon Turtles Movie CNN (25) 500 500 234 News CNN Newsroom New Day Sunday New Day Sunday Inside Politics State of the Union Zakaria GPS Reliable Sources Union _ GLOBAL (26) 339 240 4 Paid Paid Paid Paid Off Air Sarah Context Global News Morning Decked A&E (27) 520 615 202 InfoDoc InfoDoc InfoDoc InfoDoc InfoDoc P. Wars Matter Hoarders Hoarders Hoarders Hoarders Cults an AMC (28) 609 293 564 Preacher MASH MASH MASH MASH MASH MASH MASH MASH MASH \"Enter the Dragon\" ('73,Action) Bruce Lee. (CC) RSE (30) 416 406 110 Central Sportsnet Central Sportsnet Central Sportsnet Central Sportsnet Central Sportsnet Central Sportsnet Central Sportsnet Central Central _ SN360 (31) 403 410 101 FScore The Final Score MorningHighlight MorningHighlight MorningHighlight MorningHighlight MorningHighlight WWE Main Event WWE _ MM (33) 580 570 220 Simps. Simps. Simps. Playlist Playlist Playlist Playlist Playlist Playlist Playlist SHOW (34) 521 616 201 NCIS: Los Angeles \"Independence Day-saster\" ('13) Paid Paid Paid \"Alice Through the Looking Glass\" ('16) Movie BRAVO (35) 523 620 203 MCrimes Major Crimes 2/4 Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods The Arrangement \"The Irresistible Blueberry Farm\"... BlueB. _ SLICE (36) 562 601 272 \"Ocean's Eleven\" ('01) Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Paid Paid Paid Paid \"Buried Secrets\" (2015,Thriller) (CC) Ex-Wives _ DISC (37) 505 520 286 RatRods Bitchin' Rides Mayday JadeFev. JadeFev. Phoenix Tanked! North Woods Law North Woods Law D. Catch _ E! (40) 527 621 212 CSI CSI: Crime Scene \"The Good Times Are Killing Me\"... Celebri Celebri ShockTru ShockTru 100K Pyramid \"Disturbia\" ('07) _ TLC (41) 560 521 288 Styled Four Weddings Four Weddings Four Weddings Four Weddings Four Weddings Four Weddings Four Weddings Weddings DTOUR (42) 524 618 210 Yeti Hunt for Yeti Border Border Border Border Paid Border Border Paid Ice Pilots NWT Legendar Legendar Legendar _ SPACE (44) 528 627 209 Movie \"3-Headed Shark Attack\" ('15) \"The A-Team\" (2010,Action) Liam Neeson. (CC) \"Limitless\" ('11) Bradley Cooper. (CC) \"Parker\" ('13) FAM (46) 540 556 258 Justin Gadget Johnny Cat Noir CatNoir Cat Noir Cat Noir Cat Noir Arcadia \"Air Buddies\" ('06) \"Hotel for Dogs\" ('09) COM (47) 548 625 208 Queens Queens Queens CornerG CornerG CornerG CornerG CornerG CornerG CornerG CornerG CornerG CornerG \"Wedding Crashers\" ('05) TOON (48) 544 554 254 SpiderM. TeenT. TeenT. Johnny Johnny Transyl Transyl OKKO! Unikit TeenT. TeenT. \"Scooby-Doo! Moon Mo... OK K.O.! Bots HIST (49) 506 522 287 Cars America Pt. 3 of 3 Restor. Garage Restor. Garage Paid Paid Restor. Garage Motors Motors Motors Motors Evel Live _ TCM (50) 539 292 204 Festival \"Knute Rockne: All Ame... \"B.F.'s Daughter\" ('48,Dra) Barbara Stanwyck. \"Roadblock\" ('51) \"Casablanca\"... _ PEACH (51) 650 294 200 Paid Paid Family Mr. Box Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid House Escapes RawTrav. Atlanta Eats P.Affair Seinfeld FX (53) 251 DaVinci Seed Sunny Da Vinci City H. Seed Sunny Da Vinci City H. Snowfall Snowfall Snowfall Snowfall _ FOX (54) 363 283 10 Wrestle Paid Paid Fox News Sunday Mass Paid Wild Am. Paid Fox News Sunday FIFA Live Soccer FIFA World Cup Live _ CHCH (55) 345 218 17 Pinkrton Awakenin Finance andPOP Night Car Show Dr. Ho ON TV Dr. Ho Dr. Ho Dr. Ho Paid Paid Dr. Ho Key David Dr. Ho _ OWN (56) 507 526 285 Oprah Oprah Winfrey Celebrity Damage Waters of Crime Season 25: Oprah Season 25: Oprah Master Class Soul Sunday If Loving _ APTN (58) 350 239 23 \"The Twilig... Candy Teepee Morning Bizou Garderie Teepee Canot School Morning Guardia Stories Planet Earth 1491 _ NGEO (85) 551 524 289 Rocky Rocky Mountain Puppy Puppy Puppy Puppy Paid Paid South Africa Tiger Shark Terror Shark vs Predator SharkSwa _ CIHF (115) 204 4 Paid News Huntley Huntley Canadian Pickers Sarah Fishful Context J.Osteen Paid Ent. Tonight Decked CarnEats Disaster CITY (133) 344 214 19 CityLine Paid Seed CityLine The Chew Cycling Tour de France Live Y.D.P. Eye Asia VemCom. Lombardi _ PRMT (279) 584 628 211 BarRes. Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue E. Power Off-Road Truck T. D.Muscle Bar Rescue Bar Res. _ ENC1 (306) 612 304 570 19-2 Camera 19-2 \"Les 4 Soldats\" ('13) \"Something to Talk About\" ('95) \"Unknown\" ('11) Liam Neeson. (CC) Movie 48 THE NEWFOUNDLAND HERALD/July 15 - 21, 2018
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