Once I was working at Toms Lake grubbing, for a dollar and a half a day - not like now! One boy was a cowboy, breaking horses - lots of horses there. He was about my age. I was young at that time . . . . . in 1920.
This fellow said, "Theres going to be a dance tonight, up Dead Creek. If you want to go, Ill lend you a horse. I said, "All right. Ill go." So we went to the dance, this man and I. When we got there - oh! There were lots of people - a big house. But the fiddler couldnt play at all. A fellow was sitting there who used to know me pretty well at Beaverlodge. I used to play at all the dances at Beaverlodge.
"Whats wrong with this fiddle?", I says. The fiddler says, "I dont know." "Bring it to me", I says. Well, the bridge is too low, but the fiddle looks pretty good, so I took a couple of dimes and put them each under the strings and I tuned it up. It was a dam" good fiddle. Then I started to play. I was pretty good at that time. I kept on playing 'til suppertime. So Jerry said, "Were going to collect some money for this fiddler. He goes around - and I got ninety-three dollars and fifty cents! Then the man said, to the other man. "You better play now so this man can dance." I danced, but every once in a while I had to take the fiddle. I played good at that time, not like now.
First you cut it thin. Then you make a meat rack of sticks and hang it on them. Then you put a little fire under, not too much flame - mostly smoke. A little flame wouldnt hurt. The smoke gave it flavor. No we did not use cones. Poplar is about the best or willow. Not jackpine - the smoke is too strong. Black poplar is about the best. Poplar (aspen) is all right - or spruce - but jackpine is no good at all.
One old-timer, Mr. George Robinson, was very particular about his dried meat. He maintained that the very best flavor was obtained by laying the thick bark of aged cottonwoods on red coals, and adding the bark-chips on little by little. This smoked the meat deliciously without generating too much heat.)
Mrs. G: I would like to tell you how my father made hay with a scythe. My grandfather used to make hay forks with willows. And a rake with sticks - just like a garden rake. He used dry willows.
Sid G: They made hay forks with a couple of sticks - long ones. They just shoved those under. Then two men would carry that where he wanted it to go and just pull his poles back, and there would be a haycock.
|
|
|
|
News Clipping
|
KELLY LAKE, B.C. The district of Kelly Lake and many friends in Alberta were saddened by the passing of Mr. Isadore Gladue, 89, on December the 15th, 1975. He travelled across to Kelly Lake from St. Albert where he met and married Annie Thomas. They had sixteen children of which some predeceased him. He leaves to mourn him his beloved wife Anne; two sons, Fred, Quesnel, B.C.; Francis, Kelly Lake; nine daughters, Caroline Campbell, Lydia Whitford, Isabell Calliou, Dorothy Gauthier, Kathleen Letendre, Cecile Letendre all of Kelly Lake; Doreen Horsemen, Horse Lake; Nora Calliou, Paddle Prairie; Verle Nowland, Alsask, Saskatchewan. One brother, Pat Gladue, Fort Vermilion; two sisters, Ann Supernault, Kelly Lake and Louise Grey, Pouce Coupe, B.C. who is now 100 year old. There are 197 grandchildren and a large number of great grandchildren. He was laid to rest in the Kelly Lake cemetery.
|