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The Goderich Signal-Star, 1955-09-01, Page 9Mrs. L. Drinkwalter, Barr . , Mr6., '(�Il'as,' WY>Xllll'�j Neil C n eJ.l a . d kz � of'. a all r Yr visitors •. 1t w M,r. With Green. at ,Port Ahem ;. yrs. B. )F. ,, II�ll "'` London, nare guest Mrs. Nelson son' >;Ii]Il.. . ►, • D Mooney le Y bx ��TICiA:plane �►r 'i to visit it . orsseveral Wee Mr. and Mrs. Carl companae4•P:by 134k.11641,4to of Shef burn ,. retie lied acqua • ,4 ances in 'to wm ►a 'risjay.. scar John L�oRd�ge, •�of • Wiartfon QQ• Y an 8': d, lru b a gsa WaSt successful in passing Grade4B. ani ezaainatians obtaining h tt' enat+iksf3n._�the. Province, there�b '. �'. yc' �► . 'zti-ng the silver medal,is a andson•e of Mrs:R. LW on' 4t West. street � , • 'onand Mrs,.�arland Ledgeand d ancouyer fa , Wiarton visited Mrs sQiion-Sunday. :s, ` �G• G. Gardiner ,,and son, Ca'I$ daY s,vi�i � his pae•Iats, Mr, acid ,Miss .. � Thomas, , are e and 1044 Wife apid laer family at �r. 0 ;simmer �lz e. tii .an ,.� d ' .s .�o. , .A,. •Bruce >`vioinlett atreet. �:-- .ans Mr , R Earl Elliottyav� returned o 'Toronto after spending the summer at their home here ., .j Reverend MFJitthe�w 1laajury, min - AY an ,moi "- .f G ,r .. Q W o o a,.. 1rwere•rz eda �' r. 0, Dean .. Maxwell, of 'Taranto. :a .,- ., fid,. BUS; �aorhe ad sniece, Wag 1"a a Tracy; of •Vanco . , D::C. Miss Sally Jearey, daughter IZ �,of Mr. ' and lVIrS. Leonard 'Jeffry; Tragi. tion street,., has"'&pee�ppiec a: p:P,.aii` tion as teacher at St -a �' taWs: Separate Sehool, Dundas st-reet -past, Loudon.— Steaks, - Steaks, chops, spare ribs, glorified by charcoal .. dishes seasoned to perfection . and ice-cold Coca-Cola-lAh; there's a meal! The frosty goodness of Coke points up the taste of food. WARNING: Better ' have' plenty of everything including Coke! Handy cartons make it easy. {:?;�:>f%Fyn>. •••.e.i ;ry Waikiki Beach: $eautifu1 girls combine with the glistening sands of Waikiki Beach to make the Hawaiian Islands one of ,the- globe's most colorful resort areas. That's what John Freeman (inset, upper left), Canadian Weekly Newspaper editorial representative, found while on a, 20,000 -mile odyssey via Canadian Pacific Air Lines which took_ him to Australia via Hawaii and Fiji. EXCLUSIVE TO C.W.N.A, MEMBER PAPERS 4IJS1RALIAN JOURNEY igassew ads' ya'nd •'MN��F••lM max, •. • [`.h0.ane4.• 1Vesent410i> use' ' :, r e t we � � r t• xng �a Aosi3Oa p ? I :am irate s -� '. t ed fi n m . �s 1. as 4,..g aS. ' re' e x u t too any. o follOWMg, faets o in t. m `: the x: ,tahn nr n Which**.possabieto hOrt18 around tlae gXolb+e m a speed ;and copafort wlriCh . have left P'hijleas Fogg of J li es Verne's "Around The -World In 4p Days", .speechless with_adlnaira�tion, - The "1npress of rA,r iisterdam" .cost a Mahon and a quarter delfars and cruises - •above the weather around 300 m.p.h. Passenger com•- fort is assured by cabin ptessuriz-b atiorr and ai '-conditioning, and ex- cellent meals and refreshments .are all ;included in the fare tariff. • The longest leg of the •, Pacific iiigt is some 3,000 miles _from Hawaii to Fiji—hut this .is: well within the plane's maxi'm'um range .capabi.jitLies of 4,500 miles! Adventure is always in the air at -an- airport and Vancouver's Sea Island terminal is • no exception. I stopped happily aboard CPA's "Empress of Amsterdam" which was to take me half way around the world ---from summer to winter —to that "Down Under" hemis- phere where even the stars in the heavens are different to those seen in Canada. You may start a trip such as this atone; but you seldom finish that way. • Before even stepping aboard the aircraft I met a travel- ling companion who, like me, was going all the way to Australia. ills name was Ron Marsh, and he was returning, from' a three- ,yy l 00,Yply an i - sea;' keg . '4 �u e a. a & fide/ wa re.. air .only ra as the watts at Hawaii -=no wo mean depth'a010101 fait► '1.' It's , t 7wu eats Teske these one mealizes . the 'wonder. 'of' matters - j a,: • gex ujty which makes it pes rbie t • travel in pressurized and oar, conditioned .comfort at any hew. decided by weather dof; With three, airlines ,oiler n comp tion is keen oil the 'POO* run, and OGPA's plan for overnight and day stops at the ' Royal Hawaiian ;Hotel on the ;Beach at Waikiki -all included in 'th@ tariff • ----is the hig'hspOt of the trop. (To be continued)- •,- A. NILE NILE, Aug. 31.—Mr. and Mrs. Bill Clement and Clifford, of Guelph, were week -end guests of Mr. and ,Mrs. John Cleinenrt. Leslie Johnston has bought the Dave Wilson property and Dave Wilson has gone to live in Luck - now at the E1li'dt Home. Mis. Amelia McElwain celebrated her 83th birthday August 30. She is up and about every day, has perfect hearing and sees ,well. She is very :interested in the Work of the church and had been organist for 35 years. • AWhori:ed boflerof# Coca-Cpla under contract with, Coca-Cola Ltd. Phone 43'3 By JOHN (The impressions ' of C.W.N.A. editorial representative, John Free- man of The Lakeshore News, Pointe Claire (Que.), who one day found ,himself talking back to the customers and•decided it was time for a break away from deadlines and worries about rising costs. He leftt' all these; plus two future weekly newspaper editors, Jimmy and Peter, 6 and 4 years respec- tively, with his• wife Helen — a daughter of the late Walter R. Legge ofGranby, viiho was a form- er president of the 'C:W.N A. What is more, his wife promised to get the paper out every Thursday and even make money doing it!) I think that the first words I Said as Canadian Pacific Railway `yDominion" pulled out of Windsor Station, Montreal, one day early in July were "What do you know made it!" -Although this trip, which to take rne half way 'round the world to my birthplace in Mel- bourne, Australia, had been book- ed for some months, I had stead- fastly refused to believe it would take place until I was actually on the train. Trips like this don't happen to weekly editors. They just go on publishing fifty-two papers a year until they go broke; or some ex - daily _newspaper man buys the sheet in the .mistaken idea that he will be able to catch up on his 'fishing; or else, • they die! Aussie by birth but Canadian by adoption, I suggested to Canadian Pacific Airlines that a series of observations on the trip would find interest among weekly editors and their readers. The idea was accepted and 1 found' myself book- ed` to fly out of Vancouver aboard the "Empress of Amsterdam" on .•��:4v nTi� .. • Somethin4, new has been added to Western .fair. Jwo separate and completely different • Rodeos will entertain, in front of theSirandstgnd «12i00p;rn. a`• an the folb riving days:• Monday and Tuesday afternoons-- Cot Jim Eskevi's Rodeo • Friday and Saturday affbritoans Jahn,Baldwin'd Cherirkee Ranch Rodeo •' Pritosi Children .SOC, Adults T;00.� Reserfed Seats $1.50! Monday Afternoon Special — Children .25c. Special Evening Shows only 1 8:T5 each evening Geo. Hamid •3 Son, Nem/ '¥8 k, present, the Grandstand Follies, featuring the Roxyette Dancers and 9 outstand- ing vaudeville acts. Prices: Reserved Seats $2.00, $1.50, $1.00. • Never before such a variety to choose from. 'Plan to see 'at least two of these exceptional attractions. Make youlr reservations early by writing to the Western Fair Association, Queen's Park, London, Ontario, NOW ] ti, � I(O`)1 ) Prices: Children .$0c, Adults $1.00. Reserved Seats $1.50. 2:00 o'clock Wednesday and Thtrsday Afternoons—Canada's Richest Cob Stakes: 2- and 3 -year Standard. fired Futurities plus' 4 other class races and light and heavy harness events. FREEMAN the last half of its flight which begins in Amsterdam and finishes halfl a" world away in Sydney, Ausr"al'ia. Curling Topics Curlers the country over will be interested in a chat I had with Mr. W. J. Finch of Regina, Sask., Who knows the -four Campbell bro- thers, winners -of this year's Brier Tankard, emblematic of Dominion - wide curling superiority. Be gave , an idea of 'what the Campbells' "secret weapon" could be when he told a group of us how every year - the four famous, brothers convert a barn on their 8,000 acre farm property into their •own private curling rink! On this' same subject;. which must be familiar' to most weekly newspaper readers, I put in a call while in Vancouver to another curling great • and -former -Brier "Frenchy" d"Aimour of Trail, B:C. I wanted to talk over the subject of "spot curling" of which "Frenchy" was reported to' be an exponent. Before going any further I must explain that what is generally known as "spat curling" is the method whereby the rock thrower is not actually looking at tilt broom while in the act of deliver- ing the rock, (what heresy is this?) but rather aims his rock at a spot on the ice in direct line with the broom and close to the "near" house. "I've always kept my eye' on the broom at all times," said. Frenbhy (his Christian name is Theophile). He denied the im- putation that he was ever a spot curler, "although it may have looked like it," continued the '48 Brier winner. "We got down awful low on the ice at ti•mes." His advice for all prospective Brier champions is "Keep your eye on the target object and hit- ting g it becomes automatic! So at last' I've been able to clear that point up. it was a senior Montreal curler with a tap reputation, particularly in the older Iron game, rw'ho had accused "Frenchy" of being a spot curler. Indian Carvers During my stay in Vancouver I as taken on a car trip around the famed Stanley Park and was shown totem - poles being carved by Indian Ellen Neal I couldn't resist telling my host that the best kri:own. Indian "carvers' of Montreal were members of the Iroquois tribe who crossed the St. Lawrence River one night around 1680 and killed about two hundred citizen's of New France in what. wag-. known as. the Lachine Massacre. 'Off to the Antipodes Flight 301 left Vancouver air- port for Sydney, Australia, at 2 p.m. • Sunday. Flight "301" is Can- adian Pacific Airlines' new Polar route Which conPrects the new world to Amsterdam, the gateway to Europe;' -'aria the shortest route and in the quickest time. From "Down Under" to Europe the ser- GODERICH DJSTRICT COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE NS ITUTE • • • • • REOf'ENS• • • • • Tuesday, September 6, at 9 a.m. • FOR REGISTRATION AND ORGANIZATION OF CLASSES • • REGULAR CLASSES BEGIN WEDNESDAY MORNING • Gymnasium suits and new textbooks will be sold at the school • by the Students' Council. • • • • Changes have been made in some bus routes. • Goderich • • Township is being serviced by one bus. Studentsshould con- • tact bus operafprs Rex Duckworth, Goderich, or•Alvin Sherwood, • • Dungannon, regarding the time and place of meeting the bus. • ••••0.•0006•••••OO•••••0••O••0••••••0••••••••••w IN LEGION SHALL Saturday, 3 JACKPOT of $41.00' for full ,house in 51 cans. If not won on Saturday, value of jackpot and also number of calls will be raised. each ' week until it is won. 15 GAMES $1.00. $10 CASH, PRIZE 4 SPECIALS --Share the Wealth JACKPOT WILL BE PLAYED FOR 4 TIMES. Jackpot — 25c or 5 for •$1.00 Regular extra cards 25c DOOR PRIZE—$5, $3, $2„J,,,,- Doors open at 7.45 p.m. 1st game starts at'8.30 p.m.