HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1955-09-15, Page 7yr
WASP Y.
1104
CEUROPRACTIO
IDRB111Jt SUOR, R,O4'
Doctor of Oh1ropraet i ;3
Q ' a sours:
Mon., Thure —9 a.m.f t4
' Tues.. Fri -9 aan. to 0 PAH.
?p.ns,to8p.m.
Wed. 4 Sot.' 0 to, 11.80 a,,10.
Vitamttt Therapy,
Olece—Qorner of South .t. tai d
Britannia Road Pjione; 344.
Stiles Ambulance
(formerly Cranstoust
ywhere Anytime
PHONE -399
77 Montreal St, `Goderich
G. B. CLANCY
Optometrist—Optician
(successor to: the late A.
Cole: optometrist)
For appointment phone 33,
Goderich.
HAROLD JACKSON
LICENSED AUCTIONEER
HURON 'AND. PERTH
Seaforth Phone 11-661 Or
FRANK REID
LIFE UNDERWRITER
Life, annuities, business in-
surance.
Mutual Life' Of Canada
Phone 346 Church St.
.A: M. HARPER
Chartered Accountant
Office: House _.
343J 343W
,39 West .S Goderich
. C. F. CRA MiA1 '
General Insurance
llrire. Automobile, Casualty
Real Estate
30 Colborne St, Qoderioh
Phone 18w
EDWARD -W. ULIOTT
LICENSED AUCTIONEER d
Oorrespondence promptly an-
awered. Immedi* arrangements
cap hi made " for Sales Date by
g -Phone 400J, Clinton.,
rge moderate and satisfac-
n Guaranteed.
. F. T. Armstrong
OPTOMETRIST
Phone 1100 for appointment
SQUARE GiODIERIC
Geo. G. MacEwan
Agency
Peter S. MacEwen
GeneralInsurance-Real
s
Estate
West St. Goderich
4 IG
More that) 30,000 InadiT4 pThce4..
aro being 'WOKS IV . distric4
•
..
blind for the anneal operating,
fund campaign of the • Canadian,
National Institute for_ the Blind .
•opening Saturday, September 17.
'Working. in the auditors
�'' �ion
the 'training :etre wand. home for
the blind in London, residents ..of
the 'home andother b, lnd are asp
sembling_ eaanpalign , --' Fite nature
which Will be mailedto residents
of' Huron, Middlesex and, Perth
:counties"tiie...week.
Residents „Of these 'threelcoun-
ties are being asked'to contribute
$1;1,000. C.N.LB. needs $57,000 for
the >Coming year, hat Coikimnunity
Chests and. Municipal Councils
have "already pledged,
As mailing Pieces areeng pre -
Pared, E. F. Wheeler, C,N.I.B. Field
Secretary, is visiting the campaign
chairman do each Icommunity of
the three counties delivering caxa,-
aign literature :and discussing ° bb-
jectives in each town, village and
township.
The Chairman in the Goderich
district is J. H. Kinkead, andthe
objective is $700. ,
o•
DONNYBROOK •
DON1\TYIBROOK, •. 14. Ed
ward Nixon, who has. ' een in fail-
ing health for the past few roil hs,
is a patient in Victoria Hospital,
London. • •
Mr. and Mrs. ,Elliot Sandy, of
Lucknow, were Sunday visitors
with Mr. and Mrs. R. Charnley,,.
There will be no service .in
,Donnybrook Church next Sunday
as anniversary services are being
had, in Knox United Church at
Auburn.
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Thompson
and Howard were Sunday visitors
with her aunt, Mrs. Margaret Fitz-
gerald, Kincardine.
Mr, and Mrs.• Stuart Chamney
and girls were Sunday visitors
with her parents, Mr. and. Mrs.
William Webster, Fordyce.
VIERwmgagggoommanimilinr
DON'T WORRY ABOUT'
TV SERVICE
THIS IS QUR BUSINESS
RADIO, TV, &
SOUND SERVICE.
B. R. Munday
Phone 598 127 Widder St.
22tf
OPPORTUNITIES
are still
Available for.
Men Interested
in an
ARMY CAREER
Contact
The Army
Recruiting Officer
at
Goderich Town Hall
Every Thursday
10 a.m. to 6.45 ' p.m.
PHONE 200W.
,135tf
WHEN
¥rU
I THINK
OF
INSURANCE
SEE
H. M. FORD.
Get Insured—Stay Insured.
Rest Assured
Bink of Com. Bldg.
TELEPHONE 268W
CEMETEJIY MEMORI
T. PRYDE &SOA}
EXETER
•
LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE,—
GODERICH '
{ALEX SMITH
140 ELGIN AVE.
PHONE 153
•b"sba•hii,i.•ii'Y•••4,ai+b•.are*4
MOLES`Olt IDA
13 AO. 14
154.9 5294
lid ++'P",rnis►$1
A'b►vs po u$.a s wive, 04#1
'Even $ yoyrenrs ifao ts40
•
b tout * ori M pwpi lopio •q, 1
•44••• ••a• •
Get $50 to $1200., 3n.ire
Phone tor 1 -trip loan. Upon approval,
pick up cosh: Loan custom-tailored to
your needs,. inconme. Reduce payments,
consoliklatia, bills with our Bill Con.
soildation :Service Phone, or cbme an.
f04000,frli60 sr en,ri
SYSTIOA
IWyOOOi , 1.0 •���M ' i►'r� , , � i00 )STRATFORD'
alil Utak
• �gN Mr - �. ��A••¢� vi• .,* ,,. *Nato ,.
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Dans muii Is re4r E •fill firs. nuI finMNC• "0 41 '16/4611
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•
SI°'E OF 1956 OLYMPICS:. A giant, WELCOME spells out the type of greeting competitors for the
'56 Olympics will receive at Melbourne, Australia. This hugh Melbourne cricket stadium, capa-
ble of seating 104,000 persons, is bigger than any other stadium used in past Olympics. "It's
imhmense ' was John Freeman's way of describing the bowl. when he saw it during a recent
tour of the Pacific via Canadian Pacific, Ain.._.,.Lines. Mr. Freeman made the grip as editorial,
representative of the Canadian Weekly Newspapers Association.
EXCLUSIVE TO. C.W.N.A. MEMBER PAPERS
AUSTRALIAN JOURNEY
Australians Preparing `a
For Melbourne Olympics
Third of Four Articles written by CWN4 editorial representa-
tive and. Quebec weekly editor John Freeman, who, recently
returned from a •five-week trip to Australia. ,.
My arrival at Sydney Airport
via Canadian Pacific's `Empress
of Amsterdam" had been accom-
panied by the popping of flash-
bulbs. I, was distinguished • only
because I had 'carted a pair of
sklis all ' the way across . Canada
in 'the summer, and then by air-
craft over some 8;500 miles of
Pacific Ocean!
1 parried, successfully I thought,
numerous questions on skiing (I
have been on tlienx twine in my.
life); the skiis were for an
"Aussie" •Air.Force pal who want-
ed something ' particularly Can-
adian to remind him of happy days
spent in Canada while a trainee:
under the .Empire Training
Scheme.... -
My • eventual destination was
Melbourne, _ and through excellent
facilities available at the airport
found . myserlf aboard a Trans Aus-
tralian Airlines • DC -6 bound for
Victoria's state capital within an
hour of any arrival at Sydney.
With its fine climate, Australia is
one of the most airminded count-
ries in the world.
• My fare for the. 450 -mile trip
from Sydney to_ Melbourne, (about
the same distance as- from Mont-
real to New York) "came to ap-
proximately $20 and flying- con-
ditions, described• in the latest
Aussie vernacular, were "mighty."
"We'll Show The World"
I was particularly fortunate an
meeting and becoming friendly
with Press and Publicity officers
in share of arrangements for the
16th Olympic Gaines being held
in Melbourne next year from Nov-
ember 22, to December R.
The foreboding of gloomy pro-
phets that this city will "botch the
games" is vigorously denied by
citizens of all walks of life as
well as officials who know that
"HURON COUNTY HEALTH UNIT"
`Preparation For Parenthood Classes"
Another series of classes is to be arranged for Goderich and
district. Those interested in these prenatal classes are in-
vited to meet, 'onTuesday, September 20th, at 2.30 p.m. in he
Huron County Health Unit Office—upstairs in the Old Col-
legiate Building, entrance off Britannia Road, to discuss forma-
tion of these. If' unable to attend, please phone Goderich
1050.
° -36.
1 ork*
nri
r
5trCfljt!ito
orLij mo&ation
:tVCS it darm.
tJt�use
jam Pau( kicker
a f " Sectjrwn
Men who thi k of tosriorrx'roiw prat` e moderation toda
r•
the games -are too, important t
permit of anything but success.
It.'s not a question of "will the
be . a success?" but rather "Ho
big a success will they be?"
John Laughlin, press officer- wl
will have the unenviable chore o
looking after the needs of a
estimated 1,000 press members ex
pected at the Olympics, is a ve
quiet and unassuming man •wh
has the God-given quality of :bein
able to make visitors and strang
ers.feel at home from the momen
he greets them.
He'll need something to loo
after this gang of sports writer
and photographers from some 5
countries!
Stadium Will Hold 104,000
Major features of Olympi
Games preparations are the en
largement of the Melbourne Crick
et Ground to accommodate 104,000
which will make it BIGGER than
any stadium provided for past
Olympics; construction of Olympic
Fark-•into a first-class all purpose
sporting centre to Include a foot-
ball field, an athletics and soccer
field, as well as a new and most
modernnistic swimming stadium.
To house the thousands of ath-
letes a brand new "Olympic Vil-
lage" is being erected at a cost of
some $4,000,000 with the attention
to detail'including such items as
the provision of oversize beds to
house seven -foot tall basketball
players!
According to Press Officer
Laughlin, "'Prominent individuals
as well as civic groups are out to
boost Australian hospitality to the
Skies and visitors can be sure
they will be made comfortable and
most welcome."
No Olympic city has yet been
able to provide hotel accommoda-
tion for all visitors and guests`
and to overcome this problem Mel-
bourne is conducting a campaign
which :has, already made provision
for 10,000 visitors in specially
selected ,private homes.
These will be ,inspected by fe-
male hostesses (they're more fussy
than men) :before being O.K.'d as
up to the required standard.
As part of the plan to make
visitors feel at ease lawyers, for
nstance, would be billeted with
awyers, - printers with • printers,
nd so on, so that a common
ground for discussion and mutual
njoyment may be found.
Tourist Attracttons Galore
It was not until 1788 '— some
hirty years AFTER Wolfe tookuebec that the first boatload 'of
ettlers and • convicts arrived in
ustralia.
Yet ,in this • country so much
younger than Canada there is a
great awareness of the importance
of the tourist trade, and Canadians
are welcomed like long -lost cousins
by the Australians, who have -never
forgotten the hospitality showered'
upon thein own airmen when they
were in Canada during the , war
days.
Sydney, the second, largest
white city" in the Commonwealth,
Montreal is third) is a •modern
metropolis with a wonderful cli-
ate, and boasts more hours' sun-
hipe than any other capital city
s `the country.
For a visitor, Sydney is an ex -
Bent base for operations until
he •becomes accustomed to the land
nd climate, and there he is within
asy distance of - many excellent
aliday resorts and tourist attrac-
0
y
w
1.0
n
ry.
0
g
s
c
a
A
e
Q
5
If
m
s
qe
a
e
h
tions.
The newest and currently most
popular of these is "Surfers' Para-
dise" en the coast north of Sydney.
As the name implies visitors can
enjoy a beach and •surfing second
to none with . modern accommoda-
tion and facilities .at a price which.
gives added value and a bright
new look to' the Canadian dollar.
For example rooms at various
hotels and guest houses vary from,
to $6 a day (including break-
fast), and apartments are also
available from $6 per day per
person.
Don't do what I did --book in at
witha Sydneyi iiyroom! hotel and then take my
breakfast at a cafe ... being un-
aware that 1 was paying. for same
.
Another one of the• newerresort
Tots ifs Hayman island my ing off
e Queensland -coast. Hire .moda-
ern .twin,'-- bed suites, somewhat
simi, to the la
+test ,Americabr
mti+teliiar, can 'be obtained for $5 pe
day per Iperson.
Take "A Perry' ,Ride!
Sydney is -World-f'aa olts, and so
is its fine and beautiful harbor
which is criss-crossed .by ferries
taking commuters to and from
work.
To fill In , an hour ,• ot: two I
caught the £er frbm downtown
Sydney to Manly (oeach fame)
—a (thirty-five mintiflif run each
way at a cost Of about twenty-five
cents return.
Wlr to in Sydney I was, fortunate
in b ing the guest of Norman
Aliso y .,,Panadia'n Pacific Airlines
t
. ""pe atip • re' • sen t.tye,
?uaitn , e�
eoe
t Ist 044 Aerona ea
n `: ,a; •L..
fabulous"'TataSalils' +line
r e,
net which has a :turf hag,l ground
and is world famous. " Wonders to
he seen there include its ,swami.--
gni R00,1 on :tole'third 4loor and
the Settlemen�t.Room where once
every week on `Settlement Day"
race wagers are paid off and don't
thunk. the Aussie is' a piker when.
it
-echoes to ibettnnlg.
.1 met Ken Ranger, well-lsaown
Sydney bookmaker, who may :carry
over fifty thousand pounds on a
single race. If you can, wangle a
visit to this club I.guairantee. you'll
enjoy the experience.
And one more thoht-.-when in
Sydney .doe'•t miss trying the local
crayfish. A medium size one tips
the scales at two pounds and the
white flesh is a gourmet's delight
but , the local oysters, while
delicious are babies compared to,
what -we get here in Eastern
Canada.
Waltzin' Matilda
There is nothing more Austral-
ian, better known overseas, than
the title of the country's unofficial
national anthem ,"Waltzin' Matil-
da." The origin of the title ,,as' in'.
' keeping with the feelings in the
hearts of this land's sons, wher-
ever they may be. •
A "swagman" who roamed the
dew
.to a girl; (aga'
eeots' wp hest b the x
.en. ,tkagooeri
o�rOgs
bRs
were
j: ', a•
rf001y .'' "y ,
uylin strange .exis i c
iu hebecame ill' and uveal
u di+f d. • ::..
The
sor w wdowswagman n 4
andloneliness
would prpli
bis Qwag •(rolled ,,blanket and small.
aging) ag i.nst.a tree and tom:
.to it as heused to hit' wife, all
the time 'addressingthe swag' as
"Matilda."
Hence when you wtlwre carrying
us tr 'an
wr
'�•]rtl'a
e'
syr
at's.the " i"o b e
k y ae alnta1tI~e� `.
410 yoorA" p1„04$
ti el% ' I've 'Pt t ,
yeorz." }
`tWrhsat'S Yee, e» ash
tied frie'nrh •
° 4RA dItl'ble Scotch, ,nr;;,
. e,:
7
lemaCimerimmimmovaimirmi '0111111110111r
THE MARIA DB I'R
• BALL ` ' SCHOOL
will be
open
for re r�tirn On
gist the -Mit mud: nth •
British Exchange Hotel
on the 16th. from 4 p.m. tI ll 7 p.m;
and on the ,{i,''th from 10 'a.m. till 1 p.
-36
.6y 74WQ,Q' SA!/E
BARGAIN
COACH
FARES
•l b'ii'.
I.
rte_mow mirk r
GOOD GOING
TUE$. 86 WED.
SEPT. 20th
RETURN LIMIT — 7 DAYS
Between GODERICH
and
STRATFORD•- -
KITCHENER -
TORONTO -
21st
Return Fare- YOU SAVE
$3..80. $1.10
- 2.76 1.75
5,06 3.15
Bargain Fares also apply between TORONTO
and Return Fare YOU SAVE '
MONTREAL -- $12.90 $8.15
• OTTAWA -' - - - - - 10.00 6.30
Also between phints listed and INTERMEDIATE
Stations with proportionate savings.
Children under 5 travel free -5 and under 12,
half -fare.
Regular 150 ib. baggage allowance
Watch for Bargain Coach Fares Effective
October 18-19 T-5-39
CANADIAN NATIONAL RAILWAYS
"TRANS CANADA CREDIT
LIFE INSURED LOANS
protect fhTifimiIy' ecurity"
A Trans Canada Credit loan, protected
at no extra cost by life insurance, solved
this.faanily's budget problems without
endangering family security.
Smart father! He's like the thousands
--of family heads who use Trans Canada
Credit's Life -insurance -protected
family loan service to see them through
financial hurdles.
If your present loan lacks this
important security feature, call Trans
Canada Credit right away. This all -
Canadian loan company specializes in
loans tO"`Canadian families from coast
to coast, at reasonable rates, without
endorsers, and on repayment plans ar-
ranged to,each customer's income.
Prompt, courteous service, in private,
congenial surroundings is always yours
when you let Trans Canada Credit ar-
range your loans.
So, whenever you think of borrowing,
think first of the all -Canadian company
that thinks of your family security.
See your nearby manager and arrange •
your life -insured loan now ! I • ,..
THE'•ALL-CANADIAN LOAN COMPANY
TRANS
l�ANdDA BIEBuT
CORPORATION' LIMITED
148 THE
Telephone,
•
ti;