HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1981-07-22, Page 17ce
el,* SAILING
,,,opeor" INSTRUCTIONS
HURON
SAILING SCHOOL
Information Regarding
Registration
r.
•PETRELS ®LASER •AUBOTT 22
•WINDSURFER
Material provided (liner, bodges
certificates & learn to sell manuals)
•DAILY INSTRUCTION
•EVENING PROGRAM
4
For more Information
GODERICH
RECREATION BOARD
524-2.1.25..
Ship Bayfieth
The Canadian research
ship BAYFIELD and the
village of Bayfield will
jointly pay tribute on July 25
to the achievements of
pioneer nautical surveyor
Henry Wolsey Bayfield.
Admiral Bayfield, for
whom the ship and village
are named, charted prac-
tically all the shoreline from
Lake Superior to the Atlantic
Ocean over a 40 -year pre -
Confederation career.
His contributions to
Canadian hydrography — the
practice of surveying and
charting •waters for
navigation — will be recalled
on the Saturday that has
been proclaimed Bayfield
Day in the village.
The CSS BAYFIELD, will
anchor in Lake Huron at the
entrance to Bayfield 1-lar-
bour at 10:30 a.m. for an 11
o'clock sailpast organized by
the Bayfield Yacht Club.
.Capt. .F.R... Bgrcbein. and
officials of the Canadian
Hydrographic Service,
which is part : of the
Department of Fisheries an
4
Oceans, will then join an a
parade along the village's
main street to Clan Gregor
Square for ceremonies
staged by the Bayfield
Historical Society.
CSS BAYFIELD is too
large to enter Bayfield
Harbour. If wind and
weather conditions are
unsuitable for the sailpast,
the ship will proceed to
Goderich Harbour and the
Captain will return to
Bayfield for the ceremonies.
When Henry Bayfield, then
a Royal Navy Lieutenant in
his 20s, surveyed Lakes
Huron and Superior in the
early 1800s, his crew had to
take provisions for six weeks
at a time because there were
no settlers on the shores.
Years later, Bayfield
wrote in his diary :
"Two Boats,, not larger
than ship's cutters, carried
our _whole._ __stock o _con-
veniences, of which we had
fewer than the native
Indians I had not room even
GODERICH SIGNAL -STAR, WED WI:1*Y, JVL'lj ?2, t
1PdE
nd wkr4la e of Bayfield to honor pioneer
for a matress, but slept, in
all weathers, in the Boat, or
on the shore upon a buffalo
robe under the Boat's
mainsail thrown over a few
branches placed on the
ground.
"Many a night have I slept
out, in this way, when the
thermometer was down to
near Zero, and sometimes
even below it. Yet even this
was, not so wearing as trying
to sleepy in vain, in the warm
nights of summer .... in the
smoke of a Fire to keep off
the clouds .wif Moschettoes
which literally darkened the
air."
Although conditions were
difficult and methods
primitfwe, Bayfield's charts
and sailingdirections were
as accurate as he could
make them, and for more
than 50 years they guided
innumerable ships through
the Great Lakes, along the
St_ _LaLawrence ,River and in
the Gulf of St. wrence.
Admiral Bayfield's service
to Canada has been court
inemorated by plaques in
Charlottetown and
Penetanguishene, and by
the adoption of his name for
the village and river in
Ontario, villages in, ;New
Brunswit ;Nova Scotia and
Prince Edward Island and
for Bayfield Sound off
Manitoulin Island.
The Canadian
Hydrographic Service has
traditionally named one of
its vessels in Bayfield's.
honour, starting with a
tugboat bought by the ser
vice in 1884.
The present CSS
BAYFIELD is the fourth
shop to carry the name. She
was built in Norway in 1960
and was used by the
University of Miami for
biologicalresearch until
1966. Bought by John David
Eaton of Toronto, she was
converted to an ocean-going
yacht and named Hildur. On
Mr. Eaton's .death in 1973,
the federal government
purchased the vessel, head
her refitted at the Port
ORANGE JUICE
KENT BRAND
FROZEN CONCENTRATED
OUR REG. 93`
12.5 fl. oz. TIN
ZENRS OWN BRAND
POTATO CHIPS
REGULAR
RIPPLE
BARBEOUE
SALT & VINEGAR
OUR REG. 1.09
200 g. BAG
KRAFT . PROCESSED SINGLE THIN
ROYALE
BATHROOM TISSUE
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500g
PKG
OF 24 SLICES
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SNIRRIFF•ASSTB FUIOURS
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FACIAL
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PKG. OF
100
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MALTED MILK OR JERSEY MILK.
NEILSONS
NOVELTIES
JULIENNE OR STRAIGHT CUT
McCAIN
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ROYALE
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MINI PUDDINGS
2P oz.
PKG.
1119
CATELLI DINNERS
MACARONI & CHEESE
2z5GSy.
PK.
3799
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WESTON
ASSORTED VARIETIES
BISCUITS
UBBYS
FANCY QUALITY
TOMATO JUICE48-
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99°
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COOKED -READY TO SERVE
LUNCH MEAT
FLOWERDALE
ORANGE PEKOE
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OR STRAWBERRY FLAVOURED�' OR SALISBURY STEAK 11 oz. S
POWDERED MILK 1g°89 SAVARIN DINNERS.1
FLYING OR CRAWLING McCAIN
INSECT KILLER99 NAPOLIFROZEN
VAPORETTE 426AZ. MINI PIZZAS 12 0= $149
ANTI PERSPIRANT WITH BABY POWDER. WESTONS
TIN .1.39 SOFTSUPER Y& SCENTED
DRI R UNSCENTED 'Z.49 ENGLIPACKAGE SH MUFFINS 19'
12o'z,
OF 50
GAY LEA LEMON
129 CHERRY OR STRAWBERRY
CHEESE CAKES
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125
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DIETRICHS 408 a. SIZE
3Pi APPLEESTRUDEL $1.49
ea etas
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PLAIN OR SEEDED
KAISER
ROLLS
ALL VARIETIES
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BUNS
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WE RESERVE THE RIGHT -"
TO LIMIT PURCHASES TO REASONABLE
WEEKLY FAMILY REOUIREMENTS
PRICES IN EFFECT WED JULY 22 UNTIL
CLOSING i'UESDAV JUI V ?A
Weller shipyard and
changed her name to
BAYFIELD.
The BAYFIELD, based at
the Canada Centre *Inland
- Waters (CCIW) in
Burlington, is 32 metres -long
and is equipped for
hydrographic surveys and
water research:-
CCIW,
esearch'CCiW, one of the world's
reading water research
centres, provides shared
facilities for operations of
both Environment Canada
'and Fisheries and Oceans.
The Canadian Hydrographie
Service, one of the Fisheries
and Oceans agencies, uses
CCMW as its Ciskei Region
headquarters. Central
Region is responsible for
charting waters fad the
Upper St. Lawrence west" to
the Manitoba -Saskatchewan
border and north to the high
Arctic- •,
0400,V
Riding the merry-go-round at the Kinsmen Carnival last weekend was serious business for
three-year-old_ Joey Fritzley of Goderich Township. But then, that looks like a pretty mean
steed he's on. ( Photo by Joanne Buchanan)
Lawson -Clark family
gather fo.r annual picnic
Approximately 60
descendants of the Lawson-
Clark family gathered at the
Benmiller Falls Reserve for
their annual picnic'recently.
Everyone enjoyed a
delicious smorgasbord
supper, after which Gary
Jewitt conducted a short
business period. A minute's
silence was observed in
memory of several members
who passed away during the
past year..
It was decided to hold the
reunion at Benmiller again
in 1982 .on the second Sunday
of July. Sports were con-
ducted, by Bill and Lance
Livingston and the results
were as follows: races 5 and
under - Christie Straughn,
Katey Brindley, . Robbie
Brindley; 6, 7 and 8 years,-
Kevin Glew, Kirsten Carroll,
Susan. Jewitt; 9 and 10 yrs. -
Paul Glew, Jennifer Jewitt,
Jeff Jewitt; teen boys - Bill
Livingston, John Lawson,
Les Lawson; kick the slipper
- jr - Jeff Jewitt, :Paul Glew,
•Brad Jewitt; senior - Dave .
Hart, Doris Lawson, Donna
Lawson; • guessing jelly
beans in jar -Paul Glew.
At mealtime the following
prizes were; given out:
youngest person - present,
Robbie Brindley; oldest
person present, Alice
Lawson; coming the longest
diatance, Donna and Chuck
Tilston from Pickering;
largest family in attendance,
Bob Lawson.
Vacation
Cash
Give -A-Way
Well Give lou $5.00 Cash
If "1011 Join the
ub
Before
ou Go (hi vacation
482-9773
11e'mbershil) Fee -'35.00
Offer Expires Jti\F 29. 1981
�..