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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1972-10-05, Page 15
M w 0 • rr' r�A The W' Advance -Times, y, 0403fir FIREMAN. FRANCIS MERKLEY of Wingham Fire De- partment tests the mike on No. 2 pumper truck in a brigade practise session. All units can summon additional aid or call medical or police help by recently -installed shortwave radio communications. Driver is Bryan Douglas. (Staff Photo') WHAT'S YOUR FAMILY, HOME AND BUSINESS NOT MEN FROM MARS but Wingham firemen donning modern smoke mask equipment are demonstrating their ability to penetrate into smoke -,filled qua4-ters that could suffocate anyone not so protected. Wingham is fortunate to have 24 loyal volunteer firemen on call at all times. Six more volunteers are needed right away, Fire Chief Dave Crothers states. (Staff Photo) VOLUNTEER , F.I R EMAN Ed Wright, demonstrates how Wingham fire department tanker truck can stay in contact with headquarters over a range of 20 to 25 miles, contact other Huron radio equipped fire departynents or the Ontario Fire Mars"hal's office. lDriver is Lynn Hickey. (Staff Photo) ✓© AAr INC. *SI A.> WOMB 11 glib, WIN Mr vii GLOBETROTTING With Herman THIS GEM CALLED "JAMAICA" The Union Jack of Imperial Britain has been gone now since 1962. The flag of free Jamaica is green, gold and black. The colours are there wherever you look : the green in the hills and • valleys, the gold ,in the sunlight, the black in the faces of the people. They shine and gleam'. They .intermingle. They blend with other colours: the blue of sky and sea, the white of beaches, the yellow of fruits, the red of earth. Putting first things first, Ja- maica is beautiful. It is also big (as Caribbean islands go) with an area exceeded only by Cuba's and Hispaniola's and a popula- tion pushing toward two million. No "pancake with a palm tree," Jamaica is a land of many moods and aspects, faces and voices. Of lagoons and mountain peaks, cane fields and bauxite, orchids and traffic jams, hotels and history. • "Yes sir," • a taximan said proudly, "our island's got every- thing there is." Then he added, "Except money." But even that seems o becoming. • I flew into Kingston, its capital, „Though one of -the largest cities in the Caribbean, it is emerging from the 19th. century. It sprawls and swarms, but 99 per cent with homegrown Jamaicans. Other than the short -stay passengers on winter cruise ships, the main- stream of visitors prefer the north shore resorts, where the. beaches are. I spent a total of 2 t days in the Kingston area'visiting a such attractions as the Hope, Bo- t tanical Gardens, a splendid array s of tropical flora, with a few fauna and ferocious. They roar around Jamaica's five -million blind curves at fifty -per, neatly strad- dling the central dividing line. Even if your nerves are not quite those of an astronaut, the strain is worth it. For the island's interior is surpassingly lovely. On the flat coastal plains you are flanked by seas `of sugar cane. As the road rises and twists you come to the realm of bananas, coffee, cocoa, bamboo, bread- fruit and yams. When the land steepens into true mountains, the way lies through deep gorges and grottoes, their walls lined with al most vertical hanging jungles. At the top of a rise, unexpectedly, • there may be a bare plateau, with the raw red earth and looming sheds of a bauxite plant. But these are soon gone. There is again. only the green forest until you .top a final -rise and see, fat ahead and below, the shining blue miles of the Caribbean. Naturally space does not allow me to go into complete detail of all the places I encountered along the way, so I'll just mention a few. First of all there's the town of Mandeville, 2,000 'feet in the hills. For . years Mandeville has been the holiday refuge of Kings- ton Britishers seeking the cool- ness ool- nes of elevation. But the North- Amefican Tourist, ' seeking not coolness but warmth, has avoided it. Westward from Man- deville are villages with won- drous names: among them Pep- per, Gutter, Lilliput, Maggotty. Here 'are goats, donkeys, roos- ers, naked wide-eyed children nd kerchiefed women beating heir wash against the stones of tream beds. . Itis not all pastoral idyll, for in he village one finds a gas pump, Coke dispenser, and a sign say - ng F. WATSON, OFF?COURSE ETTING. And along the road- ide are groups of .men, young nd old, loafing the day away. In pite of Jamaica's great strides, n agriculture, industry and tour - m, there is still noticeable un- mployment on the island. In the outhwestern area, most jobs for en are on sugar plantations. ut sugar is a seasonal crop, and his was not the season. way. Some are on the shore, others on the hillsides a short dis- tance inland. • In the old days, (meaning fif- teen years ago) the north shore of • Jamaica, for the tourist meant Montego Bay, period. Now the whole 150 -mile sweep is on i way to becoming a tropical Riveria. . There is still confusion as to what Ocho Rios is. Basically, it's a town, a very small town with" a big traffic circle. But for touristic purposes it has given its name to the whole strip of shore from St. Ann's Bay to Port Maria. Town or . strip, it is beautiful, more so, I would say, than Montego Bay, hough it still lags behind its older ival in tradition and cachet. It ffers much to see and do. Close y, is Fern Gully, a road built in n old river bed that for two miles ores an emerald tunnel through he heart of a lush overgrowth. To e west is Dunn's River Falls,'a ascade of silver water flowing irectly into•the sea over rocks so mooth yet unslippery that one. an climb right up them to the eights. If you think a plantation our sounds dull (as I did), you ill be mistaken,. With fabulous ora and top-drawer guides, Timmer Hall is a 90 -minute de- ght, topped by a dip in the pool and a planter's punch. Port Antonio, the third of the north coast's prime resort areas is smaller than Mo Bay and Ocho Rios and has a very bright future. Scenically it's gorgeous. As'back- drop; there rise the highest peaks of the Blue Mountains, and front - and -center are deep bays and bold ' headland.. Also it is . the greenest and lushest section of the island, for which a price must be paid in more rain. But the rains are quick, heavy, and sud- denly °gone. Green and gold re- turn, richer, brighter than ever. The star aquatic attraction of the area is not offshore but inland. This is rafting on the nearby Rio Grande, which has now been go- ing on for nearly half a century and has become one of the is- land's popular tourist attrac- We continue on, and what t gleams ahead is one of the great- r est beaches of the world. We have' 0 come. to Negril, at the island's. b far -western end. Ahead, for long a miles, are bows and arcs and b crescents of virgin sand: There is t • one small hotel here, the Sun- 'th " downer, a small open-air restaur- c ant specializing in seafood and d some beach cottages that can be s rented. Here I stopped, changed c into swimming trunks'. It was one h of the memorable experiences of t a lifetime, for .on those' seven w sweing miles of beach I was the fl • onfy human being.. Leaving sand B for silken water, I was the only, li visib a creature in all the miles of the Caribbean.. Later, back on' shore, a few men and boys appeared to work on 'a small beached boat a few hundred yards from me. But they stayed only a short while. A'small Ai -tithed up, seemed to eye me curiously and took his departure. ' All that was left were sun,, sea, sand and self. But alas, I had to continue, on. "Mo" Bay was there all right, as lush and plush and lovely as I re - Member it from my last visit: •a resort that, to my mind, comes as near to having everything as any in the world. True there 'is no spectacular single beach like Ne- gril's. But the justly famous strand of Doctor's Cave (public) and those- of !natty of the hotels (private or semi -private) are, on added. Close by is the University t ofthe West Indies, in which you a can see Jamaica's past and pow-• i erfully feel its future. Also during B your stay in Kingston a visit to s Port Royal is a ,must. At the tip of a the long arm of land that forms s the, outer rim of Kingston's har- i bour, the old town was' long the is capital of Jamaica, the strong= e hold of Henry Morgan and his co- s buccaneers., once known as the m "richest and wickedest city" in B the world. In 1692 Port Royal was t stricken by an earthquake that rumbled most of it into the sea. After two days in Kingston just right, I should say, in a two - eek trip) I took to the road in a ented 'car. Th_s is no project to �e undertaken lightly. One's sired car is tiny, frail and driven y clutch and gearstick on the left ide of the road. Opposition cars, trucks and buses are often huge PROCLAMATION In Co -Operation with the National Fire Prevention Association and Wingham Fire Department, I hereby declare the Wieek of: Sunday, October 8 to Saturday, October 13 as FIRE PREVENTION WEEK IN WINGHAM and urge all Citizens of Wingham to take steps to see that Fire Prevention is practised this week and Every Week in Wingham. Special attention is called to elimination of fire hazards in the home, shop and factory. The life you sae may be your own. We wish to express at this time our °sincere appreciation of the faithful work of our Volunteer Firemen who are ready at all times to safe- fguard lives and property in the Town of Wingham. DeWitt Miller MAYOR SOWN OF WINGHAM • t. 1• a smaller scale,, pure gems Day do or night in Montego there is al- riv ways something to do, and better eig yet, perhaps it is the perfect . c" place for doing nothing. Montego Bay establishments run the gamut from the top- thr bracket cottage colonies through ge the more conventional resort ru hotels, to a host of small inns and Oh guest houses with modest accom- an modations and rates. Some are a fa ns. Unique among island ers, the Grande presents an ht -mile course of pools and annels, rapids and spillways. ng bamboo rafts, poled by ex - rt "captains" and with a onelike seat for two passen- rs, - makes the kaleidoscopic n in two hours. yes, there's much to see, do d enjoy in grand Jamaica. It's holiday destination the entire mily can enjoy, and -one which I highly recommend to you. close. to town some are out a can • Guests at a beach barbecue at J maican combo. The feast IS in Iudes dancing and an open he foot of famed Dunn's River Falls are serenaded by a of the new�Qcho Rios ' Boonoonoonoos' happenings and . r. t !J1'4. 1 Too iate to buivire After a fire, it's also too late to make sure insurance coverage is adequate for today's higher building costs. Check with os. EDWARD A. ELLIOTT General Insurance - Real Estate Broker Trust Fund Representative 241 Josephine St., Wingham Phone 357.1590 Res. 357-1555 JUST RETURNED • FROM HOTEL AND. SIGHT SEEING ORIENTATION TOUR OF BARBADOS Your inquiries are invited 163 Main St. W. Jim Cooney After Hours Call 2914207 . Leave Winter BEHIND! Join Your Fellow Canadians on a TRAVELUPIGA COMMUNITY FRIENDSHIP TOUR llth Annual Tour to SOUTH' PACIFIC , 4 35 DAYS VISITING HAWAII -FIJI, NEW ZEALAND & AUSTRALIA, DEPARTING FROM TORONTO JAN: 10/73. Management escorted and conducted throughout - $2295.00 per person 4th Annual . Tour to MEXICO 14 DAYS -- VISITING MEXICO CTTY, GUADALAJARA, . TAXCO & ACAP'ULCO. Departing from TORONTO JAN. 24/73. Escorted by Nap & , Margo King - King Grain & Seed Co., Paincourt, Ontario. All -Inclusive Price - $575.00. 6th Annual Tour to SOUTH AMERICA 21 DAYS — VISITING BRAZIL, PARAGUAY, .ARGENTINA. - 'CHILE - PERU. Departing from Toronto Jan. 31/73. Escort- ed, by Jim' Murby - . King Cole Duck Fara%., Aurora, Ontario. Alltinclusive only' $1450.00 per person. 5th Annual Tour tb SOUTH AMERICA, SOUTH AFRICA, RHODESIA AND EUROPE = *28 DAYS - VISITING RIO DE JANEIRO, ' CAPETOWN, JOHANNESBURG - SALISBURY , VICTORIA FALLS - AMSTERDAM. Departing from Toronto Feb. 19/73. Escort- ed by native South. African Mr. Carl Clayton, Napanee, On- tario. All-inclusive only : $1849.00 per person. 3rd Annual Tour to SOUTH-EAST ASIA 25 DAYS -- VISITING HONG KONG - BANKOK - PENANG - KA ULA LUMPUR - . SINGAPORE - BALI - MANILLA - HAWAII. Departing from Toronto March 4/73 Escorted by 'John Vellinga, President of Vellinga's Travel Service, Chat- ham, Ontario. All-inclusive only $1549.00 per person. These outstanding Tours have been especially arranged for you and your fellow Canadians. For your free fully illustrated Brochure come into this newspaper office to- day or complete the coupon below and mail it today. ' Yes, 'I/We are interested in e3'RAVELLINGA'S WIN - VER '73 COMMUNITY FRIENDSHIP TOUR. Please send me °your fully illutstrated Brochure on -the following Tours SOUTH PACIFIC MEXICO .. SOUTH AMERICA . SOUTH-EAST ASIA SOUTH AMERICA, SOUTH AFRICA, RHODESIA & EUROPE. NAME: ADDRESS: TEL: VELLINGA'S WORLD=WIDE TRAVEL SERVICE LTD. "Travellinga's Quality Tours" - 244 Queen St., P:O. Box 234, Chatham, Ontario (519) 352-5150, all set for a guy's FALL WARDROBE AT READMAN'S WE OFFER YOU A A WIDE SELECTION OF • SUITS • SHIRTS --- SLACKS • TIES • SOCKS • JACKETS • DRESS PANTS IN THE NEWEST STYI1 ES AND COLORS READMAN CLEANERS AND MEN'S WEAR 318 JOSEPHINE WINGHAM MAW. ri ;;.1 , t'" .< ,WORTH' TO YOU? 4 a }' :< ::. • t J' • '11'//gi •- 4 ri 1„ :r i A little inconvenience, ex - Npense . . . these things are ' so trivial when they cansave a life, 'home or place of business. Take precautions against fire, now! Protect yourself against losses from fire. Consult your insurance agent today about bringing coverage up to date or a new policy in line with today's values. ti Y r y w, ti CO-OP INSURANCE I. ,4 .4 , ,19 , , 1 - , Lloyd `Montgome , A enc•;,. r.yAgent 53 Maple St. Wingham 357-3739 STATE FARM` FIRE AND CASUALTY COMPANY Agent, W. D.'"Bili" May 322 Centre St. 357-3280 SEATS FARM ® n.. INSURANCE. . WILLIAM . S. REED GENERAL INSURANCE 64 Victoria St. Wingham • 357-21/4 EDWARD A. ELLIOTT ° GENERAL INSURANCE • 241 Josephine St., Wingham 357-1590 : 1 1 r l f I s FIRE HAZARD INSPECTION. If a fire hazard inspection is desired, this service is available free of charge by contacting Head Office ' HOWICK FARMERS MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE. CO Wroxeter 335-356j. Mei/ J INSURANCE AGENCY BILL .PETE Wingham 357-2636 Gorrie 335-3525. NOT MEN FROM MARS but Wingham firemen donning modern smoke mask equipment are demonstrating their ability to penetrate into smoke -,filled qua4-ters that could suffocate anyone not so protected. Wingham is fortunate to have 24 loyal volunteer firemen on call at all times. Six more volunteers are needed right away, Fire Chief Dave Crothers states. (Staff Photo) VOLUNTEER , F.I R EMAN Ed Wright, demonstrates how Wingham fire department tanker truck can stay in contact with headquarters over a range of 20 to 25 miles, contact other Huron radio equipped fire departynents or the Ontario Fire Mars"hal's office. lDriver is Lynn Hickey. (Staff Photo) ✓© AAr INC. *SI A.> WOMB 11 glib, WIN Mr vii GLOBETROTTING With Herman THIS GEM CALLED "JAMAICA" The Union Jack of Imperial Britain has been gone now since 1962. The flag of free Jamaica is green, gold and black. The colours are there wherever you look : the green in the hills and • valleys, the gold ,in the sunlight, the black in the faces of the people. They shine and gleam'. They .intermingle. They blend with other colours: the blue of sky and sea, the white of beaches, the yellow of fruits, the red of earth. Putting first things first, Ja- maica is beautiful. It is also big (as Caribbean islands go) with an area exceeded only by Cuba's and Hispaniola's and a popula- tion pushing toward two million. No "pancake with a palm tree," Jamaica is a land of many moods and aspects, faces and voices. Of lagoons and mountain peaks, cane fields and bauxite, orchids and traffic jams, hotels and history. • "Yes sir," • a taximan said proudly, "our island's got every- thing there is." Then he added, "Except money." But even that seems o becoming. • I flew into Kingston, its capital, „Though one of -the largest cities in the Caribbean, it is emerging from the 19th. century. It sprawls and swarms, but 99 per cent with homegrown Jamaicans. Other than the short -stay passengers on winter cruise ships, the main- stream of visitors prefer the north shore resorts, where the. beaches are. I spent a total of 2 t days in the Kingston area'visiting a such attractions as the Hope, Bo- t tanical Gardens, a splendid array s of tropical flora, with a few fauna and ferocious. They roar around Jamaica's five -million blind curves at fifty -per, neatly strad- dling the central dividing line. Even if your nerves are not quite those of an astronaut, the strain is worth it. For the island's interior is surpassingly lovely. On the flat coastal plains you are flanked by seas `of sugar cane. As the road rises and twists you come to the realm of bananas, coffee, cocoa, bamboo, bread- fruit and yams. When the land steepens into true mountains, the way lies through deep gorges and grottoes, their walls lined with al most vertical hanging jungles. At the top of a rise, unexpectedly, • there may be a bare plateau, with the raw red earth and looming sheds of a bauxite plant. But these are soon gone. There is again. only the green forest until you .top a final -rise and see, fat ahead and below, the shining blue miles of the Caribbean. Naturally space does not allow me to go into complete detail of all the places I encountered along the way, so I'll just mention a few. First of all there's the town of Mandeville, 2,000 'feet in the hills. For . years Mandeville has been the holiday refuge of Kings- ton Britishers seeking the cool- ness ool- nes of elevation. But the North- Amefican Tourist, ' seeking not coolness but warmth, has avoided it. Westward from Man- deville are villages with won- drous names: among them Pep- per, Gutter, Lilliput, Maggotty. Here 'are goats, donkeys, roos- ers, naked wide-eyed children nd kerchiefed women beating heir wash against the stones of tream beds. . Itis not all pastoral idyll, for in he village one finds a gas pump, Coke dispenser, and a sign say - ng F. WATSON, OFF?COURSE ETTING. And along the road- ide are groups of .men, young nd old, loafing the day away. In pite of Jamaica's great strides, n agriculture, industry and tour - m, there is still noticeable un- mployment on the island. In the outhwestern area, most jobs for en are on sugar plantations. ut sugar is a seasonal crop, and his was not the season. way. Some are on the shore, others on the hillsides a short dis- tance inland. • In the old days, (meaning fif- teen years ago) the north shore of • Jamaica, for the tourist meant Montego Bay, period. Now the whole 150 -mile sweep is on i way to becoming a tropical Riveria. . There is still confusion as to what Ocho Rios is. Basically, it's a town, a very small town with" a big traffic circle. But for touristic purposes it has given its name to the whole strip of shore from St. Ann's Bay to Port Maria. Town or . strip, it is beautiful, more so, I would say, than Montego Bay, hough it still lags behind its older ival in tradition and cachet. It ffers much to see and do. Close y, is Fern Gully, a road built in n old river bed that for two miles ores an emerald tunnel through he heart of a lush overgrowth. To e west is Dunn's River Falls,'a ascade of silver water flowing irectly into•the sea over rocks so mooth yet unslippery that one. an climb right up them to the eights. If you think a plantation our sounds dull (as I did), you ill be mistaken,. With fabulous ora and top-drawer guides, Timmer Hall is a 90 -minute de- ght, topped by a dip in the pool and a planter's punch. Port Antonio, the third of the north coast's prime resort areas is smaller than Mo Bay and Ocho Rios and has a very bright future. Scenically it's gorgeous. As'back- drop; there rise the highest peaks of the Blue Mountains, and front - and -center are deep bays and bold ' headland.. Also it is . the greenest and lushest section of the island, for which a price must be paid in more rain. But the rains are quick, heavy, and sud- denly °gone. Green and gold re- turn, richer, brighter than ever. The star aquatic attraction of the area is not offshore but inland. This is rafting on the nearby Rio Grande, which has now been go- ing on for nearly half a century and has become one of the is- land's popular tourist attrac- We continue on, and what t gleams ahead is one of the great- r est beaches of the world. We have' 0 come. to Negril, at the island's. b far -western end. Ahead, for long a miles, are bows and arcs and b crescents of virgin sand: There is t • one small hotel here, the Sun- 'th " downer, a small open-air restaur- c ant specializing in seafood and d some beach cottages that can be s rented. Here I stopped, changed c into swimming trunks'. It was one h of the memorable experiences of t a lifetime, for .on those' seven w sweing miles of beach I was the fl • onfy human being.. Leaving sand B for silken water, I was the only, li visib a creature in all the miles of the Caribbean.. Later, back on' shore, a few men and boys appeared to work on 'a small beached boat a few hundred yards from me. But they stayed only a short while. A'small Ai -tithed up, seemed to eye me curiously and took his departure. ' All that was left were sun,, sea, sand and self. But alas, I had to continue, on. "Mo" Bay was there all right, as lush and plush and lovely as I re - Member it from my last visit: •a resort that, to my mind, comes as near to having everything as any in the world. True there 'is no spectacular single beach like Ne- gril's. But the justly famous strand of Doctor's Cave (public) and those- of !natty of the hotels (private or semi -private) are, on added. Close by is the University t ofthe West Indies, in which you a can see Jamaica's past and pow-• i erfully feel its future. Also during B your stay in Kingston a visit to s Port Royal is a ,must. At the tip of a the long arm of land that forms s the, outer rim of Kingston's har- i bour, the old town was' long the is capital of Jamaica, the strong= e hold of Henry Morgan and his co- s buccaneers., once known as the m "richest and wickedest city" in B the world. In 1692 Port Royal was t stricken by an earthquake that rumbled most of it into the sea. After two days in Kingston just right, I should say, in a two - eek trip) I took to the road in a ented 'car. Th_s is no project to �e undertaken lightly. One's sired car is tiny, frail and driven y clutch and gearstick on the left ide of the road. Opposition cars, trucks and buses are often huge PROCLAMATION In Co -Operation with the National Fire Prevention Association and Wingham Fire Department, I hereby declare the Wieek of: Sunday, October 8 to Saturday, October 13 as FIRE PREVENTION WEEK IN WINGHAM and urge all Citizens of Wingham to take steps to see that Fire Prevention is practised this week and Every Week in Wingham. Special attention is called to elimination of fire hazards in the home, shop and factory. The life you sae may be your own. We wish to express at this time our °sincere appreciation of the faithful work of our Volunteer Firemen who are ready at all times to safe- fguard lives and property in the Town of Wingham. DeWitt Miller MAYOR SOWN OF WINGHAM • t. 1• a smaller scale,, pure gems Day do or night in Montego there is al- riv ways something to do, and better eig yet, perhaps it is the perfect . c" place for doing nothing. Montego Bay establishments run the gamut from the top- thr bracket cottage colonies through ge the more conventional resort ru hotels, to a host of small inns and Oh guest houses with modest accom- an modations and rates. Some are a fa ns. Unique among island ers, the Grande presents an ht -mile course of pools and annels, rapids and spillways. ng bamboo rafts, poled by ex - rt "captains" and with a onelike seat for two passen- rs, - makes the kaleidoscopic n in two hours. yes, there's much to see, do d enjoy in grand Jamaica. It's holiday destination the entire mily can enjoy, and -one which I highly recommend to you. close. to town some are out a can • Guests at a beach barbecue at J maican combo. The feast IS in Iudes dancing and an open he foot of famed Dunn's River Falls are serenaded by a of the new�Qcho Rios ' Boonoonoonoos' happenings and . r. t !J1'4. 1 Too iate to buivire After a fire, it's also too late to make sure insurance coverage is adequate for today's higher building costs. Check with os. EDWARD A. ELLIOTT General Insurance - Real Estate Broker Trust Fund Representative 241 Josephine St., Wingham Phone 357.1590 Res. 357-1555 JUST RETURNED • FROM HOTEL AND. SIGHT SEEING ORIENTATION TOUR OF BARBADOS Your inquiries are invited 163 Main St. W. Jim Cooney After Hours Call 2914207 . Leave Winter BEHIND! Join Your Fellow Canadians on a TRAVELUPIGA COMMUNITY FRIENDSHIP TOUR llth Annual Tour to SOUTH' PACIFIC , 4 35 DAYS VISITING HAWAII -FIJI, NEW ZEALAND & AUSTRALIA, DEPARTING FROM TORONTO JAN: 10/73. Management escorted and conducted throughout - $2295.00 per person 4th Annual . Tour to MEXICO 14 DAYS -- VISITING MEXICO CTTY, GUADALAJARA, . TAXCO & ACAP'ULCO. Departing from TORONTO JAN. 24/73. Escorted by Nap & , Margo King - King Grain & Seed Co., Paincourt, Ontario. All -Inclusive Price - $575.00. 6th Annual Tour to SOUTH AMERICA 21 DAYS — VISITING BRAZIL, PARAGUAY, .ARGENTINA. - 'CHILE - PERU. Departing from Toronto Jan. 31/73. Escort- ed, by Jim' Murby - . King Cole Duck Fara%., Aurora, Ontario. Alltinclusive only' $1450.00 per person. 5th Annual Tour tb SOUTH AMERICA, SOUTH AFRICA, RHODESIA AND EUROPE = *28 DAYS - VISITING RIO DE JANEIRO, ' CAPETOWN, JOHANNESBURG - SALISBURY , VICTORIA FALLS - AMSTERDAM. Departing from Toronto Feb. 19/73. Escort- ed by native South. African Mr. Carl Clayton, Napanee, On- tario. All-inclusive only : $1849.00 per person. 3rd Annual Tour to SOUTH-EAST ASIA 25 DAYS -- VISITING HONG KONG - BANKOK - PENANG - KA ULA LUMPUR - . SINGAPORE - BALI - MANILLA - HAWAII. Departing from Toronto March 4/73 Escorted by 'John Vellinga, President of Vellinga's Travel Service, Chat- ham, Ontario. All-inclusive only $1549.00 per person. These outstanding Tours have been especially arranged for you and your fellow Canadians. For your free fully illustrated Brochure come into this newspaper office to- day or complete the coupon below and mail it today. ' Yes, 'I/We are interested in e3'RAVELLINGA'S WIN - VER '73 COMMUNITY FRIENDSHIP TOUR. Please send me °your fully illutstrated Brochure on -the following Tours SOUTH PACIFIC MEXICO .. SOUTH AMERICA . SOUTH-EAST ASIA SOUTH AMERICA, SOUTH AFRICA, RHODESIA & EUROPE. NAME: ADDRESS: TEL: VELLINGA'S WORLD=WIDE TRAVEL SERVICE LTD. "Travellinga's Quality Tours" - 244 Queen St., P:O. Box 234, Chatham, Ontario (519) 352-5150, all set for a guy's FALL WARDROBE AT READMAN'S WE OFFER YOU A A WIDE SELECTION OF • SUITS • SHIRTS --- SLACKS • TIES • SOCKS • JACKETS • DRESS PANTS IN THE NEWEST STYI1 ES AND COLORS READMAN CLEANERS AND MEN'S WEAR 318 JOSEPHINE WINGHAM