The things you learn while making a newsletter… Like, don’t accidentally delete your subscribers. This newsletter is a day late because I was trying to make everything work out just right and forgot that deleting the software included the subscribers. But, I figured it out.
Canadian Inspiration
Hockey Night in Canada music played by an orchestra.
This has been called Canada’s second national anthem. Due to legal issues it is no longer played by the CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) at hockey games. But, it is missed, a lot!
Please help me support my fondness for groceries and the occasional new print book.
Canadian People

Foster Hewitt
Foster Hewitt was born into a sports family. His father and two of his uncles were sports journalists. At the age of 13 he started working for a newspaper called Toronto News, and by 20 became its sports editor.
On March 22, 1923, Hewitt called his first hockey game (with Radio station CFCA started in 1922), an intermediate hockey playoff game between a team from Kitchener and one from Toronto.
But it was at that game that his famous phrase “he shoots, he scores!” was born.
At his peak, Foster Hewitt was probably the most recognized voice in Canada. His audiences numbered six million — one third of the population of Canada at the time — and he received 90,000 fan letters each year.
Hewitt is reputed to have never missed a game, calling over 5,000 sporting events in his career. Foster Hewitt received many accolades over his life. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1965, named to the Order of Canada in 1972 and was also a member of the Canada Sports Hall of Fame.
Foster Hewitt died April 21, 1985 at 83 years of age. In 1989, he was inducted into the CAB Broadcast Hall of Fame.
Sources:
- CBC – Foster Hewitt: The Birth of Hockey
- History of Canadian Broadcasting – Foster Hewitt (1902 – 1985)
Amazon.ca – Foster Hewitt: His Own Story (1967)
Canadian Places

Facebook – Stories and Photos of Nova Scotia – Jocelyn Snyder Freeman
Shulie Lighthouse – Lighthouse Friends.com
Uncovering the Lost Town of Shulie, Nova Scotia: Nothing Left but Memories– Part Time Explorer
- YouTube video – Must Visit Places in Nova Scotia (Canada’s most beautiful place?) – Aly Smalls
- Epic Nova Scotia Roadtrip | Peggy’s Cove, Lunenburg, Bay of Fundy + Luckett Vineyards – Alina Mcleod
Canadian Things
Why is it such a battle to buy “Made in Canada” or “Product of Canada” goods?
- Facebook link – Where’s it Packaged?
- YouTube link – There’s only one winner in a trade war…
Canadian Links
Omegadoc – Desktop publishing software (free to use). – Made in Canada.
Dictionary of Canadian Biography
History of Canadian Broadcasting
The Alliance of Canadian Land Trusts
Government of Canada – Campaigns and Promotions
Canadian Network of Community Land Trusts
GoodReads – Calling All Canadians
GoodReads – Canadian Content









Above this you can see postcards I found for old Barrie. There were plenty to choose from. Sadly, I looked a lot (over years not just for this newsletter) but I have not found postcards from Port Union or West Rouge. So, I made my own with an old photo I have found posted in various places online.







