HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1953-01-08, Page 4THE GODERICII SIgNA -S. TA.R
Fashion Shoppe
KINCARDINE GAELS
VS.
GODERICH SAMIS PONTIACS
FRIDAY, JANUARY 9
GODERICH ARENA
ADITUS 60c 8.30 P.M. CHILDREN 25c
BEAFORTH GIRL SECOND
IN PROVINCIAL TEST
TORONTO, Jan. 7.—Ruth Keyes,
a Stratford Normal School student,
representing Huron County, placed
second in the finals of the Ontario
Junior Farmer public speaking coni -
petition, held here morning, tufter-
noon and evening on Tuesday as
part of the program of the Junior
Farmer annual convention. She is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wil-
bur Keyes, R.R. 3, Seaforth, and
tt graduate of Seafertih Collegiate
I nstri tnite.
FIGURE SKATING
IMO
at Goderich Memorial Arena
Saturday '12-2 p.m. For skaters under 13 years.
Saturday 4.30-6.30 For skaters 13 years and over.
Fee per lesson -50c Mrs. June Smith, Instructress
The groups will skate each Saturday. It is expected
that a Figure Skating Club will be formed later this
season.
The Arena Commission is anxious to make figure
skating a continuous part of their program.
1 -3 to1-2 Price
Clearance
COATS - SUITS DRESSES
BLOUSES
LIKE THE FAMOUS NEW YORK HOLLAND TUNNEL is this view of an excavated section of the firstof the twin 51/2 -Mile
tunnels now being carved under the City of Niagara Falls by Ontario Hydro. Near here,»Hydra made the , first tunnel break-
through on October 10, when Lieutenant -Governor the Honourable Louis 0,; Breithaupt went down into the murky depths of
the underground waterpassage to touch off a 11/4 -ton dynamite charge which crumbled a 2,000 -ton rock "plug" separating
two excavating crews drilling towards one another from tunnel excavating shafts no. 3 and no. 4. These are two of five
locations from which the tunnels are being excavated to supply a total of 15,000,000 gallons of water per minute to the Sir
Adam Beck -Niagara Generating Station no. 2. More than 500 guests, including Hydro Chairman Robert H. Saunders, atten-
ded the breakthrough ceremony.
Ontario Hydro Rushes. New Power Line
To Supply Power for New Generator
See.1..
The,New
• • • . •
1953
CHEVROLET
---with more significant advances
than ever incorporated in a model,
in the low price field.
`ridgy, Januar
AT '
RDNER MOTOR SALES
25 Victoria £t.
Goderich
With initial power expected from
Ontario Hytlro's giant 12 -unit,
1,200,000 -horsepower Sir Adam
Beck -Niagara generating station no.
2 by 1954, new transmission line
'facilities to handle dt are being
pushed forward in Western On-
tario, -Chairman Robert II. Saund-
ers has announced.
"Associated with these facilities
is a new 230,000 -volt line now being
constructed between {.1anford,
south of ,Ilamilton, to Petersburg
Transformer --Station, .near._..Kitch--
ener. It is being built at an estim-
ated cost of $2,492,000," said Mr.
Saunders.
Completion Next Fear
Working on the Glanford-Peters-
burg initial circuit of the two-
`circuit line is a labor force of 125
Goderich
men, alining at completion by July,
1053.
When power for the Southern
Ontario system is first received in
1954 from Sir Adam. Beck no. 2,
it will be fed into the 230,000 -volt
hydro high tension line network.
This network, in turn, feeds it to
the strategic points of Allanburg
transformer station, near Welland;
E. V. Buchanan transformer sta
tion, London; Petersburg trans-
former station, near Kitchener;
Burlington transformer station.
Burlington; . A. -W. "- Manby trans-
former station, Islington; and Essa
transformer station, sear Barrie.
The J. Clark Keith generating sta-
tion is also connected to this net-
work.
From these transformer stations,
power will be eased into the South -
'":14
f „
M
Turn -About Meat Loaf
A
CLASSIC in every best cook's
repertoire is brown- crusted.
tender meat loaf. Perfect sauce to
use in stand lover it is -condensed
tomato soup.
And you can use different con-
densed soup -sauces to vary this
basic ` loaf into other scrumptious
versions. Just a "presto-chango"
and you can turn the Tomato Loaf
into a Mushroom Meat Loat=--by wi-
ling cream of mushroom soup in-
t,stead of tomato soup for the sauce.
Or make the loaf with cream of
;celery soup tor still another good
'one.
Master Meat Loaf
,2 cans (21 cups) 34 cup chopped
condensed parsley
tomato soup 1 eg-g, slightly
1pound ground beaten
beef 1 tablespoon
it pound ground Worcestershire
pork sauce
X134 cups soft 1 teaspoon salt
bread cubes 1!a teaspoon
'S4 cup chopped pepper
onion
Combine 1/4 cup of soup with
other. Ingredients. (Save rest of
'soup for sauce.) Shape into a loaf
far pack lightly into a greased loaf
;pan. Bake in a moderate oven
,(350° F.) for 1 hour. Remove loaf
from pan; pour in remaining soup
and simmer about 5 minutes. Pour
hot. sauce over loaf. Makes 6 serv-
Ings.
Meat Loaf with Mushroom .Sauce:
Simply «follow recipe for Master
Meat Loaf except use 2 cane (21
.cups) of condensed cretem of mush-
room soup instead- of tomato soup.
!When making sauce with the mush-
room seep (11 cupii), breed soup
with % cup of milk and/or meat
drippings.
Meat Loaf with Celery • Parsie
Sauce: Simply follow recipe for
Master Meat Loaf except use
cans (2% cups) of copdensed cream
of celery soup instead of tomato
soup. When making sauce with;
celery soup (2 cups), blend witlli
1/s cup of milk and/or drippings
And add 1/4 cup of chopped parsley?
to the sauce.
SOUP SCOOPS
Here's Likely Candidate for
Cookie Jar. A likely candidate for,
your cookie jar is this spicy, rosy+.'
hued cookie made with condensed
tomato soup. They're full of oat4
meal and nuts, too—good nourish=
ment for the nibblers in your
family:
Rosy Oatmeal Cookies
3.» -cup butter or
.margarine
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
1 cup sifted flour
1 teaspoon 3
' taking powder
2 teaspoon soda 2
teaspoon salt
2 -teaspoons
cinnamon
1 teaspoon
nutmep
1 can (114 cups)
condensed
tomato soup
cups uncooked
oatmeal
cups seedless
raisins, chopped
1 cupwalnuts chopped
Cream butter and sugar; add
eggs and blend thoroughly. Sift
dry Ingredients together; add al-
ternately with soup to the butter
mixture. Mix 'wellafter each addl.
bon. Blend in oatmeal, raisins and
walnuts. Drop by spoonfuls on a.
lightly greased baking sheet. Bake
in a moderate oven (350° F.). about;
20 minute$' or- until lightly brown.
Makes- about 6 dozen ,cookies, 11
inches in diameter,
ern Ontario 115,000 -volt system and
distributed throughout this area.
Miles of Towers
In constructing the initial cir-
cuit of this new line, 223 towers
will be erected over a 43 -mile route
at an average spacing of about
1,000 feet. Some 3,500 tons of steel
will be needed for the transmission
towers. The new conductor (1.34
inches in diameter) is aluminum
carie -steed reinforced and is the
largest ever strung by Ontario
•Hydro. 'It will contain 375 tons of
Aluminum and 125 tons of steel
for a total of 500 tons. In addi-
tion, two ground cables, three-
eighths incises in diameter and re-
quiring 70 tons of steed, will be
installed for lightning protection.
Footings for the towers will use
497 -- cubic --yards --.of - . concrete, a
mals quantity as most towers are
based on a steel grid buried some
nine feet underground.
Along the 43 -mile route, 15,120 in-
sulator bells will be used, each 10
inches in diameter. The insulators
are made of porcelain and look like
inverted saucers, each 5% inches
long.
MARCH DATES FOR SEED
FAIR AT CLINTON NAMED
The Ihuron County Soil and Crop
Improvement . Association has set
March 6-7 as the dates for the
annual • seed Pair at the Clinton
Collegiate. Mlle meeting which de-
cided on this was held Monday at
the agricultural office board rooiu.
Advertising floc the seed fair
prize list was submitted and judges
were named. Russell Bolton. It.R.
1 Dublin, president, was in the
chair. G. •W. Montgomery, Clinton,
agricultural representative - for
Huron County, was present as sec-
reta ry-treasurer.
Canada's fine paper mills, unlike
the- 'one- product"' newsprint mill,
are called upon to produce al. •very
wide range of papers requiring
-great skill - and versatility.
Current expansion programs in
Stine - Canadian "steel industry _. will
bring annual production up to 4.7
million Ingot tons, triple the pre-
war capacity.
iNECalvert SPORTS COLUMN
4 Elmer 7e494444
Old Mr. 1952 hobbled into the room, lean-
ing heavily on his cane, for the 01d Doy was
nearing the end. He looked at sprightly
young Master 1953, nodded appreciatively
and said: "Fine, , Jooking youngster.' Seems
sturdy. He'd better be. It will be a tough
fear for him."
"What's so tough, pop?" queried the sprightly - youngster.
"I'm looking for a high old time in sport."
"Irt'+bl be high, all right" replied the Old Boy wlitih nindster
on ph isris. "Fh erything was high in my time, particularly prices.
You're a -corrin' into a high year and a bdg year, boy," he said.
"I'm open for suggestions" said the young felllow. "What
about the Grey Cup?" enquired the youngster.
"F)ast is east" said Old 1952. `;Thee east has got too many
good likty€rs for 'the west. . "Them gays from the prairies are
-game. II'dl give them that. They can take It. spend their
Money, put en a great show but the teaums in the feast. are 'like -
the Atlantic Ocean." -
"How come?" said the youngster. -
"Depth boy, depth" chortled the OkI Bossy. "They git there
f u stent with the mo st est."
"If I have my way" said the youngster firmly, 'they'll play
that Grey Cup as a two -game series in my tone and give the west
an even -break. Or a three -game series, so everybody can get a
look."
"Take it easy, lad" advised the oldster. "You'll get yourtlelf
ostracized in the best Toronto social cireles making cracks like
that." . -
•"The Stanley Chip's not flag off" said the youngtste'r, "who do
you fig11Te for that?"
The Old Man broke out witch a cackling sounds,' raising_ the
badasnee of his void it what he meant to be song. - "Pretty Nitre
Red Wing" he sang In. aL cracked and feeble voice. "That's the
Stanley Cup song. boy."
-"Pretty a ufirl" - enmmemteetI they kind. "The - song, I mean; not
tahe sentimonit, You ►said sytni .figure dt to be a big year in sport?"
"Big firee_ide.year"_eftnianonted the oldster. "That new gadli t.__-
they call tccleVisi+on, telld yotlr trims& to look . "out for- that.
Forks t.lilact were pa dn' their rv%iay in will be looksi'n' at the Same
,thaw night At home for free. Human nature is they won't pay
for wllilat they can get for nothtn' ".
"You had a' great runner in your day, this fallow Zatopek"
sled viung `doter 1953. '"Tlilink we'll get -a look al him?"
"Crit you see through aniron curtain, boy? If you ban,
you den see Zatopek. He's In there. Retrnember the guy will
saved Sitalinls lite?"
"Why did he?" naked the kkll, o"rttft sly.
"We all make mistakes" saki the oldster, as he prepared
to vanish. "This guy was rewarded with any privilege he
wished, so he asked the right to speak ivtelephone to his
brother in New York. They littiiited him to one word,'
"What was the word?" asked the youngster. -
"Help!" said, the Old Boy, and vanished for. keeps.
• Your comments and suggesflons for fhb column will be welcomed
by Elmer Ferguson, c/o Colveri House, 431 Yong. St., Toronto.
CaLvtrt
ISTI'LLERS LIMITED,
AMHERSTIURO, ONTARIO