HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1949-06-09, Page 6THE SEAFORTH NEWS
"More of one friends have Telephones -
and we el/ toe the Telephone more/"
DAY AND NIGHT, seven days a }peek the telephone is at
your service. Quickly and easily it keeps you in touch
with everything and everybody everywhere. There are
400,000 more telephones and two million more calls a
day than there were three years ago. And service is
getting better all the time.
In three years, however, costs of important raw ma-
terials for telephone lines and cables have risen sharply.
Copper prices have doubled, zinc and lead prices tripled.
Yet, up to now, despite rising costs on all sides, there has
been no increase in the basic telephone rates established
22 years ago. Few things give you so much real value at
such low cost as your telephone.
We've broken all records but there are still orders we
haven't been able to fill. We will keep right on working
and building to make your telephone service a bigger
bargain than ever — to continue to provide more and
better service at the lowest possible cost.
THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF CANADA
S
(by Wally)
portshorts
Goderich Lions AB 13 H 0 A
Sproul, lb • 3 1 1 2 13 3
A. McKabe, c .. 4 0 0 3 0 1
D. Murray, 2b 4 1' 1 6 1 0
V. McCole, 3b 4 0 0 4 2 0
W. Watson, rf. 4 0 0 0 0 .1
Snider, of4 0 1 2 0 0
W. Beattie, If. 4 0` 0 1 0 1
J. 'Glen, ss 4 0 2 2. 0 4
M. Chesholme, p 4 1` 0 .4 0 3
Totals 35 3' 5 26 16 13
Seaforth Fawns
B. Dale, p '. , 8 5 4 6 0. 0
M. Box. ss 8 6 6 3 0 0
B. Case, 3b .. 8 5 6 4 1 0
T. Stapleton, lb 8 3 3 1 11 2
N. Dietz, 3b 7 4 3 7 1 1
M, Bailey, If 7 6 5 2 0 0
D. Dale, if 3 1 2 0 0 0.
M. Chamberlain, c7 1 4 0 0 0
C. Hoff, cf 7 2 1 0 0 0
E. Huisser, rf .. 4 1 0 ' 1 0 '0
Totals .. . . 67 34 33 28 13 3
Score by innings R. H. E.
Goderich - 002 000 010— 3 5 13
Seaforth - 510 163 468-84 33 3
Home run—B. Dale, Betty Case,
Iylarge Bailey. Two -base hit—Bar-
bara Dale, Mary Box, B. Case; Nor-
ma Dietz, Marge Bailey. Three -base
hit—M. Box, N. Dietz. Double play
—M. Bailey (fly) to "Toot" Staple-
ton. Left on bases—Seaforth 4,
Goderich 4. Hits—off C'hesholme 13.
Bases on balls—Chesholme 1, Dale
1. Strikeouts—B. Dale 4, Ches-
holme 1.
Seaforth Bosharts—
AB R H 0 A E
Boussey, lb 5 1 2 3 3 0
Mulford, 3b 5 0 0 1 0 1
B. Smith, Lf 5 0 2 1 0 0
O'Shea, c 5 0 0 2 0
E. Wilson, ss 4 1 0 3 0 1
Kennedy, p 4 1 0 0 0 1
Eisler, cf . 4 0 0 2 0 1
MacGregor, rf 4 1 0 1. 0 0
C. Wood, 2b 4 0 0 5 1 1
Total 40 , 4 4 18 4 6
Centralia Flyers—
Stockforcl, 2b 5 0 1 1 3 0
Cal -rather, 3b 5 1 1 6 0 1
Andrews, if 5 0 0 1 0 0
Armstrong c 5 1 1 1 0 0
Riballan, of 5 0 0 1 0 0
Weinber, ss 5 2 0 4 0 1
Millar, lb . 5 2 1 0 9 0
Hammond, rf 5 0 1 0 0 0
2 0
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Flo -glaze Interior Gloss is easy to use, resists
moisture, washes perfectly. It keeps its good
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I.47F
W. H. FINNIGAN SON
oafrrs, Bakers
farmers and Feeders
*SK YOUR GROCER FOR "GOLD STAR" FLOUR
NOW
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(ALL PURPOSE FLOUR)
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Laying Mash
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Sow Ration
LISTEN TO THE NEWS — CKNX (920 ON YOUR DIAL)
8,30 EVERY MORNING
EXCELLENCE in Name and Quality
Turgeon Grain &
Processed Feeds
Telephone 354 Seaforth
Feed Division of
Excellence Flour Mills ltd.
Grayer, p 1 3 0 0
Totals .. .... 44 6 6 19 12 2
Score by innings R. H. E.
Seaforth —. 002 110 000 4 4 6
Centralia —. 020 101 002 6 6 2
Double play—Ed. Wilson to C.
Woods to 'Gus' Boussey. Left on
bases—Seaforth 9, Centralia 11.
Hits off Kennedy, 6 in 9 innings;
Grayer 2 in 3% innings; Noseworthy
3 in 0,1 innings. Bases on balls—
Kennedy 5, Grayer 4, Noseworthy 1.
Strikeouts—Kennedy 9, Grayer 3,
Noseworthy 5. Losing pitcher—Ken-
nedy; winning pitcher—Noseworthy.
Umpires—•VleCurdie, prate; Hubert,
bases. Time -8:47
The Seaforth Fawns beat the
powerful Brussels team in a very
close game in Seaforth on Friday
evening. The final score on the card
read Seaforth 12, Brussels 11.
Seaforth scored the only run in the
first inning with Brussels coining
back in the second stanza to take the
lead.
The Fawns tied the game in the
fourth and held the girls from Brus-
sels scoreless. In the sixth inning
Brussels took the lead once again
but in the eighth Seaforth tied it at
11 -all.
The first half of the ninth was
scoreless and with two out for Sea -
forth in the ninth B. Dale singled,
Mary Box walked, advancing Bar-
bara to Second and then Betty Case
came up with what might have been
a hone -run but Dale crossed the
plate and the game was over leav-
ing Betty 011 second base.
Brussels AB R H 0 A E.
N. Shaw, ss 5 1 1 7 0 4
I. Spiers, 2b 5 1 0 4 1 '0
S. Coleman, lb 5 3 3 0 7 0
M. Anderson, cf 5 1 1 2 0 1
F. Shaw, 3b 5 0 1 6 2 1
A. Campbell, c 5 2 1 2 0 1
R. Jewell, If 5 3 2 0 0 1
P. Anderson, rf 5 0 0 1 0 1
D. Willis, p 5 0 2 2 0 1
Totals , • 45 111.1 24 10 10
Seaforth Fawns—
B. Dale, a 6 2 3 1 0 0
M. Box, ss 6 2 2 4 0 0
B. Case, 3b 6 1 3 2 2 1
T. -Stapleton, p 5 1 0 8 0 3
H. Hamilton, lb 5 2 3 3 7 0
N. Dietz, if 5 1 1 1 0 1
1. Watson, 2b 5 2 1 7 2 0
M. Bailey, cf 5 0 1 4 0 3
P. Matthews, rf 1 1. 1 0 0 0
a C. Hoff, rf 3 0 0 0 0 0
b G. Eckert, rf 1 0 0 0 0 0
'Totals .. .... 48 12 15 25 9 8
Score by innings R. H. E.
Seaforth -- 102 132 111-12 15 8
Brussels — 022 033 100-11 11 10
Two -base hits—Betty Case 2, Ha-
zel Hamilton, C. Hoff. Strikeouts—
by D. Willis 2, B. Dgg1e 2. Bases on
balls—D. Willis 3, Bale 6. Hits off
Willis, 15 in 9 innings. Lefton bases
—Seaforth ,10, Brussels 6. Umpires,
D. McLeod, plate; Bill Smith, bases.
Time 9:07.
HARDY APPLE TREES
WITHSTAND WINTER
Canadian .pomologists—experts in
the cultivation of fruit trees—are
growing new varieties of apple
trees which they expect will help
commercial growers battle winter
kill inCanadian orchards and which
will have, in the process, the added
effect of pushing farther north the
boundaries of Canada's apple -grow-
ing areas.
Commercial growers have good
reason to dread the severity of Can-
adian winters. Damage done by the
winter of. 1933-34 to orchards in
Ontario and Quebec resulted in a
production drop of more than a mil-
lion barrels That meant a financial
loss of over $2,000,000.
Slow and painstaking, the search
for better varieties has been going'
on in Canada for more than 25 years
and the major research activity is
being carried on by the Horticultural
Division, Central Experimental Farm,
THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1949
YIN
Dominion Department of Agricul-
ture, Ottawa.
In addition to the varieties of
apple trees which have been growing
in Canada for about 400 years, the
search for hardy, frost -resistant
stock was extended to include Eng-
lish and 'Russian varieties.
The English varieties came from
Britain's East Mailing Experimental
Station. The East Mailing stocks
were generally found to be too tend-
er to endure the rigours of Canadian
winters. The snow cover on tree
roots in eastern Ontario and Quebec
orchards is frequently blown away
during, the winter. Duplicating this
condition for experimental purposes,
snow cover was removed systemati-
cally from tree roots at the Central
Farm by .the pomologists and the
East Mailing, stocks suffered every
time.
But the East Mailing varieties did
have value in other ways. McIntosh
budded, or grafted, on to East Mall-
in No. 9 produced a small tree of
good vigour with a yield of 40 plus
apples atfive years of age. The
yield built up to 15 gallons of apples
at twelve years.
,lW:e1ptosh budded on, East Mailing
No. 12 ,produced a much more vig-
orous tree. At five years of age the
trunk of this combination had . a
cross-section area four timesthat of
the number one combination, but it
only yielded 3 apples. However, by
the time the number two combina-
tion was twelve years old, the yield
had shot up to 35 gallons, as com-
pared with 15 from number one, and
the cross-section trunk area was
nearly seven times as great.
The lesson learned from these ob-
servations was, of course, that the
more vigorous the growth the later
the tree is in coming into bearing,
but that once it does begin to bear
the late -bearing variety outyields
the earlier one.
But the tenderness of ' the East
Dalling stocks made them of little
value in the search for hardier varie-
ties and the pomologists turned their
attention to the Russian stocks, which
had been in Canada for some time.
Russian varieties produce poor
quality fruits by Canadian standards.
They have coarse flesh, high acidity
and lack taste .appeal. But it was
found that when Canadian varieties
were grafted on to Russian root-
stocks the resultant fruit was as ap
petizinE as could be desired.
More than that, it was found that
McIntosh' budded on the hardiest
Russian varieties—Hibernal, Anis,
Antonovka, Charlamoff developed
into a tree that was highly frost -re-
sistant and' that was commercially ac-
ceptable. Moreover, Russian varie-
Wanted Immediately
Young Women 16 to 21 Years.
For Cherry, Strawberry, Raspberry
Picking
Accommodation in Farm
Service Force Camps.
Supervised by Y. W. C. A.
Good Meals Good Pay
- Good Fun
For Registration Forms apply to
High School Principal
Nearest Employment Office
OR
Ontario Farm Service Force
9 Richmond Street, East,
Toronto 1, Ontario
AUSPICES: Dominion Provincial Perm
Labour Committee
ties were shown to he practically
immune to collar rot, a 'disease which
plagues eastern Canadian orchards.
The mostsuccessful of these,
Malas Robustas No. 5, is being dis-
tributed to Canadian nurserymen
for extended, trial under commercial
orchard conditions. Although it does
not have thelush growth of East.
Mailing No. 12, it is far more hardy,
and likely to be of far more practi-
cal value to Canadian growers.
H
FOR -DEAD
ANIMALS
COWS :$2.50 each
HORSES $2.50each
HOGS .59 per cwt.
According to size and
condition
Phone collect
SEAFORTH 655 r 2
MITCHELL - 219
INGERSOLL - 21
William Stone Sons, Ltd.
INGERSOLL, ONTARIO
[MIL'S
great
le r
At the polls on June 27 the voter must
ask himself, ahead of anything else, who
should be head of the government.
In Louis St. Laurent, Canada has
found a great national leader.
That he had high abilities of the mind
was proved by his career in law. That
he had wisdom in cabinet, unique gifts
in parliamentary debate and a quick
grasp of large affairs became clear as.
soon as he entered the Government. In
international affairs, as one of the origi-
nal advocates of the Atlantic Pact, he
• made himself a world figure who spoke.
out as no Canadian before him, in the
councils of the nations.
He also revealed an understanding
of ordinary people, because he is
LOUIS 5T. LAURENT, Prime Minister of Canada
one of them.
This warm and essentially simple
human being is the real St. Laurent, the
product of the small town, of humble
beginnings, hard work, a big family and
the friendliness of country neighbors.
In blood, language and instinct he
combines the qualities of two great
races.
To the voter it is equally important
that St. Laurent is the leader of a truly
national party, with proved strength
from coast to coast, the only party which
can hope to form a stable government
after the election: His character, his
ability and his achievements have made
him the leader of all the Canadian
people.
VOTE
LIBERAL!
INSERTED BY NATIONAL LIBERAL COMMITTEE
IN HURON -PERTH ---VOTE LIBERAL
VOTE A. Y. McLEAN
Published by the
uron-Perth Liberal Association.