HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1948-08-20, Page 5eefehe
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M CJII' `.SPO'!
Phe b,g ;newel 0 itof Week la 'Glia
release Vii' the it,CI,A,A, apenisaaq k
bail , 0411"4141,1,;,PlaYdowns, :W 1ic#�,
was drawn up.'Friday night In the
Council .ehatnbez^;s, when,. the Owe*,
tivveof the league •Met to name the
l .
WE •MAVP 8
PFtQP.GT ':OF
A NICE CROP OF PLUMS;
O;F.. FINE QUALITY AND
VARIETY, OF GOOD CAN-
NING SORTS
Bring your containers and
get a supply at Fruit Farm,
1/2 mile north of Clinton,
when ripe.
C. HOARE
dais The B'eAfPlttl? ,1'ii?silal'4;
of the 4Atariding, Vhf MAOtu
1410t545, ~Ile 7$.rete 0;000 ace,
'wll.'le; Ce25ttraJiia,, 4,a * 4,V1am
and 'i3ly4tll, . ()ij, i .,chit Iteea311, 1,44"
afk:: The#4;afortit nett 1!`,,haq
aeries ls, �as• ifp1l 1W44
�u 10--40,4g ,amt ateSeefeeth..
2 afar Gk , t Wing 431
Seutert4
a—Srsafoz;th at Wlbtgham
Sept, 3--- %ingintn at:,Sea%rth
The 'Pioilii*Ong le Ole, schedule for
the neeon4 and PRP. .teaxes:
Aug. 1$Blh .at 'Centralia
"
20—Centralia at. Blyth
" 23—Blyth at Centralia
" - 26 -•Centralia at Blyth
Sept, 1—Blyth at Centralia
An ,games at Centralia are call-
- stdfir 6:30 pen.,, and in Blyth,
Whighani, and ,Seaforth at 9 $:m-
Seaforth Bosharts were hosts 4,o
Simpsons of London. on Saturday)
night, when they .played an exhi-
ii'ition game under the arcs, taking
the visitors for the count by trim-
ming them 13-2.
In the ,first innings the loeals
scored five big runs, adding three
in the second, until Weller, pitcher
of Simpsons, Was �•yauked for Koff-
POULTRY WANTE
TOP PRICES BEING PAID FOR
FOWL' AND CHICKENS
Be sure and phone for
quotations before selling.
i
Seaforth Farmers Co-operative
PRODUCE DIVISION
Phone 13 - Seaforth
DEEP
FREEZE BOXES
10 and 16 Cubic Feet Capacity
AT REDUCED PRICES
•
Seaforth Motors
Chevrolet - Oldsmobile •
PHONE 141 SEAFORTH
Mr. Bert Spence
IS THE NEW MANAGER OF
SEAFORTH PRODUCE LTD.
Poultry Producers in this section will
be glad to know that Bert is back.
W. L. Whyte has sold his interest in the Com-
pany. The new owners feel that the Seaforth
Produce has a very definite responsibility to pro-
ducers and to the community, and feel that Bert
Spence is the man best able to carry out Com-
pany ,policy.
We want you to do business with us
and we shall conduct our business to
that end.
Seaforth Produce Ltd.
SEAFORTH, ONT. PHONE 170-W
You May Know
that trust company services are impartial,
responsible, economical and experienced.
You May Not Know -
exactly how these services can be of value
to you and yours in the administration of
your estate.
-You May' Wish to Know
just howwe function and what we have to
offer.
John D. Wilson, Trust Officer, will be
pleased to answer any questions about
trust services or to discuss an estate plan
with you at your request.
M Ai
.'AANADA`rRUST
COMPANY
,r. w w.OMPANYv
;ranoh Dundas and 'Clarence — London, Ontario.
�...
znatr, a> tlx
;toCal& :�e
, f►FVlgb to rde to der, etriir06ki!
IT4g6,bA , 041.6:bac n, in
tete lx
ett# a<. 4111' 't .tv , great',pitsskti ig
tb.e soato�Ate Mere rhn
eeeilkft.:of
h1wee Ola t �. u4,.,,*xxi
then 4>. it' was• a,. pitctliirs' hat 1•e,.
ai' Kennedy and TOO** set 14.0.
inhere dQW irl Aider,,
'l>enn r avisitors; ed .held.th_..scorer
less for Yfive fraises, Simpsons
pooling- a lone run in th,tt,6lxti,grid,
one In ,the Seventh, Kennelly 43013 strikeouts and allowed ng wa eih
while tile London. 'hurlers had `l
strikeouts.. Had Koffman started
on the mound 'for Simpsone,, we
feel it would have been, a real•pit-
chers' battle and the winner would
have been. in; doubt until the last
Man was put,
D. Woods, Eisler and Labute con-
nected
onnetted for circuit hits for the le-'
eats,
Summary: R H E
,Seaforth 530 5001 000-r13 14 2
Simpsons - 000 001' 100— 2 5 1
SEAFORTH — D, Woods, ab.;
B.oussey, ib.; Kennedy, p.; Eisler,,
c•f.; McIver, 1.f.; Hubert, c.; Las
ri
buts, s.s•; C. Woods, 2b.;W ght,
r.f,; N. Beattie, r.f. in 2nd; Hor-
ton, r,f" in 3rd.
SIMPSONS — White,. s.s. Tuck-
ey,
uckey, r.f.; Burchiel, l.f.; Burton, 1b.;
Burton, 1b.; Grieve, 2b.; Whitting-
ton, c.; Barrett, c.f.; Snyder, 3b.;
Weller, p.; Koffman, p. in 2nd and
Weller to lb.
The Seaforth Fawns took the
lead in the 'finals in a surprise win
when Brussels girls were downed
10-5 Wednesday might in the first
game of the W.O.A.A. ladies' soft-
ball playdowns, at the Lions Park.
The next game of this series will
be played in Brussels Friday eve-
ning at 6.30 p.m.
The Fawns', had to be good and
despite eight errors, a,s against
three, they came through in the
pinches to win the important
game,
Ginger" Foster, pitching for the
locals, allowed no walks and struck
out none', while Anderson for Brus-
sels struckout six and issued one
walk. Although the Brussels pit-
cher had the best record, Foster
for the Fawns was they winning
pitcher.
Should a third game be neces-
sary it will probably be played on
neutral grounds the first of next
week.
Summary: R H D
Brussels ... 020 001 020— 5 8 3
Seaforth .. 001 112 32x-10 12 8
BRUSSELS—N. Shaw, 2b.; R.
Jewell, If.; F. Shaw, 3b.; S. 'Cole-
man, lb.; M. Anderson, c.f.; A.
Campbell, s.s.. c.; A. Anderson, p.;
J. Stephenson, c., s.s.; D. -Willis,
r.f.
SEAFORTH—A. Wilson, ss.; D.
Dale, 2h.; E. Huisser, 1.f.; B. Case,
3b.; G. Foster, p.; J. Curry, c.f.;
M. Clarke, lb.; B. Dale, c, I. -Glan-
ville, r.f.; Sills, r.f.
.Umpires—W. Craig. Auburn; G.
Cowan, Londesboro. .
In the second game, and what
proved to be the last one of the
semi-finals, between the Seaforth
Fawns and Auburn, fhe local las-
set:
back on Monday night before a fair
crowd at the Lions Park.
At Auburn the first game of the
W.O.A.A. ladies'- semi-finals, be-
tween Seaforth Fawns and the Au-
burn girls' team, was played Thurs-
day evening- The Fawns came out
on top by a score of 17-7. The win-
ners allowed five errors, Auburn
committing 12 errors. Maxine Hun -
king, the losing pitcher, had nine
strikeouts and walked six Fawns.
Ginger Foster, the Seaforth pit-
cher, struck out only one Auburn
batter, but issued no free passes.
Summary: R H E
Auburn .... 210 010 102— 7 15 12
Seaforth .. 035 212 210-16 21 5
AUBURN --M. Hunking, p.; J.
McClinchey, s.s.; V. Cook, ib.; J.
Beadle, c.f.; D. Hunking, c.; B.
Craig, 2b.; A. Andrews, 3b.; E.
McClinchey, If.; B. Rogers, r.f.;
J. Kirkconnell, l.f.
SEAFORTH—A. Wilson, s.s.; D.
Dale, 2b.; E. Huisser, 1:.f.; B. Case,
3b.; M. Box, c.f.; G. Foster, p.; B.
Dale, c.; J. Glanville, lb.; J. Curry,
r.f.; M. Sills, c.f.
Umpires—Geo. Cowan and Jack
Lee, Londesboro.
In the game here Monday night
Betty Case of Seaforth starred'
both at third base and at bat, driv-
ing in five runs on four singles
and a double.
Maxine Hunking, pitcher for Au-
burn, struck out six Seaforth bat-
ters and allowed six passes.
"Ginger" Foster, pitching for
Seaforth, walked one Auburn bat-
ter and struck out four. The local
lassies were the heaviest hitters
and made every bit count.
Summary: R H E
Auburn .... 600 202 10-11 8 3
Seaforth ... 744 010 2x-27' 25 6
Umpires—Plate, George Cowan;
bases, Jack Lee, Londesboro.
AUBURN—M. Hunking, p.; E.
McClinchey, 1.f.; V. Cook, 1b.; J.
Beadle, c.f.; D. Hunking, c.; B.
Craig, 2b., s.s.; J. Kirconnell-, s.s.,
r.f.; A. Andrews, 3b.; B. Rogers,
r.f., 2b.
SEAFORTH—A. Wilson, s.s.; D.
Dale, 2b.; E. Huisser, 1.f.; B. Case,
3b.; G. Foster, p.; J. Curry, c.f.;
M. Clarke, lb.; 13. Dale, c.; J.
Gianvilie, r.f.
The Legion Juvenile Softball
League schedule is almost com-
pleted and the standing up to
Saturday last is as follows:
GP W L Pts.
Dublin Irish 9 7 - 2-14
Brucefieid 7 5 1-10
Wanderers 9 5 4-10
Tigers 8 .4 3-8
Salty Anns 9 4 5---8,
Coming Games: Friday, Want
derers vs. Brucefield.
A benefit football game will be
played on Wednesday, August 25,
when players from Winthrop and
St. Columban meet at St. Colum -
ban at 6.30 p.m., Standard Time.
The game is being played for Pat
O'Sullivan, who hail his leg brok-
en in a recent game.
Laurie "Smoky" Harris lies been
appointed to coach the new farm
club, Marquette, Mich., of the Phil-
adelphia
hiladelphia Rockets' hockey chailix
S•lnoley" wag ••a Voted& pleYet ?'iii
Seaforth and all .of his friends hem'
1314 Tart)
Xraat *ie.* 'wad a Kg., -We4
1i owwt1AX eirulee• .440 it wait' T 45t 041',
lueh...te p lil.l a .bR?Wer,, We WFotq'', a
Ag1ua?l4 still pia,ted i#,.1n' oRnveJ j
ent P140e • sta: that it would 'Ilot . o
as;tr.,&y. ,Sonughew or oth. er, 4004
tItree'parts of 'it telt on the pQAr
aad was not found until, it was. tell
late tor the press.•
We wanted to make epeelal me31 '
tion ty1l the Boshart' Bros. for they,
share in making the furniture
tourna met a..success. And While
handing gut the bouquets, •Bill
Teall should not be left on, tie.
sideline. Bill dpnated enough Mats,
for the entire 18 greens, or 36 masts
to be exact. This doesn't sound
very big when you talk abie%.
mats, but seeing as they cost.
around $140.00, a person should'
take another look at them.
There's been a lot of bowling
out of town, but we can't get
around to naming all because wet
have forgotten some of them. We
do know that H. E. Smith, Harvey
Travis and Mac McKellar won.
third prize in Mitchell,, and that
the three Seaforth lathes, Mrs. E.
H. Close, Mrs. John Beattie and
Mrs. Wm. Hart, lost the King tro-
phy to a Wingham rink after hold-
ing it since last season.
On Monday evening Lorne Dale,
Gordon Muir, Fred Johnston, Erie
Munroe, George Johnston and Bill
Teall attended a tournament in.
Cxoderich. It was a Clinton tourna-
ment
ournament staged on the Goderich
greens.
A local mixed jitney was;held in
Seaforth on Tuesday evening with
30 bowlers on the green. Two ten
end games were played. Prize
winners were Mrs. P. L. Brady,
Chad Glew and George Hays, Each
received a pound of butter.
The supper served by the ladies
at the furniture tournament was
super-duper. . the beet yet . . .
and the ladies deserve credit for
the fine display of food. There
was meat, potatoes, salads, toma-
toes, bread and butter, pie and tea,
with plenty of all.
Out-of-town on Wednesday were
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Free, Dr. and
Mrs. P. L. Brady and M. A. Reid
and Alice Reidea,t Clinton. Mr. and
Mrs. Free won second prize. •
At Wingha m— Fred Johnston,
George Charters, George Johnston,
Eric Munroe and Jack Hotham.
At Exeter—W. T. Teall and Jas.
A. MacDonald.
will wish him every success in his
new endeavor.
It is said that Harris was re-
sponsible in a large measure for
bringing Belleville back on the
O.H.A. scene last winter. Mar-
quette is an entry in the newly-
formed
ewlyformed Michigan -Ontario League of
last year. Whisperings extends
congratulations to "Smoky" Har-
ris and wishes him every success,i
and bopes that he will continue'
the same clean sportsmanship of
former years, to prove to all that:
"CLEAN SPORT IS GOOD SPORT"
Low Rail Fares
To The
.N Canadian National
EXHIBITION
AT TORONTO
AUG. 27 — SEPT. 11
Fare and one third
for the Round Trip
(Government Tax Extra)
Good going Thursday, August
26th, to Saturday, September
•11th, inclusive
RETURN LIMIT—SEPT. 15
Full information from any Agent
Canadian National
McKILLOP
SCHOOL. FAIR
S.S. No. 6, McKillop
Sept. 8, 1948
BEAUTY CONTEST
"Miss McKillop" and "Junior
Miss" — (Ordinary Dress)
$600.00 IN PRIZES
10 Schools Competing
Maggie and Jiggs to be
present.
STOCK JUDGING
CONTEST
Rat4: 4
Flhters,,+tktisarr u.ndrt`'r
d` lits. Wk. n.gxpo7, 1t ; teyr
ere tefzent *ROM- at ;the Al?lf
at Zvtr, and.;Mra, A, 044 e
.baster Warn ; 40'Sr e• -icon.-,
ed ;to his .izQz4e here On ,Stlnda,Y 1'4
t`sr -spending solo .'1zoiida:fi
. at the
1lonie tee his aunt and ul le x,.
and : Mrs, Grant : Love,' in• caro
'fah.
Mrs. Hubert O'Reilly pert 'last
;eek in London' with 11iy, and A'lre,;
aS ^lvester Kelly,
Margery ,Q'Reiliy is visiting her
.sta;ndparente, Mr. and 1% ri. ,Tota
Ruston, Seaforth.
•,,M . and Mrs. R. Dalrymple and
baby daughter are visiting at the.
ilAlne of her parents; Mr. and Mrs.
l[Tr Dalrymple, at Brucefield.
Born to Mr. and Mrs, Frank
Burns, formerly of Kippen, but
11ow of Exeter, in Clinton Hospi-
tal on Monday, August 2, a son.
Schneider - Thompson
The marriage of Blanche Elaine
Thompson, R.N., youngest Baugh -
ter of Mr and Mrs. Robe Thomp-
son, and Lawrence Henry Schneid-
er, of Stratford, son of Mrs. Eliza-
beth Schneider and the late Daniel
Schneider, of Bornholm, was sol-
emnized at the home of the bride"s
parents, No. 4 Highway, south of
Kippen, on Saturday, August 14, at
2.30 p.m. Rev. G. J. Mineitly, of
West Monkton, performed the cer-
emony. The wedding music was
played by Mrs. Robert French, of
West Monkton, sister of the groom.
Large baskets of autumn (flowers
decorated the house. Given in
marriage by her father, the bride
was gowned in a white satin gown
with lace inserts at the waist and
bustle skirt, and long sleeves
HOUSE for SALE
New Story and 'a Half
Residence, situated on
North Main Street
This residence will be ready for
occupancy with the next month
Two bedrooms and set-in
bath upstairs; living room, din- •
ing room, kitchen downstairs;
' Heatalator $replace. Plenty of
closet and cupboard space.
Full-size basement; furnace;
insulated throughout. Large
picture window. Can be financ-
ed through Central Mortgage
and Housing.
FOR FURTHER PARTICULARS, SEE
SEAFORTH SUPPLY
& FUEL, LTD.
B -E -N -E -F -I -T
Football
Match
•" Winthrop
VS.
• S't. Columban
at
ST. COLUMBAN
WED., AUGUST 25
Game called at 6.30 p.m.
(Standard Time)
Admission - 25 cents
i
Seaforth
LIONS PARK
Softball
Games
This
-Week
Senior "A" Semi -Finals
Wingham vs. Seaforth
FRIDAY, AUGUST 27th
Floodlight Game at 9 p.m.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 20th
Brucefield at Wanderers
Ford Tractor Owners
NOW IS THE TIME TO HAVE YOUR
TRACTOR PREPARED FOR
FALL WORK
.Bring it to
Motors
SEAFORTH
RIMONARCH,
.ALER '
0ll #Rrinoi 11RRihtsrr ,
:iex tta ei
ca t #lt 1111r fl
ams; s o,Raxr:I O Tai; ;
reds 4io ;..or oz11 .,.t
a th ;0 $ta 1:P1';;;;;::!;:44"-
,44,14014:,
,.
jorie Lova w�, �YaFidesai,R4zf�,;,
lezl th, gRW4.f Yellow at11 °i t
tint ;Ogee ;'azld fun Mixt and
ola-tdlll;n ' head',dreae,. died. RRt< led .0,;
cascade '1to 9luet ` of *V roses
Aidre7 k'zlne ;l'ri:eatap, of lkl�tri
chgll' aazd. T n etby 1Rlzt ...
Cornish, of 0000 both Ideeea
Orf tAn .'bride, Made wilasome °*Mee
girl z, ,wea1ing; ideratic&1 fltaAr lengths:
frocks of pink errAndy and. 1111 ee
organdy, respectively?, with tiiatoh
in lie ddr a Carrie • se-
g a ess, nd d n,A
gays of sweet peas. Gorden
Schneidere 11retltey et . the groom,,
was: groomen-tan. After the recep-
tion dinner was'served at the Pres-
byterian Church, Hensall, by the
Ladies' Aid of that church to some
forty guests. Receiving the guests
was the bride's mother, dressed in
a Princess blue erepe dress with a
corsage of pink roses. Assisting
was thes room'mother, wearing
g wear g
a wine crepe dress and corsage of
white roses. Later Mr. and Mrs.
Schneider left by motor for Mont-
real and points in the U.S.A. The
bride chose for travelling a wine
gabardine tailored"•suit with match-
ing accessories, andwore a cor-
sage of white roses. Upon their re-
turn they will reside in Stratford.
The groom's gift to the bride was
a silver tea service; to the brides-
maid, gold ear rings; to the flower
girls, sterlingsilver bracelets, and,
to the groomsman, a„ tie. Guests
were present from London, Strat-
ford, Hanover, Elmwood, Kitchen-
er, Walton, Mitchell, Goderich,
Clifford, West Monkton, Bornholm
and Hespeler.
Pickles, Relishes
Many, many ditties have been
written and sung about pickles,
showing that a bit of relish is ap-
preciated by everyone:
"My ma gave me a nickle
To buy a pickle,
I didn't buy the pickle,
I bought some chewing gum."
So goes the rhyme oft sung by
youngsters everywhere.
There may be several ideas sug-
gested
uggested by Ibis tune, but certainly
if mother has a good supply of
pickles she does not need to trust
Johnny with pennies amid the dis-
traction of the corner grocery.
In the old days, late summer was
a hectic period of intensive activ-
ity, second only to housecleaning
time, while fruits and vegetables
were "put down" in crocks of pickle
ready for winter use. Nowadays
there . is less fuss when pickling
time comes around for modern
methods have simplified the pro-
cess. Also, ea account of storage
facilities smaller quantities may
be made and thus a wider variety
is possible.
There are several reasons for
failures in pickle making, but all
can be avoided. The causes of hol-
low pickles may be improper de-
velopment of the cucumber while
growing, or they may have stood
too long between picking and brin-
ing. Only firm, solid cucumbers
should be used (hollow ones may
be made into chopped mixed pickle
or relish) and they should be brin-
ed within 24 hours of picking.
Soft or slippery pickles result if
the brine is too weak to prevent
the action of spoilage bacteria, or
if any of the pickles are not cov-
ered with brine and exposed to the
air. When once soft they cannot
be made firm. Do not stir pickles
while curing.
Too strong a salt, sugar or vine-
gar solution will cause shrivelling.
Other causes may be cooking too
quickly in sugar or vinegar solu-
tion.
Poor colour results from too
much spice or over -cooking. Whole
spices give better colour. They
should be tier loosely in a bag and
removed from the pickle mixture
before the spice flavour is strong
enough to conceal the flavours• of
the main ingredients. A delicate
blend of spice and vegetables"is the
desired result. Such spices as
cloves, allspice and hot peppers
should be used sparingly.
Here are two good pickle recipes
taken from the newly revised bulle-
tin, "Home Canning of Fruits and
Vegetables," which may be obtain-
ed, free of course, by writing the
Dominion Department of Agricul-
ture, Ottawa.
Bread and Butter Pickles
6 quarts small cucumbers, 1
to 11/2 inches in diameter
1 quart small white onions
4 green peppers
1 sweet red pepper
1 cup table (beg) salt
9 cups water
2 quarts vinegar
4 cups sugar
1 tablespoon turmeric
1 teaspoon mustard seed
1 teaspoon celery seed
Wash all vegetables. Slice cu-
cumbers and onions thinly. Re-
move seeds and dice peppers. Make
a brine of the salt and water. Cool
and pour over vegetables. Let
stand overnight, Drain thoroughly.
Combine vinegar, sugar and spices.
Bring to boil and add vegetables.
When thoroughly heated, pack in
clean, hot jars and seal. Yield:
About six quarts.
ChiIi Sauce
1 tablespoon whole cloves
3 tablespoons whole allspice
1 gallon chopped, skinned,
ripe tomatoes (8 lbs.)
21/2 cups chopped, peeled on-
ions (6 medium)
21/2_ cups chopped, seeded
greenor sweet red pep-
pers (6 medium)
11/2 cups sugar
2 tablespoons salt
4 cups vinegar.
Tie spices in a cheescioth bag.
Combine With remaining .ingredi-
ents in saucepan. Cook, uncovered,
21/2 to 3 hours or MAR quite, thick;
stirring frequently. ')v.emove.F Spied
bitg. 'Pour bite sterilised Analog
or jars ands seal, Yield: about sit
pints" ,
i
T#:J"vM '%"
OUR READY: T'ORI", ,��
DRPAR1'1ME r
A slender sheath of loveliness,) in-
terpreted by Klever. Diad.' In blob'
quality blank tissue faille, ferninige,
draped puffs and shirring;.
SIZED 11 ' TO 17
21.50 to •
Youthful new Autumn fashions by
"Deb-ster." Skirts have the new
smooth, slim line front and centre
back fullness, created in both crepe
and faille.
SIZED14 TO 20
21.50 10 22 95
•
Inexpensive Black Dresses giving
you -the every -inches -lady look in
Black Crepes.
SIZED 16%2 TO 24%2
13 ss t. 16 so
d
a2
•
FLATTERING
FELTS
FOR FALL
Smartly styled
Autumn Hats, in
both light and`
heavy weight felt.
4.50 to 8.95
WE ARE ALWAYS LOOKING FOR A NEW
CUSTOMER TO PLEASE HIM . c.
Why not CALL 50 in ' DUBLIN
AND HAVE YOUR EGGS AND POULTRY
PICKED UP AT YOUR DOOR?
We haul Poultry to the U'.S.A.
and can offer you a good price.
Stapieton Produce
DUBLIN PHONE 50
PEACHES . ..
Red Haven Peaches
ARE RIPE
— • —•
• None are More Beautiful
• None are More Delicious
— • —
BUY RED HAVEN PEACHES AND
YOU WILL BE DELIGHTED !
•
A. GRANT Fi
SI1A.I gsrEARE
'elephone -- - Shakespeare
k;F