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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1948-09-24, Page 5r a fact dos a •till . o • .greet. New ll anibui' g First Garne of Play!' 4oiws Monday Night' . i%t I.4,194,!S Fis ark. 9 .Seaforth Bosharts came through "Wednesday nigh to win the Sen- ior "A>f' Greiz)? 1 Championship in by virtue of their 1213 victory over the Centralia F`iyers, This win advances Sea- forth to the Senior t`Aa'° softball a o. tilyd wns. The Bosharts will meet New Hamburg in the next round. In the game Wednesday flight it took Seaforth five frames totake the lead, which they never' re. linquished, Although. Kennedy was in several holes, • the team pulled out with little damage done, • Centralia t0olt an early lead., scoring one in the first inning on W.O.A.A. FLOODLIGHT SOFTBALL PLAYDO New Hamburg —VS:— Seaforth Bosharts Monday, Sept. 27th ADMISSION at 7:45 p.m. 35 CENTS a walk and twa Searorth a ruXar The. 10041s,tied it np agaizx'in they second_ in'thefifth, frame Seaforth 'Ae tired three ,alms p) three •Nita, one being' a triply by ,Camel an, to: take the lead 7�6, i'rom?r theft;,- on �W{ F i VENDEE Kennedy, was pretty,,nauch in the driver's seat, The Flyers brake u¢, in the (1144. h v;'hezx the locals spar- f u ed uifux runs; h F1 ra -i out. e �'e ye n their half of the ninth tried a rally when they adored three runs, Caau Oren. hit a , 'homer, and. triple ; O'Shea hit .a homer also for, the locals, : It Wee, a great aeries and. ;geed ball played' all the, way, With the locals playing theirbest•:balt.thts. year and with the sport faus con' tinning, -their fine., support, , the Basharts are on. their way to vic- tory. This is Seaforth's year! Summary: R H. XJ Centralia .. 102 20:0 003-8 6 9 Seaforth ... , 012 130 14A-12 '9 10 CENTRALIA—White, 2b; 'Cooke, r -f.; Sasso, c; Noseworthy, p; Johnson, s.s.; Farrow, e,,f.; Hubbs, 1.f.; Carragher, 3•b; Miller, ib; An- derson in 5th for Hubbs and Fos- ter ran for Farrow in 9th when latter was injured. SEAFORTH Kennedy, p; Lee, 3b; .Smith, Al.; Horton, r.f.; Cam- eron; 2b; Eisler, c.f.; O'Shea, c; Labute, s.s.; Boussey, 1b; . Mulford in second frame played • 3rd base in place o? Lee. Umpires—Connolly, plate; Baird, bases. TUCKERSMITH Mrs. Jane Hood celebrated her 85th birthday recently at the home of her. daughter, Mrs. P. McKenzie, Tuckersmith. Those present, were her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and- Mrs. A. E. Perkin, of London; Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Hood, Stan- ley; also her grandchildren and great grandchildren; also an old neighbor, Mrs- Hyde and John, of Hensall. She received many beau- tiful gifts and cards. Mr. Glen McKenzie, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. McKenzie, of Bow- den, Alberta, visited at the home , kN THE REALM OF SPORT' ,,The players, exceeutkve ,ef the ,.lthletic. .E1,seociation and ?dons Olub are tp 'be Congratulated OF t110r clouts ix arr4,00g a here, ill gatpue, all ,proeegda:gaping.to the, injured Aon "Glli'p°' Woods. The. tesd i3 'taktxlg pari .. were . Mof)k1ttou and Seaforth Bos4.4,40,„ thee: t9met winning 28-26. It Was a.,hue geS-- ture and s'howed'ate* sl)ertenaanr ship, $ * dE: In the ,Legion Jiivenile Softball, games to decide the league's semi- finals will be played at the Lions Park, Brumfield vs, Sally Anns, Saturday, Sept.. 25, at 3 p.m,,; Dub- lin vs. Wanderers, Wednesday, Sept. 29, at 5 p.m. The finals w111 be.a sudden -death game arranged when the winners qf the above games are known - This game will likely be played on Saturday, Oct. 2, or Wednesday, ,Oct. 6. Seaforth Bosharts defeated the -Centralia Flyers on Monday night in Wingham, by a score of 124, only to learn that the previous game played in Seaforth last Thursday had to be replayed. Sea - forth had won this game 8-6, but. /the Flyers protested upon the um- pire's decision in regard to a cer- tain play in which he called a Cen- tralia player out. The result of the protest lodged pertaining to this decision, after it was aired before the W.O.A.A. ex. ecutive, was .in .favor of the Fly- ers, thus causing this game to be replayed and with the result, the series stood two games to one for Seaforth Bosharts. This decision was most likely al fair one—and we hope so—but there have been others in the past which certainly are open for argu- ment. of his uncle, Peter McKenzie and At the start of this season, family in Tuckersmith. Wingham's Tory Gregg, along with CANADIAN ROCKIES FORM PLAYGROUND AND TRAINING BASE FOR ARMY CADETS On horse, on foot or on parade, 50 Royal Canadian Army Cadets were on a happy hunting ground during their three fun -filled weeks ,camping in the shadows of towering Cascade Mountain, high in the Rockies. The teen -aged boys, drawn from every Province in the Domin- ion, pitched their tents on the old Indian Camping Site, one mile -from Banff, The cloud -tipped .,gest of Cascade Mountain sheltered :their flag. Nearby, the famed Bow River meandered lazily along. From this base of "operations," the Army Cadets visited more points of interest and recreation than paying tourists. Map read- ing, first aid and wireless training carried them to Sundance Canyon, ray;o sset;unoo pue 'asinoj ar)e1 Weld o; 'aamoquesiR ;unow do beautyspots. Recreation brought memorable trail rides over west. ern' ridges, 'fI ting, Sight-seeing and 'Cadet campfire songs in the evening. (Nuniber 1): AT THE START OF A LONG, HAPPY DAY— One place where everybody "loved" a parade. In this picture the Mastel" 'Catlike tom up before their tented camp St, this foot of• 'Cascade Mountain. (Nutnber 2).• ."THE'; tiDGE WHERE THE..,WEBT COM�MENC• iES!'.-4Orl''a .1�-tfitti w>vraii ekte, rotir4i14my Cadtlte Omsk theft hetet along a Rocky Mountain ridge, 8,000 feet above sea level. (Number 3): SWEET MUSIC FOR HUNGRY CADETS—At the "toot" of 6:30 reveille, the camp bugler was sometimes "slightly" unpopular. But never was heard a complaint when the bugle blast sounded mess call. Seen above is the mad scramble for the mess tent, a daily ritual for hungry, healthy cadets. (Number 4): COLOURS ON PARADE—Forming up on the highway beside. the .camp a .,trance, kilted Army Cadets hoisted their colours and stopped ton"ist traffic for a halfmile in each direction. (Number 5): THE ONE THAT GOT AWAY!—A Ione Cadet, fly casting In the Bow River rapids, said the fishing was good but "they all got away." (Number 6): A LIVE MODEL IN A PEACEFUL POSE—There is nothing stuffed about this deer. In the wild animal paddock near Banff, Cadets met their greatest surprise when they found the ani- mals were'not to wild. (Number 7): A HIKE UP MOUNT "IKE"---On the hiking trail at the bade of famed Mi''Urit Elaefhower, Cadets pause to look back over the F3oW VaU4y At this level they are 7,000 feet up with little worry about the tlred feet they were tater dragging toward the rocky Greet of the anew -capped tnountaia. the exeetttiy , 1a d down a number. of -u1, wo beliefs rales are to VO adhered, to, sta;,ting, towns et cextadn population eoukd only' dray praye,1` from within a, igen radius of that town, btmt aI)A(arez tlf T9x didurt,"have ehellSh pultx..ar slipped up en' it when Wingbaz4 WeiA lett without the aerifices• pt Jardine maybe he and (the Wknghair' mix);$gezziezzt ;had>a't lift:- cal' the dxsta ea kr(t >t>F'iy toltrirdin'sresinhatstatdius ane{ so we gueettee. Ton' ort the. tact, `since Jardine; didn't play- 'ail season for Wingizarn, azid paa-y,eirs had t ., be epistered. '� b1 i cox- taina•'"tate, hew uol liaa'xakdiae play for Wtzighal i' in the 'sent i >rala,? ' A -nether incident was 'shown When • two teams agreed to play ,on neutral grounds were. ordered to play 'in Wiinglxam. We refer to ,Morkton and• .! Dashwood. They aglreea to play in Seaforth, but then 'that was against the 'wishes of the Wingham, Club, and so Mr. Gregg ordered it played at W hazll Why should a man in a top peat inn show this favoritism .to - wars the town clubwhere he lives;°' just because his club was still sore. at Seaforth? And we be, lueve. Tory Gregg knew the circum- stances all the time, but did not tell the home club, as it was fig- uretic`' with Jardine in there now, they would put Seaforth out any- way. .:and then nothing would 'be said4,If that is what they had in mind , , then they were sorely mistaken. These glaring tendencies on the part of the ONE high-up individual is well known to all sport fans, and should not be tolerated. Favorit- ism is not TRUE SPORT,, Our zootto certainly doesn't ring true as Tar as Wingham fans, players and Torg is concerned when the Wing - ham team loses. How can it be -hep all you hear is a beef? If we want clean sport, good sport, then the executive in charge must be fair and square with all teams and be above showing fav- oritism. Be_ a sport . . . a good sport, W.O.A A don't kill it by be- ing partial to ANY TEAM! Real sportsmanship is when YOU, the authority, can help the next fel- low as much as the other one and when there is no comeback. We feel Sure, Tory, that you'll agree withall clean sport -loving fans that this column's motto is right in every sense of the word, when e say: ,7CLEAN SPORT IS GOOD SPORT" BOWLING ON THE GREEN (13y BILL HART) Another trophy was brought to Seaforth on Wednesday. M. A. Reid, W. J. Duncan and Harold Free at E7teter captured the Baw- den silver cup in its initial appear- ance for competition. Besides the trophy, each bowler received a I*;ienwood wool blanket. This is the second cup won by the local club this year. M. A. Reid. W. J. Dun- can land Jack Kaiser having br At , home the Hunt trophy from Goderich a short time ago. Next Wednesday is ladies' day at the green. The men are making arrangements to hold the annual entertainment for them on that date. 3: Lorne Dale. Alvin Dale and Geo. Hays received fourth prize at Clin- ton on Monday evening. Others competing were Fred Johnston, George Charters, Chad Gle.w, M. A. Reid, W. J. Duncan and Charles Barber. * * x Those bowling at Exeter on Wed- nesday were: John Hotham, Jim Besse, George Johnston. Fred John- ston, John Beattie, Dr. P. L. Brady and the trophy winners, M. A. Reid, W. J. Duncan And Harold Free. HYDRO NOME ECONOMIST Hello Homemakers! How far will five dollars worth of meat go for five people? The so-called inex- pensive cuts which are usually meat extras such as liver, heart sausages, amount to the same price One Only NEW Massey- Harris SIX. Inch GRINDER with 2 H.P. Electric Motor REDUCED TO CLEAR from $308 to $248 • SEAFORTII MOTORS Chevrolet - Oldsmobile Massey -Harris Sales and Service .Rhone 141 : Seaforth reasur • 4 a ainty ..under- al>rlc .. s ftxqudsitely inade nd you justLacan't: beat then for Value' This.atvhite satin slip,, as sketched, is a Honey by- Luxite, *ith Its lade edging and luxurious, look ;.Sizes" / 32 to 40. 4.95 1 • g. .I. Silknits Famous and Pacemaker Sulette in crepe and satin, two of the most popular: Sizes 32-38. 3.00,to 4.00 Other famous makers such as Ardele, Kayser and Dover that fit with precision and comfort, in Nylon, Crepe and Satin. Sizes 32• to 42. 2.50 to 5.50 FOUNDATIONS The Best Assortment we have been able to offer in years! MORSELETTES fashioned for pure figure flattery, in heavy fabrics of satin and bro- caded, and plain cotton coutil. Siz- es 34-44. 5.00 to 16.50 CORSETS in all lengths in both front and back Iacingtis. Sizes 24.36. 4.50 to 8.00 GIRDLES All type fittings and sizes, in white and fieshtone. 2.00 to 8.00 Small; .Medium andV.arl Cups, carefully, proptrioned fit perfectly in each,slzc QAlr ours; White and N.µle. ::Sizeliz 30.46, 1.25't • Panti�s We feature famous styles from many famous makers, such. as Kayser, Holeproof, Mercury, Ardele, Watson, Stan - field's, Woods' and Silknit. PRICED FROM 79toi3 �acr,�vu� as chops and cutlets in proportion when served hot. Last week -end our order was a roast of beef, al- though the price per pound seem- ed prohibitive for the budget. With due consideration to saving elec- tricity, we placed the meat in a cold oven. When the thermometer registered 350 degrees on 'Bake,' which meant that we were heating the oven and the meat using the bottom element only, we took•out the roast, covered it and left it to cook slowly in the "meat -heat" while we placed a cake in the oven for 45 minutes. As the cake was taken out the meat was uncovered and replaced in the oven. Actual roasting time was calculated from this point allowing 28 minutes per pound. The greatest saving was effect- ed by slicing the roast when cold with a good sharp knife. Even serv- ings amounted to live slices per pound. 'This does not necessarily mean that meat should be served cold, you can heat the slices in gravy or over the potato kettle in parchment paper or aluminum foil. By the way, sliced meat has a tendency to curl so weight the pieces with a plate or small cover. Cooking in a pressure cooker is another method of preventing meat shrinkage. The constant heat in the sealed -tight saucepan will cook meat tender in a short time with- out loss of moisture. Allow 12 minutes to the pound for well-done rump or chuck 'pieces. Veal is cooked to perfection at 15 pounds pressure as follows; „Select a 3 - pound boned leg of veal and cut. about. 15 gashes, one-half inch deep into it. Insert a sliver of garlic in- to each section. Rub the roast with flour, salt and pepper. Brownin open saucepan with a very little fat(1 teaspoon). Then put rack in cooker; add i/ cup hot water and the meat; adjust the cover, and when it begins to steam or indi- cate pressure. allow 10 minutes per pound or one-half hour. Usually 10 minutes before end of cooking per- iod we cool the saucepan under the cold water tap thus reducing the pressure; take off the lid and add the vegetables. When the indica- tor registers the 15 pounds pres- sure again we Watch the clock for exactly eight minutes. Time, food and fuel are saved with this meth- od of cookery, Additional Suggestions 1. Tea meat and use skewers as well to keep meat pieces in shape and you will be able to serve even servings. 2. Serve meat extenders such as dressing, spaghetti sauce, vegetable sauce with small pieces of meat. 3. Make lots of gravy using bac- on dripping if necessary. 4. Cook ham -with rind on to pre- vent shrinkage, 5. Buy tongue and meat extras when you ca.n. Pressure cook tongue at 15 pounds, allowing 14 minutes per poundand cook liver in the oven with tomatoes or sante slowly in a pan. The Question Box Mr. N. J. asks for: Elderberry Jelly Elderberries are easy to pick from their roadside bushes. The small, blue berries, shredded from the bunches in which they grow. make fine jelly or -wine. Wash and shred from stems two quarts of elderberries. Place in preserving kettle and barely cover with water; simmer for 10 min- utes; mash well and continue cook- ing for a few minutes -longer, 'or until all the juice is extracted. Strain through a jelly bag. Mea- sure juice, bring to boil, and add three-quarter cup sugar to each cup of juice. Stir until sugar is dis- solved. Boil rapidly until jelly stage is reached. Pour into hot. sterilized glasses and seal, Miss F. H. -asks for: Variety Cheese Spread 1 pound Cheddar -type cheese 1 tall can evaporated mirk Seasonings to taste (see suggestions) Grate cheese or cut in small pieces. Put cheese and milk in top part of double boiler; cook over hot water, stirring constantly, just until cheese melts. Remove from heat and season to taste. Pour into container, let cool, and then store in the refrigerator. Suggested Seasonings Minced chives, parsley, pickle relish, caraway seed, prepared mustard, or minced green pepper or chopped olives, Anne Allan invites you to write to her c/o The Huron Expositor. Just send in your questions on homemaking problems and watch this little corner of the column for replies. Research Results Medical science has proven through intensive research that ras-,eurized milk is the only safe milk. Pasteurization eliminates, bacteria which cause such milk - borne diseases as bovine tubercu- losis, typhoid fever, undulant few er, septic sore throat, paratyphohi and dysentery. Pasteurization does no harm to the milk's, Jnutritive value. BEANS Give us a call before you sell your Beans; also your Wheat or Barley WE PAY TOP PRICES Buying for Geo. Thompson. BAGS ON HAND We try to give you Service. WM. M. SPROAT Phone 655 r 2 - Seaforth Car Accessory Specials • CAR VACUUM CLEANERS • DRIVING LAMPS • TORPEDO ORNAMENTS • PUMPS • JACKS • HEEL PROTECTOR PADS • FIRE EXTINGUISHERS • TRUCK FLARES • FLASHLIGHTS Daly Motors Ford Monarch Dealer TELEPHONE 102 SIAFORT