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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1951-02-02, Page 5• , ( This Wee. At the Seaforth High` School (By MALEY . FR1111DAY).. ''Phu reday jut wasn't okr lucky 'day;" We "suffered three losses, Even' this wouldn't have been so :.bad if the scores weren't so ter- rific. The senior boys played and lost first, with a great score of 55,18. 'Imagine: Well, as I said before, it just wasn't our day, Eric Mc- Millan 'scored the, highest points, seven in all; Jim Chapman, four; Ron Rennie, three; Fog Johnston and; Mike Bechely, two. Our girls •played, a very good game, even• if the outcome wasn't in our favor. If I said "game," it was merely .because I am being po- lite. , There is only one word to describe it, and that is "hograssle." There bas :beenalk of our girls wearing the rugby uniforms for IIII1111111111111'Ig111111111111111111i111n,u1 TERRY'S Radia Repairs Opposite Dick House Phone 347.R S E A F O -R' TH 11111111111111011111111111111M111111111111111M our home game with Clinton (new don't take me seriously! ),. Beatty did an excellent job did refereeing, Oen K .Clinton complained so loudly that she couldn't hear when `quarter -time was called. Whatev- er we do, let's not show such =- mannerly conduct at our games. Really, it was very disgraceful and certainly very unspoytsmanlike. I'verather wandered from my top- ic, so; to get back -Pat Meir was really playing a good game; •she scored seven of the nine points herself, and Ruth, the other two,. The guards did an excellent job and are to be congratulated, Ione especially, I noticed, did very well indeed. The score (and by the way the only one that was half ways reasonable) was 12-9 for Clin- ton. Nice going, Doug! Just think, Doug Stewart made twelve of the seventeen points in the junior game. Doug Keyes made three points, and Larry Wheatley, two. The boys worked hard, but Clinton boys worked harder. The score was 34-17. I'm a little slow at compliment- ing the cheerleaders on their new outfits. They are very original and Hockey! Hockey! TWO BIG GAMES!. MIDGETS -- 7:00 P.M. WINGHAM vs. SEAFORTH LEGION INTERMEDIATES - 9:00 P.M. CENTRALIA FLYERS VS. SEAFORTH LEGION Saturday, Feb. 3rd - in SEAFORTH MEMORIAL CENTRE Admission - 50c and 25c recur quiet °:'P1i4t re�.q '4d ,,.t iT�t��l y )Air'r. two reads : tag yellgw and pla.ck pair, t13at lis) with tb qts brfk they';( .white chime (someone. i X: - way), ties ss a uofelle toatch Mthebr aborts. Besides alts, they have. a fey new yells tp• go with the new uniforms:,' ;� aF Poor Mac looks so lonesome, at least his name • does, sitting there by itself, so Grade XI will be in- cluded also. Grade 10 -BD -- Mac Bolton, 80.1; Grade XI -Les. Mc. Spadden, 83.5; Patsy Lane, 81.4; Eileen McCartney, 81.0; Alice Wat- son, 78.9; Harold; Knight, 78,9; Ben - lab Bradburn, 78.0; Ione Watson, 77.3; Doug Stewart, ,77,0, and Marg. McArthur, 75.5. • In a game with Stratford Nor- mal last Friday against the coun- try girls, Seaforth won with. a score of 10-9. Doris, Pullman, 4 points; Muriel Campbell, 2, and Marg. Stevens, 3, for Stratford; and Doris Stevens 4, Jean Caldwell 2, and Lorraine Smith4, for Sea - forth. Gladys Collins . made a fine job of "pinch-hitting" in Tuesday's as- sembly. She played two very pop- ular tunes, "Nevertheless" and Tennessee Waltz." Question of the week: Jean, what does the other fellow look like? "So your husband's in the army now, Mrs. Worrit?" "Yes, they've made him a gun- ner an' that's what he's been ever since I married him." "A gunner?" "Yes, always 'gunner' do this, and 'gunner' do that, but.he never did do anything worth while!" • (By Gordon Ad. 'Greig, Secretary Fieldman) A meeting will be held in Clilnton on Friday afternoon, Feb, $, at 2 p.m., under the sponsorship of Huron County Federation Rf A culture. Attending the •meeti. will be the executives of all the dairy groups organized in Huron County, as well as representatives from other farm organizations. The purpose of the meeting is to co- ordinate efforts of all farm organ izations in Huron County in back- ing up the provincial dairy organ- izations in their efforts to protect the industry from being destroyed or driven into bankruptcy by sub- stitutes made from imported oils. Please note this is a meeting of your representatives, and not a mass. meeting. If you have any- thing to contribute, contact one of your owe representatives and have him bring your plan before the meeting. We hope this meeting will introduce a new era of co-op- eration among the dairy groups in the county. Huron County Hog Producers Organization has certainly come to life during the past year. Last fall they staged a banquet in Clinton with Mr. W. E. Tummon, ` secre- tary -manager of the provincial or- ganization, as guest speaker. The attendance at that meeting broke all previous records for the or- ganization. Now at their annual meeting last Friday, they have a "pay-as-you-go luncheon" and the Notice, Mr. Farmer Have you non -layers in your laying flock? If so, give us a call at 50 r 2, DUBLIN, and we will cull them immediately for you. We also would be pleased to pick up your Eggs and give you the most we possibly can! ALSO VERY PROMPT SERVICE We handle a full line of ROE FEEDS, MONKTON CHICKS, and .DR. SALISBURY'S MEDICINES AND TONICS FOR POULTRY Ducklow Produce Owned and Operated by William Ducklow (Formerly Wm. Stapleton Produce) avow Old D1SI'itI 1951 Dodge Regent 4 -Door Sedan The front of the new Dodge is modern and massive, distinct- ively styled to look longer and lower. Its sleek lines are deftly accentuated with chrome. The front' window is wider, the corner posts are redesigned for maximum vision, and the area of the rear window has been substantially increased. The Dodge Regent is offered as'a 4 -door sedan and club coupe. The Dodge Crusader Series also includes a 4 -door sedan and club coupe. The Dodge Kingsway (111" wheelbase) is available in a two -door sedan, and business coupe. The popular all-purpose, all -metal Suburban is again a feature of new Dodge showings across Canada. Completely new is the Dodge Suburban's special deluxe edition being introduced this year as the Savov. SEE THEM AT YOUR " DODGE - DeSOTO DEALER ROWCLIFFE MOTORS SEAFORTH, ONTARIO i ttendauce at this was gven larger' than the One staged last tall Itf h y more people attended the busineee meeting` than were at the luDSrli- 'eon, It must have given the men- hers of the Hog Producers' Organ- ization a great deal of satisfacttpn to, see so many people taking an Interest in this producers organiza- tion. rganizetion. The committee elected for 1951 is as follows: Orval Taylor,ai'- man; Harry Sturdy and Bert Lobb, are the other two members, Mr. Sturdy and Mr. Lobb are bath past presidents of Huron County Fed- eration. • Plans are now under way to have a full slate of voting delegates at- tend the Ontario Hog Producers annual meeting on •March 8 and 9. Last year there were fifteen voting delegates, and there will be that many or more in 1951. Meat Values Meats are on the high-priced food list and should be carefully selected and cooked to get the highest value from the purchase. Temperature and length of time of cooking govern the shrinkage and tenderness of the meat. Tougher cuts can be greatly improved • by cooking in tomato juice and water. This liquid provides a tasty base for gravy. Had Your Iron Today? Your body needs a certain amount of iron, and an especially pleasant way of taking it is in dried fruits. Cooked, they make delicious desserts; eaten raw, they are tasty bites when out on a hike or at your work. Prunes, apricots, peaches and raisins are all good sources of iron. Eat plenty of them. Catch It In Time Many cases of cancer and heart disease could be cured or prevent- ed from becoming serious by medi- cal examination and treatment at the first symptoms of either dis- ease. Periodic .checkups in time may entirely eliminate them. Only your doctor is competent to diag- nose such cases. Your friends, no matter bow sympathetic and well- meaning, are not qualified to make such judgment. That Important Meal Clean "Eateries" Many people regard a restaurant as a place in which to celebrate family anniversaries or special occasions, but there are many others who, from choice or neces- sity, take all their meals in public eating places. Customers are en- titled to and should demand cleanliness and sanitation in the food that is served, the utensils used and the facilities provided for public use. Disease germs breed in unclean places. If you find un- sanitary conditions where you "eat out," report the case to your local health department so that action may by taken to remedy the trouble. Libel is written abuse -slander is oral abuse. (Csmt aged'freM, F ,(ge lt`gtan,.. Tie !hedge was Ofsted in i 8 acid 1#,ds''le i )?k 9)?. ceesful gperatUQll W94% sines„ said, it'e the, Iowa eanglev , span in the world, ,though, riot tho longest .cantilever bridge, that 4.1*, tijiction belongs to th.Q . ArOrttl Bridge in Scptl,and• Another remarkable Panadian, bridge --in fact it's not only res markable it's Unique -is the Lath... bridge Viaduct. This carries the: Crowsnest line of the..C,P.R. across,. the valley of the Belly. River a few miles west of Lethbridge, Alta.•; Longer Viaducts exist, but they're. not so tall; .taller viaducts, ,"hut they're not so long. So for length plus height the Lethbridge is in- deed unique. It was built to elim- inate twenty smaller bridges .be.. tween Lethbridge and McLeod; it's well over a mile long and Taut- tains, over much of its length, the remarkable height of 314 feet. It's supported on 33 riveted steel tow- ers of great- strength and grace. Like most viaducts it's without par apets and as you cross it, the deep coulee of the Belly River and the river itself ,flowing far below look almost as if you were seeing them" from an airplane. Another famous bridge is the Victoria Jubilee bridge which car- ries the C,N.R. tracks ,from Mont- real across the St. Lawrence to; the south shore. It was. first built in 1860 and was opened . by the Prince of Wales, later to become King Edward VII. It was origin- ally a kind of bridge which you never see built' nowadays: a tubu- lar. bridge. The tubular bridge -its members consist of wrought iron tubes -had been pioneered in Eng- land by the greatbridge builder. Thomas Telford, whose tubular bridge across the Menai Straits, connecting the island of Anglesea with the mainland, is still in use. But the invention of the Bessemer converter and the change from cast iron to structural steel ren- dered such methods obsolete, and as locomotives got heavier and trains longer and rails higher, it became necessary to rebuild the bridge at Montreal. The engineers of the old Grand Trunk did a remarkable job of re- building the bridge -which, with its approaches, is close to two miles long -without interrupting train service. Using the same piers, they replaced the tubular bridge with an open work steel truss bridge with an open work steel truss bridge with double tracks and highways. The old bridge weighed only 9,000 tons, but the new one -which was opened on December 13, 1898, and called the Victoria Jubilee Bridge in honor of the Queen -weighed over 22,000 tons, It rests on 24 piers and the (Continued on Page 8) Directors of Huron Hog Producers Chosen The following directors have been elected by Huron Township Federations of Agriculture to the Huron Hog Producers' Association for 1951: Ashfield, "Cecil Johnston, R.R. 7, Lucknow; Colborne, Harold Mont- gomery, R.R. 4, Goderich; Gode- rich Township, Robert Welsh, R.R. 2, Bayfield; Grey,' James Bremner, Brussels; Hay, Henry Schiibe, R" R. 1, Dashwood; Howick, Albert Ashley, R.R. 1, Gorrie; Hullett, Archie Young, Londesboro; McKil- lop, J. Buuck, Dublin; Morris, Nel- son Higgins, Brussels; Stanley, Murray Grainger, R.R. 1. Varna; Stephen, Ed. Chambers, Crediton; Tuckersmith, Don Dayman, R.R. 3, Kippen; Turnberry, Les. For- tune, R.R. 1, Wingham; East Wawanosh, Frank Nesbitt, R.H. 3, Blyth; West Wawanosh, William Good, R.R. 3,. Auburn; Usborne, James Miller, Woodham. (By WALLY) Tavistock Greenshirts put ' through their . first win in ten starts when they edged the locals 7-6 Monday night in the Tavistock arena. The first period looked as though the locals "had it all over" the Greenshirts when they flipped in, four counters after starting the scoring at 2:45. This first goal resulted from a golfed shot by' Muir. Cameron helped Broome at 4:20; O'Shea tallied from Camer- on at the 4:50 mark. The fourth goal resulted when Sills picked up Hildebrand's (sass and neatly out- witted Hesse. Wilhelm came in with Cassidy to put the Tavistock team in the scoring list. Two goals each was the allot- ment for the teams in the second "penalty -free" period. Tavistock took their two first as Matto and Field flashed; the red light. Ten minutes passed, interrupted only by the referees' whistles. Knight slipped the rubber into the net at 14:09, assisted by Sills. A lone tally by Hildebrand ended the per- iod. This also ended Seaforth's scoring. The locals "fell to pieces" in the final stanza as Tavistock came, from behind with four goals, all before the half -way point of the frame. Seaforth Legion were un- able to'stop them and on reaching the apposition's net, "it just wasn't there," or so it seemed. Crouse and Malco Wente n together at 3:56. Fields helped himself to a goal at the quarter. Wilhelm, with a "double assistance" from Crouse and Malebo, tied the game up at six -all. Tavistock took the game when Fields performed the hat trick with the winning goal. The game was the first O.H.A. Intermediate "B" bout at which only two penalties were imposed. These penalties, handed out in the last period, were of the minor na- ture and went to Seaforth players. Cameron was penalized for trip- ping, while Boussey went to the cooler fore, two -minute stretch for charging. Referees -Hal Baird and Pat 1 Gardner. SEAFORTH - Goal, Woodcock; defence, Wade, Boussey; centre, O'Shea; wings, Muir, Broome; al- ternates, Sills, Knight, Huffman, Hildebrand, Cameron, Nicholson. TAVISTOCK - Goal, Hesse; de- fence, Cassidy. Crouse; centre, Field; wings, Morgenroth, Schmidt; alternates, Yungblut, Malebo, Wei - cher, Wilhelm, Eckstein, Vere, Klein. Summary First Period - Goals, Seaforth, Muir (O'Shea), 2':45 ; Seaforth, Broome (Cameron), 4:20; Seaforth, O'Shea (Cameron), 4:50; Seaforth, Silts '(Hildebrand), 15:45; Tavi- stock, Wilhelm (Cassidy), 18:19. Second Period -Goals: Tavistock Malebo (Crouse), 2:25; Tavistock, Field (Morgenroth), 4:07; Sea - forth, Sills (Knight), 14:09; Sea - forth, Hildebrand, 14:30. Third Period -Goals: Tavistock, Crouse (Malebo), 3:56: Tavistock, Field, 5:33; Tavistock, Wilhelm, (Crouse, Malabo), 6:10; Tavistock, Field (Schmidt Morgenroth), 10:23. Penalties -Cameron, Boussey. Seaforth's Pee -Wee Hockey Club remains undefeated? Bob McGon- igle came through with a clean sheet at this game with a sensa- tional shutout as his team helped him along to a 12-0 victory. With a score like this, we find the game hard to describe. except for the obvious 4act that our successful Pee -Wee venture was much the stronger team. Bill "Red" Roberton was the Sharpshooter for the locals, as be putin six of the 12 red lights. Referee -"Porky" Newcombe. GODERICH-Goal, Fisher; de- fence, Stubbington. Miller; centre, Doak; wings, William. Smith; al- ternates, Robinson, Paget, Serviat, Peachay, Mailireber, Wolfe. Mil- ler, Williamson, Harmon, Muce- breight, Scudder. SEAFORTH-Goal, McGonigle ; defence. Mason, Thompson; cen- tre, Dale; wings, Roberton, Mc - 0 FerpouB forinripiessa_, seai�ns. blO6y, ` 4,410 ; blie iwiif overal)sw? beef Money' .og rs bay; SNAG PROOF Saeforized white back blue it In large make Snag ,proof eve A :good working .man's.•t< ..:00,DraiI''at 4,:. 414,N. KITCHEN r STREAMLINE; Zipper front style; with denote Van - tie shoulder, straps and: high bac Come in daisy stripe or blue at ?uaiity Work MEN'S DUNGAREES Triple stitched, sanforized blue denim jeans in a big full cut make. These low prices may not prevail for long NAVY TWILL PANTS Sanforized 7% ounce navy twill pants hundreds of men buy over and over again because of their excellent wear. Sizes 32 to 52.... HAUGH'S PANTS The same quality sanforized navy twill as the famous overalls. Ex- tremely xtremely well made, with 5 pockets, belt straps and cuffs COTTONADE PANTS A wide assortment of glen checks, stripes and twills in grey, brown or blue; well made; full roomy cut. Priced at Pants 3.95 4.50 4.95 3.95 BOYS' WALKER'S OVERALLS.. 2.95 to 3.50 BOYS' BLUE DUNGAREES 2.95 ZIP FLY JEANS (Sanforized) 3.25 "HOPALONG" CASSIDY BLACK JEANS 2.98 STEWART BROS. Fadden; alternates, Wright, Bosh - art, Carter, Broome, Scoins, Mat- thews, Stapleton, Fauls, McClin- chey, McMaster; sub-goaler, But- ters. Summary First Period - Roberton, 1:31; Carter (Matthews), 5:24; Dale, 9:36; Dale, 11:22; Roberton (Ma- son), 19:06. Second Period -Matthews, 9:30; Mason, 10:4.0; Roberton, 13:04; Roberton (McFadden), 16:05. Third Period -Roberton, 6:18; McFadden (Roberton), 14:13; Rob- erton (Dale), 15:50. The Intermediates have two games left. This Saturday night Centralia Flyers play here,' while Milverton Dominion Royals play here next Saturday, Feb. 10. Seaforth must win one of these to stay in the playoffs. I.,l]i, 1,1 WALL BOARD MAPLE FLOORING Easy to paint or paper. Many Select grade, end -matched maple grades and types in stock. Per square foot as low flooring. Per 100 as C square feet i $23.110 Convert Your Attic 10% Down 30 Months To Pay Wasted attic space can be easily and economically converted into extra bedrooms or an income pro - clueing apartment. You can do most of the work yourself. See our collection of plans and ideas. FREE ESTIMATES Fred C. Kalbfleisch and Son Ltd. Lumber, Shingles and Builders' Supoixes. WHOLESALE and RETAIL Telephones: ZURICH 69; GODERICH 8g38• Residence Phone: Zurich 162