HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1962-03-08, Page 4i ti,f• f H"4Ft4$*i,any," +.y41,
'MR. AND MRS. WILFRED MALONEY, Dublin, were mar
. ried recently at St. Patrick's Roman Catholic Church, Dublin.
Rev. R. Durand officiated. The bride was- the former Mrs, •
Mary Kfstner, Dublin. After the wedding ceremony a recep-
tion was held in Stratford. The couple left for a wedding trip
through the southern United States.
or
FOOD and FIXIN'S
Recipes For the Busy
Homemaker 6
SURPRISE YOUR FAMILY
WITH APPLE PANCAKES.
At this time of year pancakes
are a favorite standby for
breakfast or supper. Instead of
serving plain pancakes, next
time you •--mix•"the batter why
don't you add some chopped
unpeeled apple? The fine apple
flavor will predominate and'
you'll notice teat the pancakes
have a different but very good
texture,. too. Serve the apple
pancakes with maple syrup or
honey and sausages, bacon or
grilled ham, if desired.
When you make your own
batter, allow 1 cup chopped ap-
ple for six large pancakes. To
make spiced apple pancakes,
add '/a teaspoon cinnamon and
2 tablespoons sugar along with
the' 1 cup apple for six large
pancakeSa
To make apple pancakes from
a mix, follow "one of these re-
cipes recently tested" in the
. EGMONDVILLE CGIT MEET
Egmondville CGIT met last
week. The Scripture was read
by Catherine McLeod and the
Meditation. by Graee Stephen-
son.
tephenson. The worship period closed
with a .prayer by Dianne Pap-
ple: Future plans include a
toboggan party or, a broomball
game.
SUPERIOR
Maintenance Service
SEAFORTH — PHONE 182
Wall washing -Floor maintenance
Brick and 'Plastering Repairing
SUPERIOR Our Name
SERVICE Our Aim
RAY SQUIRE
BOX 335 SEAFORTH
�o a� 000Ocz c c c
p CO-OP
ALFALFAS
b CLOVERS
Dare selected seeds
High Quality. Standards in
the selection and cleaning of
CO-OP SEEDS helps guar-
antee top yield!
Only Ontario adapted vale -
ties are selected. They are
then carefully tested to as-
sure high germination.
Cleaned by the most modern
seed cleaning machinery, you
are sure of high seed purity
and low weed content.
Plant Co-op Seed
Order Your Grain
Seed Now
For Spring
SAVE 5 PER CENT
Purchase Co-op Fer-
tilizer and pay before.
March 15th"'arid save
5 per cent.
Seaforth
Farmers
Phone 9 i Seaforth
c0.Op
Consumer Section test kitchens:•
11/2 cups pancake mix
11/2 cups milk,
1 egg, beaten
3 tablespoons butter, melt-
ed
1 cup unpeeled, coarsely
chopped apple
To the pancake mix acid the
milk, beaten egg and melted
butter (not hot), then combine
thoroughly. Stir in the chopped
apple and stir well. Drop ,.,by
spoonfuls onto a hot griddle or
lightly greased frying pan. Cook
until bubbles form on the top,
arid the under surface is brown.
Turn and cook until other side
is brown. Serve immediately.
Six large (5 to 6 -inch) pancakes.
Spiced Apple Pancakes
1. cup pancake mix
% teaspoon cinnamon
2 tablespoons sugar-.
1 egg, beaten
1 cup milk
1 cup peeled, coarsely chop-
ped apple.
To the pancake mix add cin-
namon and sugar. Add the milk
and beaten egg and combine
thoroughly. Stir in the chopped
apple. Drop. by spoonfuls onto
a hot griddle or lightly greas-`
ed frying pan. Cook until bub-
bles form on the top, and un-
der surface is brown. Turn and•
cock until other side is brown.
Serve- immediately. Six large
(5 to 6 -inch) pancakes.
* •8- * .
Feature Honey Dressing With
Fruit Salads
An all-time flavor combina-
tion .that's hard to beat is -fruits
with honey.. During March, the
home economists of the Con-
sumer Section 'suggest you serve
their new honey dressing or
mayonnaise with fruit salads.
For lunch, occasionally try fhe
honey' dressing with pretty
plates of assorted canned and
frozen fruits, apple wedges and
cottage cheese. At dinner, serve
your family an' attractive side
salad of jellied fruit, topped
with honey mayonnaise and
garnished with cress.
Honey Mayonnaise
1/2. cup apple juice
1/a cup honey ,
1 tablespoon cornstarch
Few grains salt
.2 egg yolks beaten
1 cup whipping cream.
Blend appple juice, honey,
cornstarch and salt in top of
doule boiler. Place over boil-
ing ter and cook until mix-
ture be ins, to thicken. Stir a
small amount of the hot mixture
into beaten egg yolks. Combine
with remaining mixture in'dou-
ble• boiler and cook for about
two minutes or until thick. Re-
move from heat and chill thor-
oughly. Meanwhile whip cream,
then fold into the cold honey
mixture. Use with fruit salad.
Makes about 11/2 cups.
DREAMING
OF SPRING?
Tiine Hanging Heavy?
Need a Pick -Me -up?
Selling AVON COSMETICS can
help you.
Start immediately in Logan,
McKillop, Tuckersmith and
Hullett Townships.
White, MRS. E. BELL
84-B Albert St., WATERLOO
or call collect SH. 5-0751
• before 8:20 a.m.
By }(EN WATSON
In curling there are two types
of guards. The first is a
legitimate attempt to protect
shot rocks in the rings to make
it l more difficult` for your op-
ponents :to remove them. The
second • is the almost .archaic
custom of calling for- a stone
in front of an empty:.bouse in
the hope of drawing behind it
and thus making the front rock
a guard "ipso facto."
Curling champs of Brier .cali-
bre• almost totally ignore the
use of guards in modern_effen-
sive " play. They' constantly re-
fuse to use a stone r this pur-
pose.as they consider r este
of good granite. However, the
further down the Tanks you go.
the greater the tendency of the
skip to play hide-and-seek with
the eight rocks under his com,)
mand. -
With 180 square feet of ice
to -fool around with he frequent-
ly succeeds in cluttering up the
front of the rings, with so much
flotsam and jetsam that some-
times it would take a well-plac-
ed drop kick to get a rock into
the- play zone.
At worst the modern theory
is td get a stone into the house
first—then play a guard. But
when . the exalted master calls
for a stone in front of an emp-
ty house, then asks his relative-
ly inelcperienced lead man to
coast one perfectly in behind,
he must have'.rocks in his head:
Trying Shot
This demand performance
would be difficult for a good
skip to execute. Why ask the
number one to play a once-in-a-
lifetime shot? -
As a matter of course with
the average coterie of rock -
tossers there are usually suffici-
ent short draws out there in no
man's land to try .tllis subter-
fuge in later shots. Too often
the grandiose strategyof clut-
tering up the front yard early
backfires on the master mar-
iner. When his turn comes to
make the great play, he often
finds himself listening to his
vice -skip suggesting a triple
raise, a long angle inwick 'or a
three-way carom off a cannon-
ball effort.
The other night while a
charming little lady curler all
the way from the Richmond
Ice Rink in London, England,
looked on, my , lead man mis-
judged his draw and his rock
came to an inglorious halt just
over the hog -line. •
The opposing skip decided to
capitalize .by asking for an in-
turn draw behind the culprit.
It was done.
' Wrong Order
Foolishly I asked my lead to
follow suit. Being short the
first time he avoided the, mis-.
takeagain and slipped past and
through. My error. I should
have .known -this might happen.
Another stone came in be-
hind. Once more some wishful
hoping on my part and another
failure to follow. The in -turn
had 'a tendency to bang -out -un-
less dead weight was used.
By this time desperation
shots were the order, so like
a tried and true veteran, I ask-
ed my vice for super -human ef-
forts where the odds were 10
to one against him. Eventually
we were lucky to , get off the
hook with two points racked up
against us instead of the five
we deserved.
The big "booboo" was made
by yours truly when he refus-
ed to recognize that surgery
was the only cure for the mal-
ignancy that was threatening
early in the %end. That tramp
out front should have been ex-
terminated right at the start!
For any. skip who has- ambi-
tions, guarding a stone in- the
rings is . a defense' mechanism
at best. gift to call for •a rock
in front of an empty house ex-
cept in unusual circumstances
is an open admission,. to a state
of pure panic. '
Draw first and guard later
if you must. Reversing this
tactic is not recommended as
good strategy.
Thirty-seven..'years ago a
great Canadian who' loved curl-
ing put a dream into action. In
1925 the late George J. Cam-
eron, Winnipeg, representative
of $he W. C. Macdonald Inc.,
made a special trip to Mon-
treal to Convince the executive
of his companythat through
the fellowship for which the
Piso�+a .Rocks First
Guard Comes-- hater
CURLING'S GREATEST
MOMENTS AT HAND
roaring game was noted the
great geographic barriers_ sep-
arating Bast and West could be
bridged by. a National Curling
-Competition. He was complete-
ly successful and after two
years of squiring the champions
of the Winnipeg Bonspiel on
safaris to Eastern centres, the
Brier was born. •
Since 1927, when eight rinks
took part in the original cam=
petition with Ossi Barkwell.of
Yellow Grass, Sas., as the on-
ly Western colorbearer, the two
famous Brier has' gained sta-
ture and color with each pass-
ing year. As this is Brier Week
in Canada with 11 would-be
Canadian champions perform-
ing in Kitchener -Waterloo, Ont.,
a glance back through the years
to recapture some of the •glory,•
drama and excitement could be
.of comparative interest.
Thirty-third This Year
With • 32 thrill -packed Briers
to look back upon, there are
many superlative flashes that
stand out vivdly • in rem-
iniscence. The most dramatic
finish was the extra game, ex
tra end, last rock finish at
Moncton between Bill Walsh,
of Winnipeg, and Alf Phillips,
of Toronto, in 1956. The most
exciting Brier with the best
ice conditions took place at
Kingston when Baldwin; .Camp-
bell, Stone and Wotld finished
1-2-3-4 the year following. Ole
Olson, of Edmonton, was the
ice -maker who did such a fine
job that he almost took the
curl out of curling.
Calgary painted the . first real
color into the Curling Cham-
pionships in 1948 but the worst
ice ever was unwittingly pro-
vided at Quebec in 1942.
The greatest longshot was at
Halifax in 1951 when an -un-
known, unsung rink ss`kippe by
Don Oyler, from Kentville, 1 ,
won 10 straight. The closest
near -upset was provided ' by
Terry Braunstein's agile adoles-
cents from Manitoba when they
forced a playoff at Victoria
with the brilliant Matt Baldwin
in 1958.
Regina and Calgary officials
are still arguing and laying
claim to 'the largest -number of
turnstile clicks made. by Brier
spectators.- Both boast around
54,00Q fans for the week.
•
Manitoba Tops
Manitoba beasts the longest
yearly win -streak. Five straight"
victories- 1928-32 by Hudson,
Hudson, Wood, .Congalton and
Gourlay. The string was brok-
en by Manahan for Alberta in
1933,, Five seven -enders have
been scored in the National
Playdowns. If Jimmy Welsh, of
Winnipeg, had net been a foot
or two heavy, against P.E.I. in
1947 he would have had the
only eight -ender. - '
The longest playoff in Brier
history involved Alberta, North-
ern Ontari and Manitoba at
Saskatoortf ,1946.
Bill Rose, of Sedgewick, Alta.,
finally made it at 2:30 a.m, Sat-
urday morning with -a big crowd
still on happd. The longest sin-
gle game teok Ontario and New
Brunswick 14 ends to decide a
winner at Regina in 1955 on
the opening draw. The greatest
scoring spree wasput on by
the Campbells of Avonlea in
pasting N.B. 30-3 in 1957. Reg.
Stone, of Trail, B.C,, made the
greatest comeback by eking out
an extra end win from Wood,
of Manitoba, after, be trailed
9-3 at . the completion of 10
ends. -
The blank end disease start-
ed in recent years. In 1958 at
Victoria 30 dead ends were re-
corded but at East William, two
years later, no less than 47 bald-
headed ends cropped up with
the eventual winners, the Rich
ardsons, guilty of 16 of them.
Believe it or not, Quebec and
Nova Scotia hold the record for
the longest streak of consecu-
tive blank ends—four to be ex-
act.
The largest evening crowd
has to be the one at Regina in
1955 when Saskatchewan. and
Manitoba ' clashed with unbeat=
en.records; 5,200 jammed in to
CHU GR HEAR . REP TS
PRESS TERIAN WMS MEETS with a. _Poster and Lei} ping
The . S nior '.w1VIS of. First from one daily. paper.) Mrs.
Presbyter an Church met „ in Williatn Roe and Ethel Dennis
the churc on Tuesday, Feb. 27.
President Miss Belle Campbell
opened the meeting with a
poem, "Snow Crystals", by Mis-
tress Margaret Rhynas, of Bay-
field, follgwed by the .. hymn,
"He Giveth, Snow Like Mol."
The minutes of the January
meeting were read and approv-
ed, also the treasurer's report.
The roll ,call was answered by
14 ladies.
Miss—'Campbell was appoint-
ed to give the prayer at- North-
side Church_ Day of Prayer en
Friday. Miss Jessie Fraser; first
• vice-president, will be in charge
.of the March meeting. Mrs. J.
G. Mullen sent some worth-
while thoughts on the subject,
"Shine," and chose the hymn,
"Jesu Bids Us Shine." Mrs.
W. J •Thom,pson's group had,
the d votional part of the meet-
ing. Mrs. E. Geddes took the
Glad Tidings prayer and the
study book was taken by Mrs.
Thompson, Mrs. Jean Cairns
and Mrs. J. B. Russell. The
meeting closed with prayer by
Mrs. J. Thompson.
BETHEL UCW MEET
13ethel United Church Women
held their monthly meeting on
Thursday, March 1, at the home
of Mrs. Stanley Hillen. The
meeting began with the invoca-
tion and the singing of a hymn
with Mrs. Alex Dennis as pian-
ist. The Scripture lesson, tak-
en from ...- John 17:11-26, was
read by Mrs. Don Dennis. Psalm
24 was also read responsively.
Mrs. Laverne Godkin gave an
interesting paper on "Christian
Living and Sabbath Obsery-•
ance." Tennie pennis took the
chapter from the study book.
It dealt with the. question of
dishonesty and crime in gen-
eral. She illustrated her talk
every available corner and ov-`
er 2,000 failed to crash the
gates at all. But to Calgary
must go the accolades for the
8,200 souls that showed up at 1
the Corral last March on a 9:30
draw which saw business •
life ome to a standstill when
the two great Alberta and Sas-
katchewan curling machines
clashed in the, game of the
week. It was a last rock finish
that sent every fan home talk-
ing to himself.
it
answered some gyestions 41,r-
ing -the question period.
The World Day of Prayei, is
to be held at Winthrop Church
on Friday, March 9, at 2 p.m.
The minutes of the last -rrreeting
were read and the roll call tak-
en. The •offering was received
at this time.
• The treasurer reported that
,$21.55 was the proceeds, of the
Valentine social. Plans were
made for a pot -luck supper on
March 20 or April 6. A hymn
was ung and the meeting dos-
ed ith the benediction.
Steering & Brake SpeciaI
ai"manii FRONT END ALIGNMENT—
To correct caster, correct camber, correct
toe -in or toe -out; tighten and adjust steer-
ing. Save dollars on tire wear:
Regular cost $8.00
WHEEL BALANCING
We balance wheels, install necessary wheel
weights. Eliminates steering shimmy.
Saves tires.
Regular Cost
BRAKE INSPECTION—
$4.00
We remove front wheels and inspect brake linings; clean and repack front ,
wheel bearings; adjust brakes; add necessary fluid
Regular cost
Warts extra) 5
NOW YOU GET
ftrt
Phone 541 — Seaforth •
$2.00
CORSETTIER
Bras, l irdles, Corsets
and Support Garments
To FIT ALL FIGURES
At Reasonable Prices
Mrs. J. 'Hoelscher
• SEAFORTH
George St. — One Block East
df Library
Remember, it takes but a
moment to place an Expositor
Want Ad and be money in pock-'
et. To advertise, just phone
Seaforth. _141.-
Crown'TFUSI
tik GUARANTEED CERTIFICATES
200 a Safe 5% Investment -
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Queens
Ave., ASK FOR A BOOKLET Phone
London GE 8-8314
We're Selling Our ENTIRE Stock of
MAGIC
MARKERS
Reg. $110
COLORS AVAILABLE
ORANGE - YELLOW - BROWN
BLUE - PURPLE
MAGIC MARKER REFILLS
GREEN - BLUE - BROWN - RED
BLACK 390
REG.
ORANGE 50c
YELLOW
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Available in Black, Red and Green
At Popular Advertised Low Prices
THE HURON EXPOSITOR
Phone 141 -•---- Seaforth
SCOTT'S
KIMBER_____
White Egg Layer
Internationally Known Leghorns, which will fay
245-290 large eggs, of the highest quality.
THREE - WAY CROSS RIR x SR x.:RIR
Brown - Egg Layer
Fifth Random Test—third position all breeds;
222 eggs per bird on hen hotfsed basis.
Now IS... THE TIME TO BOOK YOUR 'CHICK ORDER -
SCOTT POULTRY
Phone 853
•
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FARMS
Seaforth
GN,
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