HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1967-01-18, Page 11AOYER ISED iM
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 1Sth, t! 7"
THE 'LUCKNOVV SENTINEL, 'LUCKNOW; ONTARIO
Lucknow-
Dungannon
Bill Stewart clinched the 'men's,
high triple with 803 and Don ,Aub
in rolled the high single of 318.
Shirley Hawthorne. rolled both high'
triplePand singlewith 879. and 313
single
Men°over 250; Frank"Hawthornec,.
278, Bi11.'Stewart'282. 263 and 258
,Donald McIntyre .262, Al Opresnik
252. ' . .
Ladies over 225; Mary Lou Barger
287 , Ruth J°ard•ine. 256,Muriel
Ritchie 252, Marie Stewart
Joanne 'Searle 228, Anne Anderson.
226
. Bowlers be ready to start at 9
clock.
ou,
Standing6 Zebras 76,Beavers 58
Tigers 57, Wolverines 56.
'Kangaroos 50, Coons 50, Cubs 48,
••Pole Cats,45, Chipmunks 44,
Squirrels/43-, Gophers 32., ,Lions 29:
Lucknow. Men.
Tuesday ,.January 10
High Single game .of,the week
was 'rolled by Bob;Finlay with 293
flat..,' High Triple goes' to Clarence,
Greer ;with. 697 flat.
Clarence. Greer's Buicks, 7 points,
Bill • Hunters,' Dodges 0 'points Jack
Fisher's Mustangs 5 points, Bill
Button's •Fords .2 points; Freck
Button's.Oldsmobiles 7.points, Len
•MacDonald's Pontiacs 0 points.
Games of 250 and over: 'Bob Fin-
lay 29B, Donald Macintyre 259,
Fred Young'2'17 , Gordon Carter ..'
212, Biil.Schmid 254, Ken. Mow- .:
bray., 261 /
Team, Standings; Buicks 60 Olds
mobiles .59, Fords 47 ' Mustangs
45 ;' Dodges 33 , Pontiacs 29.
Ladies' Afternoon'
Monday January 16
High'Triple and High Single
scores for this week both go to
Marion MacKinnon with•a'triple ::
of 823 flat, Marion's High Single..
game was 297 flat. Good bowling
Marion T •
Afnetta Thompson's Duchess 5
•points, Shirley Hawthorn's
• Delicious.2.Points,, Marion Mac-
Kinnon's Wealthy's:1 Points, ,.
.:Isabelle Eedy's Spy's 0 'Points,
Ferne MacDonald's Russets 4 Points
Mildred Cameron's Pippins.3
Points, .
• `, Games of 200 and over: Marion
MacKinnon 288, 238, 297 , Helen.
Hall 212,' 243.; ,Freda Erringt$$n,
217', Jean Phillips 248, Isabelle
Eedy 201 •,. Margaret Ma'cN'ay; 210,,
Ferne MacDonald 207;, 235, •Anna,,
Mae Hunter 202, Arnetta Thomp-
son 238.,' 20,7 •Pearl 'Murdie 209..
Team'•Standings;.' Russet's 49,', •
Wealthy's 46, Spy's 4b, Duchess
37;, Pippins 33,, Delicious 26.`
Ladies Evening
January 16th, 1901,
Team Points:. Petunias 3;' Pansies
1; Violets 2 Tulips, 2; Roses 0;
Poppies 4...
High Single, went to Shirley
Brooks with 256 and High Triple
to Kathy Gibson With 580.
Ga=mes 2.00• and over: Trudy
Nelson 249, Ann Wiser 244;`"Shir-
ley Brooks 256, Kay Crawford 225,
Josie Hamilton 205;, Tillie Wilson
204, Kathy'Gibson 213, 'Yvonne
Christian 209, Margaret Hackett
213. Joanne Serle 202, Maudie"
Fisher 211.
Team Standings; Kay Crawford:s'
Petunias 35 Muriel Ritchie's
_SUGAR.
AND SPICE
by Bill Smiley
100 years 0f' what ?
Wouldn't it be • fun if: we'
could conjure, up from their.•
neglected. graves •Sir John A,•
and the other. Fath,ys of Con-
federation, .and take them on a,
tour of the nation they tied 'to-
gether 100, years agog' with;
string and sealing -wax?
Would they think they had ,.
' builded well? Would they swell
with pride over the nation that.
has emerged? Would they look
with awe on what has been ac-
complisited? Or would they cry,
• as with one. voice,' ` "Lemme
• outa here! What have you done
to our glorious Dominion?",
The • `physical. changes •in
those 10 tiny decades, : a flea-
. bite. in, the human span, would
surely impress them. The, vast,.'
towers 'of steel and concrete in
our; cities; the ribbons of . road
and rail that span the, conti-
nent; the 'St. Lawrence. Seaway.
. And • surely' they would be,
thrilled, by the vast technologi-
cal leap made since they stood •
together for Ghat stiff portrait
in Charlottetown. They would '.
be, dazzled by the simple facts
of electric ',light and power,
flight by jet -liner, radio, televi-
sion, " the telephone; the '.:auto
- =mobile,: .oil -heating, air-condi-
tioning,. and .a thousand, other
things we take for granted.'
Y
But how would they feel'.
,.
about, the country' they created
after the fancy wrapping' cane
off the toys? Alter they'd seen
the Toronto ; City. ' Hall,.: and
flown across -the 'country in
few hours, and plunged into the
bowels of -a modern mine,. and'
•
gone up in :a chair -lift at; Jas-
per, and faced annihilation in'a
Montreal ' cab, and groped for,
their drink in a gloomycocktail
lounge? .
Behind . the glittering play-
things,
laythings, would ,they really find °
much change in the country?.
Not at 'this tine of `year., .any
way. -It would, be still a .sham-
bling . geographical monster,''
buried in; white,. tail turne4 to
the north' wind. Only 'a sprin-
kling. of lights,, a few curls of
smoke, and a few ants crawling'
• about would suggest it was not
straight out of the ice ages.
And if Sir John • A and . his
fellows'; lifted thatfamiliar
blanket of ' white and peered '
.under it,* would they be sur-
prised' and delighted by what . w
they saw? Would they ,perceive
a mature, virile; independent.
people proudly 'proving that the
twentieth century belongs ' . to
;Canada? ' •
• One look would reveal a ma=
• • terial "prosperity and comfort'
beyond their ..dreams, , But .' it
would show' that a lot of other.
things .they ,W,ete familiar with
had not changed or improved
CANADI.A:N.;
CE-;NTENNIAL
MI:�'G;ET.
HOCKEY
CHAMPIONSHIP
KI'NGST`ON',_O.NT,
.M.AR.. 2 5
Poppies 31, Rose Hall's Roses 28,
Tillie Wilson'sPansies 26, Ruth
Jardine's Tulips' 20, Kathy Gibson's
Vi171ets • 23 .
in 100. years. 'Fear of the ILS., .;
• corruption • ,in high places;
French' and: English Canadians
wrangling, dirty fighting at Ot-
tawa, the : ' taxpayears. .being
bribed with their own money,
the rich getting 'richer and the
poor getting children a "famil-
\iar world to The Fathers:
•• But the sorrow: might 'change
to horror When the y looked be•
yond the 'familiar things And
saw , that the . healthy -looking
body was riddled with. disease.
The pollution of air and water
would make them furious. The
soaring, rate Of divorce;, drug .
addiction, homosexualism; ;alco-
holism. would, appall thein. The
number of dead on the 'high-
ways each year would • sicken.
them. The power of huge mono•
'polies would frighten .. them.
And .the' apathy ofthe: average,
well-fed Canadian would . dis=
•
gust them
No, we'd -have to divert their
,attention quickly,and turn, it to
other things thatwould dazzle
them.; Perhaps they'd' be im .
' pressed by ,someof our great
cultural • traditions,. • developed.
' since their time. like the Grey,
Cup Game, when .the 'punks and
the drunks .take over.: Or Hock-
ey .Night in' Canada, one 'of our
great .national customs, ,when
this .entire, •sprawling' nation. is '
linked together into a warm;'
friendly group of idiots, rising
as one , man to :fetch another
beer when :. the commercial
PAGE NINE:
From. flats to ` new tires,. ,we're ' prepared
to fully'selve your every tire need : . or'.
a: y other auto. need at reasonable prices..
Tryus.1'
comes One.
Maybe they'd enjoy 'a tour ok.
one of our • newatomic energy'
plants? . But :'. I .wonder . what:
they'd think of the .pictures. of•
Hiroshima?
Wecould tell -them what we .,
did` in the: two great wars. But w `
one look at the tax, bill for de
tense would give them apo-
plexy..
And so itwould .go. Personal-
ly; I think 'that' after the initial
novelty wore off, Sir John.' A.
and The Fathers, more in sor-
row than in anger, : would re-
turn to ..where they came :from, ,
without "ever .taking a look
• back.
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