HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1971-12-23, Page 221:1 22,-*THE HURON EXPOSITOR, TAPQRTH, ONT., DEC 23, 197-1
S Mi e forth dgets
Defeat Zurich 6-1
Seaforth Midgets defeated
Zurich Midgets by a score of
6 - 1 in Zurich on December 13.
Seaforth scored three times
in the first period, two by S.
Southgate and one by B.Lane
to take a 3 - 0 lead.
In the second period T.Mur-
ray scored two unanswered goals,
one at the five minute mark` and
the other at the 19:00 minute
mark. He came right back at the
0:47 mark of the third period to
get his hat trick for the night.
Zurich finally got on the
scoreboard at the 13:53 mark of
the third period on a goal by Harry
Smits, spoiling Seaforth's bid for
a shutout.
A total of eleven penalties
were called withSeaforth receiv-
ing seven.
••••••••••••••••••••MMINNIVI.MIN •
•
Cm thec8pirit
ofGffristnj as
614appiness. ]o y. Peace.
That's the spirit of Christmas.-
it warms the heart. it
brings young and old together.
And it brings to mind just
how much we value your support.
Down
At The
Lanes
By Lee Hee
SEAFORTH MIXED LEAGUE
Team standings: June Bugs,
3005; Beetles, 2997; Termites,
2749; Bed Bugs, 2675; Cater-
pillars, 2642: Lady Bugs, 2572.
Ladies' High Single - Barb.
W e se nberg - 310 and High Triple-
646.
Men's High Single - Ron
McAllister, 326; Men's High
Triple - Bill Brown, 831.
Team standings: Caterpil-
lars, 59; June Bugs, 52; Beetles,
49; Bed Bugs, 38; Termites, 28;
Lady Bugs, 26.
595.
COMMERCIAL LEAGUE
Team standings: SharpShoot-
ers, 59; Irish Tigers, 44; Chal-
lengers, 42; Irish Dutchies, 33;
Greyhounds, 28; Sharp Dutchies,
25.
Highs, Ann Nobel, 279 and
712; Rachel Walters, 268 and 584;
Mary Nobel, 246 and 633. Cord
Nobel, 304 and 769; John Cole-
man, 311 and 651; John Segeren,
262 and 659.
I
N
N
•
(By Norm)
4.14
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING
BAINTON'S
OLD MILL
IN BLYTH
1894 A LANDMARK IN HURON COUNTY SINCE
7.7
Limit four
tot to tenor.
For the Ladies and Men...
a new stock of Leather
and Sued• Garments of
High Style and Quality
has just arrived. Soso these"
and compare--
foDU SAVE 30%
A Special Christintviittrs on
Ladies Fine lad Gloves
There are 4, 8, and 8 button lengths and ' alto
short lengths in black and brown.
VALUED AT $8.00 to $15.00
Factory Outlet Winton Special - 54" to $7"
BAINTON DEERSKIN SPECIAL
Nowhere on this continent en you buy these Deerskin pleb and mitts
al tease values:
•
Men's and Ladles' Fine Deerskin Gloves, Yale statal, 6.98
Factory Outlet Benton Special at
Deerskin Curling Clove for Men and Ladle, vow. WOO, 5.98 .
Factory Outlet Benton Seder
Deerskin Boner Woes, Value $6.91, Factory Outlet 3.45
Benton Specie
MOCASSINS SHEARLING VESTS - WORK -SOCKS - 3-ply Gray
WHEELING YARN - WOOL and MOHAIR AFGHANS - AUTO ROBES -
SHEEPSKIN RUGS - TOYS - Hen* Crafted INDIAN DOLLS - Beaded
leather BELTS, CHOKERS, NECKLACES and BRACELETS.
OTHER GIFT ITEMS UP TO 50% SAVINGS
Our FIBST QUALITY
Owe Virgin Wool Satin
Bound In thole of colors:
72" OW, 4 lb. blanket,
and x 90", Last years
Sala Price we $12.95,
Now Benton Christmas
Spade at
WE ARE OPEN
Monday through Saturday
From 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
BLANKET
SPECIAL
.••••••••.••••••rmmormwm•••••••••rms,
May Christmastime joy
and laughter be yours on this
happy holiday . . . and may we
gratefully thank you for your patron9ge.
Compliments of the •Season
FROM
THE MANAGEMENT AND STAFF.
.
VICTORIA AND Glinf
TRUST
Beavers, Milverton
Play To 5-5 Tie
EGMONDVILLE
Team standings: Whippets,82;
Datsuns, 51; Lincolns, 42; Cou-
gars, 41; Gray Dorts, 41; Fords,
39.
Ladies' high single, Merc
Alexander, 222; high triple, Vi
Mulligan, 528; high average,
Helen Nott, 173.
Men's high single, triple and
average, Gbrd Nobel, 351, 841
and 240.
FORESTERS
Team standings: Green
Acres, 50; Haymakers, 45; Com-
bines, 42; Hayseeds, 31; Hee
Haws, 27; Hillbillies, 15.
Ladies' high single and triple,
Ilene Thompson, 276 and 654,
Men's high single, Don Nolan,
266; high triple, John Coleman,
683.
MINOR LEAGUE
Team standings: Pro s, 5'7;
Born Winners, 42; Tornado s,
41; Bombers, 39; Ball Bouncers,
39; Pin Knockers, 34.
Weis. Diana Nobel, 232 and
Bantams
Tie At
Goderich
Seaforth travelled to Goder-
ich Saturday night and tied God-
erich 2-2. Lee Arbour opened the
scoring for Goderich at 2:47.
Seaforth came back with -Bill
O'Shea scoring at .13:15 assisted
by Brian Murray. Allan Worgan
scored in the second period for
Godarich to make the score 2-1.
Bill O'Shea again came through
to score for Seaforth and tie
the hockey game 2-2. Danny Nolan
picking up an assist on the play.
ROSS,GOV1er in the let for Sea-
forth, held the boys in there
"stopping a lot of Goderich rub-
ber. Next home game is Wed-
nesday, December 22nd at 7p.m.
when the Bantams host Hensall.
C.Y,O. LEAGUE
Team standings: Humans, 64;
Super Stars, 62; Africans, 51;
Gorillas, 43; pullets, 31; Bab-
oons, 21.
Ladies' highs, Trudy Van
Drunen, 230, Mary Claessens,
221; Leanne Melanson, 215.
Men's highs, John Houwart,
278 and- 730; Pete de Groot,
250, and 706; Gary Nash, 265
and 693.
ST. JAMES LEAGUE
Team standings: Ostriches,
61; Blue Jays, 60; Rambling
Ravens, 50; Crows, 47; Orioles,
39; Sky Larks, 3'7. '
Ladies' high single, Anne
Noble, 262; high triple, Mary
Noble, 749.
Men''s high single, Jim Barry,
4351; high triple, Reg Dicko,662.
Saturday
Morning
Hockey
. The following are the results
of the games ,played December
18, 197,1.
COMBINES
Rockets 3 - Stars 3
PEEWEE
Bruins 2 - Leafs 0
NOVICE
Canadians 3 - Hawks 1
MITES
Leafs,3 - Bruins 3
Team standings:
play Won Lost Ties Pts
COMBINES
Rockets 3 2
Stars 3 0
PEEWEE
Bruins 3'
Leafs 3
NOVICE -
Canadians 3
Hawks 3.
MITES
Leafs 3
Bruins 3 0
LEADING SCORERS
COMBINES
D.Cornish(Rockets)
PEEWEE
C.Stewart(Leafs)
NOVICE
HlitGowan(Canadians) 4 goals
M.Flanigan(Hawks) 3 goals
MITES
M.McIlwain(Bruins) 5 goals
LEADING GOALTENDERS
G.Stewart 1 shut out
K. McC lure 1 shut out
NOTE: There will be Legion
Hockey on December 24 and
December 31. Games start at
regular times. Boys are re-
minded to mark their equipment
with their names. Your Legion
Sports Officer, Don Wood, wishes
all the boys a Merry Christmas!
A total of three penalties were
called by the referees in a game
at Seaforth Arena between Sea-
forth Beavers and Milverton. The
game ended in a 5-5 tie, keeping
the Beavers undefeated .string
intact.
Milverton opened the scoring
in the first period with goals by
Holmes and Quidd. Seaforth came
nack with goals by Terry Craig
and Ken Doig to make it all
even at the end of the first.
In the second period Milver-
ton opened the scoring when Eddy
Erb scored unassisted, Seaforth
came right back and tlied it again
on Ken Doig's second of the night.
Milverton again took the lead at
the 12:04 mark when Quidd scored
his second of the night. ,•
At the 12:58 mark of the third
Milverton scored their fifth goal
of the night when Erb scored
assisted by Holmes and Kerr.
Seaforth came storming back
and at the 17:06 mark Jack Mc-
Llwain fired in his first of the
evening unassisted. Two minutes
later he fired in the tieing goal
assisted by Murray Henderson.
,FRANK KLING .1.1.D.
Phone 527-1320 - Seaforth
2 1
0 , 1 5
2 1
1 0 4,.
2 0 2
1 0 4.
2 0 2
0 1 5
2 1 1
5 goals
3 goal
Stained Glass Sheds Radiance
For Celebrations of Holy Day
Biblical stories and personages come to life in a blaze of color. Light and color combine
to create an everqchanging mosaic. From dawn to day to dark, patterns vary with the light.
Designs seem to live and move as colors change in intensity.
While Christians, around the world, gather to celebrate the holy festival of Christmas,
these dazzling effects add to the beauty and solemnity of the celebration, as stained glass
windows shed their radiance throughout churches large and small.
The art of creating stained glass windows is ancient known in the ages before re-
corded history began, say the editors of the Encyclopedia Americana. Yet the windows
themselves seem always new. As light plays upon the colors of the glass, the living beauty
of the windows is constantly renewed and reborn. Appropriately, the age-old yet' ever new
story of the. Nativity is a favorite subject for these windows. Through the centuries, artist
craftsmen have preserved the
spirit of the first Christmas,
in stained glass.
Thus for countless wor-
shippers this Christmastide,
the light that shines through
the stained glass windows of
their churches illuminates
the wonder of Christmas.
Why It Began
The "why" of using stained
glass windows in churches-
and secular buildings, too -
is simple and logical, Like all
windows, they're intended to
admit light and keep out
wind and weather.
Colored glass helps in con-
trolling both the amount and
the quality of light admitted
to buildings, And the corn-
-blnation of light and color
forms patterns appealing and
restful to the eye.
Traditionally, stained glass
windows complement the ar-
chitectural design of the
building where they appear.
ow It Began
The "how" of creating
tained glass windows is com-
plicated - in some respects
as difficult and time-consum-
ing as it was in the Middle
, Ages, although modern
methods and equipment do
give today's stained glass
artist certain advantages.
The rainbow-like effect of
the windows comes from
pieces of glass - sometimes,
hundreds of pieces - fitted
together and held together
with strips of lead.
Today's artists don't have
to make their own glass,
leads and pigments, That's
one advantage they enjoy
that was denied to the early
artist craftsman.
But they do have to
and work painstakingly, from
the beginning of a scale
drawing in precise colors
through the development of
actual-size paper patterns
and on to such final steps as
firing, glazing and cementing.
What It Shows
The art of staine'd glass
windows reflects nearly every
artistic style and movement
of the past several centuries,
including Romanesque, By-
zantine, Gothic, Renaissance,
Romantic and modern,
Until the late Gothic peri-
od, artists believed that a
stained glass window should
be decorative rather than
pictorial, With the Renais-
sance came a trend toward
illustration rather than de-
sign.
• In succeeding years, the
balance has shifted between
the traditionally decorative
and the more pictorial styles.
How It Continues
A relatively small band of
artists keeps t,he art of the
stained glass window alive,
In a discussion of stained
glass art in North and South
America, the Americana lists
some 24 artists working in
stained glass, in studios
throughout the United a
States, as well as others in
Canada, Mexico and South
America.
Among them are revival-
ists, who work in terms of
the earliest traditions of
stained glass. Other artists.
take • the contemporary ap-
proach, but their use of free
forms carries out the belief
that light and pattern, rath-
er than illustration, make a
picture in stained glass,
(By Norm)
Saturday, December 11th was
the day of the Senior Playdowns
being held in Mt. Forest. A rink
composed of J. Patterson, Sr.,
Royce Macaulay, C. Parker and
H. Merriman represented Sea-
forth Club in this event. They
no doubt were as happy to win
13 B playdown as we at home
were for them. Congratulations
boys, may you go to the top.
The lady curlers finished
their first draw on Tuesday after-
noon. The winning rink was
Lila Campbell, Mary Divok, Leah
Keuhl and Ann James with second
prize going to Helen Davies, Ann
Cunningham, Ispbell Smith and
Mary McMillan.
The business girls also fin-
ished their draw Tuesday even-
ing with two rinks being tied for
first placd: Grace Campbell,
Kay Sharpe, Helen Crocker,
Kathy Sommers will be playing
against Gwen Patterson, Marg
Willis, Ann Underwood, Sandra
Laverty for top place 'in this
draw.
Last week end a • rink of Dr.
P. Brady, Dr. F. Newland, Dr.
P. Walden and Dr. W. Harrett
travelled to Ottawa to play in
the Ontario Medical Bonspiel
coming home with second
prize in 8th Flight. Good show
boys.
We will have a team from our
club in the Britis Consuls cup
playdowns. However it was not
without a fight to see who
the entry would be as four teams
played off last Wednesday to
win the coveted Spot.Dpug.Riley,
G.Sholdice, J.Patterson Jr.,D.
McKay vs Gerald Smith, Bill
Lobb, G. Craig, Bob Fothering-
ham. (The winner being Doug.
Riley's rink).
Bob Wilson, Bill Camp-
bell Jr., Bill Roberton, Doug.
Rowcliffe vs Bob St. Marie,
G.Beuttenmiller,Dr.John Under-
wood, Garnet Crowe. (The winner
being Bob Wilson's rink).
/1 ' With a break of fifteen minutes
the two winners went at it again
and when the snow had settled,
it was the Wilson rink by a rock.
Friday night was the final
game of our mixed draw before
Christmas.
On Thursday night the high
teams were: 7 P.M. Steve Brown,
Mar j. Papple, Ted Cosford, Meta
McLaughlin; 9 P.M., Willard
Aiken, Marion Hulley, Robert
Wilson, Claudia Eastman.
Friday night top tears- ere:
7 P.M. Bill Ball, Betty Cardno,
Bill Roberton, Jane Cardno.
9 P.M. The two rinks who tied for
top place were Glen Chesney,
Norma Riley, John Underwood,
Peg Rowcliffe; Doug Riley,Gwen.
Patterson, Wilson Millson, Ann
Underwood. It is expected these
rinks will declare a winner be-
fore the next draw begins.
In Palmerston on Sunday the
13 B playdown was played. Bob
Wilson's rink represented our
club in the play-offs. They won'
two games and lost one but the
rink is still in contention for top
place.
Smiles • 4! *
A peace Corps girl returned
from Africa with voodoo charms
around her neck and a ring
through her nose. Her mother
cried, "No, No! I told you to
marry a, rich doctor!"
. Overjoyed father: happy peppy
Arrogant horse rider: -cocky
jockey
Humorous rabbit: funny bunny
Criminal shellfish: mobster
lobster
Doghouse: mutt hut
Teachers prefer teaching at
the elementary schools because
that's the only place where they
can be sure there will be room
to park their cars.
The troops were being taught
how to jump out of the plane.
"What if my parachute does not
open," cracked one rookie.
"That", said the instructor, ,(is
known as jumping to a con-
clusion".
USE
CHRISTMAS SEALS.
ITS A MATTER OF
LIFE AND BREATH. •
CHRISTMAS SEALS FIGHT
EMPHYSEMA, TUBERCULOSIS
AND OTHER RESPIRATORY
DISEASES R