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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1963-02-21, Page 12ELECTROHOME STEREO Hi Fi .4024.0530:Mff CONWAY MODEL Del craft Cabinet—Acoustically correct, hand 'fash- ioned by master furniture craftsmen. Matched Speaker System-2 10" woofers and 2 31/2 " tweeters. True stereo, no matter where you sit, with optional 360 degree sound system. Chassis hand wired, 20 watts of power, AM, FM or AM-FM with built-in stereo. Gerrard Changer. $340 or with Stereo Multiplex Only 7.7a built in or $31935 with A. n M.-F.M. oly GALBRAIT HU 2-3841 houn, Bruce Cooper, Don Yea and Randy Glew. Squad Lose To Wingham Wingham proved to be the big stumbling block for the bantams and midgets as they each lost in the final game of their best-of-three series. In each case, the locals were beaten in both games played in Wingham. The bantams were ousted Monday night, while the mid- gets were clipped 8-5 on Tues- day. In the loss, Brad Dutot pick- ed up a pair of goals, while Bill Hutchinson, George Sch- nubb and Bob Batkin had a single each. Peewees Lose WOAA Series To Exeter Six Clinton Kinsmen pee wees were quickly ousted from WOAA action this week, re- ceiving two drubbings from Exeter in their best-of-three set. Exeter took the opener in the series by an 11-3 margin in Clinton on Wednesday and came back to wrap up the ser- ies in two straight with an 11-4 verdict in Exeter, Friday. John Loader, son of coach, Red Loader, paced his team's attack by scoring eight of the 22 goals in the series. Ricky Weber picked up an- other four, while Barry Bayn- ham, Bill Fairbairn and Frank deVries had three each. Clinton's top sniper was Cam Colquhoun, who scored six of his team's seven goals. He accounted for all four goals in the 11-4 loss and pick- ed up two in the other tilt. Only other local sniper was Scott Macaulay. TUCKERSMITH MIXED Mustangs 37 20 89 Chevies 32 25 74 GMCs 29 28 67 Fords 16 41 36 Men's high single, Ed Lay- ton 308; high triple, Ed Layton 656; ladies high single, Mrs. Stewart Broadfoot 199; high triple, Mrs. Fred McGregor 565. Canucks, Rangers Post Victories In Pee Wee Action In Kinsmen Peewee action last week two games were play- ed with the Canadiens winning the first 4-1 over the Rangers. For the Canadiens it was Wes Chambers denting the twine three times, twice assist- ed by Rick Fremlin and one solo effort. Mike Graham picked up the Rangers single, unassisted. The second game saw the Rangers and Leafs end in a 2-2 deadlock with Cam Colquhoun scoring twice for the Leafs. Saturday will see the Leafs and Canadiens meeting at 11 a.m. and Monday at 7:30 p.m. the Rangers and Canadiens tangle. O Of about 115 different spec- ies of maple in the world, Can- ada has only 10. The maple is most abundant in eastern Asia, particularly in the Him- alayan Mountains and in China. 4 '14Urg Y,",r , 0 . f;PI 0 •;'Yo.`;•-. iF Bowlers Vie for Easvern C nada PloRors Three Clinton ladies will participate in the district entry in the Eastern Canada finals of the Ontario Bowling Proprietors' Association in Islington in the near future. Mrs. Doug (Phyllis) Mclsaac, centre, who topped the district ladies, will compete in the singles division, while Mrs. Joe (Betty) Daer, left and Miss Kay Sharp, right, will be members of the mixed entry. (News-Record Photo) Canada charhpionships at Fleet- way 40 Lanes, London on April 16-17. 01150111.121111111111111111r OUT THEY We must keep on selling our USED CARS to make room for our new Spring stock. If your credit is good, a small down payment will put you behind the wheel. Look these O.K. Specials over. 62 Chev. Bel Air Hardtop 61 Chev. Station Wagon 60 Pontiac Hardtop 60 Vauxhall 4 Sedan 60 Chev. Station Wagon 59 Pontiac 8 Sedan 59 Vauxhall 6 Sedan 59 Chrysler Sedan 58 Pontiac Sedan 58 Plymouth Station Wagon 57 Volkswagen 57 Olds. Sedan 56 Dodge Sedan 55 Plymouth Sedan Try us today for a good deal on a vehicle fully gone over to meet O.K. specifications. Open evenings for your convenience. LORNE BROWN MOTORS LTD. Your Friendly Chevrolet- Oldsmobile & Envoy Dealer. Ontario Street--CLINTON Phone HU 2-9321 Be Prepared for Any Change hi Economy . . . SAVE today in your CLINTON COMMUNITY CREDIT UNION LIMITED where 74 of your friends and neighbours opened new acounts last month. Musical Instruments GUITARS Harmony -- large size, brown and yellow shaded $59.00 Stella -- medium size, mahog- any finish $36.00 Stella — small size, antique grey $27.50 "DIXIE BANJO-UKE $22.50 "ISLANDER" UKELELE, plastic $4.95 DE ORMOND IVI5CROPHONE SET $22.50 HARMONICAS — in single, reed, double reed and Chromatic $1.00 to $22.00 Toy Violins, Banjo, Accordion, Jewsharp, etc. McEwan s CLINTON ONTARIO Seven Clinton Bowlers in Eastern Canada Finals Dave Reid Wins Singles Bowling Championship Mrs. Douglas (Phyllis) Mc- Isaac, Adastral Park, RCAF Station Clinton, bowled her way to the zone singles champ- ionship in Mitchell on Sunday. She will now compete again- st the champions from 21 other Clinton Lady Tops Zone Bowler& Two Other Qualify for Team I FIVE-PIN BOWLING NEWS I champion, Ron Burbridge, Clin- ton, placed seventh this year. Reid was the tenth place bowl- er last year. Reid will represent the zone in the eastern Canada finals in Islington on March 16 and 17. He will compete with champ- ions from 21. zones. Ten Clinton men took part in Sunday's tourney and four won spots on the ten-man team to represent the zone, Winning places on the men's team were Joe Daer, who plac- ed fifth, with scores of 313, 209, 252, 285, 289, 198, 200, 197, 241 and 287 for a total of 2471; and Burbridge whose scores were, 252, 315, 258, 165, 181, 187, 241, 213, 291 and 251 for a total of 2354. Reid's •championship scores were: 328, 223, 340, 264, 234, 226, 230, 265, 258 and 269, total 2637, Placing tenth to win a place on the zone mixed team was Eugene Garrow, who bowled 229, 223, 302, 261, 173, 204, 230, 261, 173 and 246, total 2302. Jim Bossence, 2342 and Bill Anderson, 2319, both of Strat- ford, are the other men on the mixed team. Bossence also rolled the high single of the tourney, 380. Along with Daer and Bur- bridge on the zone men's team, are John Dewys, St. Marys, 2528; Bill Bannerman, St. Mary, 2498; Gene Baker, Goderich, 2489, and Franz Eckert, Strat- ford, 2379. Other Clinton bowlers who competed in the zone elimina- tions, and their scores are: Hal Rees, 2224; Don Switzer, 2188; Doug Mclsaac, 2178; Howie Grealis, 2069; Bob Chalifour, 2042 and Frank Burns, 2032. (continued from Page 1) This weekend some 100 ban- tam and midget hockey play- ers, coaches, parents and volun- teer drivers from the Canadian community are visiting Dear- born in the second half of a heartwarming, unique interna- tional "hockey exchange" pro- gram. Housed in the homes of their Dearborn players and adult counterparts, the Clintonites are enjoying a few days of hockey shoptalk, and visits to such places as Greenfield Vill- age, the Henry Ford Museum, Dearborn's impressive Youth Centre and artificial ice rink system and other nearby points of interest. Along with 100 hosts from Dearborn, the visitors are tak- ing in today's Red Wing hockey game. Despite living in Can- ada's hockey belt, it will be the first time many of the Clinton delegation have ever seen an NHL contest, and truly is a trip highlight. The first. half of the ex- change started January 25 when two teams from'the Dear- born Recreation Department program, namely the midget Dearborn Bruins and the ban- tam St. Sebastian squad, start- ed a winding 180-mile drive northward to take part in Clin- ton's "Minor Hockey Day" an- nually held in conjunction with Canada's "Minor Hockey Week" observance. For the Bruins, coached by Andy Petrere and sponsored by VFW Post 1494, it marked the fifth consecutive year they have been spotlighted in the "Hockey Day" program vvrapup. It was St. Sebastian's second trip. Upon arrival, the 30 boys HOSPITAL Lively Ones Untouchables , Flintst ones Defenders 27 36 62 High single, Mrs. W. Cald- well, 232; bowlers over '200, Betty Middel, Mrs, L. Childs, Mrs. A. Amy, Torn Steep, Mrs. C. Powell, Mrs. W. Phinney, Fred McDonald. CLINTON, BLYTH, AUBURN W L HT Pts. Untouchables „.., 56 7 20 132 Jolly Jills 33 30 13 79 In-Betweens 32 31 11 75 Jim Dandys 31 32 10 72 Quitters „... .. . ...... , 26 37 9 61 Dare Devils 26 37 9 61 Blows Unlimited „ 28 35 6 56 Twisters .....— 23 40 6 52 High single, 'Mary Haggitt 287; high triple, Kay,Sharp 735 (249, 232. 254); hig aver- age, Deanna Coutts 216, BLUEWATER-BAYFIELD W L Pts. Minnows ........ „, ,.„, 32 25 68 Crabs..... ....... ......„ 31 26 67 Sharks .......... 28 29 59 Suckers 23 84 50 Ladies high single, Barbara Telford, 300; triple, Barbara Telford, 623, aevrag e Barbara Telford, 208; men's high single, Walter Turner; 278' triple, Gor- don Scotchrner, 576; average, Gordon Seotchrrier, 192. zones in the Ontario Bowling Proprietors Association eastern Canada finals in Islington on March 16 and 17. She bowled 2566 in the ten- game zone playoffs against 40 other ladies. Her scores by frames were: 220, 240, 385, 245, 240, 263, 224, 208, 309, 232, Her high single of 385 was five pins better than the top man bowler in the zone. By placing ninth and tenth, two other Clinton ladies, Mrs. Joe (Betty) Daer and Miss Kay Sharp, won places on the zone mixed team. Mrs. Daer's scores were: 219, 170, 238, 221, 272, 229, 263, 150, 188, 174 for a ten-game total of 2124. Miss Sharp was only three pins behind, scoring 233, 271, 255, 207, 163, 228, 188, 185, 152, 239 for a total of 2121. Ten Clinton ladies competed in the zone tourney at Mitchell The six ladies who will com- pete at Islington as this zone's ladies team, (and their scores at Mitchell) are: Jean Cook, Stratford, 2336; Mrs. Lyle Ban- nister, Goderich, 2316; Marion Meyers, Mitchell, 2275; Mrs. Hugh McGillivray, Mitchell, 2256; Lorraine Harmer, Mit- chell, 2219 and Mrs. Verna Hube, Mitchell, 2196. Also on the mixed team with Mrs. Daer and Miss Sharp are Jean Cooper, Kincardine, 2173 and Peg Hunter-Duvar, Exeter, 2096. Four ladies and three men make up the zone mixed team. Winners of the eastern Can- ada finals compete in the all- COMING EVENTS Saturday, Feb. 16—LOL card party in the Orange Hall at 8:30 p.m. Everyone welcome. 8b Thursday, Feb. 21 — BINGO in Legion Memorial Hall, Kirk Street at 8.30 p.m. 15 regular games for $5; 1 game for $25; 3 Share - the -Wealth games: Jackpot $56 in 56 numbers. No door prize. Admission 50c. Tuesday, Feb. 26 — Pancake Supper, Trinity Parish Hall, Bayfield, 5-7 p.m., auspices Wo- men's Auxiliary. Children under 12 yrs., 35c; adults, 65c, 8b Tuesday, Feb. 26 — BINGO in Fish and Game Club. Jackpot $56 in 56 numbers, 15 regular games; 3 share-the-wealth gam- es; 1 $25 special game. Six door prizes. 8.30 p.m. ltfb Wednesday, Feb. 27—Annual meeting, Clinton Citizens' Hor- ticultural Society, Council Chamber, 8 p.m. Guest speak- er, Rev. H, A. Funge. Demon- stration on flower arrangement. Also slides by C. HI Epps. Everyone welcome. Admission free. Door prize. 8b Friday, March 1 — World Day of Prayer Service, Wesley- Willis United Church, 3 p.m, Guest speaker, Mrs. Frank Fingland. Girls service, 4:30 p.m. in the church. 8p With Clinton's midgets, ban- tams and pee wees all sidelined in WOAA play this week, the Legion juveniles are the only team left in the running for district laurels, The high-flying juvenile six commence their playoffs this Saturday when they tackle Sea- forth in the Exit game of a best-of-three set. Seaforth ousted Wingham to advance to the group finals. Game time for the Saturday night fixture is 8.15 and the game will be played in Clinton. With the long layoff, the ju- veniles have kept in shape by tackling the powerful Hensall- Zurich Combines, :league champ- ions in the junior "D" category. The Comibnes, who went to the all-Ontario finals last year, had to go all out before stop- ping the Clinton juvenile squad 14-10 last Wednesday night. Page 12—Clinton News-Record—Thurs., Feb, 21, 1963 Three Minor Puck Squads Ousted, Juveniles Open Set With Seaforth Four Clint n Btowlers Going t Eastern Canada Finals Placing four men on the ten-man team which will represent this Western Ontario zone in Eastern Canada finals of the Bowling Proprietors Association, is a record in itself. 22 zones will bowl off at Plantation Lanes, Islington, on March 16, and 17. The zone finals ,were held at "Red" Scott's automatic lanes here, Sunday, with 47; bowlers competing .from eight towns. The Clinton bowl- ers, from the left are,' Joe Daer, who finished fifth, will bowl on the zone men's team; Dave Reid, who finished in top spot will represent the zone in the singles finals; Eugene Garrow, finished tenth and will bowl with the zone mixed team, and Ron Burbridge, last year's singles champion, who finished seventh this year will bowl on the zone men's team. (News-Record Photo) Aiding the win were three graduates from the Clinton minor ranks, who have been instrumental in helping the Hensall-Zurich crew end their regular season with only one loss. The three local players are Ron Livermore, Paul Draper and Bill Murney, Bill Shaddick, who won the junior scoring title for the sec- ond year in a row, showed the local fans how he has earned the title, picking up four goals in the win. Earl Wagner also picked up four, while Bill Murney added a pair. Single tallies came off the sticks of Paul Draper, Ron Livermore and Craig Chapman. Bob Livermore, Borden Mc- Rae and John Cooper each had a pair for Clinton, while singles were notched by Don Colqu- For the second successive year a Clinton bowler is singles champion of the local zone of the Ontario Bowling Propriet- ors Association. Dave Reid, Erie Street, bowl- ed 2637 in the ten-game tourney at "Red" Scott's Automatic Bowling Lanes, Victoria Street, on Sunday. He was competing against 47 keglers from Strat- ford, Kincardine, Listowel, St. Marys, Mitchell, Exeter, Gode- rich and Clinton. Last year's zone singles Clinton Kegler Plays Saturday On TV Matches Sport fans will have the op- portunity to sit down and watch one of Clinton's top bowlers perform on- CKNX TV on Sat- urday at 6.45 p.m. Joe Daer won the right to enter the TV series by beating seven other top Clinton keglers in a special match at the Clin- ton Automatic Bowling Lanes recently. Daer came through with a sparkling 1,300 performance in five games to win the honor. Sponsored by the Carling Brewery Company, the series will be staged every Saturday night with bowlers from 12 oth- er bowling lanes competing. Daer's match this week pits him against Bob Shrubb, Han- over, in a one-game test. The winner of the tourna- ment, which will be completed on May 1, will be given the op- portunity to bowl on the CBC series at the O'Connor Bowl, Toronto, and he will also win a trophy and a cash prize. The betting public would be well advised to place their money on Daer this week, as he is expected to come up with at least a 324 performance, compared to Shrubb's 155 ef- fort. Ed Note — The match was bowled last week in OWen Sound and the film'only will be shown on this Saturday's feat- ure, and the above prediction is more than just a guess. Clinton Highlighted In NHL Program, Youth Visits Red Wing Dressing Room from both teams were whisked away to homes of the boys they were to meet on the ice in Saturday's featured games in a nine-game card. After get-acquainted sessions at their "new homes", the boys prompt- ly were re-united as special guests at an evening banquet. Come Saturday morning, the Dearborn players were given full use of the Clinton Lions Arena for a morning workout. Local coaches were on hand to offer skating and shooting tips and to run Canadian-style drills in fundamentals. "This is one of the trip's ironies," laughs Petrere. "They treat us like kings, feed us, house us, drill us and then go out that night and try to knock the stuffing out of us." Clintonites who have watch- ed the Bruins four previous visits readily agree that the gap ' between the Clinton and Dearborn brands of hockey is narrowing. The other story in the pro- gram was devoted to welcoming the Clinton crew to the hockey game. It finished off with, "Welcome Clinton! We trust you will enjoy the game." Luckiest fellow on the trip was Borden McRae, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ken McRae. Through his mother's connec- tion with Detroit .coach and manager Sid Abel, he was ad- mitted to the Red Wing dress- ing room prior to their appear- ance to start the game. However, all the Clinton bri- gade returned home boasting an extremely good time at Dear- born and have already com- menced plans to make the trip again next year. IOOF-REBEKAH LEAGUE (Standing as of Feb. 13) Pts. Riley's Rockets 100 Holland's Hurricanes 89 Taylor's Tornadoes 85 Cantelon's Comets 69 Fremlin's Fliers ....... 69 Beattie's Bombers 61 Tally's Twisters 61 Harris's Hornets 54 Ladies high single, Jean Col- quhoun, 300; triple, Cieta Hol- land, 670; gent's high single, Bob Emmerson, 361; triple, Bob Emmerson, 809, HOMEMAKERS BOWLING Standing: 1—Try Harris 67; 2—The Astro-Nettes 60; 3--The Dyna-Soars 57; 4—The Sweet Peas 52; 5—The Satellites 51; 6—The Comets 51; 7—The Met- eors 47: 8—The Blowers 38; 9—The Real McCoys 37; 10— The Go-Getters 30. High single, Shirley Saund- ers 287; high average, Ann Prokopetz 203; high triple, Shir- ley Saunders 657; high learn triple, Real McCoys 2746. Scores over 200: Shirley Saunders 287, 212; Mary Mc- Coy 283; Ann Prokopetz 259, 200; Marion Reles 229; Gladys Bakke 223; Ilene Shultz 221; Lillian Watkins 217; Marcelle Cyr 212, 200; jean Greer 210, 209; June Sayman 209; Lins Hill 208; Noreen Cote 204; E& na Burnside 203. LEAGUE W L Pts. 37 26 85 34 29 79 30 33 68 OPEN BOWLING Monday, Tuesday and Friday Nights 7.00 -- 9.00 p.m. CLINTON AUTOMATIC BOWLING LANES Phone HU 2.7711 For Reservations