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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1963-02-28, Page 12Sorry. Not This Time! Goalie Bill Flaming of the RCAF Clinton Thunderbolts is shown above kicking out a puck off the stick of J. Rousell of St. Jean in one of the many exciting plays witnessed in the double-bill at the camp, Saturday. Clinton's Muck Reading (4) moves in to cover Rousell, while the other Clinton players shown on the right are Newf Newport (12) Grant Meehan (13) and Robby Robertson (11). The Thunderbolts won the series by scores of 7-4 and 6-4 in two hard-hitting tilts witnessed by a large crowd of avid supporters. (RCAF Photo) Juveniles Deadlocked With Seaforth, Peewee Finals Several Players Missing In Loss Begin Monday NOW -FACE CAMP BORDEN each Eastern Finals RCAF Clinton Thunderbolts battled their Way late the finals for the Eastern Canada Training Command playoffs, Saturday, clipping RCAF St. Jean by scores of 7-4 and 6-4 in their two-game total point series, The Clinton squad will now meet Camp Borden, who nipped Centralia 4-3, for the right to enter the 'all-Canada finals against the Western representa- tive, Saturday's fixtures, which drew over 600 fans to the RCAF Clinton arena, were hard hitting affairs that provided plenty of excitement for the fans. While Clinton carried the majority of the play in both games, they had difficulty heating Terry MacGuigan, who played stellar hockey between the pipes for the visitors, He was also backed up by some fine defensive play by Tommy Bell, a burly defensive stalwart, who not only blocked many driving shots, but hand- - ed out several stiff body checks that slowed down a number of the Thunderbolts. However, the Clinton six won the series on their superior play, displaying fine positional hockey throughout most of the 120 minutes of bone crushing action. Post 7-4 Margin in Opener The Thunderbolts took a three-goal' lead on the series in the opening game, posting a 7-4 win in the morning opener. ' They jumped into a 1-0 lead at the 4:35 mark of the first period when Chris Christian rifled a low shot into the open corner past MacGuigan, finish- ing off a play with Robby Rob- ertson and Muck Reading. They upped the margin to two goals at the 12:31 mark when Don McLeod batted Bud Kelley's rebound into the cage. Clinton held the margin until the last four minutes of the contest when St. Jean came roaring back to knot the count on a pair of tallies by Len Jack- son, who accounted for all four goals by the visitors. The smooth skating captain took a pass from St. Laurent at the 16:44 mark and whipped a hard drive into the top corn- er past the out-stretched arms of Bill Flaming and came back in less than two minutes to knot the count on a similar shot on a play with Bell and Rousell. Take Lead in Second Penalties hurt the visitors in the middle frame as Clinton jumped into a 4-2 lead on a pair of power play goals with St. Jean players watching from the sin bin. St. Jean were serving a pen- alty to their goalies when Swiss with only five men. Final Is Hard-Hitting Affair Weatherby pushed Clinton into a 3-2 edge near the mid-way mark of the' stanza and Grant Meehan potted their fourth tally five minutes later with Rousell sitting out a minor penalty. Reading picked up an assist on both Clinton tallies, The final tally of the period, that gave Clinton their three- goal lead, was banged into the mesh by Jules Pedneault with less than two minutes remain- ing. St. Jean came roaring back in the final 20 minutes of play and whittled the lead to 5-4 in the first half of the game when Jackson potted his final two tal- lies. He scored his first at the 3:17 mark with Clinton's Jim. McEwan sitting out a penalty and his final marker came when his squad was playing a man short themselves at the 7:20 mark. However, Clinton regained their shooting eyes in the final half of the stanza and Ken For- syth banged in a pair of tallies to cap the win. He blinked the light on the first goal at the 13:12 mark on a play with Meehan and Mat- thews and the trio came back with only 15 seconds left in the game to beat MacGuigan on a nifty three-way passing play with the teams each playing SATURDAY AFTERNOON MOVIES At Clinton Legion Hall Leave the Kids at the Legion Show While You Shop in Clinton's Modern Uptown Business Section Saturday March 2 at 2:15 Doors open at 1.45 "The Nun Story" Kinsmen Club of Clinton again proudly present the World Famous DALE CARNEGIE COURSE YOU are invited to attend a FREE DEMONSTRATION on either Thursday or Friday Marti; 7 or 8 CoUncil Chaniber, Town Hall, Clinton 800 p.m: Learn to acquire confidence speck with ease before One or a thousand ; in-tprove your memory „ become a leader with the priceless knack of handling people step up vivo- ne,Wes ing marksman, picking up two markers, while single tallies came off the sticks of Bill Macs • Kay, Bruce Bingham and Bobs Spane, Hensall held the area six to a 14 tie in the first period and .Opened. up a 2-1 margin at the end of the aeeond. They exchanged goals in the final period and held the margin until the final minute of play when, Bingham moved up from defensive position to slide the puck into the net to send the game into the extra 1,0 minutes. . Henson started out quickly in an effort to knot the series and pick up a marker in the first minute of play, but Mast- ral Park bounced back • to pick up a pair of tallies and oust Hensall from further play. The Clinton lineup ist as fols lows: B. Bingham, G. MacKay, B. Peterson, S. Pierce, P. Me- Kenzie, D. Young, L. Prokopetz, W. Spears, D, Haspeck, M. .Sloh- ner, B. Spano, W, MacKay, K. Foote, B. Burnside, W. Morrow, P. Rousseau and A, MacDonald. WO1 Jack Reid coaches the squad, while WO2 Walter Mor- roW is manager. COMING EVENTS OUST ST. ',JEAN hunder o ts N the Office DEPOSIT Monday Tuesday Friday CLINTON Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday minimum Hours balance Evening 3%, UNION ACCOUNTS ACCOUNTS convenient COMMUNITY monthly 9:00 9:00 9:00 9:00 9:00 7:30 9:00 LIMItED on -for a.m. a.m. a.m. a.m. a.m. p.m. a.m. the to to to to to to to ‘47,f hi,t, working CREDIT 5:30 5:00 12:30 5:00 5:30 9:00 12:30 4.---...m. .eo ,so p , ±...,- man p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. Deilcraft Chassis Garrard Matched ELECTROHOME :-.-b- ..V44 STEREO ,, ,, ,,,,,, ,,,- Iv ..,, ,, $4,,, „„,„,,, „..; ,,:,:„------- f 01,1, -0-;E:-A4., Hi Fi , 7 ,.,_ , • -,1,tovr. 7 ., . , .. .. - . L. tef,104004,g, ..,„ il ' ,. , ., 14'.4. • . WO ioned by 31/2 " tweeters. you sit, hand or AM-FM Speaker Changer. Only with or 10" of with with TLYb ly MODEL correct, degree no craftsmen. power, Stereo woofers sound built oAn.1.-F.M. matter hand fash- and 2 where system. AM, FM Multiplex in iS Cabinet—Acoustically ” CAMILLE"' GALBRAITH furniture -2 True stereo, 360 20 watts built-in stereo. 2-3841 System $429.95 sr... master wired, with optional HU ', FRAMED PICTUR ES , SCENERY in mountain or lake design and religious, in dark frame size ... .. . .... $9.95 ea. RELIGIOUS SCENERY, FLOWER BRASS PLAQUES frame frames finish• designs . PICTURES in light _ size .... . . $4.95 ANIMAL and PRINTS in natural size .15 PLAQUES with antique and 2 flower holders $S,75 in plaster, marble $6.00 ea. ea. set pr. The Adastral Park bantams, in their first year in organized hpokey, battled their way into the WOAA "D" finals, when they ousted Hensel' in two stas night games in their best-of- three set. The Clinton kids took the first game by a 10-8 margin in a wide-open game at the station arena and came back to pick up .hard-fought .5,4 win in .over- time in. Hensall,. In the first game, Paul Mc- Kenzie paced the attack, de spite the feet he never picked up any goals. However, he drew assists on nine of the tal- lies hammered in by his .mates, Playing left wing on the first line with Bill MacKay and Ken Foote, he aided MacKay in five markers and. picked up as- sists on' all four of Foote's. mar- kers. The other tally was recorded by Melvin Hohner, A Real Thriller The return engagement in Hensall was a real cliff hanger as the Adastral Park fought back several times - to knot the count before recording their overtime margin. Paul McKenzie was the lead- With several players home fighting the flu bug, Clinton Juveniles had only nine players fighting Seaforth, Monday, and returned home with a 10-3 loss. The defeat evened the best- of-three WOAA series at one game each. The Seaforth squad wasted little time in jumping to the attack against the short-hand- the first period with a 4-1 edge. ed locals as they came out of They doubled the margin to 8-2 in the middle frame and coasted to their win in the third by outscoring Clinton 2-1 in the final 20 minutes of play. Wayne Rau packed the attack first and one in the second. with three tallies two in the Ron Rochon and Paul Rau added a pair each to the win- ning cause, while single mark- ers came off the sticks of Bob Papple, Ken Bedard and Paul Dietz. ,CLINTON PUBLIC HOSPITAL W L Pts Untouchables 37 29 86 Lively Ones 37 29 85 Flintstones 32 34 73 Defenders 28 38 64 High single, ladies, Marie Van Baaren, 29a. Bowlers over 200; Mrs. A. Amy, Jane Van Baaren, Mrs. Olga O'Sullivan, Mrs. C. Powell, Bonnie Thomason, Nel- lie Bette. BLUEWATER-BAYFIELD W L Pts. Minnows 34 26 72 Crabs 33 :i7 71 Sharks 29 31 61 Suckers 25 35 52 High single, ladies, Kay Gem- einhardt, 279; men, Roy Tel- ford, 212: high triple, ladies, Barbara Teltord, 64.8; men, Tom Penhale, 561; high average, ladies, Barbara Telford, 216; men, Tom Penhale, 187. TUCKERSMITH MIXED W L Pts. Mustangs, 38 22 91 Chevies 33 27 76 GMC's 31 29 72 Fords 18 42 41 Men's high single, Bill Roger- son, 250; high triple, Bill Rog- erson, 666; ladies' high single, Mrs, Vic Hargreaves, 231; high tripleaMrs, Viv Hargreaves, 585. SENIOR MEN'S LEAGUE W 1-• HT Pts. Moaners 12 6 4 28 Teatoters „. ...... 9 9 3 21 Pockers 9 9 3 21 Complainers 6 12 2 14 igh single, Murray Johnston, 311; high triple, Murray John- ton, 717; high average, Dave allman, 209. LONDESBORO MEN W L HT Pts. Stars 36 24 11 86 Sputniks 31 29 0 71 Roelaets 27 33 9 63 Comets ,.,„..„..„.„ 26 34 8 60 -ligh single, Cliff Saundercoek, 76; high triple, Cliff Saunders oek, 825; high average, Glen arter, 215. The Clinton scoring was div- ided among Bruce and John Cooper and Laurie Colquhoun, each with a single tally. Rally in First Game Rallying on their home ice on Saturday, the locals had a narrow escape before posting a 10-6 win in the series opener. They were trailing 5-1 at the end of the first period, but came out roaring in the final two frames to record the win. They potted five goals in the last four minutes of play in the second period and hammered in three quickies in less than two minutes in the opening of the final frame. Bruce Cooper paced the at- tack for the locals with five tallies, while Bruce Livermore added a pair. Sigletons were picked up by Laurie Colquhoun, Don Yeo and Ken Osborne. W L HT Pts Clubs 38 19 1.3 89 Stars 32 24 12 77 Cleaners 31 26 13 75 Imps .... ........... „ 30 27 9 69 Drivers 26 30 9 62 Budgies 26 31 8 60 Dobbers 26 31 8 60 Hearts 19 38 5 43 Ladies, high single, Beulah Wonch, 286; triple, Thelma Jones, 667; average, Thelma Jones, 179; men, high single, Harold Black, 330; triple, Paul Draper, 764; average, Howie Grealis, 210. MEN'S MAJOR INTER-TOWN Pts. Itchy Six, Exeter ...„ .170 Chapman TV, Goderich 154 Cloud 9, Clanton '34 Brophy Bros. Wingham 117 Jim's Selects, Clinton 114 Little Bowl, Goderich 112 G-Tuckey, Exeter 95 Dominion Hotel, Zurich 79 JUNIOR LEAGUE W L HT Pts Tigers 31 17 14 76 Yanks 26 22 14 66 Head Pins 25 23 14 64 Wonders 16 32 6 38 Girls, high single, Pat Rey- nolds, 266; double, Pat Rey- nolds, 448; average, B. Stevens, 160; boys, high single, Wayne Dupee, 309. double, Bob Liv- ermore, 530; average, John Cooper, 194. CLINTON, BLYTH, AUBURN W L HT 1133t,s a Untouchables 59 7 21 Jolly Jills 36 30 14 86 In-BetWecns 33 33 11 77 Jim DarclYs 33 33 11 77 Dare Devils 287 3389 , 10 6636 Quitters 27 Blows Unlimited 28 38 6 52 Twisters 23 43 6 52 High single, Lucille Arthur, 300; triple Phyllis tMcIsaac, 743 (243, 271, 229); average, Phyllis Mc- Isaac and Deanna Coutts, 213, The Clinton Recreation Com- mittee is sponsoring a golf clinic on the evenings of March 13, March 27, April 3 and April 10. Jim Graham will be respon- sible for this with the very able assistance of Mr. Fred Hulls, of the Clinton-Bayfield Golf Club, and Mr. Ken Doig, Sea- forth. The sessions will be held at the Legion Hall each evening at 8 p.m. There will be instruction of rules, etiquette and how to play the game. There will also be a golf film each evening. You are welcome—young or old, male or female, profession- al or beginner. Cost? Only 50 cents for the four nights, IOOF-REBEKAH LEAGUE lets. Riley's Rockets 105 Holland's ........ „ .... . 91 Taylor' Tornadoes „ 87 Fremlin's Fliers 74 Cantelon's Comets ...... 71 Beattie's Bombers 66 Tolly's Twisters 66 Harris's Hornets 56 0 AUXILIARY PLANS MARCH MEETING The Clinton Hospital Auxil- iary will Meet, at the nurses' residence on Tuesday, March 5 at 8:00 p.m. The night cap of the Eastern Canada semi-finals turned out to be a rugged contest and six Clinton players had to be aid- ed off the ice with a variety of cuts and injuries. However, they all came back after receiving medical treat- ment and aided their squad to a 6-4 win, The Thunderbolts jumped into a 1-0 lead at the 2:58 mark of the opening stanza when Jules Pedneault was credited with a "fluke" marker. The Clinton puckster lifted a high shot into the St. Jean end and as MacGuigan came out to slap the slow roller away, the puck rolled under his stick into the net. St. Jean came back to knot the count only three minutes later when Tremblay was left unmolested in front of the net and whipped a hard shot into the corner before Flaming had a chance to move on the play. The teams battled back and forth for most of the remainder of the period, but Clinton took control in the last five minutes to bang in a pair of tallies and they were never headed after that, Bill Keough picked up the first marker on a hard drive from just inside the blueline and Mae MacFarlain rinished off a play with Robertson in the last minute to give Clinton a 3-1 edge, St, Jean Rally The visitors wasted little time in cutting into the lead, how- ever, as they rattled in a pair of goals in the first two minut- es of the middle frame to knot the count at three goals each. Once again, little Len Jack- son was the marksman on both goals, beating Flaming on two blazing drives from about 20 feet in front of the net. For the remainder of the period the teams played steady defensive hockey and neither squad managed another tally as they opened play in the third with the score knotted at 3-3. Clinton broke the, tie at the 4:51. mark of the final when Bill Keough blinked the light and the homesters took a 5-3 lead three minutes later on a marker by Len O'Conner.. St. Jean whittled the margin to 5-4 at the 15:32 mark on Tremblay's second goal of the night, but Mac MacFarlain an- swered it in less than 30 sec- onds to pull the game out of reach of the visitors. The Clinton lineup was as follows: Bill Flaming, Tom Stewart, Chris Christian, Muck Reading, Bing Binkle, Jim McEwan, Don McLeod, Matty Matthews, Ken Forsyth, Robby Robertson, Newf Newport, Grant Meehan, Bud Kelley, Swiss Weatherby, Mac MarFarlain, Jules Ped- neault, Minnie Menard, Len O'Conner, Bill Keough. Coach of the squad is W/C H. C Vinnicombe. Than., Feb..2a — BINGO in Legion Hell, Kirk Street p,M. 15 rnula. games for i„ game for 825; .Share the s Wealth gamm Jackpot $57 in _57 numbers, No, door prize, Admission, 50c, SING() at Lucknow Legion Hall, every Thursday night, starting Feb. 28 at 2:45 p.m. 12 garnes, at 210; 4 „share-the- wealth games with a combined jackpot of $60 in 55 calla, 9-10b c A NOR LI- rl—ucilre Party scheduled at Varna Hall Under the auspices of LOL .on Friday, Mardi 1. :has been postponed until Friday, March 8, setoroay; :March g Card Party, Orange, sponsors LOBA, 8:30 pan, .Byeryone wel- come, 9b Tuesday, March 5 — BiNc40. In Fish and Game Club, Jackpot $57 in 57 numbers, 1.5 regular games; 3 share-the-wealth gam- es; 1 $25 special game. Six door prizes. 8,30 p,tp. ltfb Saturday,- March 9 — OBS bazaar, used clollbing, baking, white elephant. Council chamb- er, Clinton, 2 p,rri. 9b aaturday, March 23 — Bake sale, Clinton Town Hall, spon- sors: Varna UCW, 3 P.M. 9anc.112b S300 SPECIALS '55 Chrysler Sedan '56 Dodge Sedan , '55 Plymouth Sedan '56 Plymouth Sedan See "Pere" on these. They are his to move this week- end. See "Steve". Get a , really good buy. His Specials, '58 Pontiac 6 Sedan in excellent condition throughout. Only $1295 '57 Volkswagen A Buy at $695 Brownie took these in before going on holidays. He wants to clean up the deals. He's in a selling mood, so make a reasonable offer! '59 Chrysler Sedan Now $1675 '61 Chev. Station Wagon Now $2495 Sure — we've several other good late models waiting for a new own- er. Look us over before you buy elsewhere. You'll get a good car, fair trade allowance for your present car, very easy terms if 'needed. We are open evenings. SERVICE SPECIAL. FREE Muffler Inspection. Genuine G.M. Muffler.— for 54 - 62 Chev. or Pointiac only. Installed Price 9.95 (Clamps, etc. extra) LORNE BROWN MOTORS LTD. Your Friendly Chevrolet- Oldsmobile & Envoy Dealer. Ontario Street—CLINTON Phone HU 2.9321 Page 12—Clinton News.Reeprd--,Thuts• ,rob. 28, 1963 Mastro! Park .Bantams Oust liens011f Meet Northern, Winners for Crown. Challenge Hockey Match Clinton Lions Arena To-Night — 8:30 p.m. Thursday. February 28 CLINTON KINSMEN V • The Maple Leafs downed the Canadiens Saturday morning in Kinsmen peewee action at Clin- ton Lions Arena. Scoring for the Leafs were Cam Colquhoun with three goals and one assist and Bill Stirling getting one goal and two assists. Wes Chambers assisted by Rick Fremlin stroked in the Cana- diens lone tally. Monday evening the Cana- iens went down' 5-3 against the Rangers. Star of the game was Rangers' Gregg Burns, blasting in three markers. Scott Mac- aulay and Mike Graham notch- ed the other two Ranger goals, Wes Chambers, Rick Fremlin and Larry May came up with singles for the Canadiens. Saturday morning at 11:00, the Rangers and Leafs tangle and Monday evening will be the first of a three game final be- tween the first and second place teams. I FIVE-PIN BOWLING NEWS I Rec. Committee CLINTON MIXED LEAGUE Clinic F®r Golfers