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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1963-03-28, Page 12a 6.1 margin in the first 1.0 minutes of the game as the Clinton. squad had trouble set- ting their defence into action on the large ice surface. The locals managed to shave the lead to 6-3 by the end of the opening stanza and pulled to within two goals in the mid-. dle of the .second, but Hespeler came roaring back in the final 20 minutes to sink five tallies and pull the game well out of reach of their guests. Action in the game was hot and heavy and the squads split a total of six majors for fisti- cuffs. Don Lockwood, Otto Smale and Bruce Cooper picked up the five minute majors for the locals. Barry Auliffe was the scoring leader for the winners, blinking the light five times behind Don Members of the Dutch eom, innnity in the area had an .op- porttinity to meet the two Hu.- ren Candidates for the April 8 election when they were guests et the Christian Reformed Ch- urch in Clinton, Wednesday. The meeting had been called to let the potential members hear some of t h e particular problems of the church mein, bera, John. Hoytema chaired t h e meeting, and despite the fact the weather was very adverse, a good crowd was on hand. Elston Cardiff a n d Gordon McGaven appeared separately at the meeting, as it was not in the form of a debate, but was for the two to present some of their platform policies and 'to discuss problems par- ticular to the church members. The members of the audience questioned Cardiff as to the reason why their Christian Labour Association could not receive certification from the Canadian government. They pointed out they had been told it was opposed on the grounds of discrimination in regard to the religious impli- cations of the Association. However, they noted that some of the unions they were asked to subscribe to were against some of the standards of their church, and were in fact discriminating against thein in this regard. Cardiff reported he knew very little abut the situation, but promised to look into the matter. McGavin, who had visited Holland in the fall of 1961 re- ported he had enjoyed hiS stay Galbraith Radio & T Phone HU 2-3841 Clinton _Did You Know? ,,dir bN NOT EVERYONE NEEDS TO BORROW, BUT MOST CERTAINLY EVERYONE NEEDS TO SAVE CLINTON COMMUNITY CREDIT UNION LIMITED Page 12—Clinton News-Record—Thurs., March 28, 1963 Candidates Address Duith Group,. Questioned About Union Opposition in that country and recounted some of the anecdotes of that trip. During his short talk he ex- plained that unemployment in Canada could be cut drastically if every small business could hire only one more person. He spoke briefly on the farm improvement loan program, and said that while he thought it was a good idea in one way, he was against too much credit being granted any group. McGavin told the audience there were 15 men running on the ticket of the communist party in Canada, and noted he was very happy there were none in the Huron riding, Both candidates chatted eas- ily and in a friendly manner and between speakers enjoyed light refreshments. o. COMING EVENTS Thurs., March 28 — 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 $55.00 in 55 numbers. No door prize, Admission 50c, Friday, March 29 — Euchre, Varna Hall, 8:30 p.m., sponsor- ed by LOL. Draw for special prizes. Ladies please bring lunch. Admission 50 cents. 13b Saturday, March 30 — Card party in Orange Hall, sponsors LOBA, 8,30 p.m. Everyone wel- come, 13b Saturday, March 30 — Bake Sale, town hall, 2:30 to 5 p,m. Candy and baked goods, Draw for cake. Auspices Ladies Aux- iliary to Guides and Brownies. Tuesday, April 2 — 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, April 3—Clinton Kinettes present their annual fashion show, "Spring at Last", commentated by Valy Smith. Clinton Public School auditor- ium. Showings at 7:00 and 9:00 p.m: Admission $1.00. Draws and lunch. Tickets available from any Kinette 12-3b Friday, April 5 —Dance at Londesboro Hall, sponsored by the Canadian Order of For- esters. Dancing from 10:00 to 1:00 to Elgin Fisher's orchestra. Lunch booth, Admission 75c. Everyone welcome. 13-14b Sat., April 6 — Giant rum- mage sale, council chambers, auspices WA, RCAF Station, 1 to 4 p.m. 12b-13x Saturday, April 6 — Giant rummage sale, used clothing, miscellaneous articles, St. And- rew's Presbyterian Church, 1.00 p.m. Auspices Madeleine Lane Auxiliary. 11-14b Sunday, April 28 — Wesley- Willis UCW Easter Thankoff- ering service, 8:00 p.m: Speak- er, Rev. R. T. Jordison, of Trinidad. Music by "The Pil- grim Singers". 13b 00 BIBLES St. James Version of World Bible in black or white $2.50 to $10.00 Rainbow Bible for the young people $2.75 Oxford Bible—St. James Version, Reference and Concordance editions $4.50 to $12.95 Revised Standard Bible $7.00 & $10.00 New English Bible — Now Testa- ment $1,7543.9544.50 United Church Hym iaries $1.00 to $12.00 C tw-IL wan s CLINTON ONTARIO SATURDAY AFTERNOON MOVIES At Clinton Legion Hall Leave the Kids a* the Legion Show While You Shop in Clinton's Modern Uptown Business Section Saturday, March 30 at 2:15 Doors open at 1.45 "Tall Story" FREE ADMISSION — Courtesy of "Red" Garon of Clinton Laundry and Dry Cleaners Ltd. Get Your Ticket on The Clinton Kinsmen Club STANLEY CUP DRAW $500.00 PRIZE For holder of ticket bearing exact second that winning goal is scored in the deciding Stanley Cup game. Be Sure The Ticket Seller Records Your Draw Score On The Ticket Stub. Tickets on Sale from Members of Kinsmen Club . and many Business Maces in Clinton With two games completed in the 01V/HA juvenile "B" series, Clinton and Hespeler have failed to settle much• in the outcome of the set, splitting the games by practically identical 12-7 and 12-5 scores. In effect the series has now been whittled to a best-of-three affair and will start all over again when the clubs meet in action this week. venile Series Tied at One 'Game Each, ilts Feature Rugged, High-Scoring Play Elect Officers The Huron growers elected Don Middleton, RR 3, Clinton, as 1963. president, with Ed. Wise, RR 3, Clinton, vice-pres- ident and Boyd Taylor, Walton Mr. Strothers was on hand for the meeting. While the afternoon session was on, Miss Isabelle Gilchrist, home economist, took members' wives on a tour of the de- partment of agriculture office and spoke to them on home management: Watch Cartoonist Highlight of the noon ban- quet held at the IOOF hall was a presentation by Merle Ting- ley, cartoonist of the London Free Press, In splendid form he kept up a very witty commentary as he did caricatures of the major political leaders and also of many of the fruit growers pres- ent. An indispensible feature of the annual meeting has always been the singing of "Happy Birthday, Mrs. McGuire", with the honoured lady providing the piano accompaniment for the song and also for a sing song. Mrs. McGuire was also the subject of one of Ting's car- toons and he had a large lighted second vice-president. birthday candle sprouting from The appointed secretary is !her high hat which somehow Russ Chard, Petrolia, fieldman !became a birthday cake in the for the fruit and vegetable ex- art work. tension branch of the Ontario department of agriculture, and treasurer is Doug Miles, Huron agriculture representative. Bill Stratychuck, Brussels, was named director to the On- tario Fruit and Vegetable Gr- owers Association and area dir- ectors were as follows: Bill Stratychuck, Brussels; Ed St- Show Films The meeting concluded with Dr. J. A. Archibald, research specialist, Vineland, showing films of a recent trip through Europe. His slides depicted scenes of fruit growing in Belgium, Ger- many, France and England, as well as scenic sidelights to his trip. He explained that in some facets of fruitgrowing the Eur- opeans were ahead of those in this country, while the opposite was true in other instances. Johnston predicted the five counties under his jurisdiction would soon be producing 1,000,- 000 bushels of apples per year. "We're getting bigger and more regular yields," he noted, and pointed out that by "plan- ning, thinking and working to- gether" they would be able to find markets. The London man jokingly told the Huron Growers they had a good area and noted their annual meeting had to be held late so the members would be back from, their annual vaca- tions in Florida and California. Pray for Victory? If you guessed that these two chaps were a pair of Japanese gladiators getting set for battle or a pair of Moslems with. a difference of opinion as to which way is east, you would be wrong, because they are Clinton juvenile defence ace, Don Col- quhoun, foreground and a Hespeler player who crashed together in Friday's game here. The youths met head on and Colquhoun required five stitches to close a head cut, while the Hespeler lad received a severe shaking up. Freak accidents of this nature were common in the tilt. (News-Record Photo) Clinton mayor, W. J,. Miller, brought greetings at the ban- quet which was catered to by the Rebekahs. amornimiim0 eckle, Exeter; Lorne Woods, Lucknow; Stewart Middleton, Bayfield and Bill McGuire, Goderich. The group, formed in 1924 by Steve Strothers, Lucknow, first Huron agricultural representa- tive, is the oldest growers' as- sociation in the county. Joe Doer Local Kegler Wins TV Series Joe Daer battled his way into the finals of the Carling Brew- ery bowling championship on CKNX-TV, Wingham, Satur- day, whipping Bill Thompson of Fordwich by a 228 to 181 count in a single game.. The contest was filmed at Clinton Automatic Lanes, but is not scheduled to run until late in April. Daer moved ahead quickly in the match and despite the fact he punched out a pair of head- pins, was never seriously threat- ened by Thompson. The local kegler h a d four strikes and three spares in the game, while his opponent had only two strikes and two sp- ares. Both bowlers rolled games of over 275 in the warm-up mat- ches before the televised game,. but dropped down considerably in the one that counted, Daer's win guarantees him $50 in the TV series and he still has a chance to cop the Carling trophy and win a trip to compete in the CBC matches staged weekly at the O'Con- nor Bowl, Toronto. Local fans will have an op- portunity to see Daer on CKNX on April 6 when he will appear against Peter Weiman, Sea- forth, in an earlier televised match. The feature , is shown each Saturday at 6.45 p.m. o Mildmay Squad Retain Jinx The Adastral Park bantams met up with their old foes from Mildmay last week and again went down to defeat, but this time by only a 5-4 margin. Playing in the Grey - Bruce Police Association bantam "D" tourney at Wingham, both squads advanced to the finals with a pair of wins, and Mild- may, who knocked the are a team out of WOAA play, cop- ped the championship. Adastral Park gained the final round by whipping Ford- wich '8-1 in the opener and taking Tobermory via a 4-2 decision in a rough and tumble second match. They stuck with the WOAA champs throughout most of the final contest, but still couldn't stop the northerners. Play Exhibition This week, Adastral. Park tackled a house - league squad from Goderich in an exhibition match and came through with a decisive 5-0 win, with Brian Burnside posting the shutout. Billy MacKay provided t h e scoring power, picking up a point on all five of his teams goals. He potted three himself and helped Paul MacKenzie and Ken Foote on the singletons they Scored, Members of the Adastral Park squad are: Brian Burnside, Dennis Has- peck, Lorne Prokopett, Walter Morrow, Gary MacKay, Angus MacDonald, Robert Spano, St- ephen Pierce, Dave Young, Br- uce Bingham, Wayne Spears, Billy MacKay, Pat Rousseau, Paul MacKenzie, Bob Peterson, Ken Foote, Third game of the series was played in Clinton last night (Wednesday) and fourth game will be back in Hespeler on Friday. If the fifth game is needed, it will be played at the local arena, but as yet no date has been scheduled. While the teams have failed to settle anything as far as the outcome of the series is con- cerned, they have established a few facts in regards to the ser- ies. The first is that hockey fans will be treated to some fast, exciting and extremely rough hockey before the series is completed and will probably see a great many goals scored, with the possibility of either goalie registering a shutout, highly im- probable. Clinton opened the series on their home ice, Friday, and had things much their own way as they registered a decisive 12-7 win. Howeve,r, resuming action in Hespeler, Sunday, things were just the opposite as the hosts drubbed the locals by a 12-5 margin, dominating play throughout most of the tilt with the exception of the middle frame. Hespeler, the defending OMPIA champs, have exhibited a very rough brand of hockey in the first two games, and have drawn the major share of the penalties in both. Good crowds have been on hand for both matches to date, with Clinton fans making up close to half the audience at Hespeler on Sunday, most people finding the weather ideal for the afternoon outing. First Game In the opener at the local arena, the homesters rattled in five goals in an eight - minute stretch in the first period and were never in serious trouble throughout the remainder of the high-scoring match, posting a 12-7 win. Both Clinton units played heady offensive hockey in a game that was marred by sev- eral delays due to injuries to players from both squads. Most of the injuries were caused accidently as players fr- om both squads came together in freak plays. John Cooper and Bob Liver- more were the scoring leaders for the Clinton six with three big tallies each, while Borden McRae and Don Lockwood add- ed a pair. Laurie Colquhoun and Bruce Cooper rounded out the scoring with a singleton each, as all six forwards hit the score sheet. McRae added five assists to his two goals to top the scoring parade with seven points. McRae started the squad off at the 8.30 mark of the open- ing stanza as he banged in a rebound off the stick of Lock- wood, who had been sent in on the left side by John Coop- er's perfect pass. The trio came right back in less than a minute as they didn't let Hespeler out of their own end and McRae again banged the puck into the open corner. Clinton shoved the lead to 3-0 on a goal by Livermore shortly after, and following Hespeler's first tally by Don Parks, the locals upped the 1st period margin to 5-1 on goals by Livermore and John Cooper. Livermore notched another after only 17 seconds of play in the middle frame, banging in Bruce Cooper's pass from behind the net. Stan picken answered it for Hespeler at the 5.50 mark and the teams traded goals by Lock, wood and Parks near the mid- way mark to leave Clinton with their four-goal bulge at the end of the second. The last frame was a high scoring effort by both teams, but the locals protected their margin throughout as they an- swered all the markers notch- ed by the visitors and then threw in one extra for good measure to out-score them 5-4. Hespeler picked up 10 of the 19 penalties handed out by former area intermediate puck stars, Gerry Hesse and Ray Richards. The game was delayed sev- eral minutes in the first period when Bob Hodges, the hot- headed Hespeler goalie struck his head on the cross bar after colliding with Bruce Cooper who had come swooping in to grab a rebound. Hodges was able to play the remainder of the game and kept attempting to get a crack at a few of the Clinton puck- sters, especially Cooper. John Cooper had to be as- sisted off the ice in the last frame after being charged into by Terry Eaton, Only other ser- ious injury was picked up by Don Colquhoun, who had to have stitches in a head cut, sus- tained as he accidentally crash- ed into a Hespeler player. Both players fell to the ice after the crash and it took sev- eral minutes before the Hes- peler player was ready to re- sume action, Second Game Back in Hespeler, Sunday. the game was very similar to the one in Clinton, the home team taking a commanding lead in the first period and pro- tecting it through to the final whistle. The Hespeler crew opened up (Continued from Page' 1) he told the audience. Backing up his statement that more qualified young peo- ple were needed, he predicted that the man with only med- iocre talents would be left by the wayside by 1965. McArthur noted that more stress would have to be placed on the export market, espec- ially Britain, but reported that the biggest untapped market was still "right here at home." He explained that Canada was the lowest apple consuming market in the world, only us- ing 26 pounds per person yearly. He blamed poor quality of apples for some of the reason, but said lack of advertising was the main reason the apple gr- owers fared poorly at home, "We are missing the power of advertising," he noted, "while other commodities are using it with good results. As an example, he noted that while the song, "Chekeeta the Banana" had been issued 20 years ago, people still knew the song and followed its advice to never put bananas in the re- frigerator. McArthur urged that apple growers give more serious con- sideration to the advertising of their product. The veteran grower also re- ported they would have to alter their attitude towards export markets, noting that they could no longer ship only when the price and details suited them. Fight Bigness The speaker noted the On- tario growers would also have to join together to fight the increased production of apples in sections of the United States and Canada. He noted there was an in- crease in other parts and while the effect had not been felt too greatly as yet, it was due mainly to the fact that poor crops had been experienced in some areas while other areas had bumper crops, "Sometime all these areas are going to have big crops to- ,gether," he prophesied, "and then we'll be in trouble". The Woodstock man also noted pre - packers were now growing more of their own ztp, ples and these big firms were able to sell at lower prices, because their quantity buying gave them the advantage of lower prides. gomewhere along the line we have to equate Size with size," he concluded, urging more un- ity between Ontario growers. Another speaker at the af- ternoon session was J. J. John- Stony area Supervising inSpecter for the Canada Departrilent of Agrichlture. Freeman, who was given little protection on some of the markers. John. Fox added a pair for Hespeler, while . singles were recorded by Wes Field, Uelz, muth Lowen, By Hamilton, Bob Schnare and Terry Eaton, Team Captain, Borden Mc, Rae, again.paced the local at- tack with a pair of tallies, while Laurie Colquhoun, John Cooper and Don Colquhoun sn- iped a singleton. The homesters appeared a bit timid at times in the tilt and failed to take advantage of the extra man they had on numer- ous occasions with Hespeler drawing 15 of the 22 penalties, Clinton held the major share of the play in the second per- iod, but their lone goal of the stanza was answered by the homesters, who regained con- trol of the tilt in the final frame as Clinton had trouble- sticking with their checks. IF YOU'VE AN EYE FOR A BUY GIVE US A TRY! Right now we have some exceptinally fine USED CARS READY TO ROLL! 60 Chevrolet 6, Station Wagon Fresh new paint. Fully gone over. 56 Ford Sedan Smart two tone blue and white. 56 Chevrolet Sedan This one should be ready this weekend. 57 Oldsmobile Sedan For those who like big car luxury at the right price. 57 Volkswagen A dandy second car. 59 Chevrolet 6 Sedan O.K. in every way. 60 Chevrolet Bel Air Sedan One local owner. 59 Vauxhall 6 Sedan Small car economy. Big car performance. Several others to choose from. Many more late model, one-owner trade-ins arriving daily. Come and see us. OPEN EVENINGS SPECIAL FROM OUR SERVICE DEPT. Sy Popular Demand MUFFLER INSTALLED ONLY $9.95 54 to 62 Chevrolet or Pontiac• 6 or 8 cyl, models. (hardware extra) LORNE BROWN MOTORS LTD. Your Friendly Chevrolet- Oldsmobile & Envoy Dealer. Ontario Street—CLINTON Phone HU 2-9321 • 1111111111111111‘ 411=MM, Fatal Accident Involves Area Man A Toronto man, Herbert Stevenson, 55, was killed Mon- day, when his car collided with another in heavy fog on High- way 8, about three miles west of Mitchell. Driver of the second car was Grant R. Webster, 29, PR 1, Varna, Who was taken to St. Joseph's Hospital, London, in Orions condition, He was suffering with frac- tures of the jaw, left arm and right knee. The dead than was pinned in- side his car hhd the vehicle had to be pried open to release hint Police said the cars collided head-on about 7100 tuna. Apple Growers Urged to Co-Operate