HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1964-03-19, Page 12Pielc was the bus- ing the ,productive first line to
lest man at the Clinton Uons .0,1 to 15 goals and 10 assists.
arena Monday night, Single tallies Caine. off the.
sticks of Randy .Clew, Doug
MacaUlay, Murray Morrison
.and Bob .Batldn.
The Only contest the out,
When the Mile was over, the classed Oil Town boys managed
score:sheet resembled :a .page to Win was -the'penalty..Parede.
from Eioley's Believe-it-or-not They., picked 1.113 of the pelf-
as The Clinton crew' posted a mties, 'including a -gfune
whopping 'big. 19-5 win. in the conduct to one player who pi$
first game of the best-of-three lad a Oleic made famous by
series, Howie Young—spitting in ref,
Besides ' recording thp. 24. era Lou Heiribuck'S eye.
goals, gremlin had to mark • Spot Lead
down 21. assists and 22 penal- The first few minutes .Of the
ties which totalled 72 minutes. game certainly .' showed no in-
Captain Borden McRae act- dieation of things to come as
wally sewed enough goals to Petrolia, beat RObbie Farquhar
beat the Western Counties for two goals in the first three
champs as he dented the twine minutes for an early 2-0 lead.
eight .titnes in a prolific scoring . however, the visitors fell in-
spree, to the trap of attempting to
Centre .John -Cooper had en- throW their weight around, and
°ogle goals to tie the ,visitors the shifty Clinton. lads, took ad,
as he rattled in five and Laurie vantage to cruise around them
Colquhoun scored twice to br- and they rattled in six eon-,
Elie was the scorelteePozin -
the. first g:anie ,of the.OW1_4.
juvenile PlaYOffs 'between
Clinton and Petrolia. .
Page 12—Clinton News-Record--Thurs., March 19, 1964
.6f
"The Cavaliers" at
TEEN TWENTY
SEAFORTH ARENA
Saturday, March 21
Dancing 9:00 p.m. to 11:45 p.m.
Admission: Members 50c — Nonmembers 75c
S
Save Old Papers Now .
CLINTON LEGION
PAPER DRIVE
Wed., ,April
Have Papers Securely Tied
at Curb by 1:00
. . For
in
p.m.
15
'Bundles
12-3-4-5b
c
EASTER
TIME
EASTER CARDS . . .
from Coutts and Rustcraft for
Sweetheart, Friend, Relative, Child
EASTER BASKET
with. Shredded Cellophane Filler
5c to $1.00
10c to 29c
STUFFED EASTER RABBIT . . •
, in i Pink, Blue, Yellow 98c
EASTER RABBIT . .
with bag on his back. 59c
EASTER SERVIETTES .
in Luncheon or Cocktail Size—
Easter Tablecover 29c to
Easter Cut-Outs-,- Easter Seals
- Crepe Paper - Candles
McEwan's
79c
CHILDREN'S
MOVIES
CLINTON LEGION HALL
Saturday Afternoon
March 21 at 2:15
Doors Open at 1:45
PLAYING THIS WEEK
"Captain Horatio Hornblower
Admission: Children 15c; Adults 25c
vasmessisoministostoisesi.
JUVS
In inning First Tilt In
Give Scorekeeper N
A Set
Film Bowling Series At Local Lanes
Another round in the competition for the Car-
ling trophy, which is carried every Saturday night
over CKNX TV, Wingham, was filmed at the Clin-
ton Lanes on Friday. Discussing the match at the
left is the announcer, Crawford Douglas. Seated
beside him is Fred Menlo, who won the match with a
score of 242 over Jack Armstrong's (rear right)
166. Also seated is last year's champ, Joe Daer,
who is also still in the running for the ' trophy.
Standing on the left is Jim Armstrong, who lost his
TV match as well, despite bowling a spectacular 400
game and a triple of 982, although the News Record.
credited his brother with the feat in last week's
issue. Standing between the Armstrong brothers is
L. J. "Sparky" Weiler, a representative of the
Carling Brewery and a scout for the Boston Bruins.
ITN%
(YOult TV SEItvic8 CENTRE 482-$841)
Giant Spring Sale
ENDS SATURDAY, MARCH 21
(Continued from Page One)
which he was seated.
During the trip, the students
learned the words to "God Save
the Queen" and "The Maple
Leaf Forever", finding out lat-
er they Were among the few
people who knew the words to
the latter song.
One of the other amusing
incidents on the train was in
regard to the abundance of do-
nuts the kids had to munch on.
When they realized they Were
going to have several left over,
they attempted to give them
away to other passengers.
However, they found no tak-
ers,
One of the students then de-
cided to sell the wares and
found that people were willing
to pay for them—but wouldn't
accept them as a gift.
Fireman Has
Narrow Escape
. (Continued from page one)
about the first time it had
been used inside an enclosed
building.
Because it was "jumping"
some on the cement floor, the
firemen decided someone should
stay and watch' it.
McPherson asked Mrs. Wil-
liams to leave the windows
open so he could get fresh air
into the cellar, but he became
dizzy and told one of the men
he would have to be releived.
Two members of the brig-
ade ran over to the home and
found him lying unconscious on
the floor.
A call was put into Clinton.
Public Hospital to have the
oxygen ready, and the fireman
was rushed back to town by
Mr. Williams and Walter For-
bes, former reeve of Goderich
Township.
Fortunately, Mr. McPherson
regained consciousness as 'the
car arrived at the hospital, but
he was held for examination.
0
Catch Airmen
Before Owner
Misses Auto
Two yoUng Clinton airmen
were apprehended early Sat-
urday and charged with taking
a motor vehicle without the
owner's consent—even before
the owner was aware that the
vehicle was missing.
Wayne Raymond Mosionier,
19, and William Ronald Jones,
17, both of RCAF Clinton' will
appear in Goderich magistrate's
court on Thursday to face the
charge.
Police charge the pair took
the car—an MG midget sports
model — from the lot of Lorne
Brown Motors on Ontario St-
reet around midnight on Fri-
day.
They were apprehended by
OPP constables from Guelph
detachment as they were found
in that area about three hours
later attempting to fix the
front end of the car which was
apparently damaged when, the
vehicle struck a highway curb,
On investigation
'
the OPP
constables learned the car was
registered under the ownership
of the local firm and the young
aitmen admitted they had tal‹,
en the Vehicle off the lot,
They Were arrested and lodges
ed in Guelph city jail over
night and were brought 'back
here by local police Officers on
Saturday morning,
barrage to the vehlele M-
ounted to about $100 according
to Chief It R. Thompson, who
assisted in the case,
Community Spirit Impresses Visitors,
Don't Have That In Big USA City
0 0
ATTENTION
BOWLERS
ORDER YOUR TROPHIES NOW
FROM
ANSTETT JEWELLERS LIMITED
Beautiful, Well Made Trophies At
Reasonable Prices
Excellent Engraving
For Fast Guaranteed Service Order
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AT
rtstett Jewellers
LIMITED 40-025
(Continued from Page One)
contact with the insecticide
and, in fact, only a very small
part of each bag .was affected,
Dr. Rubin said that he, along
with the health of animals br-
anch, department of agricul-
tu.re, are working closely with
COMING EVENTS ,
Thursday, March 19—BINGO
in Legion Memorial Hall, Kirk
Street, at 8;30 p.m. 15 regular
games for $5; 1 game for $25,
letter L and T bingos apply on
the $25 game; three share-the-
wealh games; jackpot $57.00 in
57 numbers Admission 50c.
Thursday, March 19 — Gode-
rich Township Federation of
Agriculture meeting, Holmes-
vine School. Guest speaker: Mr.
A. M. Harper, Chartered Ac-
countant, Goderich. , Topic:
Income Tax". Bring
lunch. 11-12b
Friday, March 20 — Euchre
party, Varna Hall. Sponsors,
Varna LOL, Special entertain-
ment. Ladies please bring
sandwiches. 12b
Saturday, March 21 — St.
Patrick's card party, Orange
Hal), 8:30 p.m. Auspices LOL
and LOBA. Free door prize,
Everyone welcome. 12b
Tuesday, March 24—BINGO
at Huron Fish and Game. Jack-
pot $58.00 in 58 numbers. Six
door prizes, 8,30 p.m e
Saturday, May 2 —‘,Daffodil
tea and bazaar, Ontario Street
Church. Auspices Units three
and four, time 3:00 to 5:00
p.m. 12b,.
CLINTON COMMUNITY
CREDIT UNION
'COLD' MARCH WINDS
Make Us 'Hot' For
A DEAL!
The Boss is cracking the whip. Our Lot is bulging
at the seams with top quality trade-ins. He has
handed the salesmen new ball point pens and very
definite instructions to "Move these Cars — take
any reasonable offer."
'63 Chevrolet 4-Door Bet-Air Sedan
Only 8,000 miles. Still with one year's unused
factory warranty.
'62 Chevrolet Bel-Air 4-Door Sedan
Has Radio, Washers, One Owner
'62 Chevrolet 4-Door Stn. 'Wagon
Automatic, Radio and Washers. One local owner,
'61 Buick 4-Door LeSabre Sedan
Completely equipped. Spotless throughout,
'61 Plymouth 4-Door Fury
V-S power, Automatic, 19000 miles. Local
owner's name on request.
'58 Envoy 4-Cyl .Sedan
Your cholee of two. Priced at $875.
'58 Pontiac 2-Door Hardtop
Sporty model. Very Clean.
'58 Chevrolet 4-Door Sedan
Two in stook and priced to sell,
`59 Chevrolet 4-Door Sedan
'Take your pick,
"Pere or "Steve Will Welcome Your
DROP IN SOONPLEASEI
. Lorne Brown Motors Lid
Your Nattily 4hevroiet1 Oldsmobile Nolo
4041'11 -CLINTON
41600801080M00621110INW
rubbed it in as they scored
while paying shert4handed
several occasions, and McRae
even spored one of his markers
from behind the not.
Sohn Cooper made parker
loop rather silly on A couple of
his goals -as he had the get-
minder sprawling well out of
his net and then .skipped
round behind to, deftly drep the
disc in the mesh.
'A good crowd was on bapti to
watch the fray, which was sm.
piled to some extent by the. an
ties of some of the hot-headed.
visitorS.
Second game will be -played
in Petrolia on Friday, night.
Arriving at CHSS, the stu-
dents were introduced to the
parents and students with
whom they are spending the
week, as well as many CHSS
teachers.
After being officially welcom-
ed on Monday at CHSS, the
students have travelled to the
Sifto Salt Mines and County
Museum at Goderich, had lunch
with the Goderich Rotary Club
spent Wednesday at RCAF
Clinton, enfoyed a banquet with
the Clinton Lions, Tuesday.
Today (Thursday) they head
for the Douglas Point Nuclear
power station and then to
CI<NX Wingham and back for
a meal with the CHSS board.
Friday they tour two Sea-
forth area farms and have a
dance at CHSS at night.
Saturday will be a free day
and then they go to Stratford
for departure to Milwaukee.
Well Organized
Miss Meyerson, was high in
her praise of the organization
and plans for the exchange.
"This exchange is 10 times
better than any we've had be-
fore," she exclaimed.
Although this• is the first such
prograth in which the local
school has participated, she
said it looked as though they
were well experienced.
Another 'thing she noted was
the fact the "whole community
is behind the exchange and do-
ing things for us".
She said such a co-operative
project was not possible in a
city such as Milwaukee.
The Milwaukee students were
also quite impressed with 'the'
community and especially the
school,
"It's such a well equipped
school," she stated, adding that
the provision of technical sub-
jects "is, the finest thing you
could do for a person to pre-
pare him for life".
She stated that by having the
academic students in the same
school with the technical class-
es, it makes it possible for
technical students to maintain
their individual pride and dig-
nity and they do not appear to
be second rate in comparison
to academic pupils.
Bishop Here To
Induct Cleric
(Continued From Page One)
duction by members of St.
Paul's Friendship Guild.
• Rev. Wenham, who succeeds
Rev. Peter Dymond, is a native
of London, England, and he
graduated from, 'Wycliffe Col-
lege, University of Toronto, in
1936.
Prior ,to coming to Clinton
he served at Ungava Bay,
Mount Forest, Dorchester, Hes-
peler and Brantford.
Rev, and Mrs. Wenham have
three children. Mrs. Don
(Anne) McLeod resides in Cal-
gary; John is a first year el-
ectronics student at the Ham-
ilton Institute of 'Technology
and Mary Jean is remaining in
Brantford until she completes
her grade 12 studies.
0 .
CLINTON-BLYTWAU13URN
LADIES' LEAGUE
Pts. Unrcliables 105 Mobilers 100 Greenhorns 93 Pinups 93 Iribetweens 80
Hillbillies 60 Handicaps 58 Hopefuls 57 High triples, ills ther Haskell,
742; high single, Betty Troy,
301; high average, Betty Troy,
197,
Tigers
Bears
Bons
Wolves
High single, ladies, Mrs. Stu
Broadfoot, 219; men, Al Shol-
dice, 268; high, triple, ladies,
Mrs. Stu Broadfoot, 531; men,
Al Sholclice, 719.
Xobtr MIXED tumalut
rts. Marg's Mighties 20 Tallies' Angles . .......... 16% Holland's Hurricanes 181/2 Riley's, Rockets 13 611.1bing's Gophers
Paliott's Plite 12 Beattie's Bombers 11 Prattles Red Hots „ ....
Pirat of three nights in the
Play-offs.
secutive goals before Petrella
Caine back With another to
mpke the score a somewhat re-
speetable 6-3 at the end of tbe
period.
Clinton Potted few -mere in
the ,second while Alien Howes
Moved into the nets to allow
Petrolia only one for a 10-4
margin.
In the third period, the locals
really fattened their averages
as they bombarded Eon Parker
with nine tallies and Howes al-
lowed only two.
As the score Would indicate,
the Clinton crew completely do-
minated the game and really
TIJCIOPORSIMITIR: LEACiUt
Team StandingS
Pls.
40 82 92
37 35 89
36 88• 83
31 41 72
AMEN1110,
Insecticide Seeps Into Feed Bags,
District Farmer Loses 16 Cattle
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 stored
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 Places in Clinton
Mr. Thompson, Seaforth veter-
inarian, Dr. Bryans, and other
research groups in the United
States in conducting a full in-
vestigation into the chance oc-
currence.
Fay For Loss
George D. Mungall, general
manager of the Shur Gain
division of Canada Packers
Limited, said, "we were natur-
ally most disturbed to learn
of Mr. Thompson's trouble and
since the accidental contamina-
tion occurred. at our Clinton
mill, we are assuming full res-
ponsibility in Mr. Thompson's
BROWNIES
DRIVE-IN
CLINTON
OPENING
FRIDAY,
MARCH 21
(Weather Permitting)
mommnamennonme
vomoinsMoWit,
loss".
Mr, Thompson, who estimate
ed the loss of the 16 animals
at about $4,000, said the com-
pany were being very fair in
the matter.
"It was strictly an accident,"
he told the News-Record.
Noting the fact it was the
Savings and
Loans
Life Insured
Loans up to $10,000 to members of —
NEED MONEY for that
New spring wardrobe
New bicycle or car
New appliance
New home
first known incident of this
type in 'Canada and that it
had government and private
agricultural specialists baffled,
Mr. Thompson 'predicted the
case could result in more gov-
ernment control of storing,
sale and printed warnings on
cans for such insecticides.