HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1951-01-18, Page 4Page 4 THE T1MES-ADVOCATE, EXETER, ONTARIO, THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 18, 1931
Zurich Gets
Revenge Over
Dashwood Six
Zurich avenged a hockey
back by Dashwood last
trounced the
set-
by Dashwood last week,
when they trounced the same
team, 8-1, in Zurich in a WOAA
Intermediate “B” game
nigUt.
Ben Gignac led the
scoring attack with a.
effort. Over 1,100 fans
the fast,
Monday
winners’
two-goal
attended
hard-checking fixture.
Hockey
Standings
SOLVES DELINQUENCY PROBLEM—Almost good enough
to work himself out of a job is Police Chief Illingworth of
Durham. Ont. For the second straight year he reported no
youngster had been brought into court for even minor of
fences. He credited the town's record to sports program for
the children and to the parents’ co-operation. Citizens say
the chief himself is responsible for the absence of juvenile
delinquency. —Central Press Canadian
Exeter Squad Wins First Game
By Trimming Granton Six, 7-3
meet their old rivals from Zu
rich.
Exeter—Ebel, Ellis, Horton,
D. Brintell, G. Lawson, R. Tuc
key, K. Carson, A. Whilsmith,
D. Carlton, W. Musser, L.
Haugh, Waghorn, W. Fisher.
Hensall—Cooper, A. Nichol-
Nicholson, B. Doig, D.
D. Flear, J. Harrison,
Consitt, Mousseau, R. Moir, W.
John Sangster, Eyre,
Exeter Intermediates won their
first game Monday night when
they handed Granton their third
straight defeat to the tune of
7-3. It was also coach Wes Rych-
man’s first win since taking over
the team last week. He now has
a win and a loss to his credit.
Behind 2-1 in the first period
the locals rallied to net three
in each of the succeeding stanzas..
Carson and Brintnell led the Tuckey,
scorers with a goal and an assist; jacobf.'
each.
Pearce scored at the seven-I
minute mark in the first and ten i
minutes later Parnell put the j
Granton squad two up when he i relayed Harrigan’s pass between I
the pipes. “Rocket” Mason bulg- ■ _ .. —-ed the twine seconds later he LJ
•before the whistle blew. ’• IvIlSaH L/UtCllb
In the second Doug Brintnell ’
banged the puck into the net s I IrseK 7 A
from a corner face-off to tie the;l—»LICQrB I ““*T
score. Soon after, Hugh netted'
a backhand shot. F. Harrigan i
replied for Granton when he i
slammed a loose puck into the >
net. i
Excitment ran high when Reg ____ _______ __ __ _ v___
McDonald, playing his first game j rivals and should be strong
of the season and D. Pearce; contenders for the group cham-
tangled on the ice after McDon- . pionship should they continue to
aid headed a rush to the Gran-1 play the same hockey as they
ton zone. It looked like a free- j hid ]ast night.
nil n Ta.«+ MApnMAn. •<
! LUCAN—Hindmarsh, Hodgins,
iF. Revington, McRoberts, Hearn,
; Robinson, J. Hardy, T. Reving-
| ton, G. Revington, Elson.
up t0‘ HENSALL—Mickle, A. Nichol-
mark. ' son> Nicholson, Flear, Doig,
in re- i Cowan, Mousseau, Harrison, Con-
___ j WXVt, UUV.VUX, XUJXQ, x.XVXX ,
I J. Sangster.EXETER—Goal, Ebel; defen-j __________i___
ce, Ellis, Mason; centre, D. Brin-j
tnell; wings, Lawson, C“"—Z1 1 ■ J —
subs, Musser, Haugh,
McDonald, Tuckey, Stires, H.
Brintell, Horton, Fisher.
GRANTON—Goal, K.
man; defence, B. Tuttle,
gan; centre, F. Harrigan;
Parnell, Cardy; subs, J.
gan, B. Eagan, R. Westman, B.
Mullins, C. Nicholl, V. Fernan
dez, D. Pearce.
First Period
1. Granton—Pearce. 7
2. Granton—Parnell, (F. :
rigan). 16.20
3. Exeter—Mason. 19.26
Penalties—Fisher, Charlton.
Second
4. Exeter—D. Brintell, 1.07
5. Exeter—Haugh, 1.52
6. Granton—F. Harrigan, 4.20
7. Exeter—-Musser, (Carson)
16.16
Third
8. Exeter —• Carson, ( Brintnell,
Lawson), .15
9. Exeter—.Stire, 13.34
10. Exeter—Tuckey, 15.47
Penalties—Horton, Ellis, J. Har
rigan, Tuttle, Pearce, Musser.
Referee—Russ Evon.
son, H.
Cowan,
B.
J.
Goals—Hensall, Cowan, Jaobi,
Harrison, Flear, Consitt 2. Exe
ter—Brintnell. Referee—Angus
• McLean, Seaforth.
Hensall defeated the strong
.'Lucan Irish hy the score of 7-4
I in a W.O.A.ik. game played in
■ the Lucan Community Arena
* Tuesday night. The Hensall
, team went all out against their
for-all for a minute but referee j
Russ Evon broke it up. Musser i
scored to make it 4-3 at the bell, j
From the opening face-off in,
the third. Lawson, Doug Brin-j
tnell and Carson teamed
score at the 15 second
Stire and Tuckey whipped ± „bounds before the game ended, j sitt, Jacobi, Eyre, Moir, Tuckey,
^carlon’JMarketing7 Discussed
Centralia Whips
Maroons, 27-15
Monday night the Maroons
were soundly beaten by the Cen
tralia Flyers at the air station.
The Flyers led 27-15 at half
time and before the final whistle
had blown increased their lead
considerably. The final score
was Centralia Flyers 60, Exeter
Maroons 32.
Hot shots for the Flyers were
McLeod with 23, Boon with 15
and Tettmar with 12.
For the Maroons. Timms had
11.
Lineups
EXETER—J. Rether 3,
ferson, Glen Schroeder,
Sinker 6, Gordie Cann
Schroeder 6, Ron Timms
Farrow, G. Rether 4.
CENTRALIA—B o o n 15, Dal
ton, Ingall, Andrews, Candy, Mc-
Graith 4, Mathews 3, McLeod
23, Boudreau 1, Tettmar 12,
Galvin 2.
Referees: D. Decker and Sasso.
Tro unce St. Marys
The Maroons travelled to St.
Marys Thursday and trounced
the Blue Devils 56-37. It was a
closely-called game throughout,
and referee Dutch Decker hand
ed the Blue Devils 24 personals
and three technicals
Maroons 14 personals,
■putting McGregor and
out of the game on
fouls.
Top scorers for the Maroons
were O’Brien with 18 and Timms
with 16. For the Blue Devils it
was Fletcher with 12.
Lineups
EXETER—J. Rether 8, J. Jef
ferson, G. Dobbs, M. May 5, W.
O’Brien 18, Uel Schroeder 3,
Ron Timms 16, G. Farrow 5, G.
Rether 1.
ST. MARYS—Hendra 5, Sgari-
glia 2, Wilson 2, McGregor 2,
Hare 5, Ferriso 3, Fletcher 12,
Robinson 2, Bragg 4, McLaugh
lin.
J. Jef-
George
2, Uel
11, G,
and the
as well as
J. Kether
deliberate
got
Dashwood
Zurich .
Hensall
Lucan .
Exeter
Granton
Results
Hensall 7,
Hensall 7,
Lucan 10,
Dashwood
Exeter 8, Granton 3
Zurich 8, Dashwood 1
Future Games
Jan. IS
Dashwood at Lucan
Jan. 19
Lucan at Exeter
Hensall at Zurich
Jan. 22
Zurich at Exeter
Lucan at Hensall
Dashwood at Granton
Lucan
Exetex
Granton 0
7, Zurich 5
Jan. 24
Hensall at Dashwood
"I just can’t figger what _
into her,” said the old chap, as
they lugged his wife away to in
sane asylum in a straightjacket.
“She ain’t been off the farm in
30 years.”
THEY’RE FORD ACCESSORIES
Dress up” ypur car and
provide extra light for driv
ing safety in fog or rain
Heavily chromed and grace
fully styled
Turn on automatically when car
goes into reverse—throw a wide
beam of light for safe, easy
parking or backing up after dark.
monpRCM
FORD
MONARCH
DEALERS
MERCURY-
LINCOLN-METEOR
DEALERS
OVER HOP DEALERS FROM C.OAST TO COAST
DAIRY FLOODS SERVICE BUREAU
409 HURON ST., TORONTO
MILK
For glowing health . . . vitality . . . strength, do as the
sports champs do. Drink milk! It’s nature’s best refresh
ment, finest food, for into milk, nature pours vitamins,
minerals, proteins ... the very things you need for sturdy
growth and development
A glass of milk is a swell drink anytime. Enjoy it your
favourite way, plain or malted, as a milk shake, or poured
over cereal. To keep in championship form, drink three
glasses every day. ___
rEHJOYcj
NATURE'S ]
YOU CMf£e&?me &ne <$£ tfete
AERO-ENGINE
AIRFRAME, INSTRUMENT
and RADIO TECHNICIANS
TO JOIN THE R.C.A.F. YOU MUST
Be between 17 and 30
Have a Grade 8 education or better0
Be physically fit *
Be a Canadian citizen or other British subject
4.
too
We
pro-
pro-
for-
(pi W ' Par‘>'^lars
......
ggi
m[At Elimvilie Forum
i Twenty-five members o
■ Elimvilie North Farm Forum
| met at the home of Mr. and
! Mrs. Allen Johns on•> Monday
[evening to discuss “Marketing
1 Quality Products”. One section
2 of the group believes that low
[grade of products should not be
I put on the market but processed
Har-jinto other products. The other
part of the group stated that
J low quality produce should be
[marked as such, as well as the
’.good quality produce, so the
.consumer will know what qual
ity they are paying for. The
price on low quality goods
should be low to discourage pro
duction of low quality goods.
The middleman at the present
time does most of the processing
and packaging, but he gets
large a share of the profits,
think that a co-operative
cessor could take over the
cessing and marketing. The
urn would like to see an investi
gation where there is an exorbit
ant spread in prices between
what the producer receives for
his product and what the con
sumer pays for
Next Monday
um will meet
Mr. and Mrs.
Next week is
and the topic for discussion will
be “What Gan Marketing Boards
Accomplish?”.
West-
J. Ea-
wings,
Harri-
Hensail Sextet
Trims Exeter, 6-1
Hensall defeated Exeter 6-1
in the Hensall Community Arena
“B”
This
in a
first
it at the store,
evening the for-
at the home of
William Johns,
collection night
in a W.O.A.A. Intermediate
league game Friday night,
was Hensail’s second win
row after dropping their
two league games.
They will be out after
third win of the season on ‘
hesday night when they
their
Wed-
will
The centre of a baseball is a
piece of cork the size of a mar
ble which has been aged for
15 years.
A few months ago they were at school,
or civilians —many with no special trade!
Today —trained by the R.C.A.F. —they are
skilled technicians in the workings of the
. . jmodern airplane with sought-after know
ledge and experience.
Here is your chance to fit yourself for
the future. You will be given a complete
and thorough training-enjoy good rates
of pay-with opportunities for advance-
•ment- 30 days annual leave with pay — and
other satisfying benefits of a service career
in aviation.
FIND OUT FOR YOURSELF THE OPPORTUNITIES FOR YOU IN THE R.C.A.F.
SEE THE CAREER COUNSELLOR AT YOUR NEAREST R.C.A.F. RECRUITING CENTRE
OR MAIL COUPON
Royal Canadian Air Force
The expanding R.C.A.F.
has openings for more
men immediately to
train as