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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1954-03-10, Page 8
fl PAGE EIGHT T T c. t I X some goals. O-O-O: READY! 'i I WHEN THEY CALL *T* o i i. 1947 1947 1946 1946 Will give gladly* generously, gratefully to keep the Red Cross ready. 9—Lucknow, MacNay 19.59 Penalties: Baker, W. Thompson 2. SPORT... MIDGETS WIN FIRST GAME OF W.O.A.A. FINALS KINDERGARTEN ■ ■■■■■-. / (Contributed)* have been informed David Anderson, in Dodge Sedan, fully equipped . . ’ PONTIAC SEDAN 1953 CHEV. SEDAN CVanJ-poUectbd the* opening marker ROYAL PURPLE POT PILLS For Potted Plaints/ DODGE COACH FORp 5-PASSENGER COUPE PONTIAC 5-PASSENGER COUPE PONTIAC SEDAN ^.1910 PONTIAC SEDAN . ’ TRUCKS > CHEV. U-TON PICK-UP Junior “A” hockey team is the • unanimous choice of the coaches Had Wrist Broken* ~~ ~~|~in the loop for the-all-star goal— Doug; Trushinski of the Mild-keeping spot. may Monarchs suffered a fract-^ 1951 _ _____ _ TWO 19*50 . CHEV. STATION WAGONS OXE-TON STAKV TBWK 4 1916 CBEy. 2-TON STAKE • * r YOU CAN’T GO WRONG With One Of Brussels Motors .... Used Cars 1953 1953 TWO 1952 CHEV. SEDANS - 1951 CHEV. Powerglide. Deluxe SEDAN, fully equipped 1951 CHEVROLET, SEDAN 1952 PONTIAC SEDAN TWO 1919 CHEV. SEDANS ' T9'49'" "DODGE SEDANT"’’™^ " 194K METEOR COACIF“ Tivo 1948 CIIEV. FLEETLINE COACHES _ _ „ 1918 PLYMOUTH COACH, fully equipped • 1947 MERCURY SEDAN 1948 CHEV. SEDAN. /■ z/ .V. ■ ■■ >/■ z/ zr zz ^:zz--”... zr ■ ? i >/■■■■ • V * '. ’ THE LUCKNOW SENTINEL, LUCKNOW, ONTARIO ■Tpe Ripley-Lucknow mediate “C” < i SPECIAL = 4 NEtV COCKSHUTT TRACTOR, NO. 20 ....... $1,250.00 Brussels Motors Huron County’s Foremost Used Car Dealers ^erms 9Pen Evenings-Until,10 • . •scCiitive times against Col of acto & Cities'Phoii'c'^^ I to break a second period 2-2 tie, • ■ ' • ' " ' ’ . . ■ .*..•• 6. jThoughtful Citizens r „ | year stars went to John Andrew, Good Citizens ’. . . > ’Will show these ^workers every courtesy* ^■.......1../■;........... I; J[/ ■« L. / : in 1952 and six-in 1953. Equally significant, VITA-GRQ ’ PdttingSoil ■! W '. ' '■’/!• "' AFRICAN VIOLETS or ' ■ HOUSE FLANTS..... ..., .... ..... ............... . . , .... ' ■ For Hearitliy, Vigorous ^FLANTlGRaWO^ ............... ^..wse r> Di- R. Finlayson ^Phone 91 MUSIC SUPERVISOR \v FASSED AWAY THURSDAY .* The death of Professor Alfred W. Anderton occurred, in Goder? ich Hospital on Thursday. He was music instructor at both Lucknow Public and High Schools for sev eral years, but of late had be^n I in poor health. , • r fj;®' was organist of St. George’s j Anglican Church, Goderich, i where the funeral service was held on' Saturday, afternoon cpn-r ducted by Rev. Kenneth Taylor. t Interment was in-Goderich- Cem- j etery." . ' . ■ r“W^Amderton“is7survived~by’his^ , wife. . ■ '/ ' I, Those attending the funeral, from here on Saturday were Mr. , P. W:‘Hoag,'Mr. Stuart Collyer> Mrs. A. E. McKim and Mr. Ireland of. Teeswater. . , PREPARATIONS MADE FOR WOLF CUBS that re-’ ™rs. sponse to several inquiries, is making preparations for this class of pre-school children ranging in age from three to six years. These guided activities are /valuable training in. that they provide the child With opportun ities to become acquainted arid, work in groups. All of which means that they can adjust them selves more readily to full-time school^life later. ' " The School Board and several parents concerned feel that a v larger class can eventually be ac comodated at the school. Mean- while Mrs. Andersbn would pre- ; fer to start, classes nex,t Monday ________ ____ _____ ___ morning at her home opposite paui Henderson, seconder of the the new High School. • .—^—cphese classes -will---run - daily. from 9 to 12 for a small fee. Children are asked to bring cray ons; blunt scissors and a plastic apron, for fmger painting. , ' Any-parent who cannot always;-. ,drive ok pick up the little tots • W^th 31; the Greys had 26 should make definite arrange-■ an<i the Tawnys 16. ments with a passing High School { A three-year service ktan was student to escort the child both! presented to Gary Ritchie. Two- ways. : | year stars went to John Andrew, Country parents may find it: Bob Andrew, Thom Collyer, Paul convenient to drop off children, Emiberlin, George Gibsoh, Mur- on Wednesday of Saturday after- {ray Hunter, Ken Jones and Bob noons while they are busy shop-... Hunter. Gary Johnston received ping. . ! his first-year star. w Last week’s • regular -meeting was opened by White Sixer Geo. Gibson. After inspection, all nine teen Cubs passed their balancing test.,by walking along the edge of a twelve-fdot plank three feet off the floor. George Gibson out lasted the rest of the pack in ah exciting game of British bulldog. During the instruction period, the Cubs were taught the treatment for cuts, scalds, burns and shock. There was/also a review of the compass .test7"The^Red_S^x were” victorious in a'-reef knot relay. ~ ’ ■■ ’ - •’ > White Six, led the grand howl to end - the meeting- 7. __o— ‘ ■■ / The inter-six competition was won ,by the Red Six with 33 jewels. The White were close be- Keep Your Red Cross MERCY NEVER ENDS. WELCOME the RED CROSS WORKERS. s i , • ‘ ' The Red Cross canvasser who calls on you works'without pay, unselfishly devoting his spare time in a cause that has no aim but to help others. Rural Residents * . » z Will hot lie tanvassed but are asked to. leave their donations at fhp Bank of Montreal, Mckihi’s Drug Store~or at their neigbborhood store Lucknow, Midgets defeated At wood 5-4 here on Saturday night to go one goal up on the W.O.A.A. championship round. The phrase, “the outcome was not known un-y til the final whistle”, was surely carried put on Saturday- as Ken MacNay scored ,the winping marker, at 19.49 of the 3rd period. The Atwood team claimed “no ~go>F—but^eferee^FrapK^Pearce- of Kincardine ruled different andEucknow-won^M. / Lucknow: goal, Geo. Richards; def., Kenneth MacNay,; Ernie Gibson; cep., Alvin Baker; wings, Claire Thuell, Paul Couse; alt;, Don Blue; Bob Morton, Jim Wil son, Hugh MacMillan, Eugene Gardner, Pon MacDonald. Atwood: goal, Don Dennis; def., Larry Thompson, Wayne Thomp son; cen., John Harrow; Wings] Wayne Cumming, Robert HamiL i ton;’ alt., Dwight Wagner, Murray McCourt; Don Pestell, Jerry Bow man, Wayne .Petrie; Ed McKum- mage, Larry Ingles. r . - First Period No scoring'. '* Penalties: MacNay, Cumming. . • v Second Period 1— Lucknow, Baker (Thuell) 3.05 2— rAtwood, McCourt (Pestell). ■ 3 25 : ; ■ 3— -Lucknow, MacNay 11,05. ' Penatlies:: MacNay, Baker, Me-' Rummage. Third Period 4— Lucknow, Wilson (Gibson) 7.47 ■ 5— Atwood, Harrow 9.30 6— _Atwood, Hamilton (Cumming, Thompson) (14.37 7— -Lucknow, MacNay 15.00 8~Atwood, Hamilton (Harrow) ___15.45' ■ / - ■„ - ‘ '■ ■■■'. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1954 HECTIC TRIP BUT ' KIDS WERE HAPPY ■■ i Lucknow. Bantams set out in the teeth* of a storm last Wed- nesday to play an O.M.H;A. chanipionship game with Alvin- ston. at. Forest. They didn’t get there. The kids didn’t mind it —in fact they had a whale of a time? The same could, hiardly .be. I said of the drivers, Bob MacKen- zie, A. J. (Army) Wilson arid Jack Kilpatrick. * ‘ Although the visibility wasn’t good, the, going wasn’t too bad i until the local -cavalcade got ' south of Bayfield. With* “ceiling -zerb'^r—Jack—:Kilpatrick—bogged-^1 down solid in a bank at the roadside.. Bob ^MacKenzie got around him. but floundered, jn a drift a short distance .ahead. A in the first Minnesota game a little over: a . week ago* • - Chin came to Vic Heyligei, s sextette a from the' top-ranking amateur International Hockey League where he toiled y^ars for the Windsor Spitfires and. Chatham respectively. While with Chatham he notch ed 55 points to lead; the circuit i scorers, ' and both years the league h$ was a member of Cha championship This added to his two champ ionship seasons' with Michigan Tnak'©sLV a^t0talT“Of -fbur straights title winning teams for Chin., | Wbiie“playing-in-theJnterna_t^ Tonal League, George had a try out with the Toronto Maple Leafs and Was given pro feelers froip both the Leafs 'and Defrpit Red ; ® w Wings. ™e' tria! TlhAa chOam-ltractor'fro,Hi a nearby fanh wa* along with the two NCAA c | [?roUgi1t |0 the rescue, but Jack’s pionships, are counted among. . developed trouble, and a tow biggest athletic thn us. „ | Was necessary. Army” was The Chin dynasty, at Mi^ ig ahead—but. not far—*for he too may be re-estabhshed in ■ I was stuck solid. A highway plow ye.ars. Georges biotheis Jac < I the trio 0(it of their predica- Charlie . are .presently playing ;ment and Jntp Grand Bend lt Canadian amateur hoc ey nd then after-seven o’clock, We are reportedly Annf Arbor bound j mcntion it befoj,2^aTne after completion of-high school, j.^me 5 00 p.m. go the toam Bii'll and. Abe Chin, older -bro-1 peeked in for the night at the fhers of George had tryouts with Brenner House. With good meals the Toronto Maple Leafs. l and’ television the kids weren’t Chin, a geology major, plans to; worrying. Phones were out but go to England next fall for post- by police car short wave to God - graduate work and a little moue' erich, word was relayed of the hockey in the English leagues. —^-o-o-o—- TEESWATER OUSTS RIPLEYi IN 9th GAME QF SERIES GEORGE CHIN HAS BEST SEASON , George Chin is currently in Colorado with the Ann Arbor Wolverines who are competing in the National Collegiate hockey finals from. March- lOth; to 13th., The team flew to the West. The Ann Arbor team won their last eleven games to ^qualify for < and in doing so George Chin roll-: __? car short wave to God erich, word was relayed of the, overnight stay and Morley Chin , kep]t local phone wires humming advising parents where their I wandering‘ boys were. v ____ j Thqrsday p.m. came. The hotel , Tnter- 'i bill was mounting and the Blue- Combines dropped water Was still blocked. AZ’ia Ex alte decision to the Teeswater eter, Clinton and gingham the Shamrocks in Teeswater on Sat- road-was reportedly open, and urday night before a crowd of s° lhe homeward, journey was over 1000 fans. —It—was—the—9 th—arid—deciding game of the marathon group championship series, and while i the Combines I skates, , dhe I j commenped/Wasn’t too bad. when you could see, but one motorist, ^“l^astTricouldnHr-Unfortunately—— he had to be behind Bob Mac- , Kenzie and he. plowed into him, crumpling the trunk lid and back end-ofiBob’scar,J„to_the.:extenti_^^’. of between $200 and $300. This / j happened between Exeter and ' : Hensail. The car was taken into». up three straight wins to start, wfr0]e 'carload had a chance of off the prolonged set, but fait-] a jjj|. to. Wingham. Art Baker ered as the Teeswater erpw Snap-; over j0 pick them up there ta-M. »A hark ,«h> th«'8nd the last of the BaAtemfe laves n- | arrived home‘ about 8.00 p m. , Thursday. _ - • P.S.—If they had made Forest now hang up the ____ _ Teeswater squad meets Mildmay in* the next round on the W.O.A.A. championship trail. ■■,r, The Ripley-Lucknow boys raiy j’ej1gglj| anj left there when the ; off the prolonged set; but fait-.]j ■ . • — ■ . ped to life to get back into the series/send it to the limit, and finally take it. ■ ' I ----. ..... . - . - . .... ■ They took a first period lead I* >r.o._l!ir-v uau ,I1C1UV r) the tournament again this year, jn Saturday night’s game and there wouldn’t havef been a game and in doing so Georgs .Chin roll-. neVer relinquished it. The 12-6 anyhow. The hydrtTWas offlj e.d up a scoring mark that sur- c(Core hardly indicated the play |*__________— o-o-o—_- passed his last year’s. perfoiTh-as ’ losers threw caution to Riggin: “All Star” Goalie ance by three points. the winds in the .third period in (/ Dennis Riggiri of Kincardine/ This season George Scored 45 atr unsuccessful effort to get back vho plays goal, for the Hamilton points in 20 games, made up of; ® ■ 20;goals.ahd 25 assists. j — DaVe "Baad, sports—Writer for a Michigan^daily paper, had this to say of George in a. recent cpl- U1A1 (few years ago Connie ! ured ^zr’st in Baden series, I People should exchange prob- Smythe, wilv general manager of will/be lost.for th? rest of-lems arid troubles. It’s as. ?as'y *as professional; hockey’s* Toronto./^ season to the Carrick boys pie*.fdr;a person to solve the other Maple Leafs,, was discussing his wh?. mJet/?he winners of the .fellow’s problems and bear his methods of evaluating players in ^PW-Teeswater series. . i troubles, tenns of. salary worth. I He enumerated, that the num ber of poinits or goals a player scored meant less than the im portance of each scoring effort.. If./most of the points came in one-sided affairs Where they made little difference in the out- j come of the. game he paid, them I less than if they had scored a fewer amount Of goals but de posited them in the net as tying or winning markers. / •' "■ If college hockey, players were evaluated accordingly, Goo. Chin I 'WOTild^undoubtedly-.be one of'the.i ' highest paid players in4he.g'ame,) The stocky' Lucknow, Ontario, senior, now playing ' his third season for • the • Wolverines, - has specialized in crucial' goals' •ithroughout his careen. . . For the past.two years he has | sparkled' .with the.' pressure op in i . {Nf’-AA Murnatripnl fhnnino nil ■ V 'I i 7 'f r . - f7 .{ NCAA tSurnamen't, topping all ‘ • scorers each time with,four points 1 jJn 1952 and six- in 1953. • the T7.0 { ’' po uh d;' s pcedstFr'T ito'd-’’h W C'' t hr”" all 'important first goal. in each |. rtotirhath'erhrlv-. se nd • th'©.Wolvcr-* ■ ‘ ines into early leads/’ . l , Chin has; cbme; tip -with ,bigr scores zon at least four different t occasions diiring the ■ ,1953-54 I campaign, lie tallied the winning" goals in the two 3-^ victories over r Michiagn State, scored thiee corn; r