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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1953-02-26, Page 3THE TIMES-ADVOCATE, EXETER, ONTARIO, THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 26, 1953 Page 3 The Canadian roster of civil servants federally employed stood at 131,646 in March, 1952. Of these 32,689 worked at Ottawa. NEW y lOpQ-EI&HTQ Think of it, twelve hundred miles on a tank of gas!!” the re­ BY FfSHBR Flyers Dominate Scoring Contest Final official figures of Cyclone scoring race were leased this week by Derry Boyle, league convenor. Junior Barash, of Zurich, was the top point-getter with his 35 goals was tops department. Doug O’Brien, centreman, took ors with a total i The standing: Player (Team) Barash (Z) -------- Maisonville (Z)_Garvin (F) ,—__ O’Brien (Z) _____F. Revington (L) Evans (I) -------—Gignac (Z) ------— Norland (F) ------Shaw (E) ---------- Ulrich (F) ______ Stretton (L) -----W, Smith (L)__ Hesse (Z) --------- Baird (Z) ------— O’Neil (I) --------- 60 and in that Flyers', Zurich the assists hon- of 27. GP G A P 14 35 25 60 14 32 22 54 14 29 25 54 14 21 27 48 14 23 43 13 27 13 40 13 22 18 40 14 18 19 37 14 21 14 35 14 17 18 35 14 15 19 34. 14 11 21 324 14 18 14 32 14 14 17 31 14 14 17 31 Kinkids Tie Seri es ONE USED Coffield Washer PRICED TO SELL Top-Notch Shape With Clinton Midgets Exeter Kinkids walloped the Clinton Midgets 8-4 in Clinton Monday night to even their best- of-three play-off series at one win apiece. Third game was played Wednesday night in Exe­ ter arena. Don Taylor paced the locals with three goals. Bill Pollen collected three assists. For Clin­ ton, H. Colquhoun and Garon scored one goal each. The Kinkids lost the first game here Friday night 5-1 Give To The European Flood Rel ief Fund 9' What Are You Saving For Your Future Home? Drop into Jack Smith Jeweller and let us know what patterns you are saving in silver, china and crystal. We can help you and your friends who want to give you the things you’ll appreciate. Heard About Our SILVER CLUB? If you haven’t picked your silver pattern, see our complete selection. Use our club to get what you want surprisingly easy! Ask us about it now? Jack Smith Jeweller Flyers Tackle Milverton In Group Finals Centralia Flyers will meet Mil­ verton Dominion Royals in a best-pf-seven play-off series to. determine the local group cham­ pions and the right to go on in Intermediate O.H.A. “B” downs. ~ The Flyers ousted Clinton Colts in three straight games. Milverton swept its series with Mitchell, Observers predict a close bat­ tle in the group finals. Milverton and Ceptralia were tied for place in the league during regular schedule. Play-off scliedue is; February 28—Centralia March 3—Milverton 5—Milverton ‘ 7—Centralia 10—Centralia 12—Milverton All games will start at 9 except on Thursday, March’12, which begins at 8:30. If a seventh game is necessary the teams will flip to decide where the tilt will be played. Play- top the at at at at at at Milverton Centralia Centralia ’Mprr Milverton Milverton Centralia p.m. Centralia Flyer? ousted Clin­ ton Colts from 0-H.A. Int. "B” competition before the second largest crowd of the season in Exeter Arena Saturday night. The airmen scored an 12-7 victory over ridden, but game, 1,200 saw’ the tilt, The win gave easy the injury- Colts. Over Centralia a three-game sweep of the play-off series. But it wasn’t easy. The Colts held the Flyers to close 7-6 and 11-9 scores in the first two tussles. _ Clyde Wilberforce paced the night attack effort. Randy and ‘ Pumple the third period, both teams counted three, Colts missed the work of Bud Schoenhals'and Doug Bartliff on defence. Schoenhals was out with a damaged cartilage and Bartliff nursed a knee injury. Centralia It, Colts 0 Big Ray Embury led the Flyers to their second victory on Clin­ ton ice Wednesday night. The husky rightwinger drove home six goals and assisted in one other. Fairbairn in the Flyers’ net also played* a standout game. The battle was wide open as the score would indicate. Em­ bury opened the game at 6.26 and Clinton had to fight an up­ hill battle from that point on. It was a rugged affair although only four penalties were called. Clyde Wilberforce notched three for the Flyers, Johnson and Ellis scoring the other two. Mait Edgar led the Colt as­ sault with three goals. Flyers’ Saturday with a five-goal Ellis scored two Smith, Johnson, Beatty netted singles. Hank McEwan starred for the losers, firing five well-earned markers. Dalmage and M. Col­ quhoun collected the rest of the Colts' count. The Flyers opened the throttle in the first period and took a respectable 6-3 lead. They took three and gave one in the second to widen their margin to 9-4, In Vezina, ) and Langford’s Irish Capture Lead In Rousing 'C' Round Robin Local 'Homebrews-' Show Spirit, Take Third Playoff Game Hensail Wins London the locals like Tro- upset who Hustling like a team playing just for the sport of the game, Exeter "homebrews” bounced back into contention Tuesday night by whipping Hensail 9-6 in the third game of playoff series. Spurned by their waivered players again, iced juveniles, fought jans, and came up with an victory for the 137 fans saw the tilt. The winners displayed they have lacked most season. They overcame handicap after the first ■punched their way into the lead and held it the rest of the way. Bill Waghorn and George Shaw provided the scoring power for Exeter with three goals each. Waghorn opened the game in the first period by happing home a Lawson rebound. Bill put the locals two up at the 9.58 mark with help from Doug Smith. Hensail fought back and scored three before the period ended, led by O’Shea with a goal and •an assist. Munro and Wade fired the other two. Smith and Don Wells com­ bined on a picture play 52 sec­ onds after the second period opened to tie the score. Gerrjj, Lawson put the locals up witn Farrow and Wagliorn getting assists. Farrow was credited with a counter which bounced off a Hensall defenceman’s back. Shaw scored on an unassisted play a minute later to give Exeter a 6-3 margin. Knight set O’Shea up for a Hensall tally as the visitors rallied. Hildebrand and Cowan got together on another goal, Hildebrand sinking the rubber. Shaw scored his second unassisted marker a minute be­ fore the bell, sending the locals ahead 7-5 at the end of the second. The teams slowed a little in the third period and battered around centre ice most of the time. Shaw and Wells hooked up for a light-flasher at the 5.55 mark. Knight scored from Mun­ ro six minutes later. The rivals battled on even ground until the last minute when Waghorn scored his third goal of the night, finishing off an assault by Musser and Shaw. Thirteen penalties were called by the referees but, although tempers were flaring, there were no fights. spirita of the a 3-2 period, Two Straight Hensall took a two-game in the Cyclone "B” play-offs Fri­ day night with a 9-5 win over Exeter Eagles in Seaforth arena. The locals called up juveniles to fill....................... -------- gulars blades. too, in their first test in inter­ mediate company. The winners scored three goals in each stanza to maintain a margin of victory all the way. The first two periods ended 3-1 and 6-3. Knight starred for Hensall with four goals. Dale potted two and Mousseau, Munro and O’Shea netted singles. Bill Wagliorn and Bill Musser drove home two counters each for the losers, while Don Wells scored a single. Dick McFalls, of the juveniles, played a fine game_in the nets for Exeter turned in a figuring in five tallies. HENSALL; t fence, Cameron, _ tre, Munro; wings, alts., A. Nicholson; ____ ...... Campbell, Doig, Cowen. EXETER: Goal, McFalls; defence, Smith, T uckey ; centre, Musser; wings, Lawson, Waghon; alts., Wells, Coates, Farrow, Batten, Middleton, Parsons. lead the holes left by five re- who didn’t don their The lads showed up well and Doug Smith hard-working effort, four of the locals’ Goal, , A. ■Woodcock; de­Hildebrand; cen- O’Shea, Knight; Dale, Mousseau, Bowling News Lucan Irish rammed home five goals in the first period Monday night to set the pace for their 9-4 victory over Dashwood Tigers in the fourth game of the "C” round-robin series. The win gave the Langford lads top place Standing. Completely outplaying Dash­ wood in the - ’ ” Irish rang up a 5-0 lead and then held the upsurging Tigers at bay the rest of the game. Ted Elders scored two goals to spark Fred Herb ■that comfortable margin. The Tigers roared back second period and their guests 2-1. Jim Hayter and John Willert counted for Dash­ wood, while Glen Revington net­ ted the sole Lucan tally. In the third, Lucan fought to a 3-2 edge on the scoring sheet although it was nip and tuck all the way. Fred and Glen Reving­ ton and Herb Stretton fired the Irish markers. Spain’ and Bob Hayter twitched the twine for Dashwood. It was a free-wheeling, rugged contest with both teams fighting hard. Netminders Jake Barnes and Corky Schroeder both stop­ ped a lot of rubber. LUCAN: Goal, Barnes; defence, Smith, Hodgins; centre, F. Reving­ton; wings, Elders, Stretton; alts,, L. Revington, Stevenson, Watson, G. Revington, J. Hard, N. Hardy, Rid­ dell.DASHWOOD: Goal, Schroeder; de­ fence, Hartman, Tieman; centre, Spahr; wings, Klein, Rousseau; alts,, ,T. Hayter Willert Roulleau, Ford, Winn, B. Hayter, H. Schroeder. in the three-team first stanza, the the early Lucan attack, and Leroy Bevington and Stretton added the gave the winners three their in the outscored Tigers Upset Zurich Flyers Never underestimate those Dashwood Tigers! That's a song Dashwood fans have long sung but it doesn’t al­ ways scare the opposition. Some day they’ll learn. The Tigers sent the upsurging Semi-Finals Tighten Up, Bangs’ Bowling ,Pointless/ /Zurich Flyers to a crash landing Friday night in one of the big­ gest upsets of the season. The battling cats said “no” all night to any thought of defeat and they sprung a win that amazed even the most rabid fans. The final score was 10-8 and that indicates the margin of play. The Tigers held at least a one- goal lead over their rivals most of the night. It’s quite possible this game will spell defeat for the Flyers. Their star centre, Joe Maison- ville, suffered a bad hip injury when he rammed into the nets and Benny Gignac, the third top scorer of the league, broke two ribs in the affray. Besides that, the defeat put all teams on an even keel with a win and a loss each. But Zurich has to meet Lucan on the Irish ice which can make a difference. The Tigers showed some new player combinations Friday night besides the fighting spirit that only Dashwood teams are capable of. Klein opened the scoring at 2.20 of the first period to set a pace which the Flyers couldn’t match. Baird tied the score four minutes later but Jim Hayter put the locals up again. O’Brien re­ taliated this time but Bob Hay­ ter and Jack Ford whipped in two before Barash could score. Spahr sunk the marker which gave Dashwood its 5-3 first per­ iod lead. In the tight second period, Doug O’Brien fired two goals but Klein counted a single to keep Dashwood on top although they were short on the stanza’s play. Barash tied the score in the first minute of the second but it was the closest the Flyers could come. Jim Hayter, Rousseau and Rouleau drove home the winners as Zurich’s injuries took' then* toll. Barash scored to make the count 9-8 at the 10-minute mark. Jack Ford fired the Flyers' heart­ breaker at 15.11 to complete the scoring. Klein, Jim Hayter and Jack Ford each potted doubles to lead the Tigers’ attack. Barash and O’Brien both earned hat-tricks for the losers. The Tigers won despite the 10- minute handicap they had in penalties. Of the seven called, Dashwood took five. Zurich Deadlocks Juvenile Series Zurich juveniles evened the best-of-three series with Exeter Lions Monday night when they nipped the locals 13-10. Eateter edged the visitors 9-7 Saturday night. Third game will be played Thursday night ip Zurich. Don O’Brien paced the Zurich crew to victory with seven goals in the second match. Bill Yung- blut and Bill Hesse scored two each while Howard Armstrong and Jim Houlahan notched sin- Don Wells fired five for the losers. Bill Batten, Jack Parsons counted two apiece and Terry Wade scored one. The locals played with only eight men. ZURICH; Goal, Fisher; defense, Yungblut, Webb; centre, O’Brien; wings, Regler, Armstrong; alts., B. Parker, R. Parker, Hesse, Miller, Hay, Houlahan.EXETER: Goal, McFalls; defense, Middleton, Batten; centre J. Parsons; wings, Wells, Hennessey; alts., C. Parsons, T. Wade, POP’S Taxi Service Phones: Exeter 857 and 545-r-3 Evening Service Open this Sunday, Wednes­ day afternoon, and during the evenings throughout the week: From December, 1949, to August, 1950, Canada’s food cost index rose 18 .per cent. SNIDER Motor Sales It Pays You to Pick a CASE Grain Drill Co,»ven Low to fill,;. fast in the field and on the road... close control of depth and cov­ ering . . , plus Seedmeter’s proved accur­ acy with all sizes of seed and rates of seeding. Grass-seed attachment has Seed­ metre accuracy, too. Wide variety of sizes, spacings and furrow openers to fit any tractor, suit any soil. Plain and fertilizer types, or fertilizer attachment. Let us show you this simple, sturdy grain drill. Exeter Farm Equipment DICK JERMYN, PROP evident on past week in the bat­ position. Main Street Free Tires! Get Your Famous Firestone Tires For Spring Motorola Car Radios Complete With Aerial —■ $65.00 LIBERAL TRADE-IN ON USED RADIOS Exeter BUY 3 60046 Champions For $60 GET 1 60046 Champions FREE BUY 3 67045 Deluxe Champions For $75 GET 1 670 15 Deluxe Champions FREE AUTO-LITE or CHAMPION Reg. 90$ our price 600 f Canadian Auto Stores * LUCAN AND EXETER 211 - Phones - Lucan 60-W Auto Accessories —- Sporting Goods Close games were the score sheets this as teams tightened up tie to make a playoff The "A” Group leaders—r-the Butchers and the Windmills — settled with a 4-3 split. In "B” Group, the Rural Rollers are striding along with 12 points, with Ed Conrad’s 'Spare Parts a close second with 10. Last year's champions, the Whizz Bangs, usually tight-fisted whei}, it comes to giving away points, lost seven to both Windmills and the Spares. “A" GROUP Windmills 7, Whizz Bangs O The Dutch Boy Windmills whitewashed the Whizz Bangs 7- 0 last Wednesday night—1,101- 1,058, 1,198-1,190 and 1,199-1,- 139. It was a rewarding night for Al Hoskins and Bill Parker, who rolled 738 (257) and 700 (240) respectively for the win­ ners, Glenn Robinson was again high for the Bangs, with 704 (321). Big Six 5, Strikes 2 The Big Six edged the Strikes 5-2 on Monday night—971-1,013, 1,099 - 1,044 and 1,113 - 1,005— neither team bowling well. Ken Hockey led the winners with 597 (257). Butchers 4, Windmills 3 The high-flying Butchers were cut down a little when they split 4-3 with the Windmills, who are also favorites for "A” Group honors. The games finished 991- 1,361, 1,163-1,124 and 1,181- 1,173. Harold Wolfe chopped down 684 (291) for the meat­ men and Bill Parkei’ bowled well for the Windmills, scoring 752 (289). Spares 7, Whizz Bangs 0 The Whizz Bangs took a bowl­ ing lesson from Jim Fairbairn’s Spares, the Kist Cup winners taking one game with their luck and two with their skill—-1,121- 1,020, 995-990 and 1,301-1,025. Rene Francois was again in form, toppling 725 (264) for Spares. Bud Preszcator had (209) for the Bangs. “B” GROUP Rural Rollers 7, Applejacks It was bowling "a la Mode” that helped make the Rural Rol­ lers look like a pretty hot team as they squashed the Applejacks 7-0 last Wednesday night. Merle had 720 (318) for the winners but Lloyd Stewart's 690 (283) was instrumental too. Howie Holtzman bowled 608 (224) for the losers. Games ended l>206- 1,100, 1,202-1,066 and 1,076- 1,045, Spare Parts 5, Pinpoppers 2 It was the same old story, the Pinpoppers taking a 5-2 shellack­ ing this time from the Spare Parts— 1,205-1,022, 1,141-1,269 and 1,203-1,091. Lee Learn did a lot of the damage with his 657 (236) for the winners but he couldn’t beat the old master, Bob Nicol, who had 771 (299) for the ’Poppers, Applejacks 5, Huskers 2 The Applejacks staggered the Huskers 5-2 Monday night, Russ Snell’s crew edging them 1,026- 904, 1,055-1,035 and 994-1,098. Chester Mawhinney's 596 (250) for the losers was the only game worth mentioning for either team. Rural Rollers 5, Short Circuits 2 The Rural Rollers continue! their taking ways, beating Mur Brintnell’s Short Circuits 5-2 Monday night—911-1,183, 1,166- 1,065 and 1,172-999. They won the total pins point by three. Lloyd Stewart was again knock­ ing them down in fine fashion, with a 693 (307) triple. Doug Harrison was best for the hydro team with 586 (219). MEN'S LEAGUE STANDING “A” Group Butchers (134) Windmills (234) Big Six (180) _ Keglers (167) Spates (104) — Tradesmen (163) Strikes (266) __ Whizz Bangs (212) "B” Group Rural Rollers (152) Spare Parts (213*) Huskers (289) Mardons (244) __Applejacks (233) Pinpoppers (112)_Panthers (250*)__ Short Circuits (275) (*Handlcap for Six Men) Bring Spring Inside Your Home REDECORATE WITH Floor Covering LINOLEUM LUKE It’s the modern way to make those floors look ^wonderful! Choose from the.se hard-wearing, colorful, economical coverings! AND CONGOLEUM RUGS Brighten Your Rooms With Colorful Wallpaper the Blue Ribbon Cofree, 1-lb jar First Quality Rice$1.10 2 lb. 350 Stokely’s Crin. Style Corn, 15-oz. 2/290 DAVE’S COMMENTS Southcott Bros F WALLPAPER i Laba f t Trophy Arrives The week We gratefully re­ ceived the Labatt "Chainpion­ ship** Trophy from the firhTg re­ presentative "Slim” Stewart, who has been a willing accomplice ih getting the award tor the league. —Please turn to Page 10 JASPE TILE, 9x9 ........................ 240 each MARBOLEUM TILE, 9x9 ....... 200 each MARBOLEUM BY THE YARD A Guage .................... $5.90 Running Yard 3 Guage ..... $3.80 Running Yard FULL STOCK OF CONGOLEUM BY THE YARD Now any home can have a modern, bright interior with the new and exciting designs in wallpaper. Let Soutlicott’s show you these beautiful patterns that will make your home completely new. Be Ready for spring with a complete redecoration of all your rooms. Grocery Specials For Thursday, Friday and Saturday Kraft Dinner, macaroni & cheese 2/290 Nd. 1 Pitted Dates 1-lb. 150 Kellogg’s Rice Krispies