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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1953-08-13, Page 3Page 3 tough game ig an other THE TIMES-ADVOCATE, EXETER, ONTARIO, THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST 13, 1953 win school. &us No ExchangesNp Refunds Phone 210 Exeter <11 I »l IIIIH HIIHHII IIIHIlltllllHIIIII IIIIIIHIIHIIlllllllHIHIIIIIIIltlillllllllllltllllllfi IHlIilllilllllHUlIHMIl HH'IIIHH tf llllf/ This Week's Special Join Sport Our Coats Christmas Blanket ON SALE FOR Clubin in verse the Reg. $32.50 To $39.50 ALL CREPE-SOLED SHOES AND OXFORDS 25% OFF’ Wuerth s Shoes PHONE 252 EXETER $27.50 MEN’S WORK SHOES Neolite Soles 20% OFF! MEN’S ROLLER SKATES Sizes 7, 8, 9, 10 Dunn’s !— $14.95 ‘is. Save Up BACK’S SHOES Brown Oxfords - Odd Sizes 25% OFF! DISCONTINUED LINES Men's Cork-Soled Work Shoes 20% OFF! 20% OFF! Greys Lose Two Straight Dashwoo-d Tigerettes took stranglehold on .the best-of-five WOAA Ladies Softball playoffs Monday night ter Greys 8-3 games. Exeter took first inning but Dashwood five runs iu the third and to clinch their win. Grace Pickering pitched ive ball for the winners, Gossman and Dot Tetreau ed the bases twice while Guenther, Elaine Becker, Hill and Vera Weiburg single tallies. Mary McKnight hit a for Exeter. Melba Kin, Ttickey scored the i counters. Lose Tough One The Greys lost a tussle in the first i. Thursday night in Dashwood. Grace Pickering and Jean Tay­ lor dueled on the mound. Exeter scored their run. in the seventh when Jean Taylor tripled and Mary McKnight brought her in on a single. Dashwood tallied the tying and winning runs in the eighth. Carol Webb and Grace Pickering were the counters, Pickering hit­ ting a double. by defeating Exe- for a 2-0 lead in a 1-0 leatl in the scored fourth . effectr Claire round- Shirley Labelle scored homer Data On Dashwood By MRS. E. H. RADER Comfortable, Casual, Good-looking Sport Coats In Newest Styles A Real Bargain! McKnight & Walper MEN’S WEAR 3 ExeterPhone 81 ...........................................................................................................iii*ii<iiiiiiii<iiiiifiiuiiiiiyiiiiii>ii>iiii'iiiiiiii>iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini<>'s 5 :3J: L.S.M.F.T. CARS ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ 1952 1952 1952 1951 1950 1950 1949 1948 1946 1950 1940 Ford Ranch Wagon .......................... Ford Coach, a good one ............... Plymouth Sedan, only .......... Ford Sedan, a good one ............... Pontiac Sedan .................................... Dodge Sedan, a steal at only ....... Ford Coach, a nice one ................. Ford Coach ......................................... Mercury Sedan .................................. prefect, only ....................................... Chev Coach, best one in captivity Larry Snider Motors For Trucks Ford 1-Ton Express, real good ................. Studebaker Pickup, overdrive ...................... Dodge 3-Ton Dump Stake, new motor .... Chev %-Ton Express with racks and tarp, a good one ................................................................... 1947 Ford 1-Ton, low mileage ............................... 1943 GMC 3-Ton Dump, see it at ...................... 1952 1952 1947 1949 Special Trucks These Trucks Will Be Reduced $10 A Day Until ☆ ☆ ☆ 1948 1946 pride 1946 price Threshing Machine ☆1951 ☆1948 1948 1941 ☆1943 ☆Used Ford.................... Ford- Massey “20“-— Ford- Oliver “70“— Rco Chassis and Cab. Thursday’s price .> Ford 3-Ton Chassis and Cab. Thursday’s Ford 3-Ton Chassis and Cab. Thursday’s TRACTORS Youi* choice Your choice 2,100. 1,9'00. 1,750. 1,700. 1,400. 1,300. 1,250. 900. 800. 500. 550. 1,400. 1,40'0. 900. 900. 600. 600. Sold! 510. 260. 160. 1,000. 650. 400. 395. Larry Snider Motors PHONE 624 EXETER “Your Ford - Monarch Dealer” Passes Tests Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Pearson received word that their 17 %- .year-old daughter, Shirley, who has been taking the teacher’s course at Toronto, had passed in all her tests without trying ex­ cept one. She received the highest marks in primary reading in the whole group. She has been very successful in music. In 1949 she won an award of $25 at Goderich and has taken, first in solo at S.H.D.- H.S. every year. She received first speaking at London Spring. She will teach in Goderich Township in the fall. Congratula­ tions! v Personal Items Mrs, William Schumacher, Mrs. Leo Luedthe and Elizabeth, Mrs. Marvin Gar the and Philip, of Pigeon, Mich., spent 'the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. William Haugh. Mr. Harold Weber, ‘who was very ill with pneumonia, is im­ proving. Mr. and Mrs. M. W. Schenk, Howard and Lester, of Chepstow, spent Saturday with their son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Schenk. Mr. Schenk spent most of Saturday renewing old ac­ quaintances. Master Jack ie Schenk, who spent three weeks there, returned'home. • Mr. and Mrs. Earl Stumph and family, of Kitchener, spent the weekend with relatives here. Mrs. Nora Koessel and Frieda, of Harbour Beach, Mich., spent the weekend with relatives here". Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kursinsky and x family, of Palms, Mich., spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Albert Miller. Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Miller spent Saturday in Kitchener with Mr. and Mrs. Stan Scherrer. Accompanied by the latter, they spent Sunday at Niagara Falls. Mr. and Mrs. Stan Scherrer had spent last weeeknd with Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Millet. Mr. Walter Biesenthol, Hamil­ ton, spent last weekend with his sister, .Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Miller. Mr. and family left Thursday morning on a trip to the, west coast? Miss Gertrude Biesenthol accompanied them as far a§ her home at Windthorst, Sask. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Eagleson and family, of Southampton, spent Wednesday here. Mrs. Stuart Wolfe and family accom­ panied them home Thursday. Mr. Stuart Wolfe motored up on Saturday and they returned home Sunday*, Mr. Joe Martene, of South­ ampton, spent the weekend his mother, Mrs. Henry tene. Mr. ( day at Mr. stiver spent J mother, and Marion. They all' spent the weekend manville. Master ville, is Mrs. Cliff Salmon, and Gordon Kraft spent Southampton, and Mrs. and Allan, last with Mar- Sun- Percy Klein- of Chicago, with Percy’s•>week . . _ Mrs, Effie Kleinstiver, in. Toronto and Bow- Owen Scott, Bowman­ vacationing with his grandmother, Mrs. Effie Klein­ stiver, his sister, Janet, returned home with her parents, Mi’, and Mrs. Norman Scott last Sunday after spending three weeks hare. Mr. and Mrs. Lorhe Klein­ stiver spent the weekend in B o w in a n v i 11 e . The latter’s nephew, David Williams, returned home with them. Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Louis Rader were Mr. and Mrs. William Decker and family, of Zurich; Mi*. and Mrs. Oscar Miller and fanily, Mr. and Mrs. John Rader. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Rader, of London, visited Mr, and Mrs. Louis Rader last week. Mr. and Mrs. Melton Walper and girls, of Ingersoll, spent the weekend here. Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Rader spent the weekend in ''Waterloo with their two daughters and families, Mr. and Mrs. Ivan*Tay- lor and Mr. and Mrs. Garnet Weibdfg. They attended the christening of their granddaugh- CHAMPIONS RECEIVE THEIR DUE — Favorite daughte of Fonthill, Ont., Marlene Stewart and Anne Sharp, were given a motor parade, welcome from Welland, Ont., to Font­ hill. Marlene won the British Women’s Open golf champion­ ship and Anne the Ontario Ladies’ Open and the Eastern Can­ ada Ladies’ Open. The girls received many honors and cur- currently are adding to their laurels at London, Ont. Marlene won the Canadian Ladies’ Close Championship last weekend. Ump Reverses Decision, Mohawks Tie Playoffs A baseball rarity—an umpire who reversed his decision—helped Exeter Mohawks tie theii- playoff series with Seaforth on Tuesday night. The locals won 3-2 in the Seaforth Park to deadlock the set at one victory each. Henry Harburn, veteran Huron- Perth plate arbiter, called Bob Meharg out for interference while base-running during the Mo­ hawks’ fifth-inning rally. Me­ harg, who didn’t hear the call, raced home with what proved to be a tieing run. When the um­ pire announced his call the sec­ ond time, Mohawk officials sur­ rounded the man in blue and ar­ gued violently. Harburn claimed Meharg had interfered with the Seaforth shortstop on a ground ball. Both runner and infielder fell on the play, Meharg said he was tripped. Base ump, John Houghton, settled the debate by declaring the ball had bounded past both players when they fell. Harburn reversed his decision and the run was counted. Mohawks were t r a i 1 i n.g 2-0 when the rally came. Lome. Haugh Started in with a single and Meharg, Fred Darling, Steve Mitro * and Jack Elson followed his example in succession to bring in three tallies. Elson’s single was the most spectacular. With men on second and' third, the Seaforth masterminds decided to give Elson an intentional pass. Jack let two of the lobs go by, then edged close to the plate and stretched to meet the next out­ side pitch for a Texas leaguer. The Mohawks had many other chances to score during the ball game but. they couldn’t get hits in the right places. They left 12 men on base. Good Display A spectacular display of field­ ing by Lome Haugh and Jack Elson saved the win for the lo­ cals in the ninth, With two men on bases and one 'out, first base­ man Haugh made a diving stab of a ground ball that would have scored at least the tying run. He threw the pill to pitcher Joe Mit­ ro at first to get the second out. Elson made a running catch of Doug Bartliff’s smash, one of the longest balls hit in the game. Bartliff, former Clinton Colts' pitcher and heavy hitter, went the route for Seaforth and his slow ball fooled the locals most of the night. Joe Mitro, back from vacation, was the winning pitcher. He struck trouble in the first when Ron Muir and Bill Smith clouted a triple and a double to score one tally. An unearned run count­ ed against him in the third. He pitched himself out of difficulty in the fourth inning after allow­ ing two successive singles. Meharg, Darling and Elson starred at the plate for the locals with two hits each. Bob Wade hit a double, the only extra-base clout knocked by the team. Ron Muir, Seaforth’s shortstop, was best for the losers with a double and a triple Mohawks lost the first game in Exeter Friday night by a score. EXETER Wade, 2b ............ Haugh, lb ........ Meharg, c .......... Darling, If .......... S. Mitro, 3b .... Elson, cf ............ D. Smith, ss ... J, Mitro, p ........ Holtzman, rf ... SEAFORTH Morton, 3b . McKellar, cf Muir, ss .... B. Smith, If McCue, 2b .. Dulmage, lb Bartliff, p . Jacobi, Norris, 6-3 AB R 4 4 4 5 3 4 4 3 4 35 o 1 1 1 o 0 o o 0 HPO 1 1 22 1 o 0 0 0 HPO 1 0 2 1 1 1 0 0 1 7 20 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 9 0 2 3 3 02 0 20 A 4 12 0 2 0 0 3 0 E 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 32 I 3 S 1 1 0 13 A 0 0 1 0 1 0 3 0 1 E 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Kids Ousted By Clinton Ron Hugill, an. outstanding young hurley who handles a bat almost as well aS a ball, played a major role in the demise of Exeter Bantams this year. He team over from Hugill bingled three Monday night as he limited Derry Boyle’s charges to three hits in a 10-1 victory. Bill Rowe, Jack Taylor and Bill Pollen collected the Exeter safeties. Jim Crocker was the los­ ing pitcher, but he struck out 12 Clinton batters. One-Hitter Jim Crocker hurled one-hit ball last Friday night against the Clinton crew but his mates al­ lowed four runs and failed to get him a single tally. Jim fanned 11 batters while Hugill, who allowed only two hits, struck out nine. Bill Rowe hit both Exeter hits, a single and a double. pitched and hit his Clinton to a twd-straight victory the locals to oust them competition. Foreman: “How is it that you carry only one plank and all the other workmen carry two?’’ Worker: “They’re too lazy to make two trips like I do.” SCHOOL BUS THE EE GOLD COMET ENGINE • SAVES FUEL • SAVES TIME ON MAINTENANCE • SAVES MONEY ON RECONDITIONING FOR THS BEST SCHOOL BUS BUY SEE GRAHAM ARTHUR GARAGE REO SALES AND SERVICE It Costs Very Little Each Week To Own A Kenwood Through the years, our Christmas Blanket popular with our customers. By depositing a can own a beautiful Kenwood by Christmas plain it to you. You’ll want to join the club. Club has proven to be very little with us each week, you time. Come in and let us ex- Kenwood Norway Camp (66x84) Brown and tan cheeky red and black check .............,......... $12.50 Kenwood Ramcrest (72x84) In colors of wine, rose, peach, turquoise, blue and cedar .................................. $13.50 Red, blue Kenwood Famous (72x84) cedar, white, turquoise, rose, and ................................................. $16.95 Kenwood Floral Tint (72x84 - Reversible) Hollyhock, bittersweet, flox pink, lark­ spur, nasturtium ........ . $19.95 50 Pair Children's And Misses' Shoes * Sandals and Summer Shoes in Plain and Combination Colors Values to $4.50 ON SALE ONLY $2.49 Grocery Specials For Thursday, Friday & Saturday Maple Leaf Soap Flakes With Elm Leaf Dish .....giant 790 2/350 230o1 rf c Southern Cross Fancy Tuna 7-oz...................................... Canadian Pork Luncheon Meat 12-oz.................................................... SCORE Exeter . Seaforth RBI—13, Mitro, . — Muir, Aylmer Baby Food Special Value ............................. 3 tins 230 Ayltner Golden Kernel Corn 15-oz. .................................................. Kellogg’s Corn Flakes (large) 10$ Coupon for All-Bran inside 320 Southcott Bros wrzaii OFFICE Ontario SEE vm LO'C AL 3 AB R 4 4 4 3 4 4 4 3 3 33 BV INNINGS . .............. 000 030 000 — 3 9 2 ................ 101 000 000 — 2 7 1 Smith, Muir, Darling, S. Elson 2. 2B—Muir, Wade. 3B __■. SB — Elson 2, .Smith 2, J. Mitro, Darling, Meharg, Left—'Sea­ forth 5, Exeter 12. T3B—Bartliff 6. ir —Mitro 1. SO—Mitro 7, Bartliff 7. ER—Seaforth 1, Exeter 3. U—Har­ burn, Houghton. ter, Sandra Dorothy Weiburg, on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Klein, Mary and Frances, of Tavistock, spent ~ ‘ “ Krotz. Col. Mary Scotia, are visiting former’s mother, Mr man. Mr. Art Allemand spent Wed­ nesday in Detroit. Mr, and Mrs. Fred Stark family, of Toronto, spent weekend with Mr, and Mrs. Allemand. Miss Doris Allemand, Detroit, is spending a week with Mr. and Mrs. Art Allemand. On Sunday morning, John Ro­ bert Hayter was baptized by Rev. Louis Higinell. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs, Robert Hayter, Jr. following the christening & number of guests were enter­ tained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. Koehler, Mr, and Mrs. Ward Kraft and family and Mi's. Houglas Keyes, of London: Mr. and* Mrs. John Snyder, of Bratt- ■ ford; Mrs. Bertha Hayter, Rev. and Mrs. Louis Higinell and Mr. —Please Turn To Page 6 | Sunday with Rev. W. F. and Mrs. Eugene Tieman, Anil and Peter, of Nova ■are f noneYT0:Pa)"Your ■ Mortgage ZR/gZiiWjEYiBii't .ot r Deo th?i X? A; ■■■.. 'tN' ' \4 '■4\t f J "X ''i' J4- &''<4 ''s'4 ' X , V 'I .... ...Wffili ■/If w »-—T H | GERALD & GODBOLT, No. 1, centralia, Ontario.J