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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1954-03-18, Page 3POPS Taxi Service Report From Edgewood By MRS. ROY MOORE THE TIMES-ADVOCATE, EXETER, ONTARIO, THURSDAY MORNING, MARCH 18, 1954 SHDHS Top B' In Tourney * Page 3 «• Phones: Exeter 357 and 515-r-3 ■ SINUS Those Terrible Headache* in the darkened areas of photo now may be relieved by Tablets. These sufferers 30 all out in their praise of the wondrous relief from these Tablets. Get a bottle today. TRUMAC TABLETS ATOMIC PRODUCTS (HAMILTON) STATION B For Sale At DRUG STORES EVERYWHERE Mr .and Mrs. Kenneth Garrett, Jr., and Cathie visited Saturday afternoon with Mr. Tom Pye and Evelyn. Mr, Harry Crone is ■doctor’s care. Mr. and Mrs. Lester and Mrs. Ilderton. under the Longliurst and family, of St. Thomas, ed with Mr. and Mrs. Clare lop and family. Miss Anna Westman has sick with the measles. Mr. Don Middleton spent •day at Glencoe. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Moore called Friday Amos, Mrs. shard, with her parents, Mr. and H. Grohe. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Pye baby, of Ilderton, and Mr. Mrs. Ken Kirk and girls, Thorndale, visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. R, Moore and family. Ruthie and- Jackie Garrett spent Saturday at Stratford. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Moore visit­ ed Mr. and Mrs. William Cornish on Friday. Revere School, S.S. No, 5, is holding community night at the school this Friday night. The Revere Farm Forum met at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Harvey Kennedy Monday night with an attendance of IS. The committee arranged for an oyster and ham supper to be held on the closing night of the 1953-54 series, the latter part of March. visit- Du li­ been Mon­ on Mr. and Mrs. Oliver West McGillivray. William Slierritt, is spending a few Blan- •days Mrs. and and of Mother: “Where do bad little girls go?” Daughter: “Everywhere.” Grand Selection Of Bedroom Suites! LET US SHOW YOU THE 1 Most Complete Line WE HAVE EVER STOCKED! Three-Piece Suites From $94.00 Up OPEN STOCK SUITES ft Hopper-Hockey Buy Any Number of Pieces Now - Secure the Rest at a Later Date Lose To Champs By Basket Edge In one of the most thrilling games of the tournament, the senior Panthers lost a heart­ breaking 43-41 decision to the eventual “B” champions, Essex. The South Huron team, leading most of the semi-final game, piled up a comfortable nine-point mar­ gin in the third quarter but buc­ kled under an Essex rally in the final stanza. Behind near the end of the game, the Panthers made a desperate rally but just came within one point of the winners before the whistle ended the con­ test. Fouls and a sudden dulling of their shooting senses proved tlie downfall of the locals. Three of the Panthers left the floor in the last quarter because of penalties. Best In Three Quarters Outscoring Essex by one point in each of the first two quarters, the Panthers caught fire in the third and piled up a nine-point lead. Baskets by Don O’Brien, Gary Middleton, Ron Rowcliffe and Bill Yungblut gave South Huron the comfortable margin before disaster set in. A fourth quarter drive by Essex coupled with the sudden ineptness of South Huron’s sharpshooters, 1 reversed the tide and Essex took a 42-39 lead with, five minutes to go. The locals fired shot after shot at the rigging but failed to connect. Ron Rowcliffe scored a single point When he potted bne of two free throws. Don O’Brien, fouled in a lay-up try, sunk his first shot to narrow the score to 42- 41 but missed his second attempt for the tying point. In the last minute, Terry Collins netted a free throw for Essex which- gave them a two-point margin. ■Guards Jim Sturgis and Yungblut and centre Gary dleton left the game in the frame on fouls. Leading Scorer Don O’Brien led players on both teams in scoring. He netted 15 points. Gary Middleton potted 11 and Bill Yungblut nine. Stur­ gis and Rowcliffe both scored three points. Ron Gerard was tops for Essex with 12. Fred Wass collected 10. Score by quarters: Essex ........ 9 14 10 Exeter ........... 10 15 12 Essex easily defeated in the Senior “B” final the title. Score was 53-42. The Exeter seniors played Del­ hi in the consolation round but didn’t make any serious effort to win. Final result was 45-30 for Delhi. Bill Mid­ final 10—43 4—41 Aylmer to take Carbon Paper Per 100 — $4.95 Each 60 Times-Advocate Kitchen Cupboards Complete With • Arborite Top • Chrome Mould • Handles CUSTOM'BUILT FOR YOUR OWN REQUIREMENTS Furniture EXETER| PHONE 99 ^4 titiitwiiiHiiiiiiiliiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiitiiiii 1 iiii II iiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiin 11111 iiiiitiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiitiitii nun 111(11111111111111111111^ HURON LUMBER CO. LTD. Phone 48 Exeter For The Best Buy In Town See Our Selection Of OK Used Cars And Trucks 1951 Chevrolet Sedan - Like New 1951 Chevrolet Powerglide Sedan Radio and Visor — Excellent Condition — Low Mileage 1949 Dodge Custom Sedan - Real Good 1947 Chevrolet 5 Passenger Coupe Like New 1950 Chevrolet ’/a-Ton Pick-Up Low Mileage & Snell Bros. Limited Exeter PHONE 100 Chevrolet « Oldsmobile - Chev Trucks EXETERChevrolet • rw Win Semi-Final By Two Points Jim Neil and Bev Sturgis were heroes of the junior Panthers’ 28-26 win oyer Waterford in the semi-final match. Neil scored a beautiful lay-up basket to tie the score near the final whistle and Sturgis' accurate foul shooting gave the locals their two-PQint edge. This was the first nip-apd-ttick thriller that Coach Glen Mickle and South Huron fans had to sweat through. In the second, the seniors lost their exciting final by the same margin younger mates won. Fooled By Defence Although they had the throughout the game, the juniors were almost out-foxed by a- tight Waterford defence. The teams tied 8-8 in the first quarter and South Huron moved into a 17-13 lead at the half. The locals lost their edge in the third, however, when Waterford’s zone defensive play stopped their at­ tack. The third quarter ended in a 22-22 deadlock and Waterford jumped into a 25-22 lead in the first half of the fourth. Bev Stur­ gis sank two foul shots to make the count 25-24 but a good free toss by an opponent gave Water­ ford a two-point edge. Neil’s quick basket tied the count and Sturgis sank another pair of foul shots to gain the winning margin. The junior Panthers displayed a well-balanced game and all five principal players shared in the scoring honors. Sturgis sank nine points, Charlie Kernick counted six, Ted Smith five and Jim Neil and Bill Lavender four each. Denetrua, Wonnich and ski led Waterford scorers. Scores by quarter; Exeter ........... 8 9 5 Waterford 8 5 9 semi- their edge Topor- 6—28 4—26 Juniors Lose Title To Riverside Team A fast-breaking team from the Windsor district defeated ■South Huron junior Panthers 51-39 in the title contest. Riverside Raiders, sparked by the uncanny shooting of its six- foot star and two lay-up artists, frustrated the locals' bid for their first junior championship. A badly - disorganized second quarter proved disastrous for the South Huron crew. Although they outscored and outplayed River­ side in the first and third frames, they fell apail in the second and allowed the edge which come. The local of play with tegy when the game opened and baskets by Charlie Kernick and Bev Sturgis gave them an 8-5 edge at the end of the quarter. Confronted with Riverside’s fast break in the second, South Huron became rattled and their opponents rack up an posing lead. Paced by Sturgis again, locals fought back to within points of the winners but faded again near the end of the third. In the final quarter, Riverside outscored South Huron by three points. Bev Sturgis was the scoring star of the game, racking up 21 points, five more than Riverside’s tall Bob Thayer whose reach gave the winners a big advantage un­ der both baskets. Ted Weir, Leo Gerrard and Allan Greenwood sniped 32 points for the victors, most of them on accurate lay-up shots. Playmakers Charlie Kernick and Ted Smith potted eight and five points repectively for South Huron and Bill Lavender scored four before he had to leave the Raiders a 13-point they couldn’t over- hoys took command their cautious stra- Y.P.U. The Young People held their meeting Monday, March 15, with Tommy Hern and Harry Towle in charge of the program. Ruth Ann Dykeman read poem, “Like Other Boys”, Tc my Hern read “The White Buds” and Alma Hern gave a piano selection. Alma Hern and Ruth Ann Dykeman led in games, personal Items Mr. Harry Lovegrove, Thorn­ dale, visited Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Jud Dykeman. Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Jaques at­ tended the funeral of Mrs. Jaques' uncle, the late Monty Dobson, on Monday. Admiral New |iiiiiiiiuiiililinitiMiiiiiiililHHUtiiiiHU4*iiniiim«i^ By MISS JANE DYKEMAN game because of fouls. Quartertime scores were: Riverside ...... 5 19 12 15—51 Exeter ........... 8 6-13 12—49 Topics From let inl­ the two “Immediate service” IN YOUR LOCALITY 21" TV For The Price Of Other 17"s We Do Our Own Service Work On Every Admiral TV We Sell 111 Spares, R. Rollers Lead Bowlers' Trophy Race LABATT TROPHY SEMI-FINALS Spares ............ Butchers .........Applejacks .... Spare Parts ... Strikes ............ Tradesmen .... Windmills ....... Big Six ............ G9 99 99 9 6 6 p 16 15 10 998 6 4* » » Butchers 7, Tradesmen 0 Last Wednesday night, cliers gained an ;;from L_2A'_.'Tradesmen—1,271-959, 1,u<o-a,voo 1,122-1,021. Fred Darling excelled for the meatmen, with 699 (241), and Har Wolfe had 640 (231). Strikes 5, Spare Parts 2 The Strikes moved into a third- place tie with the Spare Parts by trimming the latter 5-2 Monday night -1,130-1,090, 1,013-977 and 1,110-1,148. Arnold Ford bowled 605 (226) for'the- winners and Cliff Reeves 680 (265) for the losers. Windmills 4, Tradesmen 3 Johnny Johnston’s boisterous antics aided his short-handed Windmills to edge the Tradesmen 4-3 — 957-1,142, 1,079-1,025 and 1,132-1,029. Graham Mason’s 736 (330) for the losers was outstanding for both teams. Spares 7, Applejacks 0 The Spares claimed first place by giving the Applejacks a 7-0 double­whammy—1,252-1,145, 1,164-1,031 and 1,186-1,115. Three Spares put the win across—Rene Francois had 754 (279), Bob Simpson 718 (285) and Jim Fair­ bairn 692 (281). Wes Watson, with 668 (253), made an excellent showing for the Applejacks. Butchers 5, Big Six 2.Despite Ken Hockey’s great triple of 779 (313), the Big Six salvaged only two points from their battle with the Butchers. Scores were 1,156-947, 1,136-1,107 and 1,193-1,285. Bill Mc­Lean and Vernon Heywood each had triples of 670 for the Butchers. But-the ___„____ easy seven points their traditional rivals, the ' ■“ 1,073-1,033 and “DAVE’S” N E COMMENTS Schedule? QUALITY AT ?AlR PRICES PHONE 27_______________________EXETER. For prompt attention call OOtRN M AC HIN I R Built-in loading and hitchingjack speeds up loading and hitching. Patented distributor completely pulverizes, evenly distributes 2*4 % on savings — deposits may be mailed Real Estate Services TORONTO • MONTREAL OTTAWA » WINDSOR NIAGARA FALLS • SUDBURY SAULT STE. MARIE CALGARY » VANCOUVER Extra-large feed ratchet gives 5 ranges of feeding for controlled spreading. or any office of RAYE B. PATERSON Trust Officer Heneail, Ontario, Phone 51 Your MM Service Dealer Mathers Bros. Your Minneapolis-Moline Dealer PHONE 321-W NORTH EXETER GUARANTY TRUST COMPANY OF CANADA FOR Ankle Sox Ladies! Reduced $1.00 New Spring the visit-Dresses Choose Yours Now From Biltmore Hats Mohawks 11-6 Fri- game of French Cuffs and Plain Whites - Stripes - Pastels Reg. $4.95 FOR $3.95 Reg. $5.95 FOR $4.95 Step out with one of our new Biltmore hats, latest in style, tops in quality ............ $5.95 to $7.50 Nylon-Wool and Nylon Plain and Fancy From $1.00 to $1.50 Our Brand New Stock! Our Complete Range of Dress Shirts Modern Styles and Materials Spring Shipment Men's PITTSBURG PAINTS TROPHY SEMI-FINALS Estate Planning and Wills * Investment Management and Advisory Service 4% Guaranteed Investments Rural Rollers .... Whizz Bangs .... Short Circuits ... Keglers ...............Long Shots ......... Pinpoppers ........ Grease Monkeys Hay Seeds Mess Mates Blowers .... Huskers ... Grand Bend Maroons ... Ringers .... Whizz Bangs 4, Blowers Tlie Whizz Bangs squeaked __narrow 4-3 triumph over the Blowers last Wednesday night—977-1,183, 1,160- 1,056 and 1,119-1,097. Bud Preszcator chalked up 035 (236) for the Bangs. Grease Monkeys 5, Maroons 2 Last week saw the Maroons bow 5-2 to the rejuvenated Grease Mon­ keys—1,128-1,077, 1,055-1,009 and 986- 1,050. Keglers 5, Short Circuits 2 The Keglers got into the act by downing the Short Circuits 5-2 — 1,016-1,095, 1,055-986 and 1,140-1,011. Bernie McLean knocked down 653 (232) for the air force lads. Rural Rollers 7, Mess Mates 0 The Mess Mates were duck soup for the Rural Rollers, the gentlemen of the soil grabbing first place with a 7-0 win—1,236-1,110, 1,136-1,015 and 1,091-1,006. Claude Farrow and Har­ old Penhale trundled 639 (244) 635 (236) to lead the Winners. Whizz Bangs 7, Hay Seeds 0 The Whizz Bangs caught the Seeds on an “off” night, crushing the Kippen crew 7-0 — 1,151-1,111, 1,142-966 and 1,142-992, Glen Robinson toppled 619 (240) for the second-place club. Long Shots 5, Pinpoppers 2 The Long Shots almost massacred five Pinpoppers, the 'Poppers coming to life in time to take tlie last game and make the score 5-2 — 990-980, 1,027-952 and 1,199-1,261. The only re­ spectable score was that of Harold Brintnell, who bowled 652 (258) for the losers. out a Tribe Whips Alerts 11-6 With a -six-goal splurge in the third period, Exeter laced St. Marys Alerts day night in the first the Cyclone playoffs. The tribe outclassed ors 4-2 in the first period but St. Marys1 roared back with a 3-1 Get A Schedules were distributed this week and bowlers may obtain one from the alley proprietor if they ( edge in the middle frame to tie were missed. . -----1 ~In explanation of the “finals” I ed home four goals early in the on both the Labatt and Pittsburg Paints schedules, the numbers in­ dicate the position of the teams which will continue bowling after this semi-final round is complete. The Labatt Trophy semi-final eliminates four teams, the Pitts­ burg Paints Trophy semi-final eight teams. Changes Made The Whizz Bangs fielded a re­ vamped team for this round, add­ ing Doug Smith, Punch Wells and Bob Davis to their four regulars. The move was made because the Bangs were almost compelled to withdraw from the semi-finals due to a man-power shortage. Punch Wells came in as an ex­ member of the Big Six and Bob Davis is Von loan” from the Pin­ poppers, who usually have eight men wanting to bowl every week. Doug Smith will bolster the line­ up as sub. The Windmills have signed Jim Zufelt to replace absent Gord Plyley (which is like trying to replace Joe Louis). The Big Six have called in Lloyd G from their farm system heard, undoubtedly, turkey farm) to fill ieft by Punch Wells. Laurels Department Team of the Week: the count at 5-5. Mohawks bang- final stanza to sew up the game and added two more in the last six minutes for good measure. Frank Anderson led the twine-busting contest with a hat trick. Fred Hewer and Ted Bogul, a London Briggs player the Mo­ hawks used but didn't need, each scored two counters. Doug Smith, juvenile Eugene Willert, Joe Pellish (another unnecessary addition from London), and Barry Doak counted singles. St. Marys’ best was -Tack Boyd who lit the bulb twice. Ross Wickie, Glen Cole, Ralph Herman and Don Fletcher scored lone tallies. The game was filled with penalties. Seventeen were thumb­ ed to the bin for minors and one misconduct was called. Notable offenders were St. Mary's “Boo” Wraith who made five trips and Exeter’s Pellish who served four times. men (without ef the Cushman i (you’ve ' Lloyd’s » vacancy The Spares, with 3,298 for five handicap), Bowler of the Hockey of the Big (313). Capsule Comment The Big Six seemed to the Punch to beat the Butchers Tuesday night . . » Week: six, with Ken 779 lack v; TWO-WHEEL SPREADER with built-in, quick-acting hitching and loading jack... The NEW MM LS300 SPREADER has the features you want! Extra large feed ratchet for 5 ranges of feeding gives controlled spreading from 3 to 15 loads per acre. New side extension shields for the upper beater are flanged to prevent wrapping of long manure around the shaft. The low set wheels and « box make loading much easier and faster. This new spreader can be backed into barns with the case of a go-cart. MM sturdy construction, heavy-duty bearings, and extra-heavy-duty axle and shafts assure long life with minimum maintenance. The main frame of this big 75 bushel spreader is reinforced with heavy, duty steel angles and large gusset plates to give extra strength to the sides. Sideboard edges are also protected with long, heavy-duty steel angles. The creosote-treated wooden bottom prevents rot and deterioration. See us for facts and prices. QUALITY CONTROL IN THE FACTORIES ASSURES DtHNOARLt URFORMANCt IN THE FIELO. Grocery Specials For Thursday, Friday & Saturday KAM — A Tasty Luncheon Meat 12-oz. tin ................. 350 KRAFT DINNER 7%-oz. pkg........................... McCORMICK’S SODAS Salted or Plain, 14b. pkg. 2/290 290 ELLMARR PEANUT BUTTER 16-ox. jar .................................... 320 GLEN VALLEY PORK & BEANS 15-oz. tin ................................ 3/290 HILLS-DALE SLICED PINEAPPLE 20-oz. tin ...................... 320 GOULD & JORY PHONE 16 Successors to Southcott Bros.EXETER