HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1950-03-09, Page 4Page 4
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Ice & Wood
FREE DELIVERY
E. R. Witmer & Son
Telephone 179W Exeter
Clearing
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Used Cars
41 ■Chevrolet Sedan, radio and
heater. A good buy.
38 Dodge Custom Sedan. A
real good car in A-l shape.
29 Ford Coach — cheap trans
portation.
Hensall
Motor Sales
HARPLEY
Mr. and Mrs. Langford Ridley,
of ParkhHU visited cm Sunday at
the home of Mr. Jack Ridley. ,
Miss Eleanor McLinchey, of
Detroit, spent the week-end at
the home of her parents, Mr.
and ;Mrs. Fred McLinchey.
Mr. and Mrs, Wm. sturdevand
and family of London spent the
week-end at the home of 'her
parents, Mr, and Mrs. .W. Love.
Mr, Glen Hayter, of Parkhill,
is at home for a few
ing a cold. ,
Congratulations to Mr,
Mrs, Ross Clark on
of a baby boy to their home, .
Mr. T. L. Hutchinson, of Lon
don, visited on Sunday evening
With Mr. and .Mrs. Fred Mc
Linchey.
Miss Hoolihan, who has been
teaching in S.S. No. 10 Stephen,
has resigned owing to ill health,
Mrs. Melvin Desjardine of the
Lakeroad has been engaged to
teach for the rest of the term,
Mr. and Mrs. Ellison. Whiting
and family of Centenary and
Mrs. Mary Gill, of Grand Bend,
spent Sunday at the home of
Mr. William Love.
Mr. Hector Murray who has
been spending the past few
weeks in 'Toronto is back with
his nephew Mr. Maurice Murray.
DODGE, DESOTO
SALES AND SERVICE
Phone 31 Hensall
Congress may legislate until
Doomsday, but the basis of our
national economy is still an hon
est day’s work.
MACHINE
Protect your investment. Follow up the vital chick starting
season by feeding your next winter’s layers now on a
growing mash made with National Developing Concen
trate ... fresh-mixed for tasty goodness.
The growing season makes or breaks your flock. So
build strong, vigorous egg machines now, the "NATIONAL
WAY". Be sure of birds that lay premium eggs steadily
through Fall and Winter.
Zurich Ousts
-Please Turn to Page Nine
■
L
T/1
Look in your h
was
the
final
overcome.
McDonald was
game with his
on the attack.
lone puckchaser
hemp to boost
five goals,
marker
around
WJS TIMES-ADVOCATE, EXETER, ONTARIO, THURSDAY MORNING, MARCH 9, 1950
days nprs-
Monarchs
in eight
third
1:41
2:07
6:58
13:25
of EHm-
seconds of
Cook start-
3:35
5:49
the initial
comfortable
and Mrs. Simon Roobol
nesday of last week..
-Mr. Horace Delbridge,
and
the arrival
in a good
four goals.
Westbrooke
end of
a very
second game is to be
in Goderich Friday night
squad entirely,
most of the
five tallies
visitors to one.
They
play,
while
pecked her husband, drove her i family,
children mercilessly and quarrel- into the farm vacated
ed with her neighbors. Even the
animals on her place wore a
hunted look.
THREE REASONS WHY Windsor Spitfires eliminated the. powerful Toronto Alarlboros
from further competition in the Junior “A” plavdowns are these young men—Earl Reibel,
Goalie Glen Hall and Glen Skov. They were inlrumental in the border city team’s great
play in winning tile best-of-seven series 1-1. Windsor will .now meet the winner of Barrie-
Guelph series in the final. —Central Press Canadian
a slim
a deter
sextet to
the best
series for the group
A title, Tuesday
The high scoring 10-9
was played on the local
Exeter Radio & Electric
\/ Large and Small Appliances
V General Wiring of All Kinds
V Radio and Appliance Repair
PHONE 187-W DON JOLLY, PROP.
COUNT ON
of a growing mash made with National Developing Con
centrate for the entire growing period.
See jroar iMttl NATIONAL feed Dealer today.
Centralia Drops
Close Verdict
Goderich held onto
one-goal lead against
mined* Centralia Flyer
snatch the first tilt in
of-five
Intermediate
night,
session
sheet.
The
played
with the return game scheduled
•foi’ Exeter next Tuesday.
In the first seven minutes of
play Goderich ran rough-shod
over the Flyers and pumped in
five goals. They skated off the
ice at the
frame with
7-1 edge.
However
■the sandwich session
ed Centralia on the comeback
trail and the Flyers looked like
a different
commanded
and scored
holding the
The teams went into the
with the score 8-6. Goderich I
again increased their lead in an ■
early period attack on goals by
Bissett and Wally Westbrooke.
Then the Flyers again turned on
‘their rival and Hunter, Shaw
and Dawson flashed the red
light to bring Centralia within
one of Goderich at 'the 15:47
mark. From then on the airmen
put on a desperate bid to knot
the count and while having sev
eral close calls the Goderich
team held them off.
Bissett turned
night’s effort with
His teammate Harry
scored twice. Dawson was the
only 'Centralia puckchaser to
grab off more than one goal.
CENTRALIA: Goal, MacLeod;
defence, Hallett, Hunter; center,
Cook; wings, Harris, Ruel; subs,
Millar, Eede, Dawson, Anderson,
Logan, Bird, Horton, Shaw.
GODERICH: Goal, Donaldson;
defence, Miller, Stoddard; center,
Newcombe; wings, Faulkner, Bis-
(sett; subs, MacDonald, Allen, H.
Westbrooke, Mero, W. West
brooke, Pringe, Duckworth.
Referees: Muir and Hubert,
Seaforth.
First Period
1— Goderich, Faulkner
(Stoddard) .......... .
2— Goderich, Stoddard
(Newcombe) .........
3— —Goderich, Allen
(MacDonald) .......
4~—Goderich, Bissett ..
5—Goderich, Bissett
(Faulkner) ...........
—Centralia, Horton
(Shaw) ............. ........
—Goderich, H. Westbrooke
(Newcombe) ............. 14:35
8—Goderich,
H. Westbrooke .......... 19:59
Penalties: Eede.
Series In Seaforth
The Exeter Monarchs facing
elimination against Dublin turned
in one of their better perform
ances Monday night to knock-off
Dublin 5-3 and tie the best-of-
five series at two each. The
game was played in Seaforth.
Exeter jumped into a handy
four-goal lead in the initial
stanza and from there in the
game was never in much doubt.
Lawson started the scoring and
McDonald tallied twice followed
by a single marker by Seymour.
In a rough second period Mc
Donald was the
to catch the
Exeter’s lead to
Dublin’s first
scored Iby Doyle
three-minute mark of the
session. Dublin followed this up
with two more but Exeter’s lead
was too -much to
Veteran Reg
the star of the
aggressive work __ _____
I He scored three* of the Mon
larch’s goals.
| EXETER: Goal, Smith; de
fence, Penhale, Tuckey; centre,
D. Brintnell; wings, Lawson, H.
Brintnell; subs, Fisher, Stire,
Seymour, Musser, Whilsmith, Mc
Donald, M. Brintnell, Coxworth.
DUBLIN: Goal, Morris; de
fence, Woods, Costellt; centre,
Malone; wings, F. O’Connor,
Wilson; subs, J. O’Connor, Lane,
Doyle, Bailey, Butters, Jordon;
sub-goalie, Curtin.
First Period
1— Exeter, Lawson (Whilsmith)
2— Exeter, McDonald ^(Tuckey)3— Exeter, Seymour “
(Brintnell, Whilsmith)
4— Exeter, McDonald (Seymour)
Penalties: Malone, Tuckey (2).
Second Period
5— Exeter, McDonald (Stire)
Penalties: Wood, J. O’Connor, F.
O’Connor, Jordon, Brintnell,
Penhale, .Seymour, Fisher (10-
min. misconduct), Brintnell, Sey
mour.
Third Period
6— 'Dublin, Doyle (F. O'Connor)
7— Dublin, Lane
(Woods, J. O’Connor)
S—Dublin, F. 0’’Connor
(Wilson, Malone)
Penalties: Woods, Costello, F.
O’Connor, J. O’Connor, Tuc
key, Lawson, Penhale, Sey
mour (2 minor, 10-min. mis
conduct).
Referee: Gordo n "Rooster”
Muir, Seaforth; linesman: Archie
Hubert, Seaforth.
Dashwood Six
In the fourth game of a hard-
fought semi-final series Zurich
captured the “C” .group title by
handing their Dashwood rivals
an 8-3 setback in the Babe Sei
bert Memorial Arena last Friday
night.
In a close-checking first period
Decker found the hemp for the
only marker. However, in the
second Zurich .increased their
lead in adding three more tal
lies. Dashwood scored their first
tally early in the final frame and
added two .more before the final
whistle' blew, while Zurich coun
tered with four more.
Zurich won the first two
games of the series, .then Dash
wood handed them their only de
feat of the season in the third
match.
■DASHWOOD: Goal, R. Haugh:
defence, J. Hay ter, H. Hay ter;
center, L. Haugh; wings, B. Hay-
ter, Wein; subs, Schroeder,
Kleinstiver, Regier, Ford, Houl-
ahan, L. Willert, J. Willert, Bes-
tard.
ZURICH: Goal, Armstrong:
defence, HessJB'. O’Brien; center,
Gagnac; 'wings, Quesnel, Charl
ton; subs, Decker, DesLauriers,
D. O’Brien, Mittleholtz, Hess,
Black, Weido, Krueger, Robin
son.
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TORONTO ONTARIO
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PHONE 81
7
It happens almost every hour, somewhere in Canada.
A thoughtless step, a scream of brakes . . . and another life hangs
in the balance—with an emergency blood transfusion the only hope!
Will you reach, out a helping hand to snatch one of these lives
from the jaws of death? You can do so by giving generously to
support and extend the Red Cross Free Blood Transfusion Service
through which more and more Canadian hospitals are being Supplied
I
I
I
I
I
I
Just one dozen eggs from
each pullet pays the cost
WILUAM STONE SONS LIMITED
INGERSOLL ONTARIO
Cut your feed costs by supplying a grass range with
tender green crop. Remember, no livestock gives higher
returns per acre than poultry
conducted for a woman who had
been thoroughly disliked in her
rural community, With a violent
explosive disposition she hen-
Second Period
9-—Centralia, Cook .........0:08
10—Centralia, Ruel
(Hallett) ....................7:21
11—Centralia, Dawson
(Logan) ...................12:25
12—Goderich, Bissett
(Stoddard, Faulkner)151:19
13—Centralia, Harris
(Ruel) .......................15:67
14—Centralia, Hallett ....18:42
Penalties: Eede, W. Westbrooke.
Third Period
15—Goderich, Bissett ........ 1:47
16—Goderich,
W, Westbrooke .........., 4:56
17- Centralia, Hunter ....... 6:33
18—Centralia, Shaw ........
(Hallett) ..................10:32
19- Centralia, Dawson ....15:47
Funeral services were being
THAMES ROAD
Miss Feme Rodd, of London,
spent the week-end with Mr. and
Mrs. Melvin Gardiner.
Mr, and Mrs. Lome .Passmore
and Sharon' were Saturday eve
ning dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Melvin Gardiner.
Mr. Jack Cann, of the RCAF,
Aylmer, spent the week-end with
liig parents, Mr. and Mi’s. Robt.
Cann.
•Misses Margaret Calm, and
Elsie llray, of London, spent the
week-end at their homes here.
Mr. and ’Mrs. Ross Merrill, of
Clinton were Sunday guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Brock, ,of
Zion.
Farm Forum was held at the
Lumley School and at the home
of Mr. and Mfs. Orville Beaver
on Monday evening.
We are sorry to report that
Mrs. James Cottle is a patient in
Victoria Hospital. We hope for a
speedy recovery.
Mr, and Mrs. Simon Roobol
moved to a farm near Hensall
on Tuesday of last week.
Miss Moja Roobol spent a few
> days last week with Miss Doris
Anderson.
Mr, and Mrs. Bregman and
of Wailaceburg, moved
by Mr.
on Wed-
FEED
KEYS, HOGS
-I”.... -a
Insist on NATIONAL w^ci/re^ properly-blended fertilizer
The day was sultry and as the | ville, gave his report of the Tem-
servic.ei ended the storm, broke perance Convention in Hamilton
fnriously. There was a blinding at the church service Sunday
flash followed by a terrific clap | morning.
of thunder,* I Sunday school will be held pt
"Waal, she’s got there!" a I the regular hour 10:15 a.m. and
mourner said, » | church at 11:15 a.m.
This year the need
Is urgent for
$5,000,000
to carry out the work
you expect your
Red Cross to do
Tfie Wort* of Jf«?resF 2Ve»er JSntl»
with precious blood and plasma.
Your gift will also help send relief
wherever disaster strikes . . . assist
The Red Cross Veterans' Services .
maintain Red Cross Outpost
Hospitals . . . and aid many other
essential Red Cross services. Your
contribution is needed—and needed now!
Wilham Pybus, Treasurer