Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1958-02-27, Page 6A11r11.1,m.11.1.11.11111111111.1m111111.111$111111,1,It1.1111y 111111111111114.1.01111 n11 1111171 U1 ntm111111111 .Lets Talk SPORTS -; By PON. "BOOM BOOM" GRAVETT Sports Editor . 111 t 1111tt111111141111111111114111111141111.11.11111111111111111141 mit1111./11111114tH ltUtt1111111111/ Tlie rest is over! Exeter Mohawks will have topull up their socks and start playing the brand of hockey they're capable of or forget about enter- ing the O.H.A. playdowns. As you've probably read from another portion of this sports page, the local club has been matched. against the lugh-flying PHILIPSBURG CHEVS ill a best -of -seven series for the right to carry WOAA colours into the Q.H.A. The CHEViES, as far as we can make out after a brief talk over the Bell invention with man- ager RUBEN WETTLAUFER of BADEN, will cer- tainly not be any pushovers. CHEVS for the last two years have ben crowned the champions of the WOAA HOMEBREW circuit. Their standing in league play speaks well enough for itself as they wound up on top of their league supporting a nifty 17.3 record. Their coach, who has been with them for the past three years, is none other than "PUNCH" SCHERER. who used to pilot the KITCHENER- WATERLOO DUTCHMEN. If it's still the same "Punch" we used to know, he'll certainly have a hustling hockey club from the drop of the puck to • the final buzzer. PHILIPSBURG supports a red-hot front run- ning line of JERRY MaeMILLAN, WILF ARNOLD and JERRY FOILER. MacMillan used to be an old standby for the MILVERTON DOMINION ROYALS while FOILER coached the NEW HAMBURG midget baseball team last summer. As for ARNOLD, your guess is as good as mine as to where he hails from and what he does beside score goals. This line ended. up high in the league scoring race which is compiled by NORM HILL of New Hamburg. After all of this information, one might ask If the Mohawks are' ready for them. Checking over the tribe's injury list and the number of practises the tribe's had in the last two weeks, we'd personally say NO, Of course, from another viewpoint, playoff hockey is altogether a different brand of hockey than that which is played over a regular schedule. Closer checking prevails and scoring opportunities don't come as frequently, but Mohawks officals feel it will be a battle right to the wire. One thing is for certain an dthat is that the MOHAWKS and PHILIPSBURG will supply the brand of hockey the fans have been wanting to see. The next two weeks will tell the tale of who will have the early golf season. * * * * * ROD AND REEL—Five brave fishermenen- tured out from this area last weekend in pursuit of some finny monsters in the BARRIE area. The re- sult of the expedition was 35 whitefish! GRAHAM MASON, ROSS TUCKEY, HARRY HOLTZMAN and JOHN and ED BURKE made up the party of happy sportsmen, The crew legged it 11 miles out on the ice -covered lake. They tell us that they then pro- ceeded to cut a hole in the ice and fish. When they were done, 35 whitefish had been hauled in by the brave souls. They were caught in 100 feet of water and all at the very bottom. Fishx, eh? (Note) We hear that the fish stores up :n Barrie last weekend did the best business they've done for years! * * * * * * 1 THE SPIRIT OR CURLING! ... The heart of curling is its incomparable spirit. Without that spirit 'curling is just another pastime. Played in that spirit, it is the king of all games. The spirit of curling is reflected in its most cherished traditions. Curlers play the game to win; but not to humble their opponents. Every curling game ends with a hearty handclasp of friendship and goodwill to both teammates and opponents. Every true curler would rather lose than win unfairly. He never attempts to distract any opponent or otherwise prevent hiin from playing his best. No curler ever deliberately breaks a rule of the game; and should he do so inadvertently and be aware of it, he is the first to divulge the breach. From time immemorial curling has been a truly amateur sport. No curler plays the game for pecuniary profit either to himself or anyone else. Uniformity of curling costumes to indicate teams or curling clubs is universally approved; but the advertising of any business or product by such means militates against the amateur srort of the game. Prizes of more or less value—and the less the intrinsic value, the better—are awarded for success in the game and are cherished chiefly as mementos. Curling is the kind of game that.neither needs nor permits a wager upon its outcome to enhance its enjoyment. Only by a strict observance of these,tim.e- honoured traditions can curling be kept as a game that is played for love of it alone. The respect and honour accorded to any curler is derived neither from his wealth nor his social position, but rather from his worth as a man, his skill and gentlemanly conduct as a curler, and his devotion to the game and its s irit.—Nee p awa (Man.) b Pre s. P P * * * * CUFF CLEANERS — Our congratulations to MISS L. SEIGNER and her senior girls basketball team on winning the PERTHEX CONFERENCE basketball title ... Should be worth while going to the local arena Saturday night to see AYLMER battle RCAF CENTRALIA in the TRAINING COMMAND title run ... CENTRALIA took all the honours last year :.. HENSALL BANTAMS are rolling in high gear . ..They've got past their second. round of WOAA "D" competition without any trouble. Atwood and Zurich were forced to hang up their gear by this high -flying Bantam squad . The EXETER BADMINTON CLUB is still going strong. They were guests at CENTRALIA AIRPORT last week . , . Both of EXETER'S MIDGET and. BANTAM teams have been beaten out of the WOAA playoffs , JERSEY JOE WALCOTT got so confused in his speech at the LONDON SPORTSMAN'S DINNER a couple of weeks ago inreferring to the big football series between the BROWNS and DETROIT LIONS that he called the LIONS the DETROIT BROWNS, It real) brought , ., . Y g , a hilarious ovation from the many football personnel in attendance , . What do athletes do with all the indney they get? Well here's hbw a choice few spend end it, WHIPPER BILLY WATSON travels from coast to coast helping the crippled kids. LOU "THE TOE" GROZZA is one of the top polio` fighters hi the STATES, 30E WALCOTT works with delinquents in the U.S. As he puts it, "I was born on the wrong side of tracks", "" , , . g.lts anti he knaves exactly what it's 11ke. JIMillIaLE visits the 814.11iN1 kids in M416N'i B,EAIA Ili fa& the whole 1tAMILTt N TI -CAT foot. ball team: saw the. kiddies with 1111MlBt 1 With work like this going Viii. one can't help but e sure _.. _•.. g g g' 11 are. titin s 1� g will "be looking up .ferl all unfortunates icy the dear future., The Times -Advocate, February 27, 1958 Page S, Girls Retain Conference Title, plete Cage Schedule Undefeated CENTRALIA TEAM WINS HENSALL. 'SPI EL—The curling team of Joe Ross, RCAF Station Centralia, won the Carling trophy at the Hensall Legion bonspiel last week. Legion president Bill Brown, second from left, presents the cup to 'the champion skip while members of the rink Watch. From the left are Bill. Haiker, Joe Ross, George Robertson, Bill Brown and Ross Found. Centralia nosed out a team from Southampton which had won the spiel two years in succession before and would have gained permanent possession had it won the third year. —T -A Photo Tribe Meets Philipsburg For Hornebrew Crown Exeter Mohawks and Philips- burg Chevs will tangle in a best - of -seven series for the right to enter the Ontario Hockey Asso- ciation Homebrew playoffs, Mohawk officials were informed by Alf Lockridge, business mana- ger of the WOAA, that Philips- burg and Exeter were the only two 'homebrew teams in Western. Ontario interested in trying for the Ontario title, The series will • start in New Hamburg on Friday, February 28, with the first game in Exeter slated for Wednesday, March 5. The third game will revert back to New Hamburg :on Friday, March 7, with the fourth in Exeter on Saturday, March 8. Future playoff games will. be announced at a later date. The best -of -seven series must be over by March 15 to meet OHA regula- tions. The team winning the playoff will automatically proceed into the "C" classification homebrew bracket in OHA playdowns. 'Cats Claw Inept Tribe Paced by crafty centreman Bobby Evans, Ilderton Wildcats clawed a listless band of Exeter Mohawks for a 9.5 victory in the windup game of the schedule in. Exeter Friday night before a handful of fans. With the exception of the first three minutes of play in the first period, and a few brief flourishes throughout the second and third periods, Mohawks weren't in the contest at all. Ilderton ran the homesters through the' ends of the rink with their hustle, smooth passing plays and finesse around the net to send the Tribe down to its third defeat of the season. Evans, Scarborough Not Centre Bobby Evans, who rifled home four goals and set up three other markers scored by his line - mates Max and Stu O'Neil, turned in one of his best displays of the season against the league leaders. Max O'Neil was Johnny -on -the - spot three times•for the hat trick, while brother Stu blinked the light once. Bill Dickie scored the other Wildcat marker early in the third period. Lanky Ray Scarborough, in the Ilderton net, turned. in a perfbrm- ante equal to the feat pulled by Evans, as he closed the door time and tithe again. on Mohawk shots from all angles. The agile netminder particular- ly rose to the occasion midway through the final period when his club had. Charlton and. Shurwell sitting out minor penalties, with the Mohawks at full strength. Not once did the puck leave the Ilder- ton end of the rink on. the Tribe's power play, but the M:nhawks still failed to score. Scarborough Hensall ns all • CI ub Wins Series Hensall Bantams made a clean sweep of their two -game series with Atwood this week when they Posted . successive scores of 12.0 and 10.3 to advance down the trail in the WOAA Bantam "D" playoffs. In the first game which was played in Milverton. on Monday night, Bill Shaddick rapped in four goals and Steve Kyle three to pace the winners. Single markers carie off the sticks of Gary ,tones, ,Jerry Cha man Brian 13ont]iron A li f.. Ross nlcl3eatli : and Harold Jaques In tho second encounter 'that wrapped' up the. 'series for Hen- sall, the local. kills waltzed through A 10.3 decision on home lee. Shaddick once again spear- headed the attack with: four goals. Steve Kyle and .Terry Chapntati each fired a pair of starkers, while Bruce . Horton and .Taick Chipchatte rallied for gin les. Hensall, Will nnw hied Mild- may's littl�i Monarchs ie the fia round.- stopped. everything that came his way and any that: did get by him politely deflected off the goal- posts. Gib Sabourin opened the scor- ing for the locals at the 33 -second mark of the first period and was followed by Jimmy Russell's eighth goal of the year at 2.42. Just. when it looked like a Mo- hawk massacre was shaping up, the tide changed, and Ilderton struck right back for three, with Stu O'Neil, Bob Evans and Max O'Neil doing the honours. Ilderton outscored Exeter 3-1 in the middle stanza and then came romping home to the final buzzer with three more in the third. "Boom" Gravett scored, a single in the second and added. a. pair in the third to round out the Exeter scoring. • •=Cate Show rre14t.,- nl'. relish!" ILDERTO\-Goal, Scarborough; def enc. e, Charlton, •Carmichael; centre, Evans; wings, S. O'Neil, O'Ne.11; alternates, Thir•ltrall, Lott, Li1ey, Noyes, - Lampman, Brans, Hodglns, Gregory, Robb, Reynolds, Dickie, Findley, Came- ron. EXETER -Goal, McFa11s, Baker; defence, •Delbridge, Loader; cen- tre. Oberle: •wine's, Gravett, Sa- bourin; alternates. Russell, Pin- combe, Frank 1 y n, MacDonald, Blommaert, Batten, X. Erintnell, Brintnell, First r'.'er)od 1 -Exeter. Sabourin (Oberle) :33 2 -Exeter, Russell (Pincombe, •Franklyn) - 2.42 3-Ilderton, S. O'Neil (Evans) 4:105 4-Ilderton, Evans 10;42 5-Ilderton, M, O'Neil (Evans, S. O'Neil) _.'10:51 Penalties - Batten (trip g) 15:14 and 10;00. Second Perlod. 6-Ilderton, Evans :46 7-Ilderton, Evans (S. O'Neil) 6:22 3. --Exeter, Gravett (Loader, Franklyn) 7;27 9-Ilderton, 'Evans (M, O'Neil) 19:;,1 Penalties Charlton (interfer- ence) 0:25: Batten (holding) 10:12; Sabourin (interference) 11:07. Third 'Period. 10-I1derton, Dickie (S. O'Neil, 'Evans) _._..- 2:10 11-Ilderton, M. O'Neil - 2:25 12 -Exeter, Gravett (Oberle) 0:10 13-Ilderton, M, O'Neil (S. O'Neil) 14;10 14 -Exeter, Gravett (Oberle) 11:47 Penalties - Charlton (hook- ing) 8:05: Shurlwell (interfer- ence) 9:13. BILL OSERLE DON GRAVETT Scoring Champion Second in the Race Oberle Edges. Gravett For Scoring Honors_ Centre Bill Oberle, member. of Exeter Mohawks front -running fine, captured the teams' indi- vidual scoring crown on Friday night when he collected three assists against the Ilderton Wild- cats on home ice to edge out line - mate Don Gravett by two points for the scoring honours. The three assists picked up by"Obie" jumped his total to 44 - tops for the club — and lifted. his season's total output to 31. goals and 44 assists for 75 points. The free - wheeling pivotrr)an nailed down, three hat -tricks over the 21= ams schedule chedule against Blackwell, Lucan ' and Pt. Ed- ward, The crafty centre also prod'ucedeight goals against Zurich Flyers in a two=game series, with four in each one. His most productive night came against:, Ilderton Wildcats when he fired five markers' in a 17.3 Mohawk victory. A 1 t h o.0 g h rig3twinger Don "Boom" ,Gravett netted three. goals in the last Ilderton contest, he still wound up two points shy of the title. The three goals. how- ever, brought • his total to 33 for the season, which is tops for the. club, Twit three -goat scoring sprees -against Zurich• and singles against Ilderton arid Blackwell helped spur his goal -scoring out- put. La arty Heideman, who misted font. games through injuries, was the third man among the Mo- hawk snipers with, 47 points. which is four ahead of playing coach "keit" Loader, • who finished: up fourth with 43 points on 16 goals and 27 assists. Gib Sabourin,' who patrols left wing en the Oberle-Gravett line, binged Monte 19' gniis „arid col., lected 13 *Watt in his first year; df interniediiate hockey :Rightwinger Billy Pincombe, on the Heideman -Russell line was a 16 -goal man in his first intermediate season. The total point output: for the Mohawk hockey club this season has been the best produced in years, The team scored 168 goals and collected 202. assists in 21 games for a total. of 370 scor- ing points. Playing Coach "Red" Loader led in penalties, as he sat out a total of 33 minutes. Runnin close to the redhead are teas% mates Bob Coates, who • only played in 11 games, and Bill Pin- combo who , t spent t p atotal of 28 minutes each in the sin bin, Exeter Mohawks spent a grand. total of 235 minutes in the penal., ty box: in their 21, games, which, on the average,ois 1114 minutes per gate. :HOHA.tv,tc FlNAT, scho tiG STATISTICS'. Ga. ( ,s• r )Sill Oberlet ,_ n3 at 44 75 11 Don G -e ett _ 1 3 40 73 2 Larry Jreide:P. n' •- 11 25 22 47 10 Loader 17 1R 27 43 11' Crib Sabourin 20 0 1.,. 02 16 Fill Pincombe -_. 2t. 24 1 24 02' 71n) Fussell -.. - 21 .1 6 14 4 :sill Waghorn 14 :lin 13 1t .1fnt' 11taeDonald-... 2i 6 31 15 ci,' :lloinrnaert „„ 21 3 5 0 6 13111 Franklyn' „ 2 3 3 6 0 Mur. , trintnell .,-, 21 4 1 5 2 Sob Coates 11 0 4 4 21: Kevin Deihrilige ._ i1 n 3 3 29 01111.1•tuwsei -,._ K 1 1 2 it rrtrtdle , It 1' 2 All 13111 Batten ...12 6 1 123 l:eith B1'intne•ll' ..- 4 1 0 1 0 'Tn('Tudes 'one 10 -minute lriiedoii'- duet. • Ga. da. feF`'.a:llti W -. y .- 7 61 M. a1�rliittiiell w ---� , ,- 1 6 nailer• W.......-.......-..>y.,...� fo >flt *- Total ,'C3orils t 1.1iiet X4 itetei4 G'oa.1>a AaaliB at Ave, -4.4/ • :SHDHS senior girls basketball team won their • second Terthex Conference title in two years. Coach Miss L, ,Seigner saw her team roll to its sixth consecutive victory on Friday .afternoon when the girls dropped Listowel 56.13 to wrap up the conference title,. The club won all six scheduled games to•autoii)atically claim the championship Scores on the vic- tory march were: SHDHS 34, 'Stratford 18; SHDHS 41, St, Marys 40; SHDHS 34, Mitchell 14; SHDHS 73, •Listowel 12: SHAHS 31, Stratford 27, •and SHDHS 56, Listowel'13,. Shaw, Gulens Were Flying • Kenlynn Shaw. and Mirdza •Gulens were really flying high in the final match, -Shaw sank 13 field goals and came up with two successful foul shots for a 28 - point afternoon. Gulens was good for four points in each of the first second and final quarters°, and came• up with-stk. more in the third for an 18 -point total. Pat Lovell, who scored on three field goals, and .lane Far- row, who dropped in single field goals in each of the first: and second quarters; completed the South Huron scoring'spree. The visitors' Evelyn Clelland provided the • scoring 'punch for the losers by collecting nine points an four field goals and one foul shot. Shirley • Wray • and Patsy Potts each 'scored one bas- ket to account for the other four points= The game was cleanly• played as only Jane Farrow and Barb Tuckey, of South Huron; were called for fouls by the officials. Five ..fouls were picked up by Listowel. ' The South Huron girls are now waiting for the winner of the Goderich-Wingharn playoff for a chance to go on into WOSSA at London. Junior Girls. Win Teel South • •littron's . ;junior girls' Hensall Curling —Continued from F'age 4 and Adam Bryane made up the rink with skip Carey, Bill. Brown of .Hensall. placed first in the consolation draw for the first round. Bert Horton, Wes Venner, Ernie Chipchase and Brown made up the Hensall rink for the' consolation prize. Braves Blast Flyers 15-3 Y Exeter Mohawks removed all doubts over who holds the hockey supremacy with the Zurich Flyers on Wednesday night in Exeter, when the local. Tribe breezed through a lopsided 15.3 victory. In previous . games, Exeter edged. the Flyers 8.5 and 5-4 in Zurich, and then produced a. 10-9 victory on home ice to clinch the league leadership. The 15-3 win made' a clean sweep of the regu- lar four -game set with the Flyers and gave the Mohawks their 19th victory in 21 games.: The Oberle - Sabourin - Gra vett line spearheaded • the one-sided episode by scoring nine of the 15 goals for the winners. The Tribe's front running line also picked up 11 assists in the process for a total of 20 scoring points of the 33 collected in the game. - Centre Bill Oberle led the Mo- hawk, goal production with •four, while leftwinger Gib Sabourin rallied. for three. "Boom" Gravett scored two and collected six assists. Oberle and Sabourin were credited with • •three • and ' two assists respectively. • Larry Heideman was a rsix- point man for the Tribe. He scored two .goals ,and assisted on four others. Rightwinger Bill Pincombe, who opened up. the scoring for the Tribe at •2.55 of the first period, also sank a pair. Keith Brintnell scored, his . first goal of the season; and•diln Rus- sell blinked the light at 16.10 of the initial period to round out.the scoring spree. • Centre Don Gascho• and Haug O'Brien scored first period goals for Zurich, while Raymie Wein. slid one• into the Exeter net in the final frame for the three Flyer counters. Mohawks played without the services of Coach "Red". Loader, Bob .Coates, Bill Waghorn, Bill Franklin and Al: Rundle •°A Clea* Fear -Game 'Sneep111 ZURICH ---• ' al. Geoffrey: de- tbnce, T'unghlut,-Rannie: Centre, Doug O'Brien: wings, Baker, Don O'Brien; alternates, Bedard, Sup - tat, Parker, Thea'nder,WVein, Gig• nuc, Hesse, Gascho. • • EXETER' - Goal, 'McPalls: ries fence, $alert,' Heideman: Centtre,- Oherlet wings, Gravett. Sabourin; alternate*. M. Brintnell, Russell, MacDonald, '37. • •Brintnell, Del - bridge,. Pilico)nbe, Blommaert, Flecit Period.• l--::xetar, :rinconihii' (3ieideman•) 2:55 2,,.Zurleh; Gascho (Suplat) .;15 3-i';keter, Gravett -.11:04 4—Zurich, Doug O'Rrien- 11:13 S-2 xeter, Oberle (Gravett) 14;.5 6 ---Exeter, Gravett (Sabourin, Tieidentan) ., 15:15 7 ---:Exeter, Oberle (Gravett) 16:25' s—::toter, 'Tossed • • (Fteideman, Pincoinbe)' _• 16d0 Penaltiet-=K. Brintnell, (trip• ping 16:05',. Secalld: retied 9 --Exeter, Oberle (Gravett) 1;03 10 -Exeter, Oberls (Gravett.;Sabourlh) 2;265 11--I'lxeter, Heldemaii (Oberle). --- 3 0 • t2 --Exeter, Tioiriemiin_. (, berle) ... �......,. 7.10 t3.-:EXeter, Sabourin • •(Grxvatt7 - _ -. 16:12 T'enalti,s Delhridge-erharR- ing) 9:40: Doug O'Brien (knee- ing) 11:00, Third' Period 14-4E'xetcr, Sabsur,,, (Oberle., Gravett! --- ..: 4:44 15...Exeter, Pincoinhe ?Heideman) -- -, 5.54 1a -.:Zurich, Weia -... .,v 6:05 l7 r)seter, . Prli triell -• w (ralow)maert, ifaeDoiialel) `11.:00• 18,... F3Xeter, saliourii1 . 11:15 Petitiltleii Batten (kneeini*l 1:4 50 r;neontbe (elbowing) 13' 14: Grav�ttt, . Don O'Brien' (1''ouahing7 16;44. team wound up the Sepal). on a hopeful note when they humbled Listowel's best 46-17. The victory was the fourth in, six games for the locals and gives then a mathematical chance of raining a sudden death playoff' with an- other school for the Junior Perthex Conference title,. The local juniors sewed up the game in the first half when they piled. up a total of 22 scoring points. Eighteen more in the third quarter put the game beyond doubt, 11:e Gulani Pesos Scorers Ilze Gulens had her shooting eye with her for this game as she sank no less than 11 field goals. She started the game off with four points in the first quarter, added eight in the second, six more in the third and wound up her display with four in the final stanza. Roxanne Beavers with six field goals and 'one foul shot placed second in the point parade with 13, while Dorothy •Heywood was third in line with seven, on three field goals and one foul shot. Marilyn Hamilton scored• a field. goal in each of the first and final ;quarters of the game for, four points, Listowel's Joyce At:cCou.rt got by South Huron defenders for nine scoring points, while- team- mates Joy Weber and Marilyn Knight followed with four each. The junior girls' victory was the .second of the season over Listowel, ,with the first decision being on a •32.9 note. Boys' Teams Split 'Pair Coach Glen Mickle's boys' teams played out the filial. two games of their schedule without any hope of ,gaining a conference crown. • The seniors: bowed .out of thq '58 sehedule graciously by drop ping a 69.38 game to 'the high flying Listowel club, while the South Huron junior boys bounced back for the red and black in the nightcap with a 36.21 victory. Peter novelle paved the way for the junior victory with a 14- point barrage including six field goals and two foul shots. Gond Strang and Melvin Fink- beiner each came up with an eight -point effort with Finkbeiner sinking four foul shots in nine attempts for half of his points. Keith Hodgins, with two field goals and Bill Etherington with a single were the other South Huron marksmen, The locals en- joyed an 'eight -point first quarter and then added 10, 14 and four in the following three stanzas. Listowel seniors were too much for the South huron boys to handle in their 69.38 romp. Dennis, of Listowel, spear- headed the victor's attack with 19 points on seven field goals and five foul shots, Teammates, Girard with 13, La'" • with 12, and Thompson with 'ere also very instrumental 1 ' win. Fred. "Crafty" Ilu't, ' and Bob McNeil led the South Huron squad with nine poiiits each, while Jim Tomlinson sank three bas- kets for six. Ross Wein with four points, Bill Pollen and Allen Busche with three each and Jini Hennes- sy and Wilson with two each were the other South Huron point getters. .0111t111111111llllll H1111t111111111111111,111111111t1111111111111111111111111111/1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111,111111MI S Your Weekly, • Scores ROUNDUP • Standings • Future taai-.:_s -WOAA. INT, , "8"-IIOMEBRE W Last 'R'eek's Seeress Exeter 15, Zurich E Lucan 2, Zurich 2 Ilderton 9, Exeter 5 "Lucan 11, Clinton 7 Clinton 7, 'Blackwell 6 Standings 1V L F A. Pct, Exeter. 19 3 160' 94 .063 Lucas 16 7.159 SR .695 Clinton - 12 11 107 137 .521 Pt. Edward 9 11. 92 101 .450 Forest 9 12 11.5 120 .429 Blackwell 1 12 114 155 .409 Zurich 4 11 13 100 .267 Ilderton . 3 12 69 129 .200 *Zurich has played tie games with Tlderton and Lucan. NB -Games are based on percent- age because some teams play more games than others. Gasses This Week; February ,26 -Zurich at Clinton Ilderton at Pt, Edward 27 -Zurich at Forest 28 -Forest at Lucan 'WOAA IiOMERREW t'LA•YO.O'FS (Best -of -seven series for right to enter O.H,A. Competitions.) February 2S -Exeter at Philipsburg• (8:30) March 6 -Philipsburg at Exeter (0:311) 7 -Exeter at. Philipsburg (1:30) •8 -Philipsburg at Exeter (5:30) PEE WEES Last. '!l'eek's esalts WIngs 0. Marlboros 0 'Royals 4. Bulldogs 3 Rockets 6, Teriers 4 Standing/ WLTP Royals 5 0 012 Wings 2 1 S 7 Rockets 2 1 3 7 Marlboros 1 2. 3 5 Terriers 1 3 3 5 Bulldogs:- 0 6 0 '0 Fixture Gamest Feb: 29 1:00 -9;00 -Rockets vs. royale 5:00 -10:00 -Wings vs. Terriers 10:00 -11:00 --Marlboros vs. Bulldogs 11:00 -11:00 --fled Hawks vs.' • 'Rangers 11:30 -12:00 -Boston :Bruins vs. :Montreal Canadlens ,. emu! illlllllllllll I ll l l mtttttt11ntt11111111111IIIt11t111111t1t RCAF' 1NTER-SECTIO:' Last 'Week's' Scores: • PFTS 1.4, Cadets 0 Tech -Wing 7, Cadets 5 Stnndinge Ga. W L PFTS 14 1.3 1 Cadets 15 5 6. Combines 14 5 1 Tech=!ring 13 04 9• Future Games; Thurs., Feb, "7 (6 10) PFTS vs. Combines 1 TF AP 1 99 50 25 3 91. 103 13 1 77 19 11. 2 74 109 10 RCAF Leading Scorers Franklyn, PFTS 016 6 McIntyre, Combines __,._ 24 10 34 McLaughlin, PFTS .-_ -_ 22 9 31 Brintnell. Tech -Win g -• v 14 12 26 GGobeil, PF'TS__ 17 9 26 t`alherry, Tech -Wing -• -- 910 19 Parent, PFTS _ S 9 17 'Cowan. Combines _ 11 516 Henderson, Combines _ _ 7 6 13 Chartrand, Tech -Wing 9 '3 11 "WOAA. BANTAM ,.Du 1'LA o1rrs, Gast R'eek's Score's; • Hensall 12, Atwood 0 Hensal) 10, Atwood 3 (Hensall wins the best -of -three series 2-0.) N3-Hensall will now meet Mild. may in the next' round, WOAA PEE WEE Last 'R'eek's Scores: iiensall 5, Zurich 1. BROOMBALL Lit Week's Penults Dashwood 3, Mohawks 0 Merry Maids 5, Kinsmen 5 Standings Dashwood Mohawks 'Merry Maids Kinsmen WLTP 5 0 111 1 3 2 4 0 5 1 1 Plaroff Schedule March 2 1;30 -2:30 -Dashwood vs. Merry Maids :30 -3:30 -Mohawks vs. Kinsme?i (Two games - total points to count.) mum lll lllll llllll mutin llll I1111uluumun11nI1 n1n,4 Join In The Fun Mixed Bowling. I • Friday, Feb. 28 — 9-11 p m. I All -lanes Will be reserved for nixed bowling this - Friday .evening from 9 to 11. Husband arid wives, -young men and their girl friends are all invited to ' take part -for an evening of fine entertainment. Plan I .to.; attend:'; 3 Exeter Bowling Lanes i • Len' McKnight; Prop. PHONE 494; RES. '5091 • EXETER ...Hi.'litllli it l!!!hili! l inniithoilllum,litl i till itll!IIIIII111111111111111111t11i1i1111t111ii I111IIIIII MI11111111I1an11 J .Know. Your. Mchaw ks Kevin Delbrid ge Defence' Age 20 Weight 170 Kevin, who stands 5' Si", holds down the right defence position en the Exeter club, Born in Ex- eter, he enierged up through the Bider • minor hockey ranks into this, his first year of Int. hockey. Last season he played for the Western. Ontario Agric•UI lural S c h o t,1 at Uidgetown. Hbekbyfavourite is the young athlete's •sporty Leaking For A USED CAR er NEW RAMBLER? The Plies To Go Is Wilson Bros, Final SrVic!! @ PHONE 657 NORTH EXETER