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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1963-04-18, Page 7Westinghouse a step ahead Cushioned Action ECONOMY WASHER Wonderful features for the price! Combination lint fil- ter and detergent dispenser * 9-lb porcelain tub *Auto- matic non-clog pump * Ad- justable wringer. Unmat- ched value! LOOK at this low price .. 1 129'95 BEAVERS HARDWARE Phone 235-1033 Exeter 4.44eigror, 4.• SIGNET 200 CONVERTIBLE Guaranteed Used Cars 12,000 MILE OR 12-MONTH WARRANTY '63 DODGE 490 4-DOOR HARDTOP with everything --power steering, power brakes, radio and so on. C adet Blue with white trim.SeVe hundreds of dollars On this dernonstraton • • 4 it • • it • • • W '59 SIMCA SEDAN, Powder Blue, Plash 4-dyl. engine ....•..... 4•••• ... •••••••6 $595 '58 DODGE REGENT SEDAN, sharp 2-tone black and white, V-8 'engine, custom radio, stick shift $1195 '60 ENVOY SEDAN, jet Week, economy 4teY1. engine it . • i 'it *.......^ $006 '55 CHRYSLER WINDSOR SEDAN, V4 automatic transinission, power steering, power brakes, cus- tom radio, a luxury car at Iow cost d $595 Products Of Oxnard Motors WI I Fi Frigidaire Sales with. Service Drysdale Crest Hardware PHONE 11 HENSALL our „Exeter squads. reach district finals By MRS, .KEN 1.44KELLAR. April 18, '1901 ;pogo ;7 that :if you are doinS 60 m 4•h. and passing a par. that's doing 45,, it's like passing 40 cars, that are parked bumper to bum-. per.. Tirnes,Advpcatef; .. ................ Drivers„ never try te. paSS; .7' another car if there Is the slightest doubt in Your Mind that you have room enough, The Ontario 'Safety League points Out . . . Pee wee trio scores four goals 42 seconds _ in Tbis high-flying front line of Exeter Pee Wees rapped in four goals in 42 seconds Friday at the Young Canada Hockey Tournament in Goderich. The feat came during the locals' 13-0 win over Elora in their second game of the day. From left, they are Graham Hern, Frank De Vries and Ricky Weber. --T-A photo. Darlene Snell, 446; and. Penny preszcator, 403. SENIOR GIRLS --Lana Kel , ler, 604; Sharon Appleton, WI Helen Campbell, 506; Mar), Ma- (hers, 458 and Linda Hunter- Duvar, 428. JUNIOR BOYS--Hank Gosar, 625; Bill Farquhar, 604; Jim Gifford, 586; Bryan Baypham, 503 and Doug Beaver, 447. $ENIQR BOYS--Bill Wright, 767; Don Wright, 731; Peter McFalls, 644; Barry Green- acre, 557 and Brian Sanders, 553. My. sincere thanks, Huron Name ladies loop champs. P'wees post two shutouts ELSTON CARDIFF Mos... • . Exeter Pee Wees advanced to the third round of the 14th annual Young Canada tourney in Coder- ich with a pair of Friday wins, both by the shut-out route. Playing in early afternoon, the youngsters downed Wood- bridge 1-0 in what could prove to be the toughest game of the event. A nine goal spurt in the third period, four coming in a space of 42 seconds were the big factors in a 13-0 romp over Elora in an evening contest. and family of $eaforth with Mrs,.Garnish' parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. Hamilton onThursclaY, Mrs. Darn' Elliott and family of Essex with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jelin Wallace. Mr, and Mrs, Jelin Jefferson of Sault Ste. Marie with his parents, Mr, and Mrs. John Jefferson. Mr. and. Mrs. Malcolm La- mond and son Travis, Mrs. Ken- nedy and Miss AndreaKennedY, London, Mrs. Inez McRoberts, Miss Anne CreerY, Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Kendrick of Lucan with Mr. and Mrs. M. Lomond. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Watcher, Bradley and Richard, Strathroy, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Rhode, Danny and Freddie of Stratford, with Mr. and Mrs. Roy McGhee. Mr. Jim Chappel of Geraldton with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Miler Chappel for the Easter holidays, Mr. R.G. Speare, Toronto, with his sister, Miss olive Speare on Good Friday. Mr. and Mrs, David Ringrose, Bruce and Jane of London with Mr. and Mrs. Alex Walker on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Jory, Exe- ter, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Ken- drick and sons, Windsor, Mr. and Mrs. Ken Cudmore and family of London, Mr. and Mrs. Ken Hendrick and family, Monk- ton, Miss Wanda IVIcLaren and Miss Norma Parkhouse of Ha- milton with Mr. and Mrs. Keith McLaren. Mr. and Mrs. George Wallace with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Brooks and George, Staffa. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Walker with Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Currie, Dorchester, Miss Linda Currie returned with her grandparents for the Easter holidays. Mrs. W.N. Binning and Jane of Mitchell with Mrs. Binning's parents, Mr. and Mrs. K. Mc- Kellar on Good Friday. Mr. and Mrs. McKellar spent Sunday and Monday with the Binnings. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Scott and family of Go de ri c h with Mrs. Grace Scott and Mr. and Mrs. John Wallace on Good Fri- day. Mr. Ken Walker, Misses Alice Walker, Carol Howe, Margaret Wall a c e, Dorothy Scott, all of London, at their respective homes. At a euchre and crokinole party at SS 5 on Thursday night, Mr. Bob Norris was the winner in a draw for a suit case. Cromarty relatives who at- tended the silver wedding anni- versary of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Coleman in Seaforth on Tuesday evening were Mr. and Mrs. T. Laing, Mr. and Mrs. C. Cole- man and Ruth Ann, Mr. and Mrs. R. Laing, Mr. and Mrs. G. Laing and Mr. and Mrs. M u r r a y Christie. Mr. and Mrs. T. Gillespie and daughter Ann and Mr. Grant of Komoka with Mr. and Mrs. T. Laing. Mr. and Mrs. Dei- chert of Zurich were also re- cent visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Laing. STUDY HONG KONG By using a flip chart Mrs. M. Lamond presented the study Hong Kong at the special Easter Meeting of Cromarty WM$ and the iViariali Ritchie Apxiliary in the church Good Friday evening. Mrs. Robert Laing gave some thoughts ..on "The Cross", Mrs. P.L. Scott gave a report of the synodical meeting In Wingham. Miss Olive Speare read an Eas- ter poem. Mrs. Calder McKaig presided and was assisted in the worship by Mrs. J.M. Scott and Mrs, T. Laing. Misses Bonnie and De- nise Kerslake sang a duet ac- companied by Miss Carol Ann Dow. A ladies quartet composed of Mrs. Q Carey, Mrs. J. Templeman, Mrs. A. Gardiner and Mrs. R. Laing sang "The Old Rugged Cross" accompa- nied by Mrs. G. Laing. Rev. J.C. Boyne closed the meeting. WARREN McKELLAR A funeral service for Warren L. McKellar, Cromarty, was held at thelleath-Lesliefuneral home, Mitchell, on Saturday, April 6 with Rev. A.H. Daynard of Staffa United Church officia- ting. The pall-bearers were neigh- bors, Fred Harburn, Robert Gar diner, Frank Hamilton, Hugh Norris, Mervin Nairn and Malcolm Lamond, all of Hibbert Township. • Burial was made in Roy's cemetery, Fullarton Township. Friends and relatives attended from London, Brantford, Staffa, Mitchell and surrounding dis- trict. After completion of the regu- lar schedule in the ladies divi- sions at the Exeter Bowling Lanes, the Happy Gals and Blowettes have been declared league champions in the "A" and "B" groups respectively. The Gals ended with a clear seven point margin over the runner-up Pin Poppettes 138- 131. In the "B" section, the battle went right down to the wire with the Blowettes edging out the second-place Lollipops by a single point 140-139. Play-offs start this week in each division with the winners meeting in a series for the grand championship. In individual performances Norma Caldwell claimed the high single in the "A" race with a nifty 355 and Judy Kies- wetter was best in the "B" section at 301. The best three-game total over the season was turned in by Jeanette Lippert in the "B" loop with a lofty 801 and Mary Cronyn participating in the "A" league was close behind with 794. The most consistent bowler over the year was Peg Hunter- Duvar with an average of 213 compiled in the "A" competi- tion. Top average in the "B" league was Fran Walker's 196. .Exeter Dowling Lanes was busy spot Satarday with the Staging of the southern division of the Lake Huron Zone Re,- creation Five Pin Bowling championships, Thirty-one teams of Ming- eterS from LOteWel, Ociderieh, Wingham, Clinton, Heasall, R CAF Centralia and Exeter were on the alleys trying for strikes. Senior and junior divisions were run off to boys and girls. classes with the top two clubs in each section advancing to the finals in Listowel a week later. Exeter squads were: uccess, ful in each class and will be in the running for the grand titles. Each team consisted of five bowlers with total pinfall for three games deciding the win- ners, Phyllis Madge with a three- game total of 635 led the younger girls in the under 14 class. A 604 triple by Lana Keller was tops in leading the senior girls club to second position and a spot in next week's roll- off, Captain Hank Gosar bouncing the pins for a 625 triple was best in the junior boys section. A couple of fine perform ances from the Wright brothers clin- ched top honours in the under 19 senior boys class. Bill Wright was out in front with 76'7 and Don was a close second at 731. JUNIOR GIRLS--Phyllis Madge, 635; Sue Anne Linden- field, 580; Barb Skinner, 525; first of four when he was in the right spot to bounce in a rebound on a long shot from John Roulston that bounced off the goalie's chest. Graham Hern's goal, the only one of the second, was the re- sult of a neat bit of stick- handling in eluding two defen- ders in close. Final period goals came thick and fast, eight in the first eight minutes. DeVries and Hern each fired two to account for the fast sniping in the quartette of scores in 42 seconds. Singles from Jim Hayter, Barry Baynham, another from DeVries and a pair of long blue-line drives from Roulston wound up the marksmanship. The kids played Wednesday afternoon with Winona supplying the opposition. FORCED THE PLAY Although held to one goal by a battling Woodbridge club, the locals held a good majority of the play and were out in front on shots on goal 23-14. The only goal came when Gra, ham Hern picked up a long clearing pass from Frank De- Vries to break completely into the clear. He moved in to draw the goalie out of position and slide the puck into an open net at 14.00 of the first period, Rick Brintnell in racking up his goose-egg had a fairly quiet afternoon only having to come up with about three dangerous drives. ROUT ELORA Starting slowly with three scores in the opening period and one in the second, the Loader coached kids broke the game wide open with their nine- goal barrage in the final 15- minute session. Bill Fairbairn fired two in the first, both with help from Barry Baynham, the second be- ing a breakaway from centre ice. Frank DeVries notched his St ti sti cs it o ling EXETER LANES' Lose first in overtime 3 1 MEN'S LEAGUE PLAY-OFFS "A" GROUP Kingpins OR, Peters 718) ..... 2 Rockets (J. 'Fuller 714) 2 R. Billiards (S. Nagel 797) ,., 4 Big Six (.D. Wells 752) 0 Spares (3. Fairbairn 703) Tradesmen (H. Brintnell 644) Pepsi's (J. Coughlin 806) Ringers (D. Wright 666) R. Billiards (3796) 4 Pepsi's (3510) 4 Spares (34126) 3 Kingpins (3058) 2 Rockets (3610) Tradesmen (3310) 1 Big Six (3491) 0 Ringers (3232) 0 "B" GROUP 13ankrnonts (H. Kieswettor 660) 3 Larks (N. Mattson 565) 1 C, Loggers (W, Romanluk 711) 4 Canners (B, Mat 642) 0 Fairlanes (C, :Edwards 7711) , 3 Milkmen (T. ,Stire 644) 1. isiv.asupertest (3, Snell 652) 2 K. Tigers (P. Wieman 665) 2 Crystal iLoggers (3693) 4 Falrianes (3513) Bankinon IS (3395) 3 N B Supertest (3051) 2 Kippen Tigers (3307) 2 Milkmen (3359) 1 Larks (32515 1 Canners (3500) 0 CONSOLATION 130-DidleYs (0. Watson 699) „ 3 High Hopes (N. Rooth 553) , 5 Mighty Mice (B. Morley 652) 2 Handicappers (M. Hache 638) 7 Droppettes (G. Rowe 509) 0 Blowettes (E. Penhale 648) 5 Alley Cats (F, Walker 659) ,, 2 Blowettes 140 Lollipops 039 HandicapperS 130 Alley Cats. 118 Busy Dees 111 High Hopes 110 Who Cares . 96 Jolly jilts 92 Mighty Mice 54 DroPpettes 79 Sputniks 75 Jolly Six 47 High single: P. Walker (275) 'High triple: F. Walker (659) -Hidden score: S. Exley 4 0 In Friday's opener in the northern town, a quick goal at fifty seconds of an overtime session by Henry Gray dashed Exeter's hopes of moving in front in the series. With typical play-off action prevailing and both clubs stres- sing fast skating and rugged defence work, the large crowd of fans was treated to plenty of thrills. Ray Grummet brought the home town supporters to their feet at 13.12 of the first when he converted defenceman Terry Watson's pass with a high drive from 20 feet out. Allan Thompson, working hard in the corner, knocked a loose puck out in front three minutes later and Bob Burns slammed home a low drive to knot the count 1-1. The boys left the ice after the first twenty minutes of play with the home team on top 2-1 as the result of Dwight Davies' score at 17.56. Daviesblasted a low, partially-screened shot that Tommy Glavin in the Exeter cage had little chance to stop. PERSONALS Mrs. William Hamilton cele- brated her 83rd birthday on Wednesday, April 10. Guests present for the occasion were: Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Ballan- tyne, Miss Lillian Ballantyne, and Mrs. William Sillery, Exe- ter, Mrs. Jessie Hamilton, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hamilton, Mrs. Nelson Hunkin, T ee sw at e r, Mrs. Cliff Miller and Mrs. R.D. Sadler, Staffa. Mrs. T.L. Scott, Mrs. M. Lamond, Mrs. C. McKaig, Mrs. Sadie Scott, Mrs. E. Moore, Mrs. J. Jefferson, Miss Olive Speare and Mrs. T. Laing, at- tended the Easter Thankoffering meeting of the WMS of Knox Presbyterian church, Mitchell, on Thursday as guests from Cromarty WMS. The CGIT girls entertained their secret pals at a pot luck dinner in the church basement on Monday. EASTER VISITORS Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Dolmage of Kitchener with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dodds. Mr. and Mrs. Cameron Vi- vian and Mr. and Mrs. George Vivian and son Andrew with Mr. and Mrs. Duncan Scott on Sun- day. Mr. Lloyd Crawford, Toronto with his mother Mrs. W, Craw- ford and his brother, Alvin Crawford. Mr. and Mrs. J.C. Cornish LADIES' LEAGUE Legionei(es (P, Ravelle 660) ., 6 Firecrackers ON, Chapman 527) 2 Hot Shots (P. Schroeder 639) 7 Untouchables (G. Waldron 474) 0 Westerners (VV. Gill 647) 4 Atoms (0. Gunning 61.0) 3 Harmony Gals (13, IDatars 634) 5 Braves (A, 'Ravetle 481) 2 Pit:eclat:leers ....... .......... ....... 117 Legionettes .. ......... , ...... ..... ..... 115 'Harmony Gass . 113 .13raves . . 112 Atoms.. ,..... ............ ..... ........ 55 :Hot Shots ...... .... 82 'Westerner,; 73 Un tourhala es• 59 Mat single: N. Chapman (263) High triple: W. Gill (647) LUCAN LANES GLAMOR AT LOW COST! Westons (A. Meikle 615) 1 Hensel) ('R. Caldnvell 538) 3 Sterling ,Fuels (B. Mcl'alls 694) 1 Hot Rods ,(D. ,Robbins 534) 4 Huskies (B. McArthur 585) 0 A & (14. 'Holtzman 635) 2 L. Supertest (L. Rumpel 645) 2 J-lot Rods 0253) Bo-Didleys (3711) ....... 3 Hensall (3453) 2 A & H Specials' (3540) 2 L. Supertest ('3G27) ..... 2 Stenling Fuels (3390) „.„ Westons (3369) 1 Huskies (1 2632) 0 High single: S. Nagel (356) High 'triple: J. Coughlin (806) LADIES' LEAGUE "A" GROUP Hot Dogs (I. Campbell 561) :sate Hawks (M. Goodwin 559) 2 Merry Maids (R. Carey 662) .. 7 P. Poppettes (EL Gravett 644) 0 Trailers (N. Meikle 598) Happy Gals (L. Rowe 048) „.., 0 Wee Hopes (J. Weber ON) , 7 Pills (P. Hunter-Ouvar 654) 0 Be )3o1,...9 (A. Pooley 750) 5 Frisky Six (D, Dobson 619) 2 Lucky "Strikes (S. Wright 586) 7 Rollettes (.7, Mason 480) 0 Happy Gals 138 Pin Poppettes 131 Trailers 120 Merry Maids 111 Be Bops 107 Pills. 103 Hot Dogs 100 Wee Hopes 97 Frisky Six 95 .Rollettes 82 Lucky Strikes 77 Nite 5-Tawks 67 High triple: Shirley Wright Other; Molly Burke "B" GROUP Who Cares (S. Appleton 482) 4 Btisy Bees (1 0: Webster 531) 3 Jilbs (B. Knight 600) 5 Sputniks (E. Reid 639) 2 Lollipops (L. Brook 610) 5 Jolly Six (A, Canh 513) .... 2 Bantam club drops series By MRS. G. HOOPER Mr. and Mrs. Norman Mc- Naughton and Douglas of Strat- ford were Saturday ev ening guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Thomson. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Thack- er and family visited Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pattison of St. Marys. Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Waugh of London spent Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Leonard T h a ck e r, Mrs. Jack Morgan and Ralph of Guelph visited Sunday and Mrs. John Beattie, Ann and Jack of London were Friday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Thacker. Sunday evening guests with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. G. Jones were: Mr. and Mrs. McPher- son of Bryanston, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Bryan, David, Nancy mid Cynthia of Ebenezer, Mr. and Mrs. Jas. B. Bryan and Robin of Prospect Hill, Miss Shelley Bryan of St. Catherines Mrs. Lottie Jones of St. Marys. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Petch of S t r at h roy spent Sunday and Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Claire Sisson. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Robert- son of Sutton West spent Monday with Mr. and Mrs. C lair e Sisson. Mrs. Lawrence Grasby and Debbie of London spent Friday with Mr. and Mrs. Claire Sis- son. 2 J. SCORE SHORTHANDED Early in the second, with Huntsville captain and star de- fenceman Art Gouldie resting in the penalty box for charging, his team-mates took advantage of a break to make the score 3-1. With the locals' power play in effect, Phil Clayton broke down the ice, was forced into the corner but carried back of the net to flip the disc in frontto an uncovered Henry Gray who found the open side of the net. Thirty-two seconds later, Mike Cushman stole the puck from a Huntsville defender and moved in alone to rifle a low shot into the left corner of the cage. Allan Thompson put the clubs on even terms (3-3) only a minute later, scoring in almost identical manner as Cushman. Breaking up a play in enemy territory, the hustling winger cut in to blast another low shot under the stretching glove of goalie Don Stinson. Huntsville's fourth goal was fired by Tim Kelly after he took a pass from Ray Grummet in the corner. Kelly was left un- covered directly in front of Glavin and spun around to back- hand a low shot past the sliding goalie. Parsons and Cushman were both in the penalty box at the time. PARSONS GETS TIE Play ranged back •and forth for the balance of the second and most of the third period without either team being able to beat a sturdy defence and at times spectacular net-minding. With only a minute to go in regulation time and Grummet of the homesters off for slashing, Coach Gravett threw out the power play and it paid off with the equalizer. Mike Cushman recovered the rubber in the Huntsville zone and flipped a pass back to the left point to Gary Parsons. The left winger slapped a blazing shot into the short side to send the game into ten minutes of overtime. Starting the extra play with a man advantage ) Huntsville put on a sustained attack and were rewarded with Gray's second marker of the night. Boom's boys carried a consi- derable margin of the play in the remainder of overtime but were unable to beat Stinson, supported by the fine defensive play of Gouldie. Grummett fired the insurance marker and his second of the game with 15 seconds left after Glavin was lifted for a sixth attacker. Penalties played a big part in the contest. Half of the goals were with a manpower advan- tage. The defence work of Larry Willert and Ron Broderick gave good protection to Tommy Gla- vin who turned in sensational stops, despite an ankle injury. Glavin's big saves came as he thwarted Art Gouldie on numer- ous occasions. ' Gouldie was the beat for the home team playing abig portion of the game. He waS effective going both ways. Mike Cushman andGaryPar- Sans turned in solid two way efforts on the Exeter front line with the former handing out some hard Checks. MEN'S LEAGUE Dairymen (K Simpson 642) . 3 Fire Eaters (W. ,Hickson 688) 0 Lurniber 'Kings (O. Taylor 610) 2 Hot Shots (W. 'Hodgins 582) 1 Hotel (B. Coughlin 565) 2 Agrico (G. Manders 627) 1 ShamroCks (H. tRollings 065) 2 Woodbutchers (A. :Dewar 599) 1 C. Rost'nt (T.Hermeston 702) 2 Rex. (R, Gledhill 5-IS) 1 Legion (L. Ditty 744) Duffers (K. Dickson 700) 62 .lart'Neerogxoio,dnbutchers 57 Shamrocks 50 Lumber Rings 42 Dairymen 57 47 Central Restaurant 42 DuffersHolel 40 28 Fire Eaters 25 .. 31 Agrico 15 Hot Shots High single: K. Dickson (311) High triple: L. Ditty (741) COLLEENS The Top Five (L. Harrison 543) Wingclings, (C. VanLeishout (618) Little Shots (L, Blake 667) Toe Tappers (S. Hayter 420) Wingdings 114 Top Five 66 Little !Shots 56 Toe Tappers 26 High single; L. Harrison (261) High triple: L. Blake (667) High average: A. Scott (1151) JUNIORS Jinx's (K, Ready 205) 5 ,lluorbells (J. Nagle 136) 0 131ew-Bells (5, Shipway 180) 3 Blow-OW.8 (B. Ankers. 183) .- 2 Pinkplitters (D. Shimmy 161) 5 Strikers (3. 1-1(earn 6-20) 0 Only $3 t4 60 12,000 MILE OR 12 MONTH WARRANTY Complete with aUtomatictransmission, Hi-Performance engine, whitewall tires, power top, bucket seats, padded dash, back-up lights, luxurious carpet. Fiesta Red with white vinyl top. Price complete See this Valiant Signet 200 Convertible today at Exeter Motors! Nobody beats Valiant for Value ! EASTER HOCKEY AILSA CRAIG MEN C. Supers (,J. Noyes 653) 2 Wild Cats (0. Johnson 557) 2 Lucky Six (.1„ lloideon 654) 3 13. Bomber's (A, IP/wider 697) 1 Boltonts Up (W. Parsons 009) 4 Devises (II. Weldon 555) 0 14. Panthers (B. Watson 551) 3 Chevy Flights (1). Collins 641) 1 Clandobnye Sapers 80 Chevy Ile:11ts . 55 ditteity Six 63 Wild Otis 611 Bottoms 01e - . . . 01 Bnlnsley nombetes . ... . 49 novNos .. . 34 Black Panthers .. .. 30 High single: J. ItodjSon (254) 1-Tigh triple: A, Mulder. (697) Drop second -continued from page 6 Play in the final 20 warmed up considerably after Coach Gra- vett gave a pep talk to his charges. Hard checks were han- ded out by both clubs. Exeter pressed all the way but were held to one goal. Gary Parsons wound up the scoring in the Huntsville portion of the series with a successful. slap shot mid-way through the closing session to bring the final score to 6-3. Fight back for tie. GB LANES Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Grasby and Debbie of London were Sunday evening guests of Mr. and Mrs. Claire Sisson. Jinxs 79 Dumbells 67 Strikers 19 Blow-J3ells 48 Pinsplitters 44 Blow-Outs . ................ ... 37 High single, .girIst S. Shipway (100) High single, toys: K. Ready (205) Dobbt for Dodge EXETER MOTOR SALES 235-1250 Fre bObbS prop George 285-1130 Exeter bantams, although el- iminated in the first round of the annual Georgetown Easter tourney, put up a good showing against a strong aggregation from Levack, a town north of Sudbury. They were eliminated by the northerners in a two game total goal series 7-4. WIN EARLY GAME Getting up early in the mor- ning proved to be good for Derry Boyle's boys since they gained a 4-2 decision in a game that got under way at 7.30 a.m. Bob Grayer put the locals into an early 1-0 lead which they held after one period of play. Scott Burton with the first of two and a single from Mark Hin- ton on a play with Peter Lawson upped the margin to 3-0 after two frames. While the northern boys were scoring twice in the final period Burton came back with the se- cond of his pair to give his team a two-goal edge to take into the afternoon contest. The youngsters from the mi- ning country came out strength the second tilt and reduced the deficit to one after the first 15-minute period had elapsed on a score by Don Campbell. After a scoreless second frame the Exeterites were still hanging onto the slim lead but seemed to be tiring and only Some stellar net-Minding by Glenn Stire held them in the fray. Three fast snores by Levack In a minute and a half hear the finish put the genie oh ice While several locals were in the penalty box. One Of the stars in a losing cause was Bob Beaver s who was flying both Walla and saw action In about 80 per cent of the doubleheader. Others with solid efforts WereScott Diann, Glenn Stfre and Bob Grayer. The latter was returning to action for the first time hi flVe Weeks after Tay oft due to illness. -continued from page 6 Although the team is without a coach, they leave the ice when they are tired. Goldup and another ex-Torontonian Sid Smith look after the managerial and booking duties Other one-time Leafs on the squad are Tod Sloan, Cal Gardner, Gus Bodnar, Bob Goldham, Jackie Hamilton and Harry Watson. The Old'Stars usually play about 30 ganies in a season and this year won 10 of their first 12 starts, one win coming Over a Junior A club. Speaking of aged 'hockey players probably the oldest ever to appear in Stanley Cup play- Offs was the late Lester Patrick in 1928. The Silver Pox, then coach of the Rangers was forced into the nets in a 'crucial test with the Maroons when regular goalie Lorne Chabot was hit in the face with a sizzling shot from Weis Stewart. The 45-year-old Lester tame into the game in the second period and allowed only one goal as his citib went on to win 2-1 in overtirne,