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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1971-09-30, Page 7mobskin "NOW IN STOCK" SEPT. -OCT. SPECIAL FREE SNOWMOBILE SUIT WITH EACH MACHINE SOLD 0/040%* CAPRI 1100 The Moto-Ski Capri See Them at THE 110S'N SHOP SERVICE - OUR BIGGEST ASSET 482-7222 Bill Tomkins Hwy. No.4 1 mile N. of Brucefield gain FUEL KID1 THE PITCHER-TO THE. CATCHER, SAID, you OUGHT TO USE THAT FUEL OIL, FRED! And YOU'LL be right "on the ball", too, if you order your Winter's supply of our fine, economical Fuel Oil NOW! Call us today. DON FU L OIL BP PA.1.4e, 235-2616 24 HR.BuRNER 5ERvicE• GASoL NE FURNACE INSTALLATION •OIESEL FUEL SANDERS ST., EXETER , ONT. Introducing YOUR LIBERAL candidate in HURON Ken Duncan, a 48-year-old farmer from Usborne Township, is married to the former Dorothy Marie Miller. Ken and his wife reside at R. R. 1, Kirkton, with two of their three children, Lloyd, 24, who works the 225 acre family farm with his father, and Shiela, 11, who attends Usborne Central School. A second daughter, Janis, (Mrs. Don Richardson) resides in Stratford where she works as a R.N. at Stratford General. A life resident of Huron, Ken Duncan's great-great-grandfather began the family farm on a tract purchased from the Canada Company over 100 years ago. DUNCAN IS DISSATISFIED WITH: .SOARING EDUCATIONAL COST .RAMPAGING REGIONAL GOV'T. .BUREAUCRATIC REGIONAL ASSESSMENT LET DUNCAN AND THE LIBERAL PARTY SPEAK --- FOR YOU VOTE DUNCAN LIBERAL / KEN DUNCAN SOUTH HURON DISTRICT HIGH SCHOOL EVENING CLASSES The courses listed below will be offered at South Huron District High School during the 1971-72 school year, PLEASE NOTE THE FOLLOWING 1. Fees - $10.00 for all courses except Welding $15.00; Grade 13 subjects $20.00; and Golf Instruction $5.00. 2. Fees are refunded if courses are not sufficiently subscribed to offer them. 3, Only those courses in which there is sufficient enrollment (normally 10 to 15) can be given. 4. Call the school for course details. 5. Sessions are generally 2 hours beginning at 7:30 p.m.; grade 13 sessions are 3 hours. Most courses will run for 21 sessions. 6. Classes will begin during the week of October 4th. 7. Interested persons should register by telephoning the school (235.0880) or by registering in person at the school any time during the school week between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Fees may be paid in advance at the school or may be paid on the first night of the course. 8. It is important that all interested persons register as soon as possible so that we can determine which courses we may offer. COURSES 1. Art (general course) 2. Oil Painting 3. Conversational French 4. Sewing -- Level 1 (beginners) 5. Sewing - Level 2 6. Sewing - Level 3 7. Sewing - Level 4 (tailoring) 8. Sewing - Level 5 (advanced tailoring) 9. Decorative Tube Painting and Bread Dough Artistry 10. Men's Fitness & Recreation Program 11. Ladies' Program & Recreational Sports 12. Golf Instruction (10 sessions in the spring) 13. Typing - Basic (grade 10 credit) 14. Typing - Advanced (grade 12 credit) 15. Shorthand - beginning (grade 11 credit) 16. Bookkeeping - beginning (grade 11 credit) 17. Bookkeeping - advanced (grade 12 credit) 18. Business Machines 19, Basic Technical Drawing 20, Basic Architectural Drafting 21. General Woodworking 22, Machine Shop Practice 23, Auto Mechanics - Advanced Auto Mechanics Hasid (in Clinton - Central 24. Farm Mechanics 25. Welding 26. Electricity (installation and Wiring) 27. Electronics - Basic 28. Biology (grade 12 credit) 29. Basic Economics (grade 12 credit) 30, World Polities (grade 12 credit) 31. Mathematics A (grade 13) 32, English (grade 13) 33. History (grade 13) 34. Geography of Canada (grade 13) 35. Ceramics INSTRUCTOR ROOM Mrs. R. Merner 98 Mr, V. Elliott 104 Mr. D. Solomon 111 Mrs. S. Perry 222 Mrs. L. Armstrong 222 Mrs. M. Bruinsma 222 Mrs. S. Perry 224 Mrs. I. McAllister 222 NIGHT Thursday Wednesday Thursday Monday Wednesday Thursday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Tuesday Thursday Mrs. E. Westman 107 Mr, R. Bogart Gym Miss L. Siegner Gym Mr, D. Ellison Gym & outside Miss H. Hartfurd 204 Mrs. P. Shaw 202 Mrs. M. Thompson 209 Miss H. Hartford 203 Mr. J, Robinson 201 Mr, D, Webster 201 Mr. J. Giadding 96 Mr. L. Powell 89 Mr. K, Ottewell 99 Mr, L. DeHaan 94 Mr. J, Folkhard 93 Tuesday Tuesday Thursday Wednesday Wednesday Thursday Wednesday Wednesday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Huron Secondary School) Tuesday Tuesday Wednesday Tuesday Wednesday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Wednesday Tuesday Tuesday Mr. J. H. Delbridge 93 Mr, R, Klopp 95 97 98 Mr, J. Marshall 110 Mr. O. Zivkovic 214 Mr, J. Fulop 210 Mr, L. Little 108 Mr. C. Murray 220 Mr. J. Hogan 212 Mr, C. Mills 105 Mr, W. J. Hart PLEASE CLIP THIS NOTICE FOR FUTURE REFERENCE All...1411110.11111116111111 Hawks lead in Rec ,Dufferin wins 731 division S Scott Burton went the distance for the Hawks. FASTEST RACE OF DAY - Margaret Ensign owned by Gerald Lawson of Woodham went the fastest mile in Saturday's harness races at Exeter Fair. Above, Ron Swartz is presenting a blanket to the winner while Mrs. Lawson hangs onto the pacer. Others in the picture are Mr. and Mrs. Elliott Clarke, Brian, Wayne and Cathy and driver Lloyd Turvey, T-A photo One big rally Hensall starting pitcher Barry Taylor retired the first twelve Hawk batters in order in the first game of the series before disaster struck. George Bruneau and Ron Grasdahl each singled twice during the big nine run rally for the Hawks in the fifth. Pete Lawson slammed a home run, Bill Bourne doubled and Brian Hodgins and Barry Baynham delivered singles, Don Mousseau came on in relief part way through the in- ning. Hensall opened the game scoring in the second on Barry Taylor's single and a double by Paul Morrison. Doug Brodie walked and scored the second Hensall marker in the fourth. In the fifth Bruce Horton, Bruce Moir and Doug Brodie scored for Hensall to give them a 5-0 lead that lasted until the Hawk onslaught in the bottom of the same inning. Paul Morrison and Rick Schilbe each doubled in the Hensall sixth and scored on singles from the bats of Bob Lavery and Brian Campbell. Brian Hodgins was the winning pitcher for the Hawks. Hawks fifth with back-to-back doubles. Burton's two-bagger sent Lawson in with the trying counter and he came in with thewinner as RonGrasdahi delivered his third consecutive single, The Hawks took a 2-0 lead in the first inning when Bill Farquhar and Pete Lawson singled and both rode home on Scott Burton's double. Hensall got one run back in the second when John Baker walked, m oved up a base as Bruce Horton also drew a pass and scored on a passed ball and infield out. The Hensall club went ahead with a two run rally in the third. Jack Betke walked, Paul Morrison singled and Rick Schilbe's double sent both run- ners scampering home. A four run splurge in the bot- tom of the fourth put the Hawks out in front again, this time by a 6-3 count. Bill Fairbairn led off the inning with a home run and before the side was retired, Ron Grasdahl, Brian Hodgins and Bill Farquhar had scored after singling. Hensall was quick to come back as they scored four times in their next trip to the plate. Solid hits from the first four batters to the plate produced the rally. Don Mousseau, Jack Betke and Paul Morrison singled and Rick Schilbe bashed his second double of the night. Schilbe eventually scored on a walk and a sacrifice fly. This put Hensall out in front 7-6 and set the stage for the final Hawk rally in the bottom of the same inning, Brian Hodgins went all the way for the Hawks to pick up the pitching win while Don Mousseau also went the distance in a losing cause for Hensall. Dashwood faces protest after winning first of final Win in fifth Two runs in the bottom of the fifth enabled the Hawks to eke out the Sunday night victory, With Hensall leading 7-6, Pete Lawson and Scott Burton led off the S The Dashwood Tigers took a big step Saturday night toward winning their third Ontario Baseball Association Inter- mediate "D" championship in four years. The Tigers trounced Kendall wildly and it rolled through the fence surrounding the field. At this point the umpires waved Hayter to third base and the Kendall manager came roaring ,out of the dugout to dispute the two base award. Apparently in the pre-game ground rules discussions, the Kendall manager refused to accept the usual Dashwood ground rule of one base on all over-throws and demanded that two bases be given. After considerable discussion Tiger manager Glarin Webb and umpire-in-chief Ken Newton agreed. The visiting manager argued that an,errant throw on a pick-off play was not an over-throw and only one base should be allowed. At this point as the umpires stuck to their decisions as agreed in the ground rules, the Kendall manager announced his club was playing the game under protest. After the incident, the Tigers continued their batting power. Bill Schade reached base on an error and Gord Vincent and Bob Hoffman followed with singles. John Hayter kept the rally going with a solid double and four more Tiger runs were safely home. In the third inning the Tigers scored another four runs to put the game completely out of reach of the visitors, Singles by Jim Hayter and Gord Vincent along with three bases on balls produced the rally. Pete Ravelle scored in the fourth for the Tigers without the aid of a hit. Whitey Denomme's double in the fifth sent Bob Hoffman and John Hayter across the plate. The winners completed their game scoring in the eighth with four more runs. Denomme's single was the only hit. Kendall scored three times in the sixth, the only time they really threatened and added a final run in the top of the ninth. Bob Webb went the full route for the Tigers and was touched for ten hits while chalking up a total of thirteen strike-outs. Start early Hensall wasted little time getting on a scoreboard in the Sunday afternoon game as they scored seven times during their first turn and were never headed. The first nine Hensall batters to the plate reached the bases but only seven scored as one was retired at the plate and another was stranded on third. Jack Betke started things rolling with a walk and then consecutive singles by Paul Morrison, Rick Schilbe and Murray Bell kept things alive. Bruce Horton and Bob Lavery followed with walks, Brian Campbell singled, Bruce Moir walked and pitcher Doug Riley whacked a triple, Bell was the only one of the early hitters that failed to score as he was thrown out to the plate. The Hawks had managed to score twice in the first inning when Barry Baynham walked, Bill Farquhar singled and both scored on a similar hit by Bill Bourne. In the Hawk third, Barry Baynham led off with a home run and Pete Lawson singled and scored on another one-bagger by Scott Burton. The Hawks cut the Hensall lead a bit in the fourth when Larry Haugh singled and was pushed around on hits by Baynham and Farquhar. Hensall completed their scoring in the fourth, Betke and Morrison singled and rode home on Rick Schilbe's bases clearing homer, The final Hawk scoring came in the sixth as Baynham singled, Farquhar walked and scored on Bill Bourne's single. They threatened a bit in the seventh but relief pitcher Don Mousseau came on to retire the side without further trouble. Doug Riley was the starting pitcher. 22-4 in the first game of a best-of- three series under the lights at 'the Dashwood ball park Saturday night. The second game goes in Kendall this Saturday afternoon at two o'clock. The Dashwood club will be travelling by bus and a few more fans can be ac- commodated. Anyone wishing to make the trip are asked to con- tact Tiger manager Glenn Webb as soon as possible. Webb said early this week that the bus would leave Dashwood at 8. a.m, sharp. If a third game is needed to decide a provincial champ it will be played in Dashwood the following weekend. The Tigers wasted little time in getting rolling in the opening game as they bombed starting pitcher Ralph Kennedy out of the box quickly. Bob Hoffman, the first Dash- wood batter drew a walk, John Hayter and Whitey Denomme each singled and third sacker Pete Ravelle drilled the ball over the left field fence to give his club a four run lead. After Kendall reliever Jones retired the next batter, the Dash- wood boys went to work again. Stan Lovie singled, Bill Schade and Gord Vincent each walked and all three rode home on Bob Webb's double. The first Tiger batter in the second inning Jim Hayter drew a walk. This didn't appear to be unusual but the next minute things were happening in a hurry. Jones tried to pick Hayter off first base but threw the ball Shortly before noon Wednesday Tiger manager Glenn Webb called the T-A to report he had received a copy of an official protest from Kendall manager Grant Wade. The protest reads as follows: "The protest is based on the umpires' ignorance and misinterpreta- tion of subsections 'g' and 'h' of rule 705. At the rules meeting before the game we flatly refused to play under the "bush league" rules presented to us by the Dash wood manager. We stated that the only way the ball game would get played was under the official rules of baseball. The umpire-in-chief agreed to this and so stated." In a quick call to OBA secretary Spero Annis in Peterborough, Webb learned that a meeting to hear the protest would be held Sunday. 4 The Dufferin Hotel downed Custom Trailers 6.5 Thursday night to win the "B division of the Exeter and district Rec Softball league. In the "A" division the junior Hawks lead Hensall two games to one, The fourth game played in Hensall last night, Wednesday with a fifth if necessary back at Exeter Community Park, Sulniy afternoon. Wednesday night in the first game, the Hawks scored nine times in the bottom of the fifth to pull out a 9-7 decision, Back in Hensall Sunday af- ternoon, it was another big in- ning, this time for Hensall as they scored seven runs in the first inning and gained a 10-8 victory. Sunday night at Exeter Community park it was another close contest with the Hawks eking out an 8-7 win to take a one game lead in the final series. Money tomorrow? Save it today! 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