HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1976-06-03, Page 12MOTOCROSS RACES
Sunday, June 6
CAMP, DANCE,
RACE, RIDE
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1974 VEGA HATCHBACK COUPE
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1973 CHEVROLET BEL AIR SEDAN power
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1973 CHEVROLET BEL AIR 2 door hardtop,
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1973 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE SEDAN
power equipped, radio, etc. Licence DHE106
1973 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE Custom Sedan,
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1973 MERCURY MONTEGO MX Sedan,
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1972 CHEVROLET IMPALA Custom Coupe,
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Pogo. 12 Times-Advocate, June 3,1976 tinimitimiitifuniniimmulimminmitnummommmomiltrimmitimimmillimiumu, F R
your support
Steer
This
Way
BY
LARRY
SNIDER
Attention: Gun Owners
New members for the newly formed
Playbird Gun Club are needed. There will
be a meeting on Monday, June 7 at 7 p.m.
at the Ausable Taxidermy Shop, 177
William St. N. Exeter. Anyone interested will
be welcome at the meeting or the regular
shoot held at the farm of Lloyd Stan lake, 1/4
mile N. of Hwy, 83 on Con. 2 on Saturday
at 1 p.m.
carry some of the costs but
forcing them to carry all
the costs is another matter,
The Royals opened their
season with three con- E.
secutive wins. Two of them g
came at the expense of last E.
year's champions the
Lucan Irish-Nine, Even-
tually, the Royals could be
in a position of being league
leaders; possibly league
champions and then Exeter
will appreciate them and
then they will have a home-
crowd worthy of a fine
fastball club, But it could 31
r, •
be too late. You can only go v• -
so far down the path of LADIES BOWLING Winners of the consolation prize were the
fiscal doom before it is too 5 are Marg Skinner, Helen Edwards and Norma Jones, Back row
late to turn around. ThenF.: McCallum and Judy Mason.
there is this point that the
worried Hodgins suggests,
"How can a town propose
to support an arena-
complex when they don't
even support men's and
women's fastball E
representing the town?" It
is a good point. Hodgins is E.
not suggesting people
should abandon the arena
anditsfund raising drive in
order to support the Royals g,
(remember, he does play
rec hockey and would E.
probably want the arena
built as much as anyone)
but he does point out that if
people won't lay down a
minimal amount of money
for the Royals; to help
support them and get
immediate, tangible
results in worthwhile en-
tertainment, it is unlikely
they will put out for the
$500,000 needed to finance
the arena.
The Royals deserve the
support; they need the
support and they are of-
fering something no one
else in town is offering:
fastball. Good, high-quality
fastball. Spend a summer's
night in the bleachers some
time and find out. And
while you are doing that,
you will be showing a little
pride in your home town.
If your signal doesn't flash
(and everything else is fine)
you probably have a burned
put flasher unit. It plugs in un-
der the dash, and only takes a
minute to replace.
Air filter should be cleaned
every 70,000 miles — more
often if you do a lot of short-
trip driving, Dirty or clogged
filter cuts fuel economy, causes
stalling and rough idling.
Happy Gang. Front row from left to right
from left to right are Cathy Mason, Lois
photo by Y. Romaniuk,
Hodgins has they con be expected to
enough worries managing
the Exeter Royals without
having to contend with the
problem of worrying about
his team's future if and
when money should run
out.
Hodgins has to make
sure all of his players show
up at the right town at
approximately the right
time when they play away
games. He has to check the
equipment. He has to draw
up a schedule. He submits
releases tp this newspaper,
On fop of all this, and
almost as an afterthought,
he works from 9:00 to 5:00
(all God's chillun' gotta
eat.)
What Brian Hodgins does
not need is another
problem to worry about,
But Brian Hodgins has a
lot of worries about the
future of the Royals.
Fan support at the
beginning of the season,
with the Royals now into
their fourth game, has been
minimal. Maybe minimal
is not quite the word,
Negligiblemight be better,
How about next to nothing?
The future of the Royals
hinges upon fan support for
finances. The simple
equation is: No fans—No
dollars—No Royals,
Consider the case of the
Exeter Greys who went
belly-up this season. There
may have been con-
tributing factors but the
essential reason behind
their demise was lack of
fan support.
That leaves the Royals as
the only ball team
representing Exeter in
intercounty play; and don't
forget, for this year at
least, the Royals will be the
only team in intercounty
play that actually play out
of Exeter.
What is happening is the
Royals are having to pay to
play. This is fine to a
degree. They are not a
professional team, and
Splashed deposits all over
your spark plugs are a sign
that you've delayed your tune-
up too long. Make an appoint-
ment right away.
Waiting for someone? Turn off
the engine, Even one minute of
idling time uses more gas (at
zero miles per gallon) than
restarting the car.
If your front tires are ex-
cessively worn on the outside
shoulder, but smooth, the
wheels have excessive caster.
Bring the car in for a front-end
alignment.
Tires going? Why put new tires on an
old, old car? Treat yourself to a
smooth-riding beauty at Larry Spiders.
You'll like the car, you'll like the price.
Larry Snider
TUESDAY LEAGUE BOWLING CHAMPS are the Merry Maids. Front row from left to right are Louise Pin-
combe, Barb Turnbull, Karen Pfaff and Terry Heywood. Back row from left to right are Verlyn Lindenfield,
Ann Prout, Lenore Latullipe and Grace Farquhar. T-A photo by Y. Romaniuk.
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New fence for
Dashwood
Tigers lose to Kincardine
The next time you pass Dash-
wood Community park and it
looks a little different, it will be
because of a new green vinyl,
chain link fence running from
foul pole to foul pole.
Taylor fence of Lambeth were
awarded the contract to erect the
two 50 foot sections of fence for
$3,000.
The fence was erected to firmly
Are we ever
embarrassed!
establish ground rules for the
park.
Part of the $3,000 comes from
Wintario grants; the full amount
of which has yet to be deter-
mined. About 25 percent of the
costs are being funded by capital
grants.
Both Hay and Stephen
Townships will carry part of the
maintenance costs of the fence.
Members of the grounds
committee who arranged for the
financing and fencing are: Bob
Hoffman, Bill Shady, Bill Van-
derworp. Irvin Rader, Joe Miller
from Hay and Doug Russell from
Stephen.
The park is in use all week,
being used by Dashwood and
Mount Carmel teams, Grand
Bend ladies' softball, the Stephen
Junior ball team and the Dash-
wood Tigers.
After winning their first two
games of the season, the Dash-
wood Tigers dropped a 5-3
decision to Kincardine Sunday
evening all because of Larry
Riggen who belted a grand-slam
home run in the eighth inning.
Kincardine opened the scoring
in the third when Peifer got on
base on a walk. He was sacrificed
to second from which he stole
third. A wild pitch by Jim
Guenther, who toiled all game for
the Tigers, allowed Peifer to
waltz home to open the scoring.
The score remained 1-0 until
the eighth when the Tigers
compiled three runs to give them
a 3-1 lead.
Bob Hoffman led off with a
single that left him on base. Then
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Peifer, pitching for Kincardine,
walked two men in a row, putting
Bill Shady and Dave Parsons on
base.
With men on three bases, Jim
Hayter knocked out a double that
sent Hoffman and Shady across
the plate for two runs. Parsons
picked up his run when a third
base error allowed him access to
home.
When it looked like the Tigers
might take the game, it was
Larry Riggen who sank their
hopes. With the bases loaded,
Riggen's home run pushed the
Kincardine crew ahead to give
them their two run final margin,
The ninth was scoreless.
Guenther went the distance for
the Tigers, fanning 12 batters and
giving up six walks. Peifer pit-
ched for Kincardine.
Kincardine scored five runs on
four hits, committing two errors,
The Tigers were three runs on
four hits, committing three
errors. Errors have plagued the
Tigers all season long.
Their next game is against
Chesley at Dashwood June 4 at
8:00 p.m. Following that, they
travel to Zurich June 8 at 6:30
p.m.
Soccer .
— Continued from Page 11
Lucan defenceman and the goalie
collided leaving DeBong with an
open net and the ball.
Osterloo's goal came off his
second consecutive penalty shot.
He was awarded the shot, but
under soccer rules, the goalie
cannot move until the ball is
kicked, The Lucan goaltender
moved and caught the ball on
Osterloo's first try, and he was
awarded a second which he
capitalized on.
No statistics for the Luean
scorers were available.
The Northlanders breathed a
sigh of relief when a marathon
opener for their recreation
league ball season ended after
seven innings with them barely
squeaking by the Times-
Advocate team 26-2.
The T-A team, resplendent in
their newly designed uniforms of
blue denim, t-shirts and fake
Adiddas, managed to hold off the
Northlander onslaught until the
first inning when the bottom
seemed to fall out of their game.
Murray Glanville's second
inning home run and Dave Worby
crossing the plate after a double
provided the T-A scoring which
kept the margin of victory for the
Northlanders reasonable.
Some pundits claimed Glan-
ville's home run was the highlight
of the game. Those less inclined
to kindness said it might be the
highlight of the season for the T-
A.
The Northlander runs are too
many to compile (besides, it is
embarrassing for us)and it would
upset sports-editor Fred Youngs,
a high-strung punk who can be
seen at the balldiarnond Tuesdays
s and Thursdays trying to figure
out which is left field and which is
right.
We are pleased to announce the opening of our television service department. We have the
equipment and the trained people to provide complete television repair to all makes. Rob
Noakes (front) and Ross Alexander will be happy to put your set bock in excellent working
order.
Radio l'haeli
AND TROPHIES DEALER
411 Main St, Exeter 23542261