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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1966-02-03, Page 11THURSDAY NIGIIT MIXED LEAGUE Gwen MacLaurin was high lady last week with a 249 single and a 061 triple. Hap Swat- ridge was high man with a 361 single and a 775 triple. Team standings: Gwen's Go- phers 83; Sharon's Sharks 80; Dianne's Duffers 79; Fran's Frantics 04; Dott's Dashes 59; Audrey's Angels 55. 0-0-0 WEDNESDAY NIGHT MIXED LEAGUE Joyce Gaunt bad a good night last Wednesday, taking the ladies' high single and triple with 277 and 645. For the men, Mike Hlavach took all the honors with a single of 293 and a triple of 773. The Comets have now taken over first place again, with 75 points; Corvairs 73; Pontiacs 63; T-Birds 61; Buicks 56 and Fiats 50. Special thanks to Gwen Mac- Laurin, Paul Rintoul, Phil Ad- ams and Terry Nethery for spar- ing for us. CROWN THEATRE HARRISTON WED. 2 - THUR. S - FRI. 4 "FLUFFY" A cute colorful comedy for family entertainment—starring Tony Randall - Shirley Jones A lion plays cupid and it's fun all the way. Wed. and Thurs. at 8 p.m. Friday 7:15 and 9:15 p.m. SAT. 5 - MON. 7 - uruEs. 8 "OPERATION CROSSBOW" in Color—Starring Sophia Loren - George Peppard and Trevor Howard Thrills galore race and creep across the wide screen as three secret agents face death and high adventure. ¤ Saturday at 7:15 and 9:15 p.m. Monday and Tuesday at 8 p.m. SATURDAY MATINEE at 2:15 "OPERATION CROSSBOW" 0 WED. 9 - THUR. 10 - FRI. 11 "THE ART of LOVE" in Technicolor The city ,of Paris is invaded by Dick Van Dyke, James Gar- ner, Angie . Dickinson, Elke Sommer and Ethel Merman. The results are very funny. 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For information, phone the local ON Passenger Sales Office CANADIAN NATIONAL 40.65 Wingham Advance-Times, Thursday, Feb. 3, 1986 -- Page 11 (ALLAN SHOES YOUR FAMILY SHOE STORE JOSEPHINE STREET PHONE WINGHAM 357-1840 Attend the Annual Meeting of the Wingham & District Hospital Association Nurses' Residence--8 p.m. Friday MID-WINTER SALE NOW ON SNOWBOOTS 20 to 30% REDUCTIONS SPECIAL BARGAINS THROUGHOUT THE STORE Strikes & Spares Doug Mowbray Rolls 295 1 COMMERCIAL LEAGUE There were some good games tonight with Lois Cerson bowl- ing a 245 and Dot Bain a 262. However, Shirley Storey came up with the high single of 263 and the high triple of 700. Er- nie Walker kept both honors to himself, too, with 291 for high single and 638 high triple, We thank spares Karen Win- ters, (who really enjoyed the evening, I understand) Janette Scott, Bill Johnson and Hartley Watson for filling in for our ab- sentees. I saw Norman Camer- on bowling so guess he was able to dig himself out from La Belle Province in time for to- night's game. Team standings: Stampeders 103; Argonauts 73; Riders 67; Ti-Cats 66; Bombers 51; Alou- ettes 41. For those of you who are planning to "do better next time", there are only eight more nights of regular play. 0--0--0 MEN'S TOWN LEAGUE Mac's Mercurys picked up all seven points on Monday night, to take an 11 point lead over the other teams, with 93. Bill's Jumpin' Jupiters are in second place with 82; Explor- ers 69; the Appollos and Moon Doggies tied with 64 and the Geminis have 48. Ray Walker picked up the high single with 322 and Hap Swatridge had the high triple of 781. Gorrie Rink Wins Fordwich °Spiel FORDWICH-- The annual bon- spiel was held in the Fordwich arena and a Gorrie rink, skip- ped by Earl King with Dewey Adams, Bob Hastie and Mac Eadie, won first prize. They had three wins and a plus of seven. Second prize went to Mac Inglis' rink of Belmore with two wins and a plus of 15. Third prize was won by Jake Dexter- house of Clifford with two wins and a plus of nine. Lloyd Nickel's rink of Ford- wich won the consolation. Bridge Results The Howell system was used. First: Mrs. W. Wharry and A. Wilson; second, W. Wharry and A. R. DuVal; third, Mrs. F. Forgie and 0. Haselgrove. LICATIM SHOWPLACE OF WINGHAM — PHONE 357-1630 WED.-THUR.-FRI. FEBRUARY 2.3-4 "THE ART OF LOVE" Colour — Starring: James Garner-Dick Van Dyke-Elke Sommer-Angie Dickinson A kookie artist on the loose in romantic Paris makes for a super screen funfest. SATURDAY MATINEE FEBRUARY 5 "FIVE PENNIES" ,11•112111111,11140.11111111. 1111.16 SAT.-MON.-TUES.-WED. (Special-4 Days) FEB. 5.7-8-9 "THE IPCRESS FILE" Colour - CinemaScope — Starring: Michael Caine - Nigel Green This is a thrilling tale of undercover intelligence agents in action, —COMING NEXT — THUR.-FRI. (2 Days) FEBRUARY 10.11 "MGM's BIG PARADE OF COMEDY" 11111111111111101111111.11111111111111111111111111iniMsliffluimISIIIIIMIIMINIIMIIN INTERMEDIATES Doug Mowbray was in fine form as he put together games of 207 and 295 to take both high single and high double as his Birches eked out a slim margin to take 3 points from the Pop- tars. The Poplars registered seine fine lines with Don Collar with lines of 217 and 234 and Ron Goy with 205 single. On the middle lanes the Wal- nuts and Oaks gave us our first tie game as they came up with identical pinfall. However, the Oaks got the pins flying in the second game and ended up with 4 of the 5 points. Top bowler for the Oaks was Matt Richardson with games of 215 and 201, while Ricky Gardner had games of 211 and 192 in a losing effort. The Maples showed no mer- cy as they downed the short handed Pines 5 to 0, with Gary Brenzil rolling lines of 275 and 188. High single for the girls went to Patsy Walker with 193 and Patti King had the high double with 316. Standings to date, Walnuts 31; Pines 30; Maples 30; Bir- ches 27; Oaks 25; Poplars 22. Not much between top and bot- tom teams - looks like it is go- ing to be a battle right to the wire. JUNIORS The boys had to take a back seat in the high single depart- ment this week as Margaret McLaughlin rolled a 236 single and had a 328 double. How- ever, David Walker wasn't go- ing to let the girls take all the She is a small woman, but she stands straight, a real port- rait in courage. She is Maria Cole, widow of Nat, The King, and she was forced to stand by and watch as cancer gnawed at the life of her famous and much-loved husband. When he died about a year ago, the en- tire world wept with her and perhaps it was this that gave her much of her comfort and strength. After his death she became active in things that had inter- ested him - civil rights, pro- duction of Broadway plays in which Negroes had top roles, and the performing end of the business as well. In the enter- tainment business before she married Nat, she has returned to be a singer and made her comeback debut on Ed Sulli- van's Show last week. Ed likes a fighter, and has invited her back to the show for a number of appearances this year. How ironic that she should choose as her first song "There Will Nev- er Be Another You", words that could have been sung to Nat! There never will be another Nat 'King' Cole, but perhaps Maria Cole will make him live even longer in the memories of those who loved him. 0--0--0 Speaking of beloved perfor- mers, and it's nice that some people are telling this guy so while he's still alive, it was a marvellous experience to see Bob Hope in action in his Christmas Show. The show was a tour of armed forces' bases in Thailand, Saigon, Guam, and the hot-spot, South Viet Nam, and it was filmed during Christ- mas week and shown on TV last week. It was hard for us to ima- gine that it was Christmas, but the boys on duty in that cauld- ron, I'm sure would have no honors and he put three strikes together in the tenth frame and his games of 201 and 157 gave him the high double for the week with 358. Nice going, David. The Wings edged the Habs 3 to 2, the Rangers downed the Hawks 3 to 2 and the Bruins came through with a number of strikes and spares in the final three frames to take 3 of the 5 points from the Leafs. Some of the better lines roll- ed, Doug Finley 138, Barry Gardner 137, Ian Shepherd 143, Bill Brown 180, Rhonda Bell 158, Lee Grove 152, Steven Langridge 159, Bob LaRose 141 and 147 and Ruth Ann Redman 182. Standings to date Bruins 42; Hawks 31; Wings 27; Ran- gers 26; Leafs 20 and Habs 19. BANTAMS Marlene Foxton was the big gun for the Whites as they "white" -washed the Reds 5 to 0. Marlene made the boys take a back seat as she had high score registered on her team for both games when she rolled lines of 94 and 99. It looks as though the Blues are making their move to get out of the cellar as they came up with a real team effort to take all 5 points from the top placed Greens. The. backbone of the Blues attack was Brian Gordon with games of 106 and 70 and Bradley Simmons with lines of 99 and 94. Tom Mc- Laughlin rolled high single for the boys with 110 even though his team went down to defeat. Standings to date, Greens 36; Whites 34; Reds 18 and Blues 12. 'Tis Show Biz By Vonni Lee difficulty remembering. Bob was there to make the remem- bering more pleasant and he certainly succeeded. What a guy! If only there were more like him! His guests on this trip were dancer-singer Joey Heatherton, singers Anita Bryant and Kaye Stevens, actress Carroll Baker, Miss U.S. A. Dianna Lynn Batts, singer Jack Jones, and old fav- ourite Jerry Colonna. Colonna, along with actor Peter Leeds and Les Brown and his band, are among those who travel with Bob every year. Though all of these are top performers and do much to spread joy, it is still Bob who makes the show. It is still Hope that makes Christmas bearable for the boys. This was Bob's second tour to Viet Nam; his first trip was in 1964. Before leaving on this year's tour, actor Leeds gave his impressions of last year's "We landed at Viet Nam on 'Christmas Eve and Bob, Jerry Colonna, Les Brown, and I were invited to the ambassador's house for cocktails. Bob was gracious and pleased, but he was edgy. He wanted to get to the hospital to visit the sold- iers.... The four of us went from floor to floor, from ward to ward. Walking behind this man Bob Hope and seeing the look on the faces of those young kids was almost more than one could bear. It was like Santa Claus suddenly appearing in the flesh." So really, we only see a small portion of this man's greatness! 0--0--0 Catherine McKinnon is com- ing home this week! Though we have been watching the pretty 22-year-old songbird on Don Messer each week, she has been doing some globe-trotting and has appeared on three ma- jor English-speaking television networks, CBC, BBC, and ITV, and has been a guest on a New York television show, all: in on- ly four weeks. Since just before Christmas, she has been to the United Kingdom where she guested on two BBC network programs, and starred in a New Year's Eve Special in Scotland, with Andy Stewart. After a whistle-stop in Halifax for some Don Mes- ser rehearsals, she was off to Toronto for her guest appear- ance on Juliette's Show. This was followed by a week-long guest appearance on The Mery Griffin Show, a late-night variety program on WBC-TV in New York City. And of course, coming up soon is that all-im- portant guest appearance on one of the U.S.'s top network shows, The Ed Sullivan Show. If she impresses Ed like she has everyone here in Canada, she's got it made! What she really wants is a crack at the Broadway stage, and she should have no prob- lems. She has beauty, charm, personality, and a singing voice that is as good as any leading lady's. If she goes on to be- come a star, which I predict she will, I hope she doesn't for- et that Canada made her. Maybe hard work never kill- :d anyone, but it's a safe bet hat no one ever rested to death. PEE-WEE PLAYERS had a good battle on Saturday when Detroit teams travelled to Wingham for a Minor Hockey Week tourna- ment. Harold Wild, chairman of the Arena Commission, dropped the first puck of the Pee-Wee game for K. Mascarin, of Detroit, and Randy Hafermehl, of the Wingham team.--A-T Photo. • I