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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1967-11-30, Page 11THE ;BRIDGE . ON THE RIVER TV Spectacular FRI. DEC. 1, 9 P.M. CH.8 ANCE TO THE MUSIC OF LIONEL THORNTON AND HIS ORCHESTRA AT THE WINGHAM PUBLIC SCHOOL AUDITORIUM TUESDAY, DECEMBER 26 Dancing 9:30 to 12:30 ADMISSION — $4.00 Per Couple Advance Sale — $3.50 Per Couple SPONSORED BY THE WINGHAM LIONS CLUB WINGHAM Badminton Club INVITES OLD AND NEW MEMBERS Every Monday Evening at 7:30 p.m. AT THE WINGHAM PUBLIC SCHOOL The Club has been revitalized and is proving popular with adults 450—the low priced time tested farm saw HOLIDAY—light weight and low priced Pioneer efficiency 1 1-20/1 1.5G—the deluxe farm saws for farmers who think professional PIONEER, CHAIN SAWS SIR YOUR NEAREST PIONEER DEALER RAYMOND SCHMIDT BLUEVALE, ONTARIO 62 9 411111ONSION•000~14.1001.1.1....10.1.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••404101•0010114.114.1.1.111MIMWONMON*11~/~1 THIS LITTLE TUSSLE resulted in two match penalties handed out during Winghern's 8.5 lots to Kincardine Setur. day night. Shewfelt, left, of Kincardine, it caught by the camera as he takes a poke at Forrester; NO. 17, of Wing= ham. Jon Bateson, NO. 3, 'heeds for the action es does referee Bev Nixon, partially hidden: Evidently Forrester' got in his licks too, as both were ejected from the garrie and will sit Out suspensions.—A4 Photo., Vitegt14m. .94Vaage,TUrIVI. 'Monday. Nov. 30. 1987 1.0. ell .INTE Saturday, Dec. 830 WIART.ON at WINGHAM Come out and support the "180 SPORTS" Snow Boots and Winter Footwear for all the Family at reasonable prices 8-5 defeat by Kincardine Bulldogs no indication of Wingham's ability i ridge Club The bridge club met at the home of Mr. and Mrs, J. H. Crawford, The Howell system was used. First: A.M. Forbes and C. Hodgins; second; Mrs. F. Forgie and 0. Haselgrove; third, Mrs. C. Hodgins and J. H. Crawford. 1118111111111111111•11811111111111111i111111111111 Monday to Thursday at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday —2 shows at 7:15 and 9:15; Sat, Matinee at 2 p.m., unless otherwise noted Prices: Adults $1,00; Students 75c; Children 40c WED.•THUR.-FRI. Nov. 29.30 • Dec. 1 "THE FLIM FLAM MAN" Colour-CinernaScope — Starring: George C. Scott • Sue Lyon "The Flim Flam Man" is a winner—fast, funny and clean— ideal entertainment for the whole family. It was voted the Blue Ribbon Award for Sep- tember by the members of the National Screen Council. SAT. MAT. (Special) Dec. 2 "Cinderella" Colour All seats 50c, One showing at 2:00 p.m. SAT.-MON.-TUES.-WED.-THUR. FRI. (6 Days) Dec. 2.4-511-7-8 SPECIAL "A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS" Colour — Starring: Paul Schofield • Wendy Hiller This is the BIG movie of 1967. Winner of Best Picture of Year and Best Actor award. It's one you should not miss, There will be advanced admission prices for adults only ($1.50). Students and children at regular prices. COMING NEXT: SAT.-MON.•TUES. Dec. 9.11.12 RESTRICTED "TOM JONES" 1111111111111111111IIIIIIIKIIIII1ISIIIt111111119 Wingham's entry in the W. 0. A. A. Intermediate " C" ser- ies was handed an 8-5 defeat at the hands of Kincardine in the season opener at the local , arena Saturday night. Despite the losing end of the score at CROWN THEATRE HARRISTON — Admission Prices — Adults $1.00 Students 75c Children 40c ,........0%,,,,MINI•MMIWo1",••••••••••••1•MOSI WED. 29 • THUR. 30 • FRI. 1 An espionage yarn with Michael Caine as lead man "FUNERAL IN BERLIN" in Technicolor Harry Palmer didn't know whose funeral it would be — he just hoped it wouldn't be his. Wed. and Thurs. at 8:00 p.m. Friday, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m. SAT. 2 • MON. 4 • TUES. 5 Cave men and their women battle against giant animals and the elements to survive — in "ONE MILLIONS YEARS B.C." Featuring Raquel Welch in Color by Deluxe Saturday at 7:15 and 9:00 p.m. Mon. and Tues. at 8:00 p.m. COMING NEXT: WED. 6 • THUR. 7 • FRI. 8 "PENELOPE" the final horn, Wingham was in the game for all but the last five minutes, and in fact, led twice during the first frame and had a 4-4 tie early in the third. The game was peppered with minor penalties, particu- larly in the third period, but the only major incident was the match penalties and ejec- tion from the game of Forrester of Wingham and L. Shewfelt of Kincardine for a skirmish after being separated by the referees. The game was a crowd plea- ser, showing town hockey fans that even after a six year ab- sence from intermediate play, the town can still ice a decent squad. By the time playoffs roll around, we predict Wing- ham will be right up at the top of the league. Wingham markers went to Skinn, Forrester, Irwin, Pea- cock and Brown, all with sin- gles. FIRST PERIOD Wingham got off to an early lead at 4:01 of the first, as George Skinn took a pass from Neil and fired a shot which struck the Kincardine goal- keeper's stick and bounced into the net. Forrester got two min- utes for roughing at 6:30 but Wingham held off the Bulldogs well, aided by two fantastic glove saves by Hickey in the Wingham net. Elwood Irwin let Kincardine know he hadn't lost his touch when he nailed Johnston to the boards but failed to click all alone on a breakaway when he fired wide. Kincardine tied the score 1- 1 at 12;45, Magwood scoring from D. Shewfelt and Mitchell with Magwood deking two Wing- ham defensemen and sliding - the puck between Hickey's legs. Forrester gave Wingham a 2-1 lead at 15:55 firing one home on a pass from Barry Fry- fogle for the last goal of the first period. Irwin and L. Shew- felt went off for highsticking at 16:25 and Cerson sat out two minutes for tripping Magwood as he broke in on goal at 17:45. SECOND PERIOD Kincardine tied the score 2- 2 early in the second when Mc- Leod clicked from D. Shewfelt and Magwood at 2:50. Jon Bateson caught the eye of the ref for interference and Wing- ham did an excellent job of holding off the attack untilhis return when they put on the pressure around the Kincardine goal but failed to store. L. Shew felt and Forrester were ejected from the game shortly after the middle mark of the period. A scuffle broke out and play was called. Shew- felt then skated to Forrester and took a lunge at his head, stick and all. As all this took place not five feet from the referee, they weren't long heading for the dressing room. Two goals in less than a minute by Ferguson put Kincar- dine ahead 4-2. The first, at 11:15, was banged in after Mc- Leod rapped one on the post and the rebound went to Fer- guson who was alone out in front, giving Hickey no chance. The second was a long shot from the blue. line which should have been an easy stop. At 16:26 Martyn got two minutes for cross checking Ir- win across the back of the head and Elwood gained revenge less than ten seconds later, deflect- ing a point shot by Bain into the net. Peacock was also given an assist. THIRD PERIOD The third period opened with the score 4-3 for Kincar- dine, but Wayne Brown tied the game at 1;10 with the help of George Skinn, Brown taking advantage of a lapse in the Bulldog defence. Kincardine pulled ahead again at 9:38, Hamilton scor- ing on a long shot with McIn- tyre and G. Johnston assisting. Magwood lengthened the lead to 6-4 at 13:10 unassisted. The prettiest goal of the night came at 14:45 as Pea- cock and Irwin teamed up on a two-man passing play with Pea- cock flashing the light. Kincardine was good for two more goals, Hamilton from G. Johnston and McLeod at 15:35 and just 10 seconds later, Mag- wood from D. Shewfelt. Three goals behind and with less than five minutes left, Wingham was unable to score as English was off for roughing with Martyn at 16:27 and Skinn for tripping at 18:55. NOTES AND QUOTES Neil was shaken up in the first period when hit hard by Shewfelt and left the ice be- fore his shift was over. In the second he left the ice and was hospitalized with a possible broken bone....There was a total of 22 penalties including 2 match penalties....Ken Henry, former Owen Sound Grey who has been practising with the team, was not in the lineup Saturday.... Elwood Ir- win shook up a few Kincardine players with stiff checks and managed to pick up two penal- ties.— The match penalties could mean one-game suspen- sions for the players. Shewfelt definitely deserved it as he charged at Forrester stick first after the play had been called. In fact, he was trying to get something going most of the time he was on the ice. AMENDMENTS TO HOCKEY RULES At the W.O. A. A. meeting held in Wingham last week, a number of rule changes were announced. Most of these have been included in the O. A.H.A. or 0.M.H. A. rules which are followed by the W.O. A. A. Among the changes are: (a) rule 22, para. c. - Players warned by the referee of a missing skate heel guard may not participate in the balance of the game unless satisfactory protection measures are made to the skate. (b) rule 36, para. A - Where a match penalty has been asses- sed the offending member's team shall be assessed a major penalty as well and it must be served by a substitute player who will take his place on the penalty bench immediately. (o) rule 36, para. D -When a goalkeeper leaves his goal crease to join in a fight or al- tercation, act as a peacemaker, or take part in another fight during the same stoppage of play, he shall receive a game misconduct penalty. (d) rule 55, para B - It shall be necessary to place a substi- tute on the penalty bench when the penalty is assessed to take the place of the penalized player and the substitute player shall not return to the ice until five minutes of actual playing time has elapsed. (e) rule 66, para F - If the referee or linesman shall have erred in calling an "Icing the Puck" infraction, under any conditions, the face-off shall take place at the centre ice spot. Changes have also been made in the 0.M.H.A. popu- lation limits. The new classi- fications are "E" up to 900; "D" Local squad played well INTERMEDIATE SCHEDULE RELEASED BY WOAA Officials of the Wingham intermediates received the schedule for the year's play recently and we thought our readers might like' to have the entire season's play to clip out for reference. Evening games will start at 8:30 while Sunday games will begin at 2;30. Saturday, December 2 - Wiarton at Wingham Sunday, December 3 Wingham at Kincardine Friday, December 8 Wingham at Shelburne Saturday, December 9 Palmerston at Wingham Friday, December 15 - Wingham at Shelburne Saturday, December 16 - Shelburne at Wingham Thursday, December 21 - Wingham at Listowel Saturday, December 23 Milverton at Wingham Thursday, December 28 Wingham at Clinton Saturday, December 30 Shelburne at Wingham Friday, January 5 Wingham at Palmerston Sunday, January 7 Wingham at Milverton Saturday, January 13 - Clinton at Wingham Saturday, January 20 Kincardine at Wingham Sunday, January 21 Wingham at Wiarton Saturday, January 2'7 Wiarton at Wingham Saturday, February 3 Listowel at Wingham Sunday, February 4 Wingham at Kincardine 901 to 1800; "C" 1801 to 3000; "B" 3001 to 5000. CHANGES WOAA RULES Two rules have been amend- ed for the W.O. A. A. only. The first requires all minor hockey clubs to pay a fee of $5.00 for each playoff series they enter before the finals and a $10 fee for the finals. There will be no percentage of the gate receipts paid to the W.O. A. A. The second rule involves intermediate "C" teams whose combined population totals may not exceed 3,500. MINOR GROUPINGS ARE ANNOUNCED At the W.O. A. A. meeting, groupings were announced for all the minor teams. In squirt Wingham plays against Ripley, Lucknow and Blyth while in peewee Kincardine, Lucknow, Ripley, Teeswater, Brussels and Blyth will provide the opposi- tion. The bantams will play in a four-team loop with Kincardine, Lucknow and Ripley and the midgets will face Hanover, Walkerton, Lucknow and Ripley. STILL ROOM IN MINOR HOCKEY Youngsters who want to play hockey in Wingham can still do so. Anyone who regi- sters will play. Registration in Tykes and Squirts is slightly under that of last year. It was hoped it might even be higher. WILL ATTEND REF'S SCHOOL Five area men will be in at- tendance at the referee's clinic being held in Listowel on De- cember 3. Ed Anderson, Cal Gray, Doug Neil, Jim Steffler and George Thomas have vol- unteered to referee minor hoc- key here this winter and will gain a working knowledge of the refereeing game at the school. Anyone else interested should contact the recreation director, Jim Ward. The school will include lectures as well as practical demonstra- tion and the opportunity of refereeing a portion of a game under the watchful eye of an instructor. SCHEDULE FOR PUBLIC SKATING Public skating is being held at the arena each Tuesday, Thursday and Friday afternoon from after school until 5.There is also public skating Saturday afternoon from 2 to 4. On Thursday evenings there will be public skating for teens and adults, giving the Older people a chance to relax without the kiddie?; under foot. If response is great enough, Thursday eve- ning will be permanently re- served for teen and adult skat- ing. HOCKEY DONATION The Wingham "180 Sports" gratefully acknowledge a fur- ther donation this week, a $10 helping hand from Jake Jutzi at the Wingham Meat Market. Donations are still wekonie, BROOMBALL Broomball gets underway at the arena on Meriday night at and We understand a lea‘ ALL SORTS "A FAN IN THE STANDS" gue has been formed and a schedule will be played. Any- one interested should contact Bill Fraser at 357-2428. SKATING FOR MOMS AND KIDDIES Public skating for mothers and pre-school children will be started at the local arena on Tuesday. Each Tuesday from 10;00 to 11:30 a.m. and each Thursday from 2:00 to 3:30p.m. will see Mom and the little ones enjoying a skate. BADMINTON CLUB FORMED An enthusiastic group turned out for the first meeting of the Wingham Badminton Club held at the public school auditorium on Monday night. Twelve per- LEADING SCORER with the Wingham "180 Sports," El- wood Irwin is seen doing battle with a Kincardine defence- man and goalkeeper during the match here Saturday night. He went on to pick up a goal and an assist. The two teams meet again in Kincardine Sunday afternoon at 2:30.—A-T. sons joined the group and they're still looking for more. If you're interested phone Jim Ward at 357-3550 or hike on down to the public school any Monday evening at 7:30. TAKE THIRTY— SPORTS IN '37 The Wingham Athletic As- sociation held their annual meeting with Ken Somers named coach of the juniors and Stewart "Zick" Cowan as man- ager. Efforts were being made to form a girls' hockey team. J. Ellacott, C. Yeoman, L. Lee, C. Cook and N. William- son travelled to Toronto where they witnessed a hockey match' between the Maple Leafs and the Montreal Canadiens, 4 4 4 4 4