HomeMy WebLinkAboutTimes Advocate, 1996-12-04, Page 21McDonalds
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Rick Etherington
Ron's Health Centre
Royal Bank .
RSD Sports Den
Seba Seeds (Jeff Borland)
Selp's valu-mart
Sisters
Smyth's Shoe Store Ltd.
Snow -Con Excavating Inc.
Stedmans
Take Two Hair Design
Tasty Nu Bakery
The Bayberry Cafe
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Abattoir
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Ringette Parents
I
Page 20
Times -Advocate, December 4, 1996
SPD
Minor hockey scoreboard
L Stephen Minor Hockey
Pre -Tyke
November 29
Lucan 6 at Stephen 3
Goals: Richard Dinney (3)
Assists: Mau Korcina, Kay Weber (2), Rhys
Widths
Goaltender: R. Forrest, Sam Christie
November 30
Zurich 6 at Stephen 5
Goals: Dinney (3). Kyle Masse (2)
Assists: Korcina (3), Weber, Keri Lynn
Reschke
Goaltenders: Christie, K. Masse. D. Courtis
Tyke Young Guns
November 30
Stephen 4 at Bayfield 0
Goals; David Reschke (2), Eric Duenk. Ja-
mie Hodge (5)
Assists: Derek Wells
Goaltender: Mackenzie Christie
December I
Stephen 4 at Exeter 3
Goals for Stephen: Reschke (3), !Curtis Va-
nOsch
Assists for Stephen: Duenk (2), Kelly Cro-
nyn, Justin Lightfoot. Christie, Hodge, Brett
Steeper
Goaltender for Stephen: Josh McCann
Goals for Exeter: Chad Hackett (2), Antho-
ny Vink
Assists for Exeter: Sean Harrigan, David
Daters, Meaghan Ellison
Goakender for Exeter: Stephen Osgood
Next games: Dec. 7, Milverton at Stephen.
12:00; Dec. 8, Stephen at Zurich, 9 a.m.
Novice Diggers LL
November 30
Clinton I at Stephen 5
Goals: Brendon VanOsch (3), Stephanie
McCann, Derek Hodgins
Assists: VanOsch, McCann (2), Hodgins
(2). Ed Hearn, Brent Dixon, Jordan Cronyn
Goaltender: Adam Blanchard
Novice Avalanche
November 25 - Exhibition game
Stephen 8 vs. Ilderton 1
Goals: Jason Thompson (3), Greg Thomp-
son (3), Kent Nicholson, Blair McCann
Assists: McCann (2). G. Thompson (3), Jus-
tin Bender, J. Thompson (2), Brent Windsor
(2), Leanne Cronyn, Nicholson, Cale Duenk
Goaltender: Jeff Baker
November 27
Stephen 8 vs. Hensall 0
Goals for Stephen: McCann, Duenk. Cro-
nyn (2), J. Thompson, G. Thompson, J.T.
Knee
Assists for Stephen: J. Thompson (4),
Windsor (2), Duenk, Bender, Knee, Cronyn,
G. Thompson (2), Nicholson (2), Travis
O'Neil, McCann
Goaltender: Baker
November 29 - Exhibition game
Stc hen 3 vs. Strathroy 3
Goats: Windsor, Duenk, J. Thompson
Assists: J. Thompson (2), Cronyn (2),
MGoaltender: Baker
November 30
Stephen S vs. Scaforth 0
Goals: Cronyn (3). Knee, J. Thompson
Assists: Windsor (3). O'Neil, J. Thompson
(2)
Goaltender: Baker
Atom Sting
November 26
St. Marys I at Stephen 5
Goals: Jamie Bibby (3), Ryan Knee, Reid
O'Neil
Assists: Bibby, O'Neil. Jessie McCann, Jeff
Smale (2), Wes Johnson, Shane Wilson
Goaltender: Curtis Pfaff
November 27
Stephen 10 at Bayfield I
Goals: Knee (4), McCann (3), Smaie, Andy
Springall, O'Neil
Assists: Knee, McCann (5), Springall
Goaltender: David Desjardine
Next games: Dec. 7 vs. Brussels; Dec. 8 vs.
Blyth
Atom Hot Chilies
November 28
Stephen 4 at Blyth 2
Goals: Jeff VanBergen (2), Ryan Masse,
Shane Gregoire
The Exeter Figure Skating Club modal winner ,From back row, left, Melissa Timmermans,
Kristylee Varley, Jenalyn Baker, Melissa Jonee, '9asahOverholt, Brenna Anstett, Shelley Mill-
er. Bottom, left, Ashley Ralph, Laura Noakes and Michelle Roy.
Local skaters compete in
Mooretown Invitational
MOORETOWN - The Exeter and
the Zurich figure skating clubs
competed in the Mooretown In-
vitational last weekend.
From the Exeter Figure Skating
Club, Laura Noakes placed seventh
in Canfigure "A" Freeskate, Mi-
chelle Roy placed fifth in Can -
figure "B" Freeskate, Melissa Jones
placed sixth in Canfigure "C"
Freeskate and Ashley Ralph placed
first to win a gold medal in the
same division.
In the Preliminary "B" Freeskate
Brenna Anstett placed fifth, Kris-
tylee Varley placed fourth and Sa-
rah Overholt placed first to win
gold. In the Preliminary "C"
Freeskate Jenalyn Baker placed
sixth.
Michelle Roy placed fourth in the
Pre -preliminary Elements and Ash-
ley Ralph placed second winning
silver. In the Preliminary Elements
Kristylee Varley and Jenalyn Baker
won gold, Brenna Anstett won
bronze and Sarah Overholt placed
fifth.
Melissa Timmermans won
bronze in Senior Bronze Elements
and Shelley Miller placed seventh
in Junior Silver "B" Freeskate.
Coach Kathy Merner said the Ex-
eter Figure Skating Club was very
well represented in Mooretown,
their first large-scale competition,
and are looking forward to the
Great Lakes Competition which
will be held in London on January
10. The club will also compete in
H.O.M.E. which will be hosted in
Lucan from January 25 to 26.
ZURICH
Sarah -Rae Lovie won a gold
medal for the Zurich Figure Skat-
ing Club at the Mooretown In-
vitational.
The 14 -year-old skater from
Grand Bend placed first in Junior
Silver "A" Freeskate division com-
peting against eight other skaters.
Coached by Marcy Walker, Lo -
vie placed fifth at the All -Ontario
competitions last year. This season
she is looking forward to the Great
Lakes and H.O.M.E. competition
scheduled in January.
LOCAL BUSINESSES SUPPORT
has made the Exeter and District 6th Annual Ringette
Tournament a great success. Thank you to:
AAA restaurant
Algoma Tire (Exeter)
Ltd.
Anstett
Art's Auto
Bakelaar Jewellers
Bank of Montreal
Bank of Nova Scotia
Becker Farm
Equipment
Beckers Milk
Bells Variety
Big V Drug Store
Canadian Tire
Colour Your World
Cooks
CoOperators
Country Health
Foods
Country Trenditions
Credit Union
0 & D Stock Farm
Davis Moore Fuels
Designers
Donut Delight
Donuts Now
Eclipse Hair
Ellison Travel
Erbs Garage
Eric Campbell
Exeter 1 Hour Photo
Exeter Chrysler
Exeter Collision
Exeter Decor
Exeter Flowers
Exeter Golf Club
Exeter Optimist
Exeter Times Advocate
Exeter Toyota
Expressions Hair Design
Geiser Kneale
Insurance
Gerry and Ekia Riehl
GodboltInsurance
Grammies Pizza
Greeting Card World
Hensall Coop
Hensall Kinettes
Hensall Village Office
Holtzmann IGA
Homuth, Taylor &
Partners
Horse 'N' Round
Huron Apothecary Ltd.
Huron Dental Clinic
Huron Motor Products
Huron Produce
Huron Restaurant
Hyde Bros.
Ironwood Golf Club
Jack Glavin
Sandblasting
Jarvis Photo
JMR Electric
Macleans Source for
Sports
Mary Kay, Peggy
Etherington
McCann Redi Mix
Sarah -Rae Levis
Assists: Gregoire. Wes de Lange
Goatter: John Young
November 30
Clinton I at Stephen 14
Goals: Tim Sheridan (2), Corey Lawton (3),
Matt Marlene (2), Ryan Heywood, Korey
Vanahena, deLange (2), Masse (3)
Assists: Sheridan (6), Lawton (4), Marlene
(2), Heywood (2). Vanaltena (4), de Lange
(2), Masse, Reschke (3)
Goaltender: Young
December 1
Stephen 5 at Merton 6
Goals: de Lange (2), Gregoire, Reschke,
Sheridan
Assists: Reschke (2),Masse (2)
Goakender: Young
Peewee Rep
November 25
Stephen 3 at Strathroy 4
Goals: Roman Wilson, Jessica Davies, Scott
Davies
Assists: Wilson, Brian Dixon
December 1
Lambeth 5 at Stephen 5
Goals: Henny Pfaff, Aaron Geiger, Jesse
Schroeder, Cal de Lange, S. Davies
Assists: S. Davies (2), J. Davies, Wilson
Peewee Woodpeckers
November 25
Forest I at Stephen 7
Goals: Adam Cyr (3), Brent Tatara (3), Ben
Parsons
Assists: Cyr, Tatara (3), Frazer MacDonald
(2), Nevin Hodgins, Cayle Lawton
Goaltender: Richard Young
November 30
Brussels 7 at Stephen 12
Goals: Young (4), Hodgins (2). Colin Saud-
er (2), Cyr (2), Aaron Geiger, Lawton
Assists: Hodgins, Sander, Cyr (2), Geiger
(2), Lawton (2), Tatara (4), MacDonald (2),
Shawn Thompson (2), Ken Tilley, Parsons
Goaltender: Dane Michielsen
Next game: Dec. 7, 8 p.m. in Hensall
Bantam Rebels
November 30 - Omemee tournament
Game I
Almaquin I vs. Stephen 3
Goals: Shawn Sherwood (2), J.R. Davies
Assists: Sherwood, Shawn Stuck less (2),
Matt Foran
Goaltender: Kevin Thompson
Game 2 - 'A' semi-final
Stephen 7 vs. Ajax 1
Goals: Sherwood (3), Adam McCann, Da-
vies, Stuckless
Assists: Sherwood. Davies, Stuckless, Jere-
my VanBergan, Jake Widdis (2), Dan Mosu-
rinjohn
Goaltender: Chris Glavin
Game 3 - 'A' final
Stephen 1 vs. Omemee 5
Goal: Sherwood
Assists: Widths, Stuckless
Goaltender: Thompson
Junior Girls
November 28
Stephen 2 at Watford 0
Goals: Magic Steciuk, Michelle Somerville
Assists: Heather Thompson, Sarah Parsons
November 29
Elma Logan 0 at Stephen 3 .- -
Goals: Kristine Regier, Somerville (2)
Assists: Somerville
Exeter'. Junior D
Hawks
vs
Pt. Stanley
Friday Dec. 6
8:30 p.m.
South Huron Recreation Centre, Exeter
These are the winners of our hockey draw up to and including
the game on Nov. 15, 1996: Steve Sararas, Todd Walden, Kyle
Veri, Jamie McBride, Eric Campbell, Matt Muller, Sandra
McCann, Marion Snow, Dan Durand, Lori Cook, John Semple,
Mark McLlwain, Mark Cronyn, Mike Kelly, Mark Kennedy,
Dave Markle, Fred Lewis, Harold Kerslake, Christine
Dalrymple.
South Huron
volleyball
All -Stars
chosen
EXETER - The South Huron Dis-
trict High School senior and junior
volleyball teams named the four
athletes that will compete in the
Huron -Perth All-Star volleyball
game held in Stratford on Thursday.
Senior players Chris Straw, Ste-
phen Bell and juniors Jamie Clarke
and Paul Gregus will represent
SHDHS at the All-Star game hosted
by St. Michaels.
Last year, the event was hosted
by South Huron. Darryl Romphf
and Luke Sims represented the jun-
ior team and Adam Jean and Bryan
McAllister represented the seniors.
• (,('I I I; \I I ti • (.I O\ I • (,III (! I;I ll It \!!
GIVE THE GIFT
OF GOLF FOR
CHRISTMAS
MEMBERSHIP FEES
apt &BR T I Fl C AVEt X7,5 O
LADLE
Adult (GST included) $450
$700
$300
$160.50
Couple (GST included)
Student (GST included)
Junior (GST included)
PRO SHOP OPEN
Sat. Dec. 7 104:00
EXETER GOLF CLUB
RR1 Centralia, Ontario
NOM 1.1(0
CALL 235-1517
• r , t )1 1 i; \ I i • (. I : ' \ i •
I
.10
•
Ddji3 vu! Old Man Winter returned in October for the second year in a
row. Can Ontario snowmobilers possibly hope for another long winter
like the last one - I can still hear satiated enthusiasts wearily saying
"Enough is enough" as it stretched into April. But according to the
Farmer's Almanac, the answer is "yes" - we're in for heavy snow
accumulation throughout the snowbelt in 1996/97. And that means
lots of saddle time for you and I.
It also means higher overhead for Ontario's 294 snowmobile clubs.
Last season, trail operations cost almost $22 million, a record
expenditure. To keep on grooming past Spring Break, many clubs
even dipped into reserves allocated for replacement of their aging
groomers. Recent information indicates that the minimum annual cost
for an OFSC club to groom just one kilometre of trail is $200. This
figure escalates rapidly in high traffic and tourism areas to $400or
more. It also balloons when the season is unusually long, or the
snowfall heavier. It takes at least 2.35 permit sales per kilometre for a
snowmobile club to meet even the minimum expense level. No
wonder clubs need all the help they can get - buy your 1997 Trail Use
Permit today!
As the world's largest snowmobiling organization, the Ontario
Federation of Snowmobile Clubs has developed the world's longest
contiguous recreational trail network for Ontario snowmobilers.
Almost 50,000 kilometres of groomed trails like snow highways
connect snowbelt communities. That's more klicks of trail than even I
can ride in one season!
To keep these trails open and groomed, we have two simple tasks: buy
a 1997 Trail Use Permit and Stay On The Trail. Each of these actions
supports and promotes the credibility, longevity and sustainability of
our trails. Without that commitment from riders province -wide, there
is danger that our trail netvyork will slowly be whittled away piece by
piece until what's left is a disjointed, unlinked mish-mash of local
trails leading nowhere. Come to think of it, that's where we started
about thirty years ago.
Before that, (and indeed, in many remote areas of the province today)
snowmobiling was a pioneering adventure of cross-country riding and
backwoods pathfinding. It appealed mainly to.hard-eor entlaufiasts
prepared to handle the breakdowns caused by extreme use and to pay
for the damage inflicted by hidden rocks and. stumps. This frontier
riding style discouraged wide -spread mainstream participation and
helped give snowmobiling an undeserved wild and negative
reputation. Its remaining proponents are among the last hold -outs for
buying Trail Use Permits, arguing that "We've never paid to ride
before, so why should we start now?"
For starters, because since 1966, when the OFSC was founded by 10
clubs in Midland, Ontario, organized snowmobiling has made a
dramatic difference on the snow. It has assembled, developed and
maintained the world class trail system we now enjoy, and in many
cases, take for granted. But organization costs money. Heavy
industrial groomers and drags at $100,000 a piece and up. Fuel and
oil. Operator's wages. Insurance. Repairs and maintenance. Trail
preparation including bull dozing, grading, brushing and clearing and
fencing, and the cost of related equipment such as ATV's, chain saws
and bush hogs. Bridges at $30,000 to $100,000 or more each. Loads
of fill, grass seed and gravel. Hundreds of thousands of trail numbers,
destination markers and traffic warning signs. Together, these are the
crucial components that have put our bush-wacking days behind us.
Are there other reasons to buy a Trail Use Permit? Maybe because it's
such a small price to pay for groomed trails - less than 1% of the cost
of most performance sleds. Perhaps it's to protect your ability to
continue to ride anywhere, anytime. You could buy to show your
appreciation for all the hard work others put in so you can
snowmobile to your heart's content. Perhaps you're willing to pay for
safer, more comfortable destination touring. Or maybe you just want
to pay your fair share. Whatever the case, if you intend to ride
groomed trails for any reason or any length of time this winter, buying
a Trail Use Permit from your local club is the right thing to do.
Until next time, happy trails and remember: SledSmart - Ride Safe
Ride Sober. For club or driver training info, contact the OFSC at (705)
739-7669. To plan your Ontario tour, call 1 -800 -263 -SLED. To Bring
A Buddy to Snowarama, call 1-800-461-3391.