The Goderich Signal-Star, 1969-09-04, Page 5•
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Round and About ''
With
Ma ribo
Weren't you glad you took in
the ball games over the
weekend? 1 was happy to see so
many put each day -- and
e. ening - , and so were the
• organizers of, the tournament
and they say `•tT ank you very
much!"
It was, ind d, a splendid
success and t ' e are twice as
happy as the ould be, since
this tourna ent idea was sort of
• an after-thbtrgh- Kitty Smith
• getg the credit for ,giving, them
the push they needed and
everyone worked real . hard to
make it worthwhile.
Many people like Jerry Pitre
of Skeoch Office Supplies,
• Sandy Profit and his barber son
Stan forgot their barber shop for
a couple of days (- Boy, were
they busy Tuesday!) Doug
Sanderson had a ground crew
rounded up and they really
'worked hard.
• The diamond had to be
`smoothed' out - (and Don
Masse is a real "Smoothie") then
it had to be all lined again. How
many miles of lines Doug?
Anyway I couldn't begin to tell
you of all the work and workers,
• that were- tied up in such a
project.
The fact that it went - off
smoothly, witht any protests
or fist fights` shows that
everyone was a good sport.
There were a few spots ,in the
DRMCO and Holmesville game
• that: warranted a fat eye (-for
the field referee) but that's the
way it goes.
How did you like that final
game with Holmesville up
against London?
Holmesville played three
• games Monday and should have
been dead tired but they
traipsed out onto the field -
quite. a contrast to the natty
London team who were in very
smart white uniforms while our
farm boys - two of them had
• uniforms and the rest were
dressed in whatever . they
happened to• have. Kenny Daer,
that young giant, looked like a
hippie in a sleeveless, one button
long style shirt. That other
"button" you saw was not on
• the shirt.. ,
When I saw Ken in an earlier
game I thought he was just
clowning - and so did a lot of
• other people, but when he
started pitching you soon
realized he wasn't fooling, but
playing for keeps. He pitched. a
•
•
v
•
good .game, but played filltbase
in the final game. Bob Pearson a
native of Holmesville, pitched.
the final and what a pitcher!
I was talking to Bill Hoggarth`
their 'manager and he told me
this team had not had a single
practice together. So many of
their regular team vi)ere away
and some of them came home
just for the tournament - and so
they played itby ear. They were
more surprised than anyone
when they ended up 'with, the
winners `bucks.'
The lean left fielder = Herby
Oakes made some fantastic
catches, real thrillers. I'na sure
you could hear the cheers right
down to the dock! I know the
coaches Orville Blake and
Gordon Stock were real proud
:of them:
The two days were certainly
real big entertainment no matter
what time you arrived there and
we have a very fine group from
Goderich and District to, verify
this statement.
Sandy and the other Profits
were also tied up with the soccer
which was terrific for the little
tykes that played in it. -
The Lion Hearts and ,Legion.
Cherubs played a terrific tie
game with overtime and had to
have_ a replay which ended in 2-1
for the Lions and it too had
been tied for most of the game.
These youngsters of 8-12 years
are receiving some wonderful
training and character building.
The Legion Cherubs were proud
The annual Labour bay dance sponsored by the Goderich and
District •Labour Council was held at Goderich Memorial Arena on
Saturday August .30 with about 200 cod'ples in attendance.
Dancing was to the Bluetones and went from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
IIIIIIIIt!Illlllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllfillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Illlllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllll Illlllllllllltllllllllllll III
Kerry McLean of Clinton was selected as Miss
45 contestants. Judges were Mr. and Mrs: B. R.
and Mrs. W. Denomme. -staff photo.
Union Maid from
Robinson and Mr.
Bay cha,rt reprinted
A reprint edition of the Courthouse, Detroit, Michigan
LAKE SURVEY .Chart •of the /18226 Mail &orders should
of their loss. Not as a LOSS r Saginaw Bay area of Lake Huron
but of the terrific game they is ready for sale at $1.00.
played. See - I told you you COAST CHART 52 covers,
should come out and see these from PTE. AUX BARQUES to
games. Anyway Sandy tells me 11 miles north of OSCODA,
there will be some exhibition Michigan, including .SAGINAW
games before the season is over BAY. In addition to large-scale
so be sure to go and enjoy them. detail insets of PORT AUSTIN,
Sunday evening Sept. 7th the TAW -AS HARBOR and the,
Goderich Little Theatre is having entrance to AU SABLE RIVER,
its general meeting so all ' it contains insets of
members - and prospective CASE1Q'ILLE and SEBEWAING,
members are asked to be at The Michigan, and shows CHARITY,
STONY and KETCHAY
ISLANDS. ,
!'The reprint was made to
show that the approach channel
has been extended
approximately , 7-' 2 miles and
dredged to 27 feet. Renumbered
aids for the entire channel were
necessary because- of the
additional 10 aids marking the
extended portion.
For a free catalog showing
this and other charts available,
write to the U.S. Lake Survey,
Barn before 8 o'clock.
Come and see what's cookin'.
Martha
NEW
Upholstery Shop
OPENING
SEPTEMBER 15
........._,
THE QAR781
30PHONE
524-E
1
PAR,"
111W
GODERICH AIRCONDITIONED
SHOW TIME$: Sunday through Thursday, ONE SHOW ONLY—At 8_ p.m.
Friday and Saturday—TWO SHOWS—First Show starts at 7.30 p.m.;
- ' ' Second Show at approximately 9.48 p.m:'
THURS., . FRI., SAT., SUN., MON., TUES.
o ° September 4-5-6-7-8-9
"DAllLING! Once you see it, you'll never again picture`Romeo & Juliet' .
quitelhe way you did before!" —LIFE -
RfLOMMtMutAA RomEU
nmitNttRtaiaMtRr
(JULIET
TEI;HW1COLOR \o,,,,iin:u•� t,�.r,c1, ,.. "'
SATURDAY Sept. 6 MATINEE
— -- .
Special All -Color Show . of 2:00 p.m: ,
"GENTLE GIANT"
A wisp of a boy ... . A ton of bear . . . And a whole angry town
trying to tear them apart.
WED., THURS., FRI., SAT.—Sept. 10-13
"THE SHOES OF THE FISHERMAN"
• Starring ANTHONY QUINN and OSKAR WERNER
A "Mustang' Theatre
•
•
•
$
UNET
DRIVE1N THEATRE
HWY. 8 GODERICH AL CONCESSION RD. 4 PHONE 524.9981
Thurs., Frig, Sat. and Sun. — Sept.
•• a
THE NAZIS NUR
BA116"4ViWEOfOR
1)ozeia
A MARVIN'
COMING NEXT:
Ate
Amy
5, 6, 7 ,
.JAMESGARNER
Prix
'IDUI1 EN1RR11INMENI
"3 in the Attic"
and
"Born Wild"
(Restricted Admittancel'
f
6-3.0 Federal Building _ and U.S_
BROWNIE'S
DRIVE-IN THEATRE
CLINTON
Box Office Opens at 8.00 p.m.
FIRST SHOW AT DUSK
Weekend . Shows Only
Friday & Saturday
Sept. 5 and 6
- DOUBLE FEATURE' —
'KILLERS• THREE'
•
(Adult Entertainment)
Starring ROBERT WALKER, DIANE
VARSI and DICK CLARK
In Color — — PLUS
'Name Of The
Game Is Kill'
(Adult Entertainment)
SUSAN STRA SBERG '& JACK LORD
Color . Cartoon
Coming Next:
"Three In The Attic"
(Admittance Restricted) — And
- ,"The Conqueror
Worm"
(Adult Enterthinment)
•
include a check or money order
drawn on a United States bank
or post office and made payable
to the Treasurer of the United
States.
N OTE: Collection and
exchange fees prevent Lake
Survey from accepting Canadian
and foreign checks.
Lt'. Col. and Mrs. ' W. M.
Crawford and family returned •
from Europe after a three :year
stay (here, and have spent four
weeks at their sntrtmer cottage
on Blairs Beach, ' leaving last
Thursday 'for _Edmonton where
Doctor Crawford will take up
the position of Regimental
Surgeon. Mrs. Crawford is - a
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B.
Bradford, South Street.
,Mrs. Edyth Argyle and Mrs.
Walter Rathburn ‘Vere the
-winners. -of the -King --trophy at
the double tournament hold
recently in Wingham.
Mrs. ` H. Hoebekee Detroit,
spent her annual visit in
Goderich at • the Bedford Hotel
and renewing old acquaintances.
Tiger Dunlop WI
The Tiger Dunlop Women's and a social half hour was
Institute met in the 'Township enjoyed by all.
Hall, Tuesday evening August .
Mrs. Elmer Hunter the
president, opened the meeting
with the • Ode, Mary Stewart
Collect and 0' Canada.
The Roll Call was answered
by telling a place of interest
within driving distance of -your
home:
. An invitation from the
Goderich Branch to attend their
September 1 meeting was
accepted.
Plans were made to cater to a
wedding in Auburn•
September 6. • ,
Mrs. Reahurn introduced the
s p e a k er, Mrs. Donald
'lacl)onald, wife of the minister
of North Street United Church
in Goderich.
Mrs. MacDonald pati 'been an
efficient leader of youth groups
at summer camps. She gave a
veryinteresting and informative
talk- on citizenship and
rdLi ation, _(one l i -di -g---- by-
explaining her part in the
training and instruction given to
young pvople at these camps.
A lunch was served by Mrs.
Charles \Iil'chell. Mrs. Ernest.
Mitchell and Mrs. (71ire Allen
Huron History Corner
Continued from Page 4
them are senior supervisory staff and as a consequence are no longer
part of 1863. .
Father and son teams are a measure of a firm's stability: 1863,ras
several such teams. .
The Sully Family have never believed in bringing in outside talent
and when vacancies have. occurred men from 1863' have been •
promoted to fill them, almost without exception and almost always
with 'success. • As a consequence. oday we have a remarkably
frictionless plant because the man control has gone through the
mill himself and understands the problem of the man who is actually
doing the work_ Not that we don't have problems; we do: but the
fact that we have never had a strike in our 25 year history argues that
we must - have fairly good communication between upstairs and
down. The present General M?eager E. Cayley Hill started out as a
bookkeeper at the old foundry down on Victoria Street and the
plant superintendent and his assistant are both past presidents of the
Local. All the foremen and lead hands have come from the Local. So
have some of the department heads upstairs.
Most of the men agree 'it's a good place to work."
* Exerpts from the history of Bluewater Lodge, Number 1863
of the - International :Association of . Machinists and. Aerospate
Workers.
Next week - Relations With Our Community, and A Look
Around Us. �'
---BAX-FIELD FALL FAIR—
.FRIDAY & SATURDAY SEPT. 12th & 13th
Parade at 1 pani, September 13, led by Goderich District Collegiate Band. Entries in
Parade invited in following classes:
* PONY OR HORS' AND RIG. ..
* BEST PONY OUTFIT, GROOMING AND RIDER•CONSIDE'RED. '
* DE,ORATED BICYCLES, OPEN TO ALL GOOD PRIZES.
*' ANTIQUE CARS.
* FLQATS AND NOVELTY VEHICL• ES.
* CLOWNS.
The' Arena Opens at 7 p.na. Friday Evening For Displays 'and Monster Bingo
SPECIAL. COMMERCIAL FEATURE IN APPLES
AS USUAL
GENERAL EXHIBITS - b °4-H CLUB
SAT., 2P.M. BABY SHOW - -
TWO CLASSES -
Babies Under 6 Months -- Babies Unde-r 1 Year
In addition 'to prizes for winner, each baby entered
will receive a silver dollar.
o
C
SATURDAY 9:30 P.M. — DANCE IN AUDIT9RIUM
BOYD'S ORCHESTRA
BAYFIELD AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY
Secretary R. ,Vtirling
ENJOY THE FINEST FOOD
IN TOWN
Chinese Food
Qui Specialty
ALSO TAKE-OUT ORDERS
OPEN DAILY -5 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Open Friday and Saturday
Uiitil 12 Midnight
The Esquire
Restaurant
"524.9941"
GODERICH SIONA ,STAB, THURS.DAY, SE ENO R 4,. :1,9e19 $.
BING9 -af' LE
Saturd�y', Sept:
at 8.3.0 p.m.
15 GAMES - 1.09
The Prize for each . regular game will be $IZ.00 ' p
JACKPOT OF $95.00 IN 59' CALL$
Sponsored by Branch 109 ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION"
No One Under 16 Permitted To Play
YOU CAN HAVE AN
INTERESTING NOBBY!
HOURS OF ENJOYMENT AND SERVICE TO
YOUR COMMUNITY CAN BE YOURS,
JOIN THE GODERICH BAND
Instruments In Excellent Condition Will Be
Available At
MONDAY, SEPT. 8; 8 P.M.
l'c'mpAT10
REST4URANTT4VERN
BAYFIELD GODERICH
SEPTEMBER 5 & 6
DESJARDINES
ORCHESTRA
ti
WE'RE
OPEN
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday •
• Saturday
Sunday t"
_- 12 Noon to 9 p.m.
- 12 Noon to 9 p.m.
- 12 Noon to 9 p.m.
12 Noon to 9 p.m.
- 12 Noon to 1:00 a.m.
- 11 a.m. to 1:00 a m.
- 1,1 a.m_ to 9:00 p.m.
tied �'kicke
TAKE HOME SHOP
. 87 KINGSTON STREET
Located Beside The Gulf Station At The Five Points
iikkrikkipar
ASK ABOUT OUR
CATERING DIVISION
Special rates- for banquets, church
socials, wedding receptions, lodge and
club' meetings, etc.
FOR DELIVERY CALL
524-735.9
TH E
AGAIN THIS YEAR
ROTARY. CLUB.
of GODERICH
PR ESENTS
"TRAVEL AND
ADVENTURE SERIES"
AT THE -GO 6ERTCH DISTRICT
COLLEGIATE AUDITORIUM
Beginning
SEPTEMBER 30th, at 8:00 P.M.
THIS SERIES WAS -COMPLETELY "SOLD OUT" LAST YEAR
ROTARIANS WILL BE CONTACTING LAST YEAR'S MEMBERS"
DURING 'THE NEXT TWO " WEEKS TO GIVE ,THEM FIRST
OPPORTUNITY TO JOIN.
The Travel And Adventure Series Includes Six Nationally Known
Adventurers And Explorers Who Are Artists In The -Travelogue Field.
They Appear In Person To Narrate Their 'Adventures. -.