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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1972-11-02, Page 6QOIERICU SIONAL,STAR, TIWRSDAV, NOVEMBER Z. 1972 • tit.k.ty 4 derich intermediate C League gets , underway with first -big win If the first exhibition gime is any indication of the calibre of hockey to be played, there is going to be some very .good hockey to be played at Goderieh during -the, winter ,and_axea in termediate teams will have some tough opposition in the In- termediate C league from the ° Goderich Sailors. The Goderich team took one Of the strong teams in the league, the Kincardine bulldogs, and out -skated, out -shot, out- scored and over all, out -played' Kincardine , last Sunday. Goderich came,up with six goals inthe, final period to swamp Kincardine 11-5 in Kincardine. About the only category in which 'Kincardine had more of was in penalties. They had 14 minors, 1-5 minute major and 1- 10 mute misqonduct and two game misconducts. Goderich took 10 minors, one - 5 minute major and two game rnisconducts. Although Goderich , out -shot Kincardine in the first period, •18-8, Kincardine held a 1-0 lead 1'. Allan MacDonald with Father !Wray • . _ - • • _ , _ A former, Goderich man, Allan GreggMacDdhald, son of Murray MacDonald, Anglesea Street, announced this' week on behalf of his .company, Marine Development Group • Ltd. of Toronto, a program of develop- ment for . a submersible. THe submarine type unit would be used for geophysical exploration and other undersea work. The firm, of which Mr. MacDon., is President, made the the L.IU1Li1 cl announcement last week in Financial Post. "It will be capable of exten- ded undersea missions indepen- dent of surface support, will have a crew capacity of nine, and be fully equipped for all functions," Mr. MacDonald said. "Construction of the prototype is expected to start in six mon- ths. Power wilt be derived through thermodynamic energy Town Police Report conversion of heat produced by radioactive Cobalt 60," he shid. Marine Development Group is designing a radioisotope power . package, which has been presold for submarine use, to produce 35 kilowatts of usable electric MacLeod's first goal from E. 'Courtney at 16:56. MacLeod took a shot from the blueline Which went off Goderich defen- ceman Bill Fritzley into the cor- ner. • CourtneY fired the puck- to MacLeod who' had stationed himself 10 feet in front of the net and shot the puck into the top left hand corner. Goderich was actually two men short' when the goal was scored. One player was in the penalty box while another had just come off theice.ice. Bob) Dick got Goderich going with a goal at,3:30 of the second period with an assist going to Frank Hagen. E. MacLeod put Kincardine ahead one minute later with his second goal of the game. R. Forster assisted the' goaI. DirkV-9,Iterbeek tied the, gaine -for' Goderich MacLeod's third goal at 7:01 from J. Bell 'Out Kincardine ahead for the third straight time. Austin Faulds tied it again for Goderich at '12:18 assisted by after one period of play on Bill Fritzley and Jim Farrish. power. Twenty six year old Mr. • MacDonald is also thd e A company • n rival Ca nsave (appeal owner. He studieat the Goderich District Collegiate Institute during his time in Goderich.' Rash of accidents this week Goderich Municipal Police in- vestigated a series of accidents during the last two weeks which sent at least one man to hospital and resulted, in extensive property damage. Oetober 28 a collision oc- curred between vehicles dthen by Gordon A: Fisher of 371. Huron Road and Lance W. Sad- dler of R.R. 2, Clinton. The crash completely destroyed the Saddler car and sent Mr. Sad- dler to hospital suffering of frac- tures and other • injuries. _moon -nit a PP -rpgrF7C BUG- siiy1 On October 30 a two car crash between cars driven by Martin J. Gough of Woodstock and Brian 'T. Hamilton 4.189 St. David resulted in $350 to the Gough car had $20 to the Hamilton - vehicle. There were no injuries. A two car collision on October 21 resulted in $900 damage when cars driven' by Jane E. Smith of 22 Comox Cres, and Ema F. Fangard of R.R. 2 Goderich collided. The Smith car suffered $500 damage and , the Fangard car $400. There were no injuries. ..Two hundred and fifty dollars damage was done in 'a two car* crash October 16 between Her- bert J. Davidson of 258 Mary Street and George B. Ramsey of 189 Elgin Street in London. Both drivers escaped injuries. Considerable damage resulted from a, two car mishap on Oc- tober 17 ,between vehicles driven by Jackie Elizabeth Koene of R.R.` 2 Bayfield and Douglas Raymond Gilders of R.R. 2 Goderich. There were no injuries but the Koenepr suffered $380 damage and the Gilders car $120. MAKE simE fr'.$ Tie!) bow.) SellE mennuf itosi.vo. • THEY'RE HERE '• FROM Glenavr Approximately $310 damage was done in a two car crash Oc- tober 22 when a parked car owned by Betty L. Baechler of 33 Britannia Road in Goderich was struck by a car driven by Robert, Greg Lozinsky of 133 St. Georges Cres. The- mishhp oc- curred on The Square causing $250 damage to the parked car and $60 damage to the Baechler vehicle. Canadians are being asked to dig a little deeper this year as the Canadian S'aveth0 Children Fund holds its Annual Appeal from November 15 to December :31. The goal of $1,800,000 is the highest in our history, and it reflects the increasing demands being made on CANSAVE Children to enlarge and extend our work internationally,' says National Director Kenric R. Marshall. • Our main emphasis continues to be, helping children through co-operation in long-tertn social development programs -- day care centres and day nurseries, clinics, teaching and mother - training programs, agricultural and rural development schemes, and community development projeeti But. CANSAVE has been for- . . ced to divert large sums for emergency relief and post-': disaster rehabilitation work, most recently in Bangladesh where the government has asked the International Union for Child Welfare to establish a number of Reception Centres for children victimized by the war. The first Centres are now in. operation, and CANSAVE as the Canadian member of the ItTCW, is committed to the program, which will eventually include a child-care and vocational -training component for which funds must be made Help CANSAVE Children to continue its work through your contribution to: Cansave/The Canadian Save The Children Fund, R.H. Grant, Honorary •Secretary -Treasurer, 70 Hayter Street, . Toronto 2, Ontario. " STRATFORD Save tip to 50% pada! on Super Plenamins bonus Art Mcbougall Fait Goderich ahead for the first time in the' game at 17:45 with'. an unassisted effort. Tom Crawford 'made it 5-3 at the end of the second, noring, from -Dirk . Wolterbeek at 18:32., Goderich ' held a wide territorial advan- tage in the second period as in- dicated by the shots on goal, 26.- 10 in favour of Goderich. • J. Cosmerly cut .Goderich's lead to one at 1:20' of the third period from Bell. Jim Farrish upped Goderich's lead to 6-4 - at .3:32 from 13�b Dick and 'Bill Fritzley. D.' St. Andrews scored Kincardine's final goal from. C. Pollock at 6:59. Every Kincardine goal was scored with one Goderich player in the penalty box. The teams , were playing five aside when the first_ and fifth goals were ,scored bilt-ablefferWas orie-niairSholvt* for the other three. Jim Farrish fired his second •goal of the game 49 seconds later from Jim Hayter. Hayter set up Austin Faulds 28 seconds later at 8:16 for his second goal of the game. This was one of the fine passing plays by Goderich during the gaine. Faulds stole the puck from a Kincardine player between cen- tre and the blueline and fed a 'pass to Hayter' who was streaking across the blueline. Faulds was. corning in on the other side and Hayter returned the pass to Faulds who was left all alone in front of the Kincar- dine net. T'om Crawford's second goal gave Goderich a 9-5 lead at 9:10 from Jim Hayter and Ron Brown. Dirk Wolterbeek scored his second goal at 11:47 'from Frank Hagen. Goderich's final goal at: 1425 by Wayne Rau was one of sAVE s'Fivorctik vir4A4,0,,18/E ,Aor,/,ivorrilEcri orp,c —dive iet(E0 Poi6., Uf LIG 'yr CF LIE WASHABLE WOOL 801REVIRA KNITS WF65—button-up front vest with revere collar and self tie -belt in solid colour. Sizes 10 to 20 Each $25.00 WF66—matching slightly flared pants with elasticized waistband. Sizes 10 to 20 Each $20.00 Big savings on other sizes,too. NSW FOR KIDt Chewable Super • ••••••,.. CHOCOLATE PLENAMINS SUPE 9 DELICIOUS — 11 VITAMINS PLUS IRON 144 -Day Supply $ 689 12 -Day Supply $ 4 19 36 -Day Supply $ 2 8 At% . SHOI.VE 6.0DERICII N FRIDAY 1 1011T TILL 9 P. • RIECK PHARMACY Arnie Barber, POWS. Goderich Aik. rik —aikfr 14 The Square Larry Rieck, MACE. the ,prettY plays of the game. Rau took the puck just outside, the Kincardine blueline and skated unmolested, then gave Kincardine goalie Whalen a lit- tle_ deke_and flipped the puck in behind him. Kincardine-oiltshot- Goderich in the final period 13- 42. Overall Goderich outshot Kincardine 56-31. Bob Kellestine, and Chuck Jewell shared the goaltending chores for Goderich., 11. Mar- cate, S. Begg and M. VVhalen each played a period for Kincar- dine. :There was one major alter- cation in the game when Gord McIntyre was sent off for slashing at 15:00 of the final period. He proceeded to shove referee Lynn Shewfelt and was given a game misconduct. At the same time, J. Bell and Ron Brown squared, off and were each given 5 minutes for fighting and a game misconduct. Fritzley of Goderich was given a game- miscondiict being third man ipto the fig •Although outweighed, Goderich did not back away and when they started shoving Kin- cardine around, sorne of Kincar- dine's strength was taken away. Goderich played a good positional game and the for- wards were coming back into their own end zone. If you really want to find out how good the Sailors are, take in the exhibition game this Sun- day at 2:00 p.m. in Goderich between GoderiCh and Kincar- dine. 1 SONAL- CHRISTMAS CARDS Family groups, children, etc. Because of the time required PLEASE CALL NOW FOR APPOINTMENT ERIC CARMAN PHOTOGRAPHY 524-7924' • BLUE'S SUPERMARKET SU ER DISCOU T PRICES ON THE SQUARE FRESH LEAN Pork Shoulder Roast 69c OPEN 8 A M SHARP TILL 1() F' M h HAYS t WE EK MAPLE LEAF—ALL BEEF Wieners L.B. 68c ONTARIO NO. 1. Potatoes •25 LB. BAG _90c WESTON'S—SUPREME BREAD 3 LOAVES • 83c BORDEN'S EAGLE BRAND MILK 16 oz. TIN 39c Hamburg Helper 4 FLAVOURS PI" 55c DEVON. OR EPICURE Side 1 lb. Bacon VAC PACK 95 FLORIDA WHITE -OR PINK GRAPEFRUIT 5 45c SCHNEIDER'S CRISPY -FLAKE Shortening 3 n. SA 1 • PEPSI KIORST FAMILY SIZE 89( PLUS DEPOSIT WHITEI PTIjM:VCALE WHEAT Bread Mix (MAKES 4LOAVES) 55c 3 Ib. BAGS BERRY -BOX ASSORTED JAMS 90z. 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