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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1976-11-25, Page 18W 4b Page 6—Tbe W1 oam, Advance -Times, November W Ws with 41. Telton's Tia Marls had McMichael 2W 334, 3n- Dick del 37; Thompson's Tom Collins 33; Boer 217; Bonnie Johnston 01; Sallows' Sidecars 31% and Cecil Clark 239; Aart de Vas 316; Hickey's Hangovers X. Carl Smith 337; Hannah Nidal - E ,'Ii1' last week's session, Edna son 21o; Ken Pellett 788. iMae Armstraig bowled the high s-- -s single of M. Jean King had the high trill, a 666. FORDWICH MIXED Other singles of 700 or over Dave Dinsmore 708, 251; Lorne were recorded by Susan Talton Behrw 345, 238; Grace Ross 273; 707; Marie Skins 303, 217, 214; Andrea Eakritt 3W; Sandra Allan LL J �n��l J .r J,.r J J JM6in.16 -w IJ .-r J . do J J J -a J. Jean King 229, 348; Nora Find' 706; Gertie Lambkin 204, 212; . gall 701; Lila Hickey 304; Mary Julie Machan 706; Gary Schu- 1EE8WATER AND 741; Keith Moffatt 231, 739 TEESWALADIES Norma Brenzil 213; Janet Clar , Lee 700, 219' Bea Shropshall 213; macher '113; Dave Jacobson 202; Barb Stainton 209; Mary Camp- Lorne Lambkin 225; Winnie Win - Dell's Dalmatians lead the 213, 211; Jack Tervit 221; Doug tall 225; Jeanette Scott 270; Dale kel 211; Blanch Hoegy 200; second series with seven points Elliott 240; Perrie Holmes 208; Talton 236; Dorothy Thompson Earlen Osborne 205, 232; Russell while. Shirley's Spaniels are Art Clark 208 and Cathy Edgar Me, 272; Eley Wharton 296; Behrns 218. second with five. Beth's Boxer's 209. Elda Nethery 219, 266; Shirley Ladies' high single, Andrea are third with four points and 0-0-0 Storey 255, 2(Y7; Nancy King 209; Eakritt 240; ladies' high triple, Betty's Beagles fourth with COMMERCIAL LEAGUE Joyce Gardner 216, 253; Edna Grace Ross 588; men's high three. Brenda's Bulldogs have The Satellites are moving far - two points while Ila's Poodles are ther out in front with 54 points. Armstrong 215; Corinne Irwin single, Dave Dinsmore 251; 232• Linda Walden 216; Shirley men's high triple, Dave Dina - in the cellar with no points. Coming in second spot are the �O� 238. more 647. Mime Newton was high in both Gremlins with 40 points. Mus- singles and triples with 277 and tangs are in third with 35 while were Nancy King and Linda Walden. 650 respectively. Hornets are fourth with 34 points. 0-0-0 Other games over 200 were: Granada's are moving up slowly Mima Newton 206; Gladys Ste- but are fifth with 29 points and the COFFEE KLATCH Bridge results wart 274; Doris Carmichael 246; Austin are last with 18 points. Jean King was the high bowler Lis Leady 201; Phyllis Ireland Shirley Zimmer was high for for the day with a single of 262 First, Elaine Colvin and Jean ling ladies with a 248 single and 648 and 453 double. Girls bowling 200 Ho�� second, Pat Hay and 237, 220; Lorna Cook 232; Beth deBruyn 207. triple. The men's single went to a were: Lois Surridge 222; Mary P. Art Wilson; third, Mae Porter 0-0-0 very surprised Bob Gordon with a Campbell 2D4; Donna Chomyn and Harley Crawford; fourth, THURSDAYMIXED 297. High triple went to no other 224; Susan'Tolton 232; Shirley Lilian Brooks and Rena Fisher. Luanne Kerr had the high than Jim Griffith with a 652. Storey 211, 229 and Donna Van - single for women with 243 and Many thanks to Debbie Blake derwood 207. Elda Nethery had high triple with and Jim Mawhinney for sparing. Coffee mugs were given to the 621. Art Clark had both high sin- a-" girls that entered the daytime Belmore gle and high triple with 295 and WEDNESDAY LADIES ladies' tournament. The winning 689 respectively. Harrison's Highballs have been team bowls in Hanover Decem- Other games over 200 were: named winners of the first series, ber 5• Bob Reid of Kenabeek, Ont. Helen Skelton 206; Gayle Neil ending the first lap with a total of O--P-U visited this Past week with sev- 209; George Skinn 259; Elda 421cl points. Very close behind SENIOR CITIZENS eral families of the Belmore com- Nethery 229, 210; Dave Tiffin 238, were Gardner's - Grasshoppers Diamonds and Rubies are tied munit for first place with 25 points each. y' Belmore Maple Products won Pearls are third with 23 and the Grand Champion Syrup Opals are fourth with 19. Agates aAward at the Royal Agricultural re fifth with 11 points while Amethysts are in the cellar with Winter Fair, also the Corbett Recreation Report two points. Trophy and the Premier Exliibi- i"' W. Lockwood rolled a 350 tot's Trophy. double while Anne Geddes had The Belmac Mariners met By Jim Ward Monday nite at McIntosh church. 316. Margaret Hastings had 303. Wilfred and Eileen Johann were t� 0-0-0 in charge of the meeting. Wilma The contractor, Murray Mc- we have ice here. All "house" WROXETER LEAGUE Dustow read the scripture lesson. Dougall, is getting a little de- games are Saturday nights. Men's high triple, Ron Mc- Guests of the evening were Mr. pressed by the winter weather. 0-0-0 Michael 620; ladies' high triple, and Mrs. John Langendoen of When the snow arrived weDOOR-TO-DOOR BLITZ -- Ethel McMichael 678; men's high Fordwich. They showed slides of thought it would soon be done and In the blitz last week a total of single, Ken Pellett 268; ladies' their recent trip to the Holy Land, Indian summer would be just about $6,500 was raised. It was high single, Ethel McMichael 234. which were much enjoyed. A fel- around the corner. HoWver the felt that there are some people Games over 200: Wendell lowship hour and lunch were en - snow has not left the arena roof who gave during the phone-athon Stamper '219; Ron McMichael joyed after the slides and com- yet and we have to put the new and who expected to give during 201, 226; Bonnie Pellett 226; Ethel mentary by Mr. Langendoen. steel roof on before the concrete a blitz such as last week. These floor is poured. people wonder why we did not The floor has been levelled andcall on them. It was fe • by the time this report is in your felt by the YBC Bowling hands the insulation will cover committee that those who gave the floor. On Thursday or Friday previously had contributed all the brine pipes will be put down they had intended. We made a list Jack - and brine are ho to the of all those who gave through the BANTAMS Michael Heard 150; Allan Jack- pm6 ice' phone-athon and then attempted Daffodils lead was cut to 10 son 156; Jeff Moore 155, floor next week if all goes well. to contact the remainder of the points as they only took two of a SR. JUNIORS When the floor is poured it will be town folk. Unfortunately the possible five. They now have 36 Standings have tightened up in a continuous operation from start people in town change their plac- points. and second place Roses, rete- t weeks with Jaguars hdid- to finish in order to get maximum es of residence frequently. If you who took five points, have 26. ing first place with 27 points. smoothness• would like to donate to the arena, Daisies remain in third place Susquataches are second with 24 0-0-0 our hockey and physical centre, with 23 and Sunflowers are fourth but Speedbugs have moved into MINOR HOCKEY— please contact Tom Deyell or the with 22. Sweet Roses are fifth third with 22 points. Tigers and Our teams are playing on recreation office. with 17 and Violets are in- the '' The Sweets are tied for fourth Saturday nights in Lucknow until cellar with 13. with 21 points and Grizzlies are J Cheryl Delmage was .agh only one point behind with 20. single and double for girls with Linda Wittig had a 212 single to 149 and 246 respectively. Jeff lead the girls and she had the Cameron led the boys with 139 high double of 358. Greg Storey �j GOLDEN BIRD single and 246 double. had a 229 single and 434 double to Other games over 100 were: lead the boys. r. .J Adolikk Is Is Sherry Johnston 120, 110; Brenda Other games over 175 were: gMYS Thompson 111; Ellen Rodger 103, Donna Thompson 191; Scott 128; Leanne Cornwall 101; Cornwall 201; Tim Stainton 186; Michele Heard 113; Debbie Hoy Robbie Grove 190; Danny Martin 118, 114; Jeff Cameron 107; 177; Greg Storey 205 and David Stephen Skinn 112; Darrin Hickey Nesbitt 199. 113, 108; Jeff Walden 109; Murray Richard Daugherty received Skinn 120. his 100 Pins Over Average badge. ■ ■A'■ f1A 1 SA/rA�SAA / JUNIORS L His average is 139 and he bowled suinaings wim za points. A oa[ue SENIORS is looming for second as Crystal- The Bionic 4 moved into first drops have 26, Pearldrops 25 place with 41 points as they took Florida while Dewdrops and Golddrops five points. The Sacks dropped to are tied with 24 points. Gumdrops second with 40 points and Team 4 are well in the basement with is third with 37. Team 5 is fourth Enter our draw for a FREE SEAT on an OTTAWA TULIP TRIP upcoming in spring 1977. Return trip, via deluxe Motorcoach Tours in co-operation with All Star Tours. qN Draw to be held Sat., Dec. 18. Deposit this ballot �tL o' at Holiday World. �b Name..................................... 4�Q =� Address ................................... �b Town ...................................... r►� Phone.....................................3 a•� AV H%3LIDAY WORLD WINGHAM 357-2701 Wingham Lions avenge loss, and beat Durham Jay MacLaurin scored three goals including the winner as the Wingham Lions avenged last week's loss to Durham and edged the visitors 4-3 on Saturday in Lucknow. The win left Wingham and Durham tied for second place with four points each, two behind league -leading Mitchell who have three straight wins. MacLaurin opened the scoring at 3.51 of the first with a power play goal and added another at 6.28 with the teams playing even. John McArthur scored Durham's first goal at 10.14 with Durham holding a two-man advantage. The first period ended with Wing - ham leading 2-1. Dave Nixon tied the game at 2-2 with the only goal of the second period at 8:34. Again the Lions were playing two -men short. Durham dominated the third period outshooting. Wingham 13-4 but Lion netminder Doug Taylor came up with the big saves. Goals by Dave Kieffer at 3.11 and Mac- Laurin on a Power play at 4.41 gave Wingham their second win of the season against one loss. Durham's final goal came with 2.17 left in the game. This time they enjoyed a one-man advan- tage. The line of MacLaurin, Kieffer and Rick MacLennan was flying on Saturday and accounted for all Wingham's points. MacLaurir, fired the team's first 'hat -trick', Kieffer scored once and added three assists while MacLennan collected three assists. Doug Taylor continued his steady play in goal stopping 33 of 36 shots. Wingham scored on four of 24 shots. Taylor has allowed only seven goals in three games. Penalties played a big part in the game with five of the seven goals coming on power plays. The Lions took 14 of 25 penalties and were shorthanded two men on three different occasions. Wingham travels to Palmer- ston this Saturday for an 8:15 p.m. game, against Harriston. On Monday they go to Mitchell for a 9 P.M. game. Bahamas seven points. Andrea Walker had high single with 29 points and Number Ones are fifth with 22. Team 3 is in the South Carolina Winter, Spring 76'77 Brochures Available for girls with 198. Julaine Adams had high double with 284. Tim Bain led the boys with a 217 single and 345 double. Other games over 150 were: Jo- anne Henry 156; Debbie Lee 160; Julaine Adams 171; Terry Rin- toul 196; David Scott 171; Robert Hubbard 163; Stephen Gaunt 150; Robbie Willis 160; Randy Bain 172; Byron Thompson 150; cellar with 20 points. Christine Foxton was high single for girls with 236 while Peggy Tervit had high triple with 647. Ken Thompson had high single for boys with 184 while Spencer Burley had high triple with 478. Other games over 200 were: Janet Storey 219; Peggy Tervit 210, 220, 217. Enter our draw for a FREE SEAT on an OTTAWA TULIP TRIP upcoming in spring 1977. Return trip, via deluxe Motorcoach Tours in co-operation with All Star Tours. qN Draw to be held Sat., Dec. 18. Deposit this ballot �tL o' at Holiday World. �b Name..................................... 4�Q =� Address ................................... �b Town ...................................... r►� Phone.....................................3 a•� AV H%3LIDAY WORLD WINGHAM 357-2701 Wingham Lions avenge loss, and beat Durham Jay MacLaurin scored three goals including the winner as the Wingham Lions avenged last week's loss to Durham and edged the visitors 4-3 on Saturday in Lucknow. The win left Wingham and Durham tied for second place with four points each, two behind league -leading Mitchell who have three straight wins. MacLaurin opened the scoring at 3.51 of the first with a power play goal and added another at 6.28 with the teams playing even. John McArthur scored Durham's first goal at 10.14 with Durham holding a two-man advantage. The first period ended with Wing - ham leading 2-1. Dave Nixon tied the game at 2-2 with the only goal of the second period at 8:34. Again the Lions were playing two -men short. Durham dominated the third period outshooting. Wingham 13-4 but Lion netminder Doug Taylor came up with the big saves. Goals by Dave Kieffer at 3.11 and Mac- Laurin on a Power play at 4.41 gave Wingham their second win of the season against one loss. Durham's final goal came with 2.17 left in the game. This time they enjoyed a one-man advan- tage. The line of MacLaurin, Kieffer and Rick MacLennan was flying on Saturday and accounted for all Wingham's points. MacLaurir, fired the team's first 'hat -trick', Kieffer scored once and added three assists while MacLennan collected three assists. Doug Taylor continued his steady play in goal stopping 33 of 36 shots. Wingham scored on four of 24 shots. Taylor has allowed only seven goals in three games. Penalties played a big part in the game with five of the seven goals coming on power plays. The Lions took 14 of 25 penalties and were shorthanded two men on three different occasions. Wingham travels to Palmer- ston this Saturday for an 8:15 p.m. game, against Harriston. On Monday they go to Mitchell for a 9 P.M. game. learned a lesson. 1 tape they get someone to coach the club who has some idea of how to manage -superstars". I also hope they don't bring in any more "stars" and expect them to conform right off the bat. ' Even "superstars" take time to make adjustments from the American style of football to the Canadian style. It isn't done overnight. Reward Your Patience I with a new Philips Colour T.V. from: - G. B. Electronics Sales $ Service 357.1235 Philips Modular 4 Colour T.V. "The Dependable One!" Yamaha Rugged trail riding demands a machine that hangs in there, on any terrain—no balking,no bogging down. Yamaha's '76 STX series are the performers. Features include slide— rail sus Cris with hvdraulic shocks and a double sprocket drive track for a better power transfer, light- weight press -formed aluminum chassis, CDI ignition, twin carbs designed for efficient operation in colder weather conditions and wide, leaf syringed skis with independent hydraulic dampers. It all adds up to an unbeatable machine for the adventure -minded. The plus of course is Yamaha's top rated warranty and the Yamaha reputation for technology, quality and service. T i0labieliety PLUS... MONTGOMERY Serviceentr C e ' Josephine Street Wingham A Yamah< `N• Snowmobi I Helmet ANC Snowmobile Boots!- Just fill out the official ballot and deposit it at Montgomery's and you could win Combine Retail 6000 Value of 3 NOW 0 MONTGOMERY SERVICE CENTRE OFFICIAL BALLOT Name........................ Address ...................... Town......................... Telephone .................... Enter as many times as you like. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY Saturday, December 18, 1976. 7 Canadian football is rough for a college star to adjust to because he is used to carrying the ball. He 0R TS L") ful 0 TS is used to plays which are con- tained by the narrowet field. He - has to change his patterns. l, I think coach Russ Jackson bI� V Ted Saunders figured that with the high salary he was Davis J getting, should have made a quicker adjustment. To me this ridiculous. There is too much to be done tri a college When are Toronto Argonauts when not on the field. player moving into the pro ranks, going to realize that their fans I realize that some of the lesser without having to re-form his will not keep up their support paid players resent the high whole conception of football. without a winning team? wages of the "stars". This is not Davis migg have been one of With one of the best team per- the fault of the coaches but of the the best college players evgr to sonnel in the Canadian Football owners and management'. They move into the professional ranks, League, the Argonauts look like a are the ones who go out and Pur- but he had to change his thinking bunch of high school players chase the so-called "stars". and I don't think Jackson took learning the fundamentals of the Trying to buy a championship ' this into consideration. When game. And it isn't all the fault of with players like Anthony Davis Anthony didn't show up to Russ' the coaches. The players them- is like sudden -death. You know expectations in training camp, he selves are disoriented in their right off the bat that the estab- decided to ignore him. assignments. lished veterans are going to re- Davis was a marked man right There has never been any talk sent it. It is only human nature to from the time he started working of dissention in the club, but wonder how a rookie, who is paid out with the Argos. His reputation watching the players on the field a it inillion salary, is going to re- came along before him and and along the sidelines sure gives act. everyone at camp had to take a a television viewer a feeling that People can talk all they like shot at him and find out if he was it is there. In fact, when the about a player of Davis' calibre really that good. camera pans on the bench and being an instant hit. This is not It is not a coincidence that he coach Russ Jackson, it is always usually the case. I figured when didn't start the regular season noticeable that the players aren't the Argos bought Davis they and was out with injuries. Those talking to each other the way would expect him to be a star of injuries occurred in training other teams do. the future. Instead they figured camp and resulted from two I'm not saying that some of the he should produce immediately. things; one was he was trying too blame shouldn't be put squarely What a lot of people forgot was hard to prove himself, and two, on the shoulders of the coaches. that Anthony didn't have any pro- he took some cheap shots during They are the ones who should be fessional experience. He was practices which were overlooked able to instill some comradeship right out of university football by the coaching staff. between the players. But the and he was making a big adjust- Now that both Davis and Jack - Argo players seem very clannish ment. He had to get used to Cana- son are gone, I hope the team and seem to break up into cliques dian football and its wider field. owners and management have learned a lesson. 1 tape they get someone to coach the club who has some idea of how to manage -superstars". I also hope they don't bring in any more "stars" and expect them to conform right off the bat. ' Even "superstars" take time to make adjustments from the American style of football to the Canadian style. It isn't done overnight. Reward Your Patience I with a new Philips Colour T.V. from: - G. B. Electronics Sales $ Service 357.1235 Philips Modular 4 Colour T.V. "The Dependable One!" Yamaha Rugged trail riding demands a machine that hangs in there, on any terrain—no balking,no bogging down. Yamaha's '76 STX series are the performers. Features include slide— rail sus Cris with hvdraulic shocks and a double sprocket drive track for a better power transfer, light- weight press -formed aluminum chassis, CDI ignition, twin carbs designed for efficient operation in colder weather conditions and wide, leaf syringed skis with independent hydraulic dampers. It all adds up to an unbeatable machine for the adventure -minded. The plus of course is Yamaha's top rated warranty and the Yamaha reputation for technology, quality and service. T i0labieliety PLUS... MONTGOMERY Serviceentr C e ' Josephine Street Wingham A Yamah< `N• Snowmobi I Helmet ANC Snowmobile Boots!- Just fill out the official ballot and deposit it at Montgomery's and you could win Combine Retail 6000 Value of 3 NOW 0 MONTGOMERY SERVICE CENTRE OFFICIAL BALLOT Name........................ Address ...................... Town......................... Telephone .................... Enter as many times as you like. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY Saturday, December 18, 1976. 7