HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Citizens News, 1964-04-23, Page 1PRIZE
\`i wIO WAN W( k�fR
�pAPSRS ASSOGI�''E\�{\
fWSPA PER5 COMP
R
1
CH
NE
S
No. 16—FIRST WITH THE LOCAL NEWS
ZURICH, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1964
$3.O0 PER YEAR — 7 CENTS PER COPY
LEAGUE CHAMPIONS of the Zurich Bantam Bowling
League during the past year were "The Shamrocks", who are
shown here with their trophies. Left to right are Ron
Desjardinc, Mark Bedard, Claire Lawrence, David Siebert,
Gary Fiugill and Wayne Beirling. The presentations were
made last Thursday night at their annual banquet.
PLAYOFF CHAMPIONS of the Zurich Bantam Bowling
League during the past season were the "Mighty Mites",
shown here with their trophies. Left to right are Mozart
Gelinas, Gary Jeffrey, David Stark, Peter Regier, Doug
Coxon, Ron Rau.
Grand end Discusses
Grand Bend — Council Mon-
day night agreed to consider re-
locating the village dump, blam-
ed for the April 14 blaze that
burned thousands of .trees in.
The Pinery, 1% miles away.
William Blewitt, whose home
is located just north of the
School Officials
At Dashwood
Secretaries and board mem-
bers of Township School Areas
in South Huron met recently in
the Dashwood Community Hall,
to discuss educational problems.
Those attending were from
Stephen, Hay, Stanley, Gocle-
rich, Tuckersmith and Usborne
Townships.
In the absence of South Hur-
on inspector J. C. Burrows, who
was away on school business,
three district inspectors were
present, They were J. H. Kin-
kead, North Huron; J. W. Coul-
ter, Central Huron, and G. Mac-
Donald, Lambton.
Gordon McGavin, of Walton,
was a guest at the meeting, and
showed slides of his visit to
Russia as .a representative of
the Ontario Plowmen's Asso-
ciation,
The three inspectors ex-
plained particulars of the new
legislation which has been in-
troduced, regarding central
schools, and they also answered
numerous questions during a
question and answer period.
The Scott Trio provided en-
tertainment, and a lunch was
served by a group of Dashwood
district ladies.
dump, said major fires started
at the dump are annual events.
Mr. Blewitt urged council to
find a new site to prevent a re-
petition of last week's fire,
which at one point threatened
Grand Bend.
"We know it is not the best
place for •a dump," said Reeve
Stewart Webb, "but where can
we go with it."
The village owns 25 acres of
land, of which several acres are
used for the dump, five miles
south of Grand Bend, off High-
way 21.
Councillor Ian G. Coles said
council should consider moving
the dump because of the clanger
to trees in the provincial park.
Village garbage collector Har -
Start Installing
For Dial Phones
Workmen of the Hay Muni-
cipal Telephone System have
started this week to install the
new dial telephones, in prepar-
ation for the cutover this fall.
They have started with the vil-
lage" of Zurich, after which they
will install the rural telephones.
Officials of the system have
pointed out that there is no
additional charge for the instal-
lation of the new telephones,
and they are giving customers
the privilege of locating the
phone wherever they like, in
their home or business.
The project of installing the
new phones is to be completed
by the end of August.
u
old Skipper maintained the fire
did not start at the dump.
"I'll defy anyone to say that
this fire started at the dump,"
he said. _"There was not a
particle of fire or paper on the
north side. _The fire has come
up to the dump, not away from
it. I get the blame for start-
ing the fire."
Mr. Blewitt said the wind was
so strong that day nothing
would have stopped the fire.
Councillor Orval Wassmann
recommended that the fire wall
on the dumps' north side be
enlarged.
He also suggested the top of
nearby hills be flattened and
sand bulldozed •on top of the
grass slopes.
Mr. Skipper said that, since
only the north side is a fire
hazard, a • suitable fence be
erected to prevent residents
from putting garbage on that
side.
0
Turn Your Clock
Ahead One Hour
Saturday Night
Daylight Saving Time goes
into effect in this area at
midnight, Saturday, April 25.
To avoid problems in get-
ting to church on time,
householders are asked to
turn their clocks ahead one
hour before going to bed
Saturday night.
The change will mean one
more hour of daylight in
the evenings, for gardening,
fishing, golfing and other
recreation.
Plan To Form
Historic Socie
Goderich — The president of
the Ontario Historical Society,
A. W. Taylor, of Galt, will be
guest speaker at a meeting
here on May 6, when it is plan-
ned to organize a Huron County
Historical Society. This is a
public gathering, to which
everyone interested is cordially
invited. It will be held in the
council chamber, court house,
at 2 p.m.
The matter of a historical so-
ciety has long been under con-
sideration, but action has come
about only recently on the init-
iative of the Women's Institute
of the county. Huron County
council has approved the idea,
in principle, and its property
committee, of which Reeve A.
D. Smith of Turnberry is chair-
man, authorized clerk -treasurer
John G. Berry to prepare the
program in co-operation with
the Institute, Mrs. Otto Popp,
of Dungannon, has represented
the W.I. in this matter.
The gathering will be wel-
comed by Warden Ralph Jewell,
Mayor May Mooney, of Gode-
rich, the property committee
chairman and a representative
of the Women's Institute.
Following Mr. Taylor's ad-
dress, a presentati.on to J. H.
Neill, curator of Huron Pioneer
Museum, will be made by L. R.
Gray, treasurer of the Ontario
Historical Society and Ontario
chairman of the awards com-
mittee, American .Association
for State and Local History, He
will present a Certificate of
Commendation, awarded at Ra-
leigh, North Carolina, last fall
by the American Association,
Beaten 8-5 at Stouffville
Combines Lose Fourth
Seres; PIy gain Fr
You can't win 'em all! And
that is just what happened to
the HensalltZuS•itch Combines
last night when they played
the Stouffville Clippers in the
fourth game of the all -Ontario
Junior D finals, at Stouffville.
After winning the first three
games in a row, the Combines
were in a perfect position to
wrap up the title last night,
but the Stouffville crew were
just as anxious to force a fifth
game, and came with a deter-
mined 8-5 victory.
The fifth game of the series
will be played in the Hensall
Arena on Friday night, at 8,30
p.ni. If a sixth game is necess-
ary, it will be played in Stouff-
ville Monday night, and a sev-
enth game, if necessary, will
also be played back in Stouff-
ville, next Wednesday night.
The Combines, however, are
quite determined to finish the
series Friday night, and win
the all -Ontario championship.
The loss last night was the
first in ten playoff games for
the Combines. After trailing
Strathroy three games to two
in the group playoffs, they
came back strong with two
straight victories, and then went
on to eliminate Gravenhurst
in four straight games. After
this they won three in row
from Stouffville, before losing
last night's encounter.
Two players were missing
from the Combines' line-up
last night—Bruce Horton and
Bill Murney, while another,
Earl Wagner, saw limited action
due to a broken arm.
Stouffville 8 — Combines 5
There was no second chance
for the Clippers last night, as
they came up with their best
effort of the series in skating
to an 8-5 win over the Comb-
ines, They struck early in the
game, scoring three big goals
in the first period before the
7,40 mark. The three fast goals
threw the Combines off bal-
ance, and they never fully
recovered from the shock.
With the Clippers Ieading
3-0 early in the game, the Com-
bines came back with goals
by Bruce Cooper at the 8.57
mark, and Mike Cushman at
the 11.20 mark, threatening
to tie the score. With less
than two minutes to go in the
pelriod, however, Stouffville
banged in a long shot which
completely fooled goalie Denn-
is Amacher.
In the second period it was
Stouffville all the way, as they
skated and checked the Com-
bines right into the ice. Had it
not been for some sensational
saves by Amacher in this per-
iod, they would have scored
more than the one goal they
did, at the 1.30 mark,
Trailing 5-2 going into the
third period, the Combines came
on with a determined effort
to try and tie the score, and
they banged in two goals be-
fore the halfway mark. Cooper
scored' his second goal of the
game at the 2.14 mark, from
a scramble around the net, and
four minutes later Cushman
banged in his second goal of
the game. Then the roof :Cell
in for the Combines, as Stouff-
ville replied with two quick
goals, at the 11 -minute mark
and the 14 -minute mark. At
16.28 Dennis Morrissey made
the scoreboard read 7.5 when
he tipped in a pass from 13111
Shaddick and Craig Chapman,
but Stouffville came up with
an insurance counter at 19.42
when Vassal shot the puck into
an empty Combines' net. Am-
acher had been pulled in favour
of another attacker when the
Clippers drew a penalty with
a minute left to play.
A total of 10 penalties were
handed out in the game, with
seven going to Stouffville and
three to the Combines.
Combines 4—Stouffville 2
Coming up with two big goals
in the third period, the Hensall-
Zurich Combines won the third
straight game of their best -of -
seven series with Stouffville on
Monday night, 4-2. The game
was played in Hensall.
For the first two periods it
was anybody's game, as Stouff-
ville took the lead twice, only
to have the Combines roar back
and tie it up on both occasions.
Earl Wagner, broken arm and
all, scored the winning goal
midway through the third peri-
od, when he capitalized on a
neat pass -out from behind the
net by Bill Shaddick.
The Clippers took the lead at
4:04 in the first period, when
Glenn Hooper scored from Ron
Brown. Five minutes later
Dennis Morrisey found the
range for the Combines, when
he banged in a pass from Bob
Hoffman. Only two penalties
were handed out in the first
session, one to Earl Wagner
and the other to Barry McLean,
of Stouffville.
With less than a minute gone
in the second period, Brown
banged in a pass from Hooper
and McLean, to shoot the vis-
itors into a 2-1 lead. Four min-
utes later Shaddick teamed up
with Craig Chapmn, to score
the smoothest goal of the game,
and tie the score at 2-2. Neither
team was able to score for the
balance of the period, even
though they cane close - several
times. Both teams were hand-
ed two minor penalties in the
second.
The teams battled on even
terms for the first half of the
third period, before Wagner
and Shaddick hooked up for the
winning goal, at 10:38. The
Combines were struggling des-
perately for a counter when
Shaddick slapped out a pass to
Wagner from behind the Stouff-
ville goal, and Wagner in turn
flipped the puck over the goalie,
who was sprauled across the
net. At 17:10 Feasby was sent
off for hooking, and this set the
stage for an insurance goal 21
seconds later, with Bob Liver-
more slapping in a pass from
Cooper and Cushman. The vis-
itors were given four penalties
in the third, and the Combines
three.
Dennis Amacher, in the Coin -
bines' net, played an outstand-
ing game, turning aside many
shots that could have altered
the score. On several occasions
he came well out of his net to
break up possible scoring
chance by Stouffville.
Combines 7—Stouffville 4
Two quick goals, 21 seconds
apart midway through the third
period, was all the Combines
needed on Saturday afternoon
in Stouffville to give them a
7-4 victory in the second game
of the series. Up until this
point the game had been a nip -
and -tuck affair, with both teams
struggling desperately for the
big win. The Combines were
playing without regular left-
winger Earl Wagner, who
watched the game from the
sidelines.
With only half a minute
played in the first period, Ken
ame of
ite
Aida shot the Stouffville six
into an early Iead when he
scored on a screened shot which
goalie Dennis Amacher had no
chance to stop. Midway through
the period, Bill Chipchase bang-
ed in a pass from Bob Roffman,
in a scramble around the Clip-
pers' net. At the 17:20 mark,
Cooper, Cushman and Liver-
more combined in a nice pass-
ing play which san- Cooper flip
the puck over Jackson, :r, the
Stouffville net.
Early in the second period
Rod Kelson tied the score for
Stouffville, only to have Chip -
chase score his second goat of
the game 20 seconds later. At
13:23, Stouffville again tied the
score when Jim Hood found the
range. Then. with only 12 sec-
onds left in the session. Craig
Chapman scored from Bill
Shaddick to give the Combines
another temporary lead. Chap -
man's goal, his first of two. was
the smoothest of the game. He
picked up the pass from Shad -
dick near centre ice, and streak-
ed down right wing. picking the
top left-hand corner of the net
For a little over half of th�
second period Stouffville held
a decided edge on play. and
kept the Combines in their own
end. Only brilliant goal -tend-
ing by Amacher prevented them
from scoring a few more coals.
The third period was only
four minutes old when Stouff-
vile again came up with the
tying goal,, with Glenn Hooper
finding the mark. This
seemed to set a fire under the
Combines. as they started to
roll from then on. For abut
five minutes straight they pep-
pered the Stouffville net before
Mike Cushman finally slipped
the puck past Jackson, on a
nice passing play with Cooper
a n d Livermore. Twenty-one
seconds later Cooper scored
from Livermore to give the
Combines a big 6-4 edge.
After they went up two goals
with ten minutes to play in the
game. the Combines turned to
a fine defensive style of play,
and held the Clippers out of
their enol. With less than a
minute to play in the game,
Stouffville pulled their goalie
in an attempt to tie the score,
and the strategy back -fired.
Shaddick worked the puck out
of his own end and flipped a
pass to Chapman at centre ice.
(Continued on Page 8)
0
Goshen UCW Meet
At McBride Home
The April meeting of the
Goshen United Church Women
was held at the home of Mrs.
Clare McBride. on April 16.
Mrs, Floyd Armstrong opened
the meeting, followed by hymn
380.
Scripture was read by Mrs.
Armstrong from St. Luke,
chapter 11, verses 1 too. Bible
study was on the Lord's Prayer.
and Mrs. Armstrong read the
lines. Mrs, Anson McKinley
gave. the commentary.
The study book was, "One
Household in Faith, United Mis-
sions and Christians in Nepal",
taken by Mrs. Roy McBride,
Mrs. Janes Keys and Mrs. An-
son McKinley,
Mrs. Melvion Elliott then
took charge, Minutes were
read and approved. Nineteen
members answered the roll can.
A motion was made to enter-
tain in May. The meeting
closed by singing hymn 166
and prayer by Mrs. Bob Peck.