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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1990-12-19, Page 121a -THE HUAON EXPOSITOR, DECEMBERn9, ies0 -Sport News Centenaires The Seaforth C mamices hast twice at home and didn't make tlwigii randy sailor for themselveson ctihlc� weekend, as they xmtinuc 10 walk a tightrope over the basement of the Ontario Hockey As- sociation's Worn Junior D League. They dropped an 8 - 6 decision it Belmont Sunday after- noon after a 4- 2 loss to Lucas Friday night. Luckily for the locals, both fauns chasing than in the standings also lost on the weekend so the Cetucn ties remained in seventh spot m the nuc-tcatn division, one point up on the Mt. Brydges Bulldogs and throe points ahead of the last place Alvinston Ryas. But both cheat teams have games in hand on Seaforth. And Seaforth plays both these teams this coming weekend in what would be the moment of truth for three points ahead of last place this year's edition cat the Cc.- maaros. The Flyers are an town far an 8:35 gyne Friday *On at the Seaforth and District Conemm sty Coatres, whale the Ce,wraaites travel to Mt. Brydges Saturday nigtu tar an 8:30 noddy gash u was the - �at aoory in Sunday afternoon's iws to die Palls. Belmont was up 2 - 0 before you could say boo, in the first 1:09 of the gwic, and uicrrasod that lad too 1 at 12:13 of the opening peariud before Cea- tooaitc conch Bob Zimmer yawed stator Dana Duskocy and replaced him with Bill Treinca , who was an unprovancnt, but not by much. The Centenaires than mach: a game of what looked like was going to be a blow out and pulled into a 6-6 tic after the second period, because of a two goal per - PRO SHOPICLUB HOUSE OPEN Saturday & Sunday 12-5pm EVERYTHING IS ON SALE! 20% 50°A3 OFF E •5 .�A,6s. GIFT CERTIFICATES ti It •Green Fees•Marnbershps•Equipment•Cbthng Now'sWirjeW9lub repairs /41 1 COME ON OUT...OR ALL CAM SEAFORTH GOLF and COUNB . Eastof Van ERg ond�Housee 522-0985 104 • - sir .‘ SEAFORTH VETERINARY CLINIC Holida Hours CHRISTMAS EVE DEC. 24 8:00 A.M. TO 1:00 P.M. CLOSED CHRISTMAS & BOXING DAY NEW YEAR'S EVE DEC. 31 8:00 A.M. TO 1:00 P.M. CLOSED NEW YEAR'S DAY In Case of Emergency Call 1-800-265-4593 4 SPECIAL CHRISTMAS SWIM TIMES Thursday, December 27 Friday, December 28 Wednesday, January 2 T hur'day, January friday, Jaanuary 4 i:0() prim to 4: 30 pm PLUS Regular Swim Times BUILDING CLOSED Mon. Dec. 24 and 31 at 103 P.M, Tues. Dec. 25 and Ian. 1 ALL DAY Wed. Dec. 26 ALL DAY Thurs. Dec. 27 and Jan. 2 &AND& Special Student Rate In effect during school break (must be 16 yrs. or over) for only $3.25 use pool, sauna and fitness dur ing scheduled times. r**7***4t*********************** DECEMBER MEMBERSHIP SPECIAL New Members May * BUY ANY 3 MONTH MEMBERSHIP AND GET AN EXTRA 1 MONTH FREE * OFFER EXPIRES DECEMBER 29, 1990 (Full membership includes Pool, Sauna and Fitness Room or you can buy any Individual Membership) s***************************** New Winter Program Starts Jan. 14 To Register For Programs Call 482-3544 Vanastra en re (2 1/2 rnibs South of Clinton) formate by Mike Watt aid sink tallies from the snicks of Denny Wildfoog, Katy Dietz, Ted Sills aad Kaden Carroll. The stic,s went dry in the thud however, Pesti what the • • s - a pair, and Scafartb with ' s wn to its sixth straight defeat. Carrel chapped in three assists and Kcvui McLlwain added a pair. with single set ups by Steve Schroeder, K0ry Diets, Dsvc Wil- liams, Blair Bcuermann, Doo Scou and W ildfcng. Referee Claude Dam tagged Belmont with 11 minor penalties, and Seaforth with eight. Friday night, also at Seaforth, the league leading Lucan Irish played like a bear with a sore bum, after recent losses to Exeter and Al- vinsttxn, and were simply too quick to catch, particularly in the third period, as they skated to the 4 - 2 decision. Greg Deprest paced the Irish with a pair of goals, including the insurance goal with just under three minutes left m the game. It was 1-1 after the first period and rasa °ed that way unal the thud. Kan► Dietz and Sills did the kaaphitIning for the Centeaamcs, bob on the poweirpiay. Brad Seut- ar:11mllcr, Carroll and Williams had aaasts, and Tremont took the kiss between theReferee Bill Woe gave Sd krth six minx peanlucs, two mayors, a misconduct aad two game misooetducts. Lucas toot 11 miners, a major, miscon- duct and game misconduct. HOT STOVE LEAGUE...Scouts from Stratford Culitonas and Tillsonburg Titan watched Sun- day's garne..Jaasun Schoonderwoerd missed both weekend games, still nursing a tender knee...Beuuctunilla has finished exams and should be available for both of next weekend's games...Scutdebuu has u that the league's notion to go junior C is all but a dead issue...The Centenaires arc having a Minor Sports Day on Sunday, January 13 when they host Mr. Brydges. All minor sports people will be admitted free. Datsuns in first place The fist schedule of the Seniors Alley Bowling League concluded with Bill Harris. Datsuns the win- ners with 46 points. The Hondas were second with 44 and the Chevy's third with 38. The Fords had 34 the Buicks 26 and the Lincoln's 21. Watson Reid paced the Fords with games of 285 and 230 and a 636 triple to help them take five points on the Hondas. Bill Harris also had a 238 single. Over on lane one Dorothy McCluskie had her best game ever rolling a 304 single and a 581 triple. Campbell Wey of the Datsun team again had three good games ending with a 597 triple. Mary Finlayson also had a 198 single. Lucky draw winners were Betty Leonhardt, Hazel McNaughton, and Watson Reid. Next Friday will be fun bowling with high and low bowlers bowling together. First place last year went to Watson Reid and Agnes Lam- merant, while second was Mary Finlayson and Katie Phillips. The league is sorry to hear Katie is still confined to Seaforth Com- munity Hospital. There will be prizes for bowling next week and don't forget a Christmas goodie for lunch. Good bowling to all. Horseshoes earn man place in Horseshoe Hall of Fame BY HEATHER IOBINET A Seaturth uiari received word secs,ttly that he had been inducted IND d11: Canadian Horseshoe Hall of Paine. Plod Hart ws, 80, of Chalk Street is Seaturth. said notice of his ap- pointment, as well as a plaque fear his boar, was delivered to hon recently, almost a year after be was ward the honor. Because of caan- ges an address, those responsible for the appou'uu ret were unable Its kxiite Mr Harburn, but tound his sun at a rcttau hurscahoc 10u1- nanait. "1 didn't know there was such a dung as a Horseshoe Hall of Fame," canmentrd Mr. Harburn, "But 1 guess it opened four years ago in Hamilton. They tell me each year one playa and one organizer are elected to u." Onginally of Cromarty, Mr. Har- burn purchased his first set of hor- seshoes in 1925, after seeing a former Canadian Cham peon at work in Hensall. "I took a liking to it, and he was selling shoes, so I bought a set for two dollars. Now they're worth 550," he recalled. After the purchase Mr. Harburn hit the horseshoe circuit, playing all over Ontario in exhibitions, in fair tournaments, at May 1 celebrations, and whatever other occasion war- ranted a competition. "I was playing horseshoes more than I was working," he said. In 1931 Mr. Harburn became the Ontario Champion, and in 1932 upgraded that title to Canadian Champion. Mr. Harburn was Canadian Champion off and on from 1932 to 1942. "My average ringer percentage was 82-83 per cent," he said, ad- ding that ordinarily a percentage of 55 to 60 per cent was considered good. "I was the best by quite a bit." Mr. Harburn recalls that between 1932 and 1942 he was never worse than second in a tournament. And HALL OF FAME - Fred Harburn was inducted into the Horseshoe Hall of Fame recently. Robinet photo the best he ever did was to throw 43 ringers in a row. "When you get older it takes a lot out of you, but I used to play all day, and throw two ton of shoes," he said. Mr. Harburn added that he is honored by his inducuon into the Horseshoe Hall of Fame. "1 have all kinds of awards, but this is the nicest," he said. Mr. Harburn has lived in Seaforth for three years, and prior to that lived in Cromarty. He used to spray weeds in the Huron -Perth area, and also sprayed Huron and Perth County roads. He is a member of the Seaforth Men's Euchre Club, the Royal Canadian Legion, and is well known in the area for his fiddling. In 1990 he competed in six fiddle contests, finishing with four seconds and one third. Youngblood, Parr Line tied at nothing LADIES BROOMBALL JUNIOR FARMERS 1 WINTHROP 2 The lone goal for the Farmers was scored by Annette Hoggarth off a direct pass by Deb Bedard and Cathy Vanneste. For Winthrop, scoring were Donna Arts and Joanne Holland. Their back ups were Deb Murray, Pam Dale, Hilda Young and Marita Kochis. PARR LINE 0 YOUNGBLOOD 0 The Youngblood goalie was keen in net as she seemed to be in the right place at the right time. Parr Line Ladies tried and tried to score but could not find an opening anywhere. Great game by both teams. COMMERCIAL 1 - PERTH 1 For Perth, Vickie Innes scored a thrilling goal, assisted by Lori Ward. the Commercial Ladies had Audrey Schenk to thank as she scored their goal. In the back ground helping were Joan Flanagan and Sophie Klaver. In Ladies Broomball December 19 at 9 p.m. Parr Line vs Perth; 9:50 p.m. Youngblood vs Jr. Farmers; 10:40 p.m. Queens vs Commercial; and Winthrop sits out. MENS BROOMBALL DUMPERS 0 - GRADS 1 Dumpers are still a little pooped from the Goderich Tourney. But you can't win them all. The Grads beat them Thursday. Wayne Rum- ford tipped in the winning goal with a quick wrist shot pass by Robert Wydeven and Craig Kerslake. EASY RIDERS 1 - RAIDERS 1 Rob McGregor needed no help as he scored the first and only goal for the Easy Riders. Sean Melady blasted the ball past the Easy Rider goalie. Great passing by Steve Jansen and Dwayne Pryce. ROYALS 0 - PARR LINE 5 It seemed Parr Line did everything right as single goal scoring was done by Wayne Pol- lock, Paul Gibbings, Mark Krahn, Adrian Salverda and Craig Piet. Assisting these fellows were Dennis Dolmage, Ed Salverda, Don Wise and Paul Nurse. The Royal's Christmas spirit was good but the goals were scarce. KNIGHTS 4 - WINTHROP 2 The Knights were going all out and chalked up goal after goal. Scoring were Doug Eidt, Lawrence Vink, Paul Nyenhuis and Mark Louwagie. Back up help came from Jim Nyenhuis, Jody Durand and Steve Hulshof. Picking up their pace. was Jim MacDonald and Neil Mitchell, scoring for Winthrop. Assisting were Brian McGavin, Dan McNichol and Ross Mitchell. In Mens Broomball December 20 at 8 p.m. Red Rustlers vs Easy Riders; 8:50 p.m. Dumpers vs Royals; 9:40 p.m. Raiders vs Knights; 10:30 p.m. Parr Line vs Winthrop; and Grads sit out. Knights bowls high ladies game In Thursday Nighter Bowling this past week Joanne Knights bowled the ladies highest single game so far this year with a 283. Her team the Rocky Rollers managed to lose that game however to the first place Simpsons. This matchup was the closest of the night with the Simpsons taking two of the three games and the Rocky Rollers taking total pins by two in a recount The Simpsons were led by Doug Procter 216/622 and big singles from Dave Moody 271, Mark McKellar 219, Debbie Bedard 208 and Sherry Tunney 205. The Rocky Rollers had Brian Dale with a 239 as well as Joanne's big game. 2ainton's Old c/14i11 in Downtown Blyth A SPECIAL PLACE: SPECIAL PRI ES AT CHRI TMAS TIME! The Ninja Turtles were the hottest team for the night but still could not capture all the points from last place Four Plus Two. Gary Bedard led the team with 246/694. Janet Moody had a 198 and Shelly McKellar a 186. Four Plus Two captured the first game on the strength of Gerry Armstrong 242/649 night. The Pink Panthers continued their climb to contention with a five point win over the Behinders. Leading the team again this week was Erich Matzold with 246/639. Doug Leonhardt had a 217, Barb Alexander a 192 and Pat Ryan a 195. The Behinders were led by Karl --i BAILEY'S of Hensel) Ltd. Highway 14 262-2020 1 IIh You Will Appreciate • Pricing that is low & honest. (We arc the manufacturer') • Cheerful, Willing Sales Staff. • Natural, Long Lasting Products of Leather & Wool! JACKETS, SKiRTS, PAN'S, SWEATERS. PURSES. GLOVES, BLANKETS. SHEEPSKINS & MORE. Call for Xmas Hours • Open Boxing Day DOWNTC WN BLYTH •519 523 4740.OPEN 7 DAYS home comfort people • Furnaces ' Air conditioning ' 14eat pumps We aren't comfortable - - - until ou are) Teicherts high performance of 290/725. Dan Bennewies had a 263 and Michelle Deighton a 230 to capture game number one. This week the league gets ready for the Christmas break with a fun night of game variations and prizes. The league is proud to note that two of their bowlers have advanced through the Labatts Blue Light Open Provincial Championship Regional qualifying round. Doug Leonhardt placed sixth in the Blue Water Region and will compete on the area men's team. Dave Moody placed tenth and is on the mixed team. The Provincial Championship will be held March 28 to 30 in Hamilton NESBIT ELECTRIC LTD. 229$222 •Electrical Contracting & Maintenance •Electric motor sales & service *Pole Line Construction •Bucket Truck Service •24 Hour Emergency Service after 6:00 PM Call TOM RAPSON 527-1643 HURON SUPERIOR MEMORIALS ESTABLISHED OVER 60 YEARS tervisie Cr1oMw sod All el Hums Ceer $ y MICHAEL FALCONER 133 HIGH STREET, CLINTON Sus: 452-7441 Roo.: 4112-3464 EwnlnM oppointneents available