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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1983-10-26, Page 1010 L .THE'HURON -EXPOS TOR.. !( OBER <2L 1.0 A ilEAL TROPHY—Hunters have complain- ed that moose are scarce 'this year. Red Vantyghem of RR4, Seaforth was one of the few lucky hunters to down a moose. Reiland his brother Eric of Dutton shot their 1500 pound bull moose near Cochrane, The animal's antlers measured 52 Inches. "I've shot eight moose In 12 'rears," eaya Red, "and this Is the' biggest one yet. We were the only ones to get a moose In our area. Last year, there were nine taken from the same spot.'-' (Wasslnk photo) Minor hockey starts Seaforth and District Minor Hockey's official season starts this weekend, bright and early. Houseleague games scheduled for Satur- day, Oct. 29 are: senior division - Nordiclues vs Canadians 7:35 a.m.; Oilers vs North Stars 8:30 aim.; Kings vs Bruins 9:35 a.m. Junior Division -Flames vs Jets 10:30 a.m.; - Leafs vs Penguins 11:35 a.m. Teams are: Senior Hopse League -Oilers - Tony Van Loon, Kevin Williamson, Darren Crocker, Don Brown, Kevin Cooper, Ray Lamont, Chris Reeves, Jason Horan, Karsten Carroll, Brad Carter, Scott Teall. Coaches -George Reeves. North Stars -Trevor Fortune, Dave Akey, Brad Beuttenmiller, Greg ScroggS, Pat M9ylan, Steve Schroeder, Aaron Broome, Brian Cook, Sean Cook, Chris Maloney, Jeff Gemmell. Coaches -Bob Cook, Dave Broome. Kings -Bill Tremeer, Terry Gray, Mike Betties, Brian Henderson, Dave Garrick, Jason Rodney, Pat Nigh, Wayne Regele, Mike Murray, Jeff Kennedy, Steve Cook. Coaches -Bob Regele, Art Murray. • Nordiques-Jason Patterson, Scott Driscoll, Paul Henderson, Bill Stewart, Dwain Osborn, Rick McLean, Andrew Ball, Jason Papple, Kevin Murphy, Jim O'Reilly, Mark Reid, coach -John Ball. Canadians -Mike Van Loon, Trevor Price, Chris Cardno, Ray Anstett, Gord O'Dwyer, Paul Murray, Darren Akey, Paul McLlwain, Chris Vogels, Scott Hoegy, Rob Sloan, coach -Bob Gridzak. Bruins -Jeff Hoelscher, Dan Van Loon, Mike Schoonderwoerd, Br%an Ilndcrwood, New curlers get BY JOHN PATTERSON SR. At Seaforth Curling Club, ice maker, Peter Jansen, has been working hard to have curling ice ready for the first draw on Oct. 27-28 which is mixed curling. The men's draw gets going Oct. 31. It is hoped that last.year's membership of around 125 will be improved upon this season. As noted in last week's advertise- ment, anyone new who wishes to try this very fine sport and make new friends, come and try it. The exercise iso good,and the socializing too. MEMBERS WELCOME The person to call in Seaforth is Ken Moore at 527-0508 and in Clinton Tim Collyer at 482-7842. New curlers may curl the first draw on a look-see basis and get a special rate for the seaon. The first social event is coming up on Nov. 5 at the Seaforth and District Community Centres, which is right across the road from the curling club. Steve Brown is special Brian Dupuis, Dwayne Price, Mike Ball, Jason Wheatley, Jason Schoonderwoerd, James Wilbee, Todd McLean, coach -Elly Schoonderwoerd. Junior House League -Flames -Brent Van- denAkker, Mark Smale, Adam Quipp, Eric Johnston, Dwayne Pryce, Shannon Jones, Paul 'Dolmage, Scott Jervis, Mike Dever-, eaux, Brad Moore, Tamar - Farag, Mike Smale, Allan Kling, "Daryl Haney, Wayne Schoonderwoerd, Kalen Carroll, coaches - Ron Quipp, Jim Moore. Leafs -Kevin McLlwain, Jason Beuttenmil- ler, Jeff Weber, Doug Campbell, Mike Coyne, Mark McDonald, Rob VandenHen- gel, Thomas Wheatley, Kevin Vanden Neuker, Mike Weber, Jeff Flanagan, Jeff Ryan, David McKay, Ron Sinnamon, Steve Pletch, Bruce Ungarian, coaches- Bob Campbell, John Sinnamon. Jets -Jason McNichol, Kevin Cardno, Danny McNaughton, Mark Vogels, Mike Watt, Brian Little, Pat Maloney, Tyler Papple, Joe Murray, Ken Hildebrand, Gary Glanville, Matthew McNichol, David Mc- l?airn, John McKercher, Jeremy Somer ville, Jamie McNichol. Coaches -John Watt, Archie Robertson. Penguins -Ted Sills, Brad Schroeder, Jason Muir, Aaron Sauvage, John Moylan, Shannon Jones, Mike Moylan, Derek Gridzak, Stephen Hicknell, Dean Finnigan, Jim Crowley, Chris Gridzak, Justin Rodney, Danny Dalton, Kevin Coleman, Darren Cook. Coaches -Don Jones, Gregor Camp= bell. specialr':rates events chairman, and he reports that it is an 'open dance beginning at 9 p.m. with lunch included in the price of $5 per person. This sounds like a real bargain for a good fun evening. The President of the ladies club this season is Irma Pryce and for the men's club. Ron McKay. FIRST SPIEL Neil Dolmage, chairman of the bonspiel committee has indicated that the first spiel is on Dec. 6, It is a farmer's open bonspiel and the persons to call your entries to are Bruce and Marjorie Coleman at 527-1938. The sponsors of this spiel are Topnotch Feeds Ltd. and Vincent Farm Equipment Ltd. of Seaforth. This is the first of curling news columns, with others to follow. Watch for scores which will appear weekly in both the Seaforth Huron Expositor and the Clinton News Record. 1 eat lucan but lose to Tavistock SEAFORTH CENTEN AIRES vs. THEDFORD Friday October 28 8:30 p.m. IF SO, WE CAN NOW SUPPLY ALL POOR EQUIPMENT NEEDS INCLUDING BROOMS, SLIDERS, GRIPPERS, GLOVES AND SHOES. WE INSTALL SLIDERS AND GRIPPERS! Hetherington FEmily MAIN STREET ootwear SEAFORTH 529-1110 BY GARY GRAY Led by the spectacular goaltending of Mike Macdonald, the Seaforth Jr. Cente- naires were undefeated after their first three games as the result of a 4-3 win over the Lucan Irish on Friday night. A crowd of approximately 200 watched Macdonald kick aside 44 of the 47 shots he faced as the Irish held a wide margin of the play; The Centenaires looked their best in the first period when they outshot their opponents 11-9 and came away with a 2-1 lead. Dave McLlwain opened the scoring for the Centenaires with an unassisted goal at the 5:40 mark but the Irish came back over a minute later to tie it up on a goal by Steve Glenn. At the Midway point in the period the Centenaires regained tile lead as Jack Chaffe converted passes from Dave Murray and Jeff Pauli and beat Lucan goaltender Brad Lucas. In the second frame the Centenaires started quickly as Greg Murray scored at the .57 second mark. The goal was unassisted. Just 19 seconds later the Irish cut the lead to 3-2 as Glenn notched his second of'the game. Neither tram was Phi.' to score during the remainder of the period but the Irish had several golden opportunities to blow the Centenaires out of the rink. This was where Macdonald shone as he kicked aside several point blank drives, The Irish ended the period with 23 shots on Macdonald. The Centenaires managed only nine on the Lucan goal. The third frame saw the Centenaires run into penalties, once again setting the stage for good scoring opportunities for the Irish. At the two minute mark, Centenaires Jamie McClinchey was sent off for tripping and 41 seconds later Murray lllman for interference to give the Irish a two man advantage. , Before the first penalty had expired the Irish tied the game on a goal by Les Arts. Lucan kept the play in the Centenaires zone for most of the period (as the locals were playing shorthanded) but were thwarted on all of their chances. When it appeared the game was either going to end in a tie, or the Irish were going to take the lead, the Centenaires made one of their few offensive rushes. into the 'Lucan zone. The end result was Darren Watts beating Lucan with assists going to John Bicknell and McClinchey,. The goal came with a minute and eight Seconds remaining in the game. The locals carried ,the play to the Irish in the dying seconds thus enabling them to hang on for the victory. Lucan outshot the Centenaires 15-9 in the period. Twenty-seven penalties (all minors) were called in the game with the Centenaires picking up 16 including seven in the third period compared to Lucan's two. TAVISTOCK 7 — SEAFQRTH 6• The Tavistock Braves Scored five second period goals and then held off a strong third period come from behind effort by the Centenaires to go -home with a 7-6 victory on Sunday. -Although it was Their first Toss of the season, the Centenaires showed a lot of positive signs but unfortunately received few breaks in the game. fn the first period the Centenaires outshot the Brave 10-5 but ended up on the short end of a 2-1 score. The middle frame saw Tavistock outshoot the Centenaires by a narrow 10-9 margin and outscore the locals 5-3. In the final stanza, , the locals took Icomplete control by outshooting the Braves t2.11 and outscoring them 2.0. Terry Ross led the Tavistock attack by firing four goals vylrile Kevin Albrecht, Jim ' Elliott and Greg' Poetker each added one apiece. , Dave McElwain scored twice while Jeff Pauli, Mark McLlwain, Greg Murray, and Darrin Watts scored singles for the Centenaires. Three of the Centenaires six goals came on the power play while Tavistock managed only one. The Braves picked up, 11 minor penalties compared to the Centenaires eight. Both goaltenders Mike Oliver of the Braves and Keith McClure of the Cente- naires came up with several good saves despite the high scoring game. The Centenaires are idle until Friday night when they host the Thedford Browns in an 8:30 start. Aftet that, they will play five road games against Port Stanley, Tavistock, Thedford, Bothwell and :Exeter. They return home on Sunday, Nov. 20 for a two o'clock game with the Belmont Bombers. •' THE HARVEST IS IN —REAP' ' '" ,''' THE SAVINGS ON THESE _e A"i'olle0 ..i.. ' '!',' U� '•;.1 _• S' i : , . .I FRESH FRYER PARTS OUR REG.. $1.59 Ib. ,,/'� .�,.� • "COUNTRY CUT" . 0; ,. - HICKEN ‘0,,, ClEOREOUgqRTER3 WITH WHOLE NECK AND BACK ] HINDQUARTERS WITH WHOLE BACK ZehrS fire markers... of line yrs ] wisps ]GIBLET PACKS ,/,■+.,� SUPER '+..1 SPECIAL .c 9 I b /kg »... Z Ss»VF 3wil 1'h FRESH! . ,p ■ ONTARIp P tK '• WHITE OR WHITE & DARK MEAT BURNS "COUNTRY CLUB" STORE SLICED COOKED P:J���n+:k• TURK I� Moll' %oo,kg 4,991¢ A _ -------7-::-.7- r ��fSI'DE"SPARERiBS, T ZtW BRAND STORE SLICED LEAN FRESH COOKED NAM 5.49/49?.49. Ib SCHNEIDERS BROKE s�IcEs 7 99.. 15MAPLE 3 , 5?IfS// LEAF REG. OR PARA BOLOGNA �y/�o 0 / Ib. ?i�?/�i�/ Ib. 1 g `• , l Y �y•i /i' 4 f ,: ?r � - w: R' jS / fyr r <...` .. I�� 111 R='S.:" _.. at . r. , FRESH ONTARIO POULTRY PART BACK ON CHICKEN LEGS 2.6249 �I 19b. FRESH SPLIT CHICKEN BREASTS 315149 1.59b. SCHNEIDERS 10 VARIETIES MINI -DELI MEATS .250 g 'I79 EA SCHNEIDERS FRESH BEEF & PORK, ENGLISH STYLE SAUSAGE 4.39.1.99b. SCHNEIDERS VACUUM PAK RING -BOLOGNA -5..49.2.49 • < � LAL `" SPECIAL PRICES IN EFFECT ' COUNTRY GOLD BURNS SWEET PICKLED BOIL 1N BAG SLICED CORN MEALED BY THE PIECE CORNED BEEF BACK BACONHAM WED. OCT 26 UNTIL CLOSING TUEs, SPECIALS NOV 1ST WHICHEXCEPEXPIRE PRODUCE CLOSING SATURDAY OCTA 9TH MAPLE LEAF PORTIONED COOKED STEAKS MAPLE LEAF (BONELESS PORK BUTT) SWEET PICKLED COTTAGE ROLLS 4A50 g fI 99 7125/kg 3129. KITCHENER PACKERS SPRINCYA COTTON RAC 959,9 SUMMER SAUSAGE S'591b. 175 9 f 9 3I /k9 93 fI i / Ib SCHNEIDERS S 7f THREE LITTU PIGS 500 g 1 WHITE ON SL000 /k9 LINK OR rARM STYLE PUDDING RINGS 2.5916. PORK SAUSAGE 2.29 NO NAME PEPPERONI • I SALAMI 0R SUMMER MEAT CHUBS sob e 2.49 NO NAME POLISH LINKS / 3Q ON SMOKED SAUSAGE 7. 7 /k9 LINKS, YAC PAC I.991b. I /URNS P5105 OP CANADA SMOKED - I� 01NNER STYIE 7.0 /k9 PORK SHOULDER 1191b• ' D• �/ /P"" FROZEN �E,�yv�' �t.V'- •• BOXED -READY BY THE CASE ONLY - STEAK SHAPED JUMBO BEEF STEAKETTES .49cnsE f OF 17 S 143 y 4 PER SERVING BY THE CASE ONLY PRE -BROWNED . VEAL PARMIGIANA •7�cASE OF 1] PER 9 75 g �� SERVING BY THE CASE ONLY SLICED- BREADED .. BEEF LIVER 5%49 CASE Or 11 PER 00 g �� SERVING TO USE UNICEF CANADA WHEGIYE .A■R■►' � � �i'yf s "' ""` '"" " a <+ WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT PURCHASE TO REASONABLE WEEKLY FAMILY REQUIREMENTS. GENE ROUSLYALLS SUPER. ' - S_+— PRODUCT OF U.S.A. FRESH GREEN BUYS RO�IIIAiNE FRESH BAKED DELICIOUS CHEESE BUNS ?O 19 �R A COUNTRY OVEN FRESH GRANOLA BREAD ?LOAVES �� CHEESE•RAISIN-PLAIN ,,. TEA BISCUITS 99 Of , - PRODUCT OF U.S.A. CANADA NO. 1 GRADE y ::.RAPES ,., f LETTUCE 0 BUNCH ONTARIO GROWN, LARGE WHITE l'e AULIFLOWER C #33 CANADA NO. 1 GRADEACH . - RED EMPEROR 1.70,7FRSALADS �k9 . ONTARIO N0. 1 WHITE MUSHROOMS 4/317/49 I Mb. ONTARIO N0. 1'GRADE RUTABAGAS . 53',..24!. ONTARIO FANCY CORTLAND APPLES 3 Ib BAG 1.19 PRODUCT Of U.S.A. FINE QUALITY ZUCCHINI 218/4999° PRODUCT OF SORT AFRICA OUTSPAN .ORANGES 4 Ib BAG 149 PRODUCT OF ONTARIO N0. 1 COOKING ONIONS 2 Ib. BAG S90 PRODOCT Of ONTARIO NO. I FRESH - CARROTS 2 Ib. SAO S90 PROD. Of U.SJL N0. I SPANISH TYPE ONIONS 8� / o 39,Ib PR000CT Of U.S.A. CALIFORNIA WALNUTS ?i84jkg Ib PREVENT Of ONTARIO SWEET PEPPER SQUASH V FOR �1 N