The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1954-02-18, Page 3THE TIMES-ADVOCATE, EXETER, ONTARIO, THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 18, 1954
Ontario boasts the most tele
phones per population of any Can
adian province. The figure is
something better than 30 tele
phones per 100 persons.
Tribe Hungry For Points After Three Losses
New Rates
“A”
Goderich and Fo-
Mohawks take to
against the other
a few points.
LOCAL TRIPS ,...........
PER STOP ...................
OUT OF TOWN TRIPS:
Per Mile
Effective Monday, Feb. 15
win
and
Open this Sunday, Wednes
day afternoon, and during
the evenings throughout the
week:
Sunoco
GARAGE
Unsuccessful in their bid to
upset t'he two Cyclone
powerhouses,
rest, Exeter
the warpgth
clubs to scalp
The tribe in hupgry for a
after losing two to Pontiacs
one to the Lakesides.
Despite their current poor
showing, they have some advan
tage over St. Marys and Hensall
in that they have most of the
tough part of their schedule
over,
Mohawks tackle St. Marys
Alerts Friday night and they’ll
be favorites to win after whip
ping the stone town* crew twice
during the regular season. Tues
day night the warriors trip to
Hensall to meet the Finks. Next
home game is Thursday night,
February 26, when Forest re
turns here. The night will be
featured with a draw for a car,
figure skating, the Exeter
and extra prizes. •
SpUt Series
Hensall and St, Marys
their two games this past
Finks trimmed the Alerts 6-4 in
the stone town and St. Marys
turned the tables in Seaforth on
Tuesday night to the tune of 6-2.
Other scores of the week were:
Forest 11, St. Marys 3; Forest
6, Strathroy 5; Goderich 8,
Strathroy 0.
up some
the boys
most in
notched
received
on three
band
split
week.
There’s no tractor that can help you so much with so many
jobs as the improved Case "VAC.” It hustles your field work,
helps with your chores. You can carry feed to the cows and
bring back the milk, without heavy lifting. You can pull
posts, dig holes, stretch fence with it. Latch on to the Case
Mounted Hammer Mill and go a-grinding. Dozens
of mounted field implements plus diggers, loaders,
scoops, scrapers, etc. fit the Case "VAC” Tractor for
a hundred jobs or more.
in FARM POWER
and UTILITY
CASE
aotV’MB
Emms, Hesse
Stop Locals
A crafty Dop. Emms, top Cy
clone netminder Gerry Hesse and
a belting Goderich crew bounced
Mohawks 7-1 in the lakeshore
arena Friday night.
The win gave the Samis-Pon-
tiacs a clean sweep of the two-
game series against the tribe
and their fifth straight victory
in the "A” round robin.
Emms, the slight, baldheaded
and shrewd playing-coach of the
Pontiacs, figured in five of the
winners’ total. He set
beautiful plays that left
in blue standing in the
effective places. Emms
two counters himself,
well-deserved assists
others.
Hesse displayed the form that
would convince any cynic he
earned the Gerry Smith award,
ITe displayed amazing skill and
dexterity in making some ter
rific stops, which coupled with a
sprinkling of luck, made him
unbeatable. The only rubber that
went by him—a hard, blueline
shot by Frank Anderson—glanced
off, about three bodies before it
bulged the net. It's doubtful if
the Stratford netminder ever saw
the disc zig-zag towards him.
Mohawks were handicapped in
the bounce department and Gode
rich used its advantage well. The
heavier Pontiacs, led by "Stone
wall” Westlake handed out stiff
punishment to the tribe.
Young Jim Rivers earned some
type of award for his part in the
Goderich victory. The blond
speedster, whose sole duty of
the night was to tag Frankie
Anderson, performed his duties
well. He shadowed the Exeter
star with the deftness of a Sam
Spade, although his efforts
brought him five fast fists to the
face late in the third period and
a heavy boarding from the pes
tered Anderson.
The game wasn’t as one-sided
as the score indicates. The.Gode-
rich scoring plays clicked better
than average and the locals were
more ineffective on the attack
STARS AGAINST FOREST
Coates, a Mohawk who is playing
his first year in organized WOAA
competition, fired two goals
against Forest when the tribe
tackled the league leaders Mon
day night. —Jack Doerr, Exeter
than usual.
Tempers were strong in spots,
resulting in three fights. Arbour
tackled Doug Smith in the third
in a short skirmish, Frank An
derson outpunched his shadow,
Rivers, in a quick match, and
Frank’s wife and a Goderich
woman tangled in the stands.
Only other incident of note
was George Westlake’s mistake
in’ the third. The, big boy, who
made a number of clean, hard
bodyohecks during the game,
made an unsuccessful bid to
catch Anderson with his poster
ior, When Flying Frankie dodged
him, Westlake collided with a
Pontiac who was trailing Ander-
sprawled allson and the two
over the rink.
The lone Exeter
15.58 of the third,
batted the puck from the Gode
rich corner to Barry Doak at
the blueline. Doak flipped to An
derson whose shot caromed
through a crowd of players into
the net.
tally came at
Ray Richards
Thrilling Rally In Third
Gives Flyers First Win
Braves Best
In Forest
Like their ancient namesakes,
Exeter Mohawks battle best in
the Forest. The local tribe invad
ed the woods of the league lead
ers Monday night and although
the braves dropped a 7-4 de
cision, they gave the Lakesides
a hot skirmish.
The torrid tussle was not un
like the first time Mohawks at
tacked the Forest squad when
they dropped a close 6-4 verdict
to the inhabitants. Lakesides
showed the edge but they had to
work hard to put it on paper.
In Monday night’s contest,
Forest outscored the warriors by
one goal in every frame. Count
was 2-1 at the end of the first
and 4-2 in the second.
Coates Stars
Highlight of the tribe’s game
was the two goals by Young Bob
Coates. The hard-working winger
from Usborne, who has been the
most faithful of the Mohawks
despite the fact he’s been used
sparingly, opened the scoring in
both the first and third periods.
Forest’s spark was big Red
Graham who fired two markers
from the blueline in the opening
canto to give the Lakesides a
lead they never lost.
Black counted for the home
sters in the first minute of the
second to widen the margin to
3-1 but John Anderson, with
Royals Oust
RCAF Flyers
Milverton Royals fired a tire
full of rubber into Centralia
Flyers’ playoff operations over
the weekend to end the airmen's
ice tour for the season.
The district OHA league lead
ers won 12-2 in the local arena
Thursday night and added a
10-2 conquest in Milverton Sat-
turday. The four straight wins
gave Milverton the semi - final
series.
Centralia
two tilts were
force, Sargent
The Flyers,
district league
only two games during the entire
’53-’54 season.
marksmen in the
Campbell, Wilber-
and Rouleau.
champions of the
last season, won
Add Sparkle
COME IN . . . MAKE US PROVE IT
WITH A DEMONSTRATION '
Floor Coverings
Linoleum by Tile or Yard
New Patterns
Just Arrived
Exeter Farm Equipment
Phone 508
Staging a thrilling third-period
rally Tuesday night, Zurich Fly
ers roared * back into contention
in the “C” series by edging Lu
can Irish 7-5 on Exeter ice.
Behind 5-2 early in the last
canto, the Flyers produced a
sensational five-goal splurge to
register their first victory of the
best - of - seven set. The series
score now stands 2-1.
The Irish piled up a 2-0 lead
in the first period when Ross Mc-
Tavish and Fred Revington
found the mark. Ben Gignac and
Doug O’Brien evened the count
in the second, but Len Gaudette
put Lucan one up before the
period ended.
Two quick goals by Ed Rowett
and Ray Yelle in the third made
it appear that the Irish were
headed0 for their third straight
victory.
V
To Your House By Redecorating
Put new zest into your
home with new colour
schemes, bright new de
corations! Let us show
you many new ideas for
every room!
PAINT
Choose DECORATONE,
tho new Crown Diamond
sensation in paint! Won
derful new colors, easy
application, long-wearing.
Two Quick Goals
Lucan appeared to clinch
their third straight victory when
Ed Rowett and Ray Yelle scored
two quick counters in the final
frame. But Zurich began its
splurge at 6.29 when Roger For
tier fired a marker and Jim
Hayter added another less than
a minute later. Don Hesse tied
the shore at 5-5 midway during
the stanza and Junior Barash
counted the winning tally at
16.18.
The Irish pulled Jake Barnes
in the final minute to gain the
equalizer but the strategy failed.
Hesse broke away and fired the
final marker into the open net
at 19.45.
Nick Papp, the Zurich goalie,
suffered a gash under the eye in
the middle frame and had to re
tire for repairs. His opposite in
the Lucan net, Jake Barnes, took
a shot in the mouth but his in
juries weren’t serious.
Win Second Tilt
Lucan won the second tilt on
Friday night with a 6-4 edge in
the Irish arena.
Glen Revington sparked the
winners with two goals. Fred
Revington, Ed Rowett, Gallagher
and McAlpine tallied singles.
Zurich marksmen were Hesse,
Barash, Fortier and Maisonville.
Fourth game of the series will
be in Lucan Friday night.
Beautiful
Wallpapers
New Patterns for ’54
Draperies
Make your choice from our splendid
stock of plain, floral or modernistic
patterns; 36" and 48" widths. From
............ ................75 to $3.95 per yard
Plastics
Patterns
bedrooms, kitchen.
36" width ..............
54" width ...............
suitable for living rooms.
.. 590 yd.
.. 890 yd.
Grocery Specials For Thursday, Friday & Saturday
LIBBY’S PORK & BEANS
20-oz. tins .......................................... 190
FRANCO AMERICAN SPAGHETTI
15-oz. tins ......................................... 2/290
GREEN GIANT NIBLETS
14-o^z. tins 2/350
AUSTRALIAN SEEDLESS RAISINS
Price .............................................. 190 lb.
ZEST SWEET MIXED PICKLES
16-oz, jar ...... ........... 250
KELLOGG’S FROSTED FLAKES
Price ............... 2/350
Exeter Juveniles
Deadlock Series
Exeter Lions Juveniles
feafced Clinton 5-4 Tuesday night
to deadlock their best-of-three
series at one win each.
Eugene Willard starred
the victors with two goals. Don
Wells, Terry Wade and Green
counted singles.
Clinton’s marksmen were Ga
ron with two, Higg and Hartley.
Only five penalties were called
in the game.
Lose In Exeter
The locals lost 8-4 in Exeter
Monday night when Clinton fin
ished strongly with four goals
in the last period.
Goals by Eugene Willard and
Kevin- Delbridge gave Exeter a
2-1 lead in the first canto and
Don Wells made it 3-1 in the
second before Clinton rallied to
score three. In the third, the
visitors held Exeter to one goal,
by Tefry Wade, While counting
four. The locals suffered nine
penalties to Clinton’s five.
The first
ended in a
EXETER
defence, D. and J .Regier; centre
Wells; wings, Wade and Willard;
alternates, Desjardine,
Delbridge, Middleton,
Jensen.
CLINTON — Goal,
GOULD & JORY
PHONE 16 Successors to Southcott Bros. EXETERSuccessors to Southcott Bros.
help from Ray Richards and
Frank Anderson, put the locals
back in the game at 5.37. Mo
hawks held the Forest attack
until J7.15 when Randall scored
on a pass from Wright.
Hewer Assists
Fred Hewer earned an assist
on Coates’ marker in the third
as the tribe came within a goal
of the Lakeside’s total. Three
quickies by Farlow, Baines and
Horner knifed the locals’ chances
midway during the frame. Hewer
scored Mohawks’ fourth goal at
15.06 with Doug Smith and
Gerry Hill getting assists.
Smith, Barry Doak and Bruce
Glen played an effective defens
ive game and Reg Turner dis
played some hot moments in the
net.
ROUND ROBIN STANDING
(Not including Wednesday’s games)
Goderich
Forest
St. Marys
Hensail ..
Exeter ...
Strathroy
Z
Vi
’^a
For The Best Buy In Town
See Our OK Used Cars
1951 Chevrolet Powerglide Sedan
Radio and Visor
1950 Oldsmobile Sedan, Hydramatic
Radio
1950 Chevrolet Coach — Like New
Less Than 14,000 Miles
1950 Chevrolet 14-Ton Pick-Up
Low Mileage
Snell Bros. Limited Exeter
PHONE 100 Chevrolet - Oldsmobile - Chev Trucks EXETERChevroletOldsmobileChev Trucks
Headline News
for Truck Buyers I
NEW POWER NEW TRANSMISSIONS NEW STYLING
game of the series
7-7 deadlock.
—- Goal, McFalls;
Johnston,
McLaren,
Denomme;
defence, Tyndall, Carter;
Hartley; wings, Higgs,
alternates, Holmes, Lee,,
Taylor.
centre,
Garon;
Hu gall ,
Canada’s international trade in
outstanding securities in 1952 re
sulted in a record purchase of
about $86,066,i006« This com
pares with a sales balance of
$53,000,000 in 1951.
They’re the most powerful, finest performing,
best looking Advance-Design trucks ever built I
They’re engineered to do your kind of hauling
more efficiently and at lower cost. Come in and
See these great new advances in the completely
new Chevrolet trucks —
NEW POWER IN "THRIFTMASTER 235" ENGINE.
A new high compression brings you greater horse
power and increased operating economy. Such
features as aluminum pistons and full-pressure
lubrication, together with other new improvements,
add up to finer all-around performance.
NEW POWER IN "LOADMASTER 235" ENGINE.
New high-compression power, performance and
economy are yours in this advanced engine — plus
even greater durability. Chrome top piston rings,
extra-tough exhaust Valves and controlled valve
rbtators add to engine ruggedness.
NEW COMFORTMASTER CAB. Greater coinfort, con
venience and safety are offered by this advanced
cab. New one-piece windshield gives greatly in
creased visibility. New instrument panel is easier
to read and to reach.
^Optional at extra cost, Ride Control Seat is available on all cab models as extra equipment.
NEW RIDE CONTROL SEAT* Here’s real passenger
car comfort for truck drivers! Seat cushion and
back move as a unit to “float” you over the
roughest roads with ease. You drive relaxed without
irritating back-rubbing.
NEW AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION.* Offering great
new ease and convenience for driving in city traffic
and for door-to-door delivery service. Proved truck
Hydra-Matic transmission is available not only on
%- and %-ton trucks, but on 1-ton models, too!
J4EW HEAVY-DUTY 3-SPEED TRANSMISSION.*
Rugged hew 3-speed transmission with the con
venience of a steering column gearshift lever on
1100, 1300 and 1400 scries. It’s specially designed
for sniooth operation and long life.
NEW, BIGGER LOAD SPACE. New pickup bodies
have deeper sides ... to give you extra load space.
In addition, they’re set lower to the ground to make
loading and unloading easier,
NEW CHASSIS RUGGEDNESS. Heavier axle shafts in
two-ton models .. . bigger, more durable clutches
in light- and heavy-duty models , , . more rigid
frames in all models. These are a few of the rugged
new chassis features that make the new '54 Chev
rolet trucks even more durable.
NEW ADVANCE-DESIGN STYLING. Handsome new
appearance reflects the new power and ruggedness
of the 1954'Chevrolet trucks. New front-end design
is more massive and sturdy in appegrance. New
parking lights are positioned near' the fender
corners to indicate the full width of the truck.
Mas? T'brfaorf/ty
Oh /btyJob ''
$
A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE
CT-3S4C
Phone 100 SNELL BROS. LIMITED on, I
i CHEVROLET, OLDSMOBILE AND CHEVROLET TRUCKS |