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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1954-01-06, Page 10The Wingham Advance-Times, Wednesday, Jgn. 6th, 1954 np- ST ¥ 11 olowne nailers lie bailors In Overtime Clash at Sarnia Despite a ten minute overtime clash a regulation Junior “B" OHA fixture played in Sarnia between the Sarnia Junior Sailors and the Wing­ ham Towne Hallers ended in a 4-4 tie. The visitors were undermanned in the contest, icing only 11 players, but were paced offensively by the bril­ liant effort of Forward Tom Wilson, who garnered all their goals. Top marksman for the Tars was fleety Marcel Beauchamp, who knot­ ted counters in the first and second frames. Territorial play in the game was about even with both clubs display­ ing plenty of action. Sarnia broke through the Wing­ ham defence on many occasions but couldn’t put the puck past Doug Lessor, who was a standout between the pipes. WINGHAM, Goal, Lessor; defence, Lockridge, Fry, Nash; forwards, M. Stainton, Gerrie, Purdon, King, Bell. Wilson, Lott SARNTA, Goal, Ryan; defence, Ward, Green, Guthrie, Vernon; for­ wards, McGrath, Moffitt Duncan, Forbes, Beauchamp, Haddon, Hamil­ ton, Cole, Dunham, McDougall, Officials, Fred Fellows and Glaab, both of Sarnia. First Period 1— Wingham, Wilson 15.15. 2— Sarnia, Beauchamp (Dunham, Moffitt) 17.52. 3— Sarnia, Green 19.40 Penalties — Lott 10.45, Hamilton 12.19, Nash 16.04. Second Period 4— Sarnia, Beauchamp < 5.17. 5— Wingham, Wilson 18.16. Penalties — Nash (minor and major) 1.57, (minor) 15.08, Dun­ ham (minor) 1.57, Forbes 7.40 15.08, Bell 12.57, Lott (minor and major), Ward (major) 13.40. Third Period 6— Wingham, Wilson 10.40. 7— Wingham, Wilson 13.12. 8— Sarnia, Duncan 17.46. Penalties — Nash 11.19, Overtime Period Scoring — None, Penalties — None. INSURANCE MAN MEETS COUNCIL (Continued from Page One) LOSES THUMB IN FACTORY ACCIDENT A regrettable accident occurred at the Bogdon & Gross factory recently in which Mr. William Gebherdt, the head sawyer, had the thumb of his left hand severed, Mr. Gcbherdt was engaged in cutting logs in the saw nuu qi me piunt wnen .m mtuj- her hig hand came into contact with the fast-revolving blade with the above result, The victim of the mis­ hap is still $ patient at the Bruce County Hospital, but is making a good recovery.—Walkerton Herald- Times. BRUNSWICK RECORDS YEAR OF MINING BOOM Ms BUS1 « months limitation had expired before negotations with the company had been completed was “unfortunate." Under law the claimant must file suit within a period of three months. Mayor Miller said that the insur­ ance adjuster had assured him that a settlement would be made with Mrs. Willie, and the adjuster had also told Mrs. Willie the same thing. He felt that in spite of what had happened, the company was to some extent under moral obligation to rectify what had been a mistake on the part of one of their employees. Other councillors concurred in this opinion. Mr. Roberts said that the adjuster had no right to make such a state­ ment, in view of the fact that the town was not legally responsible for the mishap. He said that because of the way in which the case had been handled, the company was willing to make a settlement with Mrs. Willie for the amount of her hospital and doctor bill, but that this settlement was not in any way to be construed (Guthrie) ' as an admission on the part of the company that the town was liable for damages. If the town accepted this settlement, he said, an addition­ al 25% would be added to the policy's premium. On a yearly premium of $468 this would amount to about $117 per year. Members of the council seemed to feel that if the matter were handled in this way, the town would be in­ directly paying the. claim itself. One of the councillors voiced the opinion that the town would under these circumstances be paying for a mis­ take made by the company’s em­ ployee. He said that he didn’t think the town way. It was that the without increasing the policy, and if that would not be possible the town might have to re­ consider its liability protection. Mr. Roberts said that he was not empowered to make such a conces­ sion but that he would take the matter up with the head office of the company and advise the town of any further decisions. . Pete SAVE MILK & MONEY GARGETEX (N1XON) Multi-Antibiotic Ointment Will Stop Mastitis or Your Money Back ! GARGETEX contains two peni­ cillins, streptomycin and the new antibiotic bacitracin com­ bined in a completely milk soluble ointment, bringing the effect of four antibiotics again­ st mastitic infections. GARGE­ TEX works immediately on the internal infected udder tissue, promoting- fast safe recovery and is guaranteed to give effec­ tive results. Get a tube of New GARGETEX today. Instruc­ tions for easy administration on every package. Made in Can­ ada by Nixon Laboratories Limited. should be suggested company penalized in this to Mr. Roberts pay the .claim the premium on Canada's international trade in out­ standing securities in 1952 resulted in a record purchase of about 86,000,- 00. This compares with a sales bal­ ance of $53,000,000 in 1951. Wednesday, Thursday, Jan. 6-7 (ADULT ENTERTAINMENT) ■"From Here to Eternity 11 Burt Lancaster, Montgomery Clift, Deborah Kerr, Frank Sinatra, Donna Reed ■ This film version of James Jones' best-selling novel of Army Life in the pre-Pearl Harbour days is a powerful ADULT drama. Advanced Admission Price ADULTS—75c CHILDREN 35c Tax inci. ■ =£ a Friday, Saturday, Matinee Saturday Afternoon rr Jan. 8-9 "The Vanquished John Payne Jan Sterling Fast action in a melodrama of post-Civil War days in technicolour. Trounce Lou Balls 15-4 Central Press Canadian At the end of the year, New Brunswick looks back to 12 months of mining activity un­ paralleled in this history of the province. Over 40,000 mining claims have been staked and 14 companies have been incorporat­ ed with a combined capitalization of $38,000,000, giving to the province’ payrolls an estimated $10,000,000 increase. To the native New Brunswick residents this has meant the building of roads mines and buildings in areas known only to vacationists and bushmen. The road, top, is part of the 13-mile stretch newly built north of Bathurst, where the principal base metal strike has centred. The diamond drill­ ers, left, are searching for man­ ganese and titanium. The year closes with an optimlstle note for the provincial planners, as • new titanium strike and favor­ able reports on uranium hold­ ings were received from widely separated claim* M COOK A IMAI SOS 20 OS MOSS•a SOASI 2, 1S«U. IURKEVS In Free Scoring Match The Wingham Towne Hallers went Wingham arena. The visitors started on a scoring spree on Saturday night off strongly with three tallies in the when they took the London Lou Balls first period, but were unable to keep into camp to the tune of 15-4 in a up the pace against the rough-riding wide-open Junior “B" fixture at the > Towne Hallers. KINCARDINE CLAIM FOR WHAM PLAYERS REJECTED BY WOAA Former Shut=in President Dies The Spaceiaving Range with Big Range Features The King Size Oven of this new Westinghouse 30-inch Imnerial rives you 2&o more baking and roasting capacity tt£n XXd Lgle-oven range. ... yet the entire ranf. takes up only 30 inches of floor space. And this truly deluxe range has the famous Super Corox Unit that gets RED HOT in 30 seconds—a handy Look-In Oven Door—• buflt-in automatic Electric Clock and Oven Timer—full-width Ftae- wacent .Light. The giant oven is Miracle Sealed to aseust any-rack baking perfection. The Western Ontario Athletic As­ sociation has rejected a claim by the Kincardine Intermediate Hockey Club that it has prior rights to players TommyWilson and John Burnside, both Kincardine natives. The Kincardine club accused the WOAA of “high-handed attitude and inconsistent rulings” regarding these players but Tory Gregg, WOAA gen­ eral manager, contends that “every­ thing is in order." Kincardine spokesmen say they Granville opened the scoring in the first period with a tally for London at 2.41. Wilson and Bell countered for Wingham, and Don Beattie came back .for one for London at 9.45. Granville .’from Walker notched another at 13.40, giving London an early lead. Before the period was out, however, Chin, Purdon, King and Lott' notched one apiece, leaving the Lou Balls behind to the tune of 6-3. The second, period saw five goals! have a release for Wilson from the for Wingham without a reply, • while four more were rung up in the final Toronto and Emmanuel; frame. A singleton from Granville it was while he was1 and Quirrie in the third was the only in Goderich (1941 to became interested in A founder and former president of the Shut-in Day Association, Rev. Arthur J. McKaye, of Byron, Ontario, died at his home there last month. He was forty-nine years of age. Mr. McKaye was a graduate of the University of College, and ministering 1944) that he shut-in work. In 1952 he helped found the S.I.D.A. and as president guided its destiny until April, 1948, when he resigned. Many will remember hearing his voice on the Happy Gang program and over CKNX, Wingham, and CK- EY, Toronto, where he broadcasted Shut-in's Day sermons. His passing deprives the world of a great friend of the sick and dis­ abled, a loving husband and father, and a minister whose Christ was more human and likeable than many ministers. Disabled Persons To be Assisted Out Of the Blue other counter for the visitors. Top scorer for Wingham was Merv. King, with four goals and one assist. Tommy Wilson bagged three with four assists, and Bud Lott got two and two. Singletons were notched by Kev Bell, Morley Chin, Barry Purdon, Morris Stainton, ’ Nipper Nash and Murray Gerrie. Leading the losers was Granville, with three of the four tal­ lies. Busiest man on the Lou Balls w'as goalie McAinsh, who was respon­ sible for a valiant but losing effort in the London nets. LONDON—Goal, McAinsh; defence, Pigeon, Wilson; centre, Quirrie; wings, Bourne, Granvijle; subs, Thompson. McFalls, D. Beattie, K. Beattie, Walker, Horlick, Fraser. WINGHAM—Goal, Lessor; defence, Lockridge, Nash; centre, Purdon; wings, Lott, King; Chin, Bell, Murray. centre, subs, Batte, Fry, Wilson, Stainton, Gerrie, First Period Granville, (Quirrie, Bour- 8 Monday, Tuesday, The dominion government will in­ troduce at this session of parliament a bill to provide pensions for disabled persons. At present disabled resi­ dents of only three of Canada’s ten provinces receive q disability allow­ ance. This new legislation will pro­ vide assistance to disabled persons who are not protected by other pro­ grams, and will be financed on a 50- 50 basis by Ottawa and participating provincial governments. The allow­ ance may be about $40.00 a month, and will be paid only to disabled persons living at home. We cannot emphasize too strongly what a great blessing this will mean to the ones who stand to benefit, Those at Ottawa who were responsible for in­ troducing this important legislation, and the Canadian Association of Incurables, Calgary, and others who worked so faithfully and untiringly for this cause, merit the deepest gratitude of us all for bringing into the realm of probability this’momen­ tous and Christian legislation, Christain FourcadeBing Crosby A tender and satisfying story of a father's search t for his lost boy* Honie ownership made a Vance In Canada frphi 1941 At the latter date 65,6 per homes were occupied by owners. big ad- to 1981. cent of 1— London, ne) 2.41 2— Wingham, Wilson, (Stainton, Bell) 5.44 3— London, D. Beattie 9.45 4— Wingham Bell (Lockridge), 12.28 5— London, Granville 6— Wingham, Chin, 14.10 7— Wingham Purdon, 14.40 8— Wingham, King (Lott) 16.14 9— Wingham, Lott (Purdon, Wilson) 17.13 Penalties—Lockridge • (tripping) 2.05, K, Beattie (holding) 6.25, Batte, (interference) 18.08 Second Period 10— Wingham- Wilson 3.25 11— Wingham, Wilson 12— Wingham; 10.49 13— Wingham 12.37 14— Wingham, Penalties—Gerrie (holding) 6.16; Lockridge (interference) 13.21, Quir­ rie (tripping) 17.26 Purdon (roughing) 18.59, Walker (interference) 19.40. Third Period 15— Wingham, Nash, .13 16— Wingham, Gerrie (Nash) "3.52 17— Wingham, King (Purdon) 9.07 18— London, Granville (Quirrie) 11.09 19— Wlrigham, Lott (Purdon) 17.17 Penalties—Lockridge (hooking) 17.40 Horlick (slashing) 17.40. (Walker) 13.40 (Nash, Batte) (King, Wilson) (Bell, Stainton) King, 4,34 (Purdon Lott) Stainton (Wilson Bell) King (Wilson) 19.40 vou can SUM...IF nWV^Stln^JlOUSC London Lou Ball team dated Decem­ ber 9. Gregg said that this was use­ less because the London team had released Wilson to Wingham on De­ cember 3. "We have never received any other release for this player,’’ Gregg said. "Kincardine was out-smarted in the deal. There’s no doubt about'that." As for Burnside he has played five games with Wingham Juniors and is therefore ineligible to be released to any other club this season. Regu­ lations forbid the release of any player after he has played more than three games. In Wingham coach Alf Lockridge, of the Towne Hallers said that he “didn’t have any idea" if Burnside would be back to play for Wingham. He said that after Burnside had play­ ed six game's with the Towne Hall­ ers, he asked for his release from the club, and since that time he has been absent from the Wingham line-bp. "The whole matter was dealt with at a special meeting," Gregg explain­ ed. “I think it was fairly dealt with. The two boys concerned were there and they were satisfied. Wilson even admitted that he had signed with Wingham first. Kincardine never produced any release in the first place so.they didn’t have a leg to stand on.’* ,The management of the Kincardine team was suspended .while the status of the players was under question but since then this has been lifted, Gregg said. Canadian males leave the of fur coats pretty much women folk, In 1951 men’s production was valued at compared with $45,351,000 for women’s fur apparel. wearing to their fur coat $154,000 GOSPEL HALL Regular Sundays Service* Sunday School 10.15 a.m. Remembering the Lord at 11.15 Gospel Meeting at 7.80 p.m. Prayer Meeting and Bible Study Each Thursday evening at 8 p.m. Radio & Electric • % SERVING YOU SINCE 1935 98 Flannelette Thurs. - Fri. - Saturday ' 'i Jan. 7 / ■ i i i £■ i ■ £i Printed and Striped Flannelette Reg. to 69c yd. - Special 58c yd. White Flannelette 36 in. wide Reg. 59c yd 48c yd Flannelette 27 in. wide, Reg. 45c yd. Special 38c yd 9 ii i i I I €DIGHOFF€RS, UJinGHRm g “The Friendly Store”' ^■timinuBuniniMihniiniimmrwniniMnintnnirBiiimii